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Ladies And Gentlemen (F. & S. II.131) - Signed Print by Andy Warhol 1975 - MyArtBroker

Ladies And Gentlemen (F. & S. II.131)
Signed Print

Andy Warhol

£8,000-£12,000Value Indicator

$17,000-$25,000 Value Indicator

$15,000-$22,000 Value Indicator

¥80,000-¥120,000 Value Indicator

9,500-14,000 Value Indicator

$90,000-$130,000 Value Indicator

¥1,590,000-¥2,390,000 Value Indicator

$11,000-$16,000 Value Indicator

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110 x 73cm, Edition of 125, Screenprint

Medium: Screenprint
Edition size: 125
Year: 1975
Size: H 110cm x W 73cm
Signed: Yes
Format: Signed Print
Last Auction: May 2025
Value Trend:
27% AAGR

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

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4 in network
5 want this
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Auction Results

Auction Date
Auction House
Location
Return to Seller
Hammer Price
Buyer Paid
May 2025
Artcurial
France
£6,310
£7,424
£9,354
November 2024
Lempertz, Cologne
Germany
October 2024
Phillips New York
United States
November 2023
Il Ponte Auction House, Via Pontaccio
Italy
May 2023
Bolaffi Auctions
Italy
October 2022
Wright
United States
June 2021
Van Ham Fine Art Auctions
Germany
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Track auction value trend

The value of Andy Warhol's Ladies And Gentlemen (F. & S. II.131) (signed) is estimated to be worth between £8,000 and £12,000. Over the past 12 months, the artwork has sold 3 times with an average selling price of £7,957. In the last five years, the hammer price has ranged from £5,648 in November 2024 to £12,226 in May 2023. This screenprint has shown consistent value growth, with an impressive average annual growth rate of 27%. This work is part of a limited edition of 125.

Created with Highcharts 11.4.8Jun 2021Feb 2022Oct 2022May 2023Jan 2024Sep 2024May 2025£5,000£6,000£7,000£8,000£9,000£10,000© MyArtBroker

Meaning & Analysis

The Italian art dealer Luciano Anselmino who commissioned Warhol to complete the series, stipulated that he wanted the portraits to feature New York drag queens, but suggested that it was to be ‘impersonal’ and ‘anonymous’. The commission also specified that the models were not to be drag queens who resembled beautiful cisgender women, nor did he want them to be higher profile members of the drag community. The names and identities of the models therefore remained anonymous until 2014, when the Warhol Foundation published an official list of all the Ladies and Gentlemen paintings.

Despite their anonymity, each model in Ladies & Gentlemen is striking and unique. Warhol’s print of Iris is overlain with blocks of vivid colour to bring a sense of joy and flamboyance to the portrait. The deliberately misaligned layers of colour that spill beyond the lines of the photographic screen print, adeptly capture the theatricality of drag and gender performance that Warhol was trying to explore.

  • Andy Warhol was a leading figure of the Pop Art movement and is often considered the father of Pop Art. Born in 1928, Warhol allowed cultural references of the 20th century to drive his work. From the depiction of glamorous public figures, such as Marilyn Monroe, to the everyday Campbell’s Soup Can, the artist challenged what was considered art by blurring the boundaries between high art and mass consumerism. Warhol's preferred screen printing technique further reiterated his obsession with mass culture, enabling art to be seen as somewhat of a commodity through the reproduced images in multiple colour ways.

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