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Goethe (F. & S. II.270) - Signed Print by Andy Warhol 1982 - MyArtBroker

Goethe (F. & S. II.270)
Signed Print

Andy Warhol

£40,000-£60,000Value Indicator

$80,000-$130,000 Value Indicator

$70,000-$110,000 Value Indicator

¥390,000-¥590,000 Value Indicator

€45,000-€70,000 Value Indicator

$430,000-$650,000 Value Indicator

¥7,880,000-¥11,820,000 Value Indicator

$50,000-$80,000 Value Indicator

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97 x 97cm, Edition of 100, Screenprint

Medium: Screenprint

Edition size: 100

Year: 1982

Size: H 97cm x W 97cm

Signed: Yes

Format: Signed Print

Last Auction: March 2025

Value Trend:

6% AAGR

AAGR (5 years) This estimate blends recent public auction records with our own private sale data and network demand.

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Auction Results

Auction Date
Auction House
Location
Return to Seller
Hammer Price
Buyer Paid
March 2025
Sotheby's London
United Kingdom
N/A
N/A
N/A
December 2023
Lempertz, Cologne
Germany
September 2023
Lama
United States
June 2023
Karl & Faber
Germany
December 2022
Ketterer Kunst Hamburg
Germany
September 2022
Christie's London
United Kingdom
May 2020
Christie's New York
United States
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Track auction value trend

The value of Andy Warhol’s Goethe (F. & S. II.270) (signed) is estimated to be worth between £40,000 and £60,000. Over the past 12 months, the artwork has sold once, with an average selling price of £40,000. In the last five years, the hammer price has ranged from £36,906 in September 2023 to £85,680 in September 2022. This work has shown consistent value growth, with an average annual growth rate of 6%. This screenprint is part of a limited edition of 100.

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Meaning & Analysis

Goethe (F. & S. II.272) is based on a painting of Goethe by Johan Tischbein, regarded as the most famous portrait in Germany. Much like his works inspired by the Mona Lisa in 1963, Warhol takes the original iconic painting and subverts it to call into question high art ideals on originality, authorship and what constitutes the value of art. In this iteration of the image, Warhol has removed the landscape background to focus instead on Goethe’s profile, in the style of his portraits from the 1960s of Elizabeth Taylor and Marilyn Monroe.

This portrait is produced with stark contrasts of colour with pops of brown, blue, orange and beige against a light pink backdrop, working to flatten the original image and render Goethe’s profile into a piece of Pop Art. Warhol also uses graphic lines to contour the image and presents a dichotomy between classical portraiture and the resulting Pop aesthetic. By staging Goethe, a figure of the classical past, as a superstar in the present, Warhol reflects on how mass media can change public perception of reality.