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Andy Mouse 4 - Signed Print by Keith Haring 1986 - MyArtBroker

Andy Mouse 4
Signed Print

Keith Haring

£160,000-£240,000Value Indicator

$330,000-$500,000 Value Indicator

$300,000-$440,000 Value Indicator

¥1,540,000-¥2,320,000 Value Indicator

€190,000-€280,000 Value Indicator

$1,690,000-$2,530,000 Value Indicator

¥31,290,000-¥46,940,000 Value Indicator

$210,000-$320,000 Value Indicator

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96 x 96cm, Edition of 30, Screenprint

Medium: Screenprint

Edition size: 30

Year: 1986

Size: H 96cm x W 96cm

Signed: Yes

Format: Signed Print

Last Auction: March 2023

Value Trend:

2% AAGR

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

TradingFloor

6 in network
4 want this
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Auction Results

Auction Date
Auction House
Location
Return to Seller
Hammer Price
Buyer Paid
March 2023
Christie's London
United Kingdom
£160,650
£189,000
£226,800
September 2022
SBI Art Auction
Japan
July 2020
Ketterer Kunst Hamburg
Germany
February 2019
Wright
United States
April 2016
Christie's New York
United States
November 2010
Germann Auctions
Switzerland
MyPortfolio
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The value of Keith Haring’s Andy Mouse 4 (signed) is estimated to be worth between £160,000 and £240,000. This screenprint, created in 1986, has shown consistent value growth, with an annual average growth rate of 4%. This is a rare artwork with an auction history of 6 total sales since its entry to the market on 23rd November 2010. In the past five years, the hammer price has ranged from £121,056 in September 2022 to £189,000 in March 2023. The average annual growth rate is 4% and the edition size is limited to 30.

Created with Highcharts 11.4.8Nov 2010Dec 2012Dec 2014Jan 2017Feb 2019Feb 2021Mar 2023£120,000£140,000£160,000£180,000£200,000£220,000£240,000© MyArtBroker

Meaning & Analysis

The final print in the Andy Mouse series features a perhaps disgruntled Warhol figure standing with his hands on his hips and wearing Mickey Mouse ears and shorts. His signature spiky wig and sunglasses help to identify this as the father of Pop Art, along with the bold colours of the screen print. The work can be read as a tribute to Warhol, whose influence on Haring was undeniable, and to the cartoons of Walt Disney which Haring began copying from a young age. It is perhaps these two factors that had the most impact on Haring as an artist and here they are joined in a celebratory image of energy and creativity.

The figure of Andy Mouse also features a dollar bill sign on his chest, representing both artists’ knowing relationship with commercialism. Not one to adhere to the distinctions between the so-called ‘high’ and ‘low’ art, Haring believed that art should be for the masses rather than the elite few. To this end he began his career by working in the street, painting murals for the enjoyment of passersby. Even as he achieved some critical and commercial success, Haring continued to make his art available to the everyman by opening a series of Pop Shops in which kids and collectors alike could shop for his signature works on badges, t-shirts and figurines for as little as 50 cents. This drive towards mass consumption was in part due to Warhol’s pioneering work in the 60s where he elevated screen printing from a commercial process to a fine art.

Haring began screen printing in 1983 after some initial experiments with lithography and began to work with publishers across the US and Europe, producing ever more inventive and daring work. Printed in an edition of 30, each sheet from the Andy Mouse series demonstrates an element of precision that shows the level of care with which he supervised the process.

  • Keith Haring was a luminary of the 1980s downtown New York scene. His distinctive visual language pioneered one-line Pop Art drawings and he has been famed for his colourful, playful imagery. Haring's iconic energetic motifs and figures were dedicated to influencing social change, and particularly challenging stigma around the AIDS epidemic. Haring also pushed for the accessibility of art by opening Pop Shops in New York and Japan, selling a range of ephemera starting from as little as 50 cents. Haring's legacy has been cemented in the art-activism scene and is a testament to power of art to inspire social change