
Christie's to host groundbreaking auction featuring only AI art
This marks the first time a major auction house has hosted an exclusive AI art auction. The collection will include a diverse mix of pieces – some of which are NFTs, while others are physical works such as sculptures, paintings, and prints.
Perhaps the most intriguing lot will be 'Emerging Faces' (2017) by Pinar Van Arman, a series of abstract portraits painted by two AI agents. The AI algorithms work together, one generating human faces while the other halts the process once a face is detected. The evocative – even haunting – results are considered among the first to be painted autonomously by neural networks.
Another unique feature of the sale is the inclusion of an interactive robot painting. The 3.7-metre-tall (12 feet) robot, created by Alexander Reben, will be on hand at the Rockefeller Center gallery, where it will paint a new section of the canvas in real time as online bids increase. Starting at just $100, bidders can watch the art take shape as the auction progresses.
Alongside these works, husband-and-wife duo Holly Herndon and Mat Dryhurst will present their Embedding Study' (2024) pieces, which were part of the 2024 Whitney Biennial. These works, which feature a character in a bulky spacesuit, are based on Herndon's appearance and made using a text-to-image AI model.
Though the majority of the pieces are expected to fetch significant sums, there has been some controversy surrounding the auction. Reid Southern, an illustrator, published an open letter calling on artists not to auction works that may have been created using AI models trained on copyrighted works without permission.
'Many of the works you are planning to put up for auction use AI models trained on copyrighted works,' reads the letter, 'AI models and the companies behind them exploit human artists and use their works without permission or compensation to build commercial AI products that compete with artists.'
As of Monday 10 February, the letter had been signed by over 3,400 people, with many citing concerns about the ethics behind using AI in art creation.
For its part, Christie's wrote on X that the sale 'challenges us to rethink the limits of artistic agency'. The auction house is optimistic and is expecting the auction to bring in at least $600,000 (€581,000), with cryptocurrency being accepted as payment for most of the lots.
Christie's has already made its mark in the digital art world, not least with a landmark non-fungible token (NFT) auction in 2021. On 11 March 2021, the auction house made history by selling Beeple's 'Everydays: The First 5000 Days' for a staggering $69 million €66.8 million) – the first major auction house to bring NFTs to the global stage.
In November, Sotheby's New York made waves by selling a painting created by Ai-Da, a humanoid robot powered by AI, for $1,084,800 (€1 million).
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Euronews
02-07-2025
- Euronews
Canaletto masterpiece sells for record €37.8m at Christie's London
A work depicting Venice by 18th-century Italian painter Canaletto has set a new auction record for the artist, selling for £27.5m (€32.6m) - or £31.9m (€37.8m) with fees - at Christie's in London. Titled Venice, the Return of the Bucintoro on Ascension Day (c.1732) and once owned by Britain's first prime minister Robert Walpole, the work exceeded its estimate of $20m. Measuring 86 x 138cm, it's the largest major Canaletto to hit the market in two decades and was bought by a phone bidder via Christie's director Alice de Roquemaurel. The painting was last sold at auction in 1993 for 66m French francs (£7.5m/€12.2m), setting a record in France. Its companion piece sold at Sotheby's in 2005 for £18.6m (€22m), the previous record for a Canaletto. Check out the video above for footage and interviews.


Euronews
27-05-2025
- Euronews
Video. Pink diamond linked to French royalty expected to sell for millions
The 10.38-carat kite-shaped gemstone, believed to have once belonged to Marie Antoinette's daughter, Marie Thérèse of Angoulême, dates back to the mid-18th century. Although no official records confirm its early ownership, the diamond has long been linked to royal lineage. After reappearing at a Geneva auction in 1996, the stone vanished from public view. Now mounted in a ring designed by Parisian jeweller JAR, it is on a world tour with stops in Los Angeles, Geneva, and Hong Kong. Christie's will present the piece on 17 June, expecting bids between €2.8 million and €4.6 million.


Euronews
11-02-2025
- Euronews
Christie's to host groundbreaking auction featuring only AI art
Kicking off on 20 February and running until 5 March, the 'Augmented Intelligence' sale at Christie's in New York will showcase more than 20 works from AI pioneers like Refik Anadol, Pinar Van Arman, and Claire Silver, spanning everything from early neural network experiments to contemporary creations. This marks the first time a major auction house has hosted an exclusive AI art auction. The collection will include a diverse mix of pieces – some of which are NFTs, while others are physical works such as sculptures, paintings, and prints. Perhaps the most intriguing lot will be 'Emerging Faces' (2017) by Pinar Van Arman, a series of abstract portraits painted by two AI agents. The AI algorithms work together, one generating human faces while the other halts the process once a face is detected. The evocative – even haunting – results are considered among the first to be painted autonomously by neural networks. Another unique feature of the sale is the inclusion of an interactive robot painting. The 3.7-metre-tall (12 feet) robot, created by Alexander Reben, will be on hand at the Rockefeller Center gallery, where it will paint a new section of the canvas in real time as online bids increase. Starting at just $100, bidders can watch the art take shape as the auction progresses. Alongside these works, husband-and-wife duo Holly Herndon and Mat Dryhurst will present their Embedding Study' (2024) pieces, which were part of the 2024 Whitney Biennial. These works, which feature a character in a bulky spacesuit, are based on Herndon's appearance and made using a text-to-image AI model. Though the majority of the pieces are expected to fetch significant sums, there has been some controversy surrounding the auction. Reid Southern, an illustrator, published an open letter calling on artists not to auction works that may have been created using AI models trained on copyrighted works without permission. 'Many of the works you are planning to put up for auction use AI models trained on copyrighted works,' reads the letter, 'AI models and the companies behind them exploit human artists and use their works without permission or compensation to build commercial AI products that compete with artists.' As of Monday 10 February, the letter had been signed by over 3,400 people, with many citing concerns about the ethics behind using AI in art creation. For its part, Christie's wrote on X that the sale 'challenges us to rethink the limits of artistic agency'. The auction house is optimistic and is expecting the auction to bring in at least $600,000 (€581,000), with cryptocurrency being accepted as payment for most of the lots. Christie's has already made its mark in the digital art world, not least with a landmark non-fungible token (NFT) auction in 2021. On 11 March 2021, the auction house made history by selling Beeple's 'Everydays: The First 5000 Days' for a staggering $69 million €66.8 million) – the first major auction house to bring NFTs to the global stage. In November, Sotheby's New York made waves by selling a painting created by Ai-Da, a humanoid robot powered by AI, for $1,084,800 (€1 million).