Christie’s AI art auction outpaces expectations, bringing in more than $728,000
In all, 28 of the Augmented Intelligence sale’s 34 lots found buyers, including pieces by Refik Anadol, Charles Csuri and Harold Cohen
5 March 2025

Christie’s Augmented Intelligence sale, its first dedicated to art made using artificial intelligence (AI), which ran from 20 February until 5 March, has been contentious to say the least. An open letter posted online on 8 February and garnering almost 6,500 signatures called on Christie’s to cancel the auction (it did not).
“Many of the artworks you plan to auction were created using AI models that are known to be trained on copyrighted work without a license,” the (brief) letter alleges. “These models, and the companies behind them, exploit human artists, using their work without permission or payment to build commercial AI products that compete with them.”
The letter was addressed to Christie’s digital art specialists and heads of sale Nicole Sales Giles and Sebastian Sanchez. In February, a spokesperson for the auction house told The Art Newspaper: “The artists represented in this sale all have strong, existing multidisciplinary art practices, some recognised in leading museum collections. The works in this auction are using artificial intelligence to enhance their bodies of work.”

But, as the saying goes, all publicity is good publicity and the controversy spilt an unusual amount of ink on the usually dry subject of an online timed auction. The sale, which finished earlier today, contained 34 lots dating from the 1960s to today and totalled a middling $728,784 (with fees), against a pre-sale low estimate of $600,000 (calculated without fees).
Speaking after the sale, Sales Giles said in a statement: “With this project, our goal was to spotlight the brilliant creative voices pushing the boundaries of technology and art. We also hoped collectors and the wider community would recognize their influence and significance in today’s artistic landscape. The results of this sale confirmed that they did.”

Then there was Holly Herndon and Mat Dryhurst’s Embedding Study 1 2 (from the xhairymutantx series), commissioned for last year’s Whitney Biennial, which sold for $94,500 (with fees) against an estimate of $70,000-$90,000. The work depicts a cartoonish version of Herndon in a spacesuit-cum-Michelin Man outfit, part of a series produced by a text-to-image AI model trained on altered images of Herndon.
The earliest work in the sale was Charles Csuri’s Bspline Men (1966), an experimental figurative work of a bearded man made using a B-spline, a mathematical function. The ink-on-paper work came from the estate of Csuri, a pioneer of generative art, and sold for $50,400 with fees (est $55,000-$65,000).
Another early work on offer was Harold Cohen’s Untitled (i23-3758), an ink-on-paper piece made in 1987 using Cohen’s own AI drawing programme AARON, developed in the late 1960s. The drawing sold for $11,340 with fees (est $10,000-$15,000).
Six lots in the auction failed to sell: Robbie Barrat and Ronan Barrot’s Infinite Skull #21 (est $10,000-$15,000); Pindar Van Arman’s Emerging Faces (est $180,000-$250,000 — the highest estimate in the sale); Jake Elwes’s Zizi – Queering the Dataset (est $18,000-$25,000); Huemin’s Dream-0 #9 (est $30,000-$50,000); Botto’s Siamese Cycle in Absurdism (est $20,000-$30,000) and Ivona Tau’s Nightcall (Not AI) (est $7,000-$10,000).
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