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Flowers II - Signed Print by Keith Haring 1990 - MyArtBroker

Flowers II
Signed Print

Keith Haring

£15,000-£23,000Value Indicator

$30,000-$45,000 Value Indicator

$27,000-$40,000 Value Indicator

¥140,000-¥210,000 Value Indicator

18,000-28,000 Value Indicator

$150,000-$230,000 Value Indicator

¥2,840,000-¥4,350,000 Value Indicator

$19,000-$29,000 Value Indicator

11% AAGR

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

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Medium: Screenprint

Edition size: 100

Year: 1990

Size: H 100cm x W 130cm

Signed: Yes

Format: Signed Print

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The value of Keith Haring’s Flowers II (signed) is estimated to be worth between £15,000 to £23,000. This screenprint, created in 1990, has been sold 4 times at auction since its initial sale on 29th September 2005. The edition size of this artwork is limited to 100.

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Auction Results

Auction DateAuction HouseLocation
Hammer Price
Return to Seller
Buyer Paid
April 2016Sotheby's London United Kingdom
May 2009Bonhams San Francisco United States
May 2008Sotheby's New York United States
September 2005Christie's New York United States

Meaning & Analysis

The Flowers series is an example of Haring’s expression of his own AIDS diagnosis and bodily suffering. Acknowledging the legacy of the Abstract Expressionists, Haring creates gestural strokes and ‘accidental’ drip lines to produce an emotionally charged image that relates to his feelings around his diagnosis. The flower figures that Haring carefully chooses as his subject matter throughout the print series, are deliberately ambiguous in their phallic nature and in their abstractness, this series if markedly different from his explicitly activist works such as Fight AIDS Worldwide (1990).

In this print the flower-like shapes are used as symbols of nature’s ephemerality and the fleeting impermanence of human life. In rendering the subjects to look phallic, Haring makes clear the stigma experienced by homosexual men during the HIV/AIDS epidemic and the way in which their sexuality was weaponised in relation to death and the fragility of life.

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