Jackson Pollock painting sells for record Ksh24B at auction

By , May 19, 2026

A Jackson Pollock artwork, described as one of history’s “first truly abstract paintings”, has sold at auction for $181m (£135m)-about Ksh24 billion, in New York.

Number 7A, 1948, which went under the hammer at the renowned Christie’s auction house on Monday, May 19, 2026, smashed the previous record for the most a work by the late American artist has taken at auction.

The painting, which came from the private collection of media magnate SI Newhouse, is also now the fourth most expensive artwork ever sold at auction, according to ARTnews.

Also in the collection was a bronze sculpture by Romanian artist Constantin Brancusi, which sold for $107.6m (about Ksh13.9 billion) – the second highest amount a sculpture has ever gone for at auction.

One of the art world’s most recognisable

Pollock, who died in 1956, was a major figure in the abstract expressionist art movement. His drip painting technique is one of the art world’s most recognisable and often imitated.

Jackson Pollock artwork. PHOTO/@AcademicBlock_/X

The previous auction record for one of Pollock’s artworks was $61.2m for his Number 17, 1951 painting, which was sold in 2021. Other pieces have sold for higher prices in private sales.

Christie’s called Number 7A, 1948, which depicts black drips of paint with touches of red on a huge canvas spanning more than three metres, a key piece of art history.

“It is with this work that Pollock finally frees himself from the shackles of conventional easel painting and produces one of the first truly abstract paintings in the history of art,” it wrote in its description of the piece online.

Other artworks sold at the Christie’s auction included pieces by Mark Rothko and Joan Miro, which also both broke previous records for works by the artists at auction.

In a landmark moment for modern art, Jackson Pollock’s Number 7A, 1948, has shattered records by selling for an astonishing Ksh24 billion at Christie’s auction. This iconic splatter masterpiece, featuring bold black drips and touches of red across a vast three-metre canvas, marks Pollock’s revolutionary break from traditional painting, establishing him as a pioneer of pure abstraction.

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