Auty, G. March 7-8 1998 “Late Desert Flowers’, The Weekend Australian: p25
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Grishin, S. Not the Best of Kngwarreye, Canberra Times, February 26th 1999
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Emily Kame Kngwarreye’s position at the apex of the Australian art market is now firmly established. Recent auction activity confirms a market that has entered a phase of maturity. Particularly since 2023, sales results demonstrate a pattern of consolidation, characterized by selective competition, strong prices for quality works and continued international interest.
Following her death in 1996, Emily’s prices surged but then stabilized during the late 1990s while curators and critics reappraised her work. After a spate of adverse publicity that characterized many works as either failures, fakes, or ‘School of Emily’ paintings i.e. those created by other clanswomen, the market became divisive and highly sensitized, with a significant proportion of collectors willing only to purchase works with a very restricted range of provenance. Sotheby’s preference for works that were produced for CAAMA, and the Holts at Delmore Downs, for instance, prejudiced even the best of the paintings that came from other legitimate sources.
Yet the tide had well and truly turned by 2004. Total sales at auction that year reached $2,072,538 due to Christies, Lawson Menzies, Shapiro and Bonhams and Goodman all joining Sotheby’s with specialist auctions. This grew to a whopping $3,477,394 in 2017. In 2007, Lawson-Menzies sold Earth’s Creation 1995, for $1,056,000, more than double Kngwarreye’s previous record. It marked the first time an Indigenous Australian artwork had exceeded the $1 million dollar mark at a public sale and this stood as the highest price ever paid for a work of art by any Australian female...that is until the same work sold in 2017 for $2,100,000, thereby doubling the former record. It reflects the astonishing premium still paid for Emily’s major paintings from her 1990-1996 period.
Emily’s market had broadened but also recalibrated itself towards quality, scale, and a more inclusive provenance. This has resulted in a more stratified but ultimately more resilient market structure. Yet, of the 1,523 individual paintings offered for sale through auction houses since her career began; the majority have been valued below $90,000. This is due to both the large number of smaller works that she produced, and the relative rarity of those major pieces. Her sale success rate hovers consistently just over 60%, (presently at 64%) despite major auction houses vetting the works heavily and dismissing any other than the best works carrying preferred provenance.
In 2019, however, 74% of all works sold for an average price of $99,254 on the back of two exceptional results at the first Sotheby’s auction in New York: Summer Celebration, a magnificent 121 x 302 cm palimpsest sold for $863,544.00 while an Untitled early Delmore work measuring 212 x 123 cm sold for A$507,115. Things have escalated from here, with ongoing liquidity in all sectors of the market and a rearrangement of her top ten sales within the last five years, including 3 major sales in 2025, with total sales that year reaching $5,145,279, more than doubling the yearly sales of her closest rivals.
Since Emily emerged as a major force in contemporary Aboriginal painting in the late 1980s, her international recognition and renown have shown no sign of abating. Her inclusion in the Venice Biennale and her retrospective exhibitions have reinforced this. Her reputation was significantly advanced during 2008 with the landmark exhibition curated by Margo Neale of the National Museum of Australia which toured Osaka and Tokyo. By the end of 2015 she drawn so far ahead as the markets leading artist that she is unlikely to be drawn back to the field.
Her work, Earth’s Creation I, 1994, (still top sale) was included in the Director’s exhibition at the Venice Biennale and was included in the major exhibition Women in Abstraction at the Centre Pompidou in Paris, 2021. Her 2023 –2024 retrospective at Australia National Gallery toured to the Tate, London 2025. The importance of her international retrospectives cannot be overstated. They presented Emily Kngwarreye as one of the greatest international contemporary artists of the twentieth century.
Quite a few works have been offered for sale on numerous occasions. Earth’s Creation II, a multipaneled painting in predominantly blue tones was produced during the same workshop as Earth’s Creation I. When originally offered in 2007 through Lawson~Menzies the work sold for $336,000 then a year later it sold through Deutscher-Menzies for $360,000. In 2011 this same work was re-offered through Menzies and sold for only $226,727. A rare loss for one of Rod Menzies’ ‘notorious’ buyer groups. However, in 2018, it was back up to $294,545; and as recently as 2023 it sold for $859,091 at Art Leven in the deaccession sale of a prominent collector, way ahead of its giveaway estimate of $400,000 –$600,000. [Such are the intrigues of the auction market]. The colourful Untitled (Awelye)1992, (now second in Emily’s top ten sales) sold for $204, 000 in 2011, dropped down to $168,000 in 2013, then soared up to $1,196,591 in 2025, nearly double its top estimate) all with Deutscher and Hackett.
It is now thirty years since the artist’s death, and enough time has elapsed for the story of her career and those who worked with her to have been thoroughly examined. There is no doubt that Emily Kngwarreye painted wonderful works for a variety of dealers. Most importantly, works produced for Fred Torres with Dacou Gallery provenance; for Hank Ebes with AGOD provenance have been greatly undervalued in the market. The best of these works would seem to represent fantastic value. Overall, the market for high quality works by the artist remains strong despite the emergence of equally gestural painters from the Eastern and far Western deserts, whose works sell at much lower prices. While early works will always fetch a premium over paintings of similar size from other periods, exceptional late career works are yet to be fully tested. These include the final series of 22 paintings completed immediately prior to her death. As these are released onto the market, they are bound to create a sensation.
Rank #1Cumulative AAMI 161.30
Annual AAMI rating by year — hover or tap a bar for the exact figure.
How the AAMI rating is calculated
The AAMI (Aboriginal Art Market Index) measures an artist’s auction performance each year. Each annual rating combines the value of works sold (total sales and clearance rate), the number of works offered, and the average price achieved — with adjustments that temper thin trading years and a rising annual price threshold, so results stay comparable over time. The yearly ratings are added together into an artist’s Cumulative AAMI score, which determines their rank in the index.