American Art

Christie’s American Art department specialises in paintings, sculptures and works on paper from the 19th through early 20th centuries, featuring masterpieces from the Hudson River School, American Impressionism, the American West, Illustration and Modernism.

We hold two curated auctions annually: 19th Century American and Western Art during Americana Week in January and Modern American Art in April. Additionally, important American works are featured in Christie’s marquee 20th/21st Century Week auctions each season, ensuring global exposure. Beyond auctions, we consistently achieve strong results through private sales year-round.

The consistent market leader in American Art, Christie’s holds countless world auction records, including the record for American Art overall with Edward Hopper’s Chop Suey at $91,875,000 (2018) and for any 19th Century American painting with Emanuel Leutze’s Washington Crossing the Delaware at $45,045,000 (2022).

Our unrivalled expertise with single-owner collections has consistently led to historic results, including the record-breaking sales of The David and Peggy Rockefeller Collection, The Barney A. Ebsworth Collection and The Paul G. Allen Collection.
This historic painting depicts a group of soldiers navigating icy waters in a small boat, carrying an American flag as they persevere through challenging conditions.

Upcoming auctions

No upcoming American Art auctions

Our specialists are currently preparing our next American Art auctions. In the meantime, browse results from past auctions.

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Abstract painting with vibrant, multicolored shapes and a luminous yellow orb at the center.

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  • Tylee Abbott

    Tylee Abbott

    Senior Vice President, Head of American Art

    New York

    Tylee Abbott serves as Vice President and Head of the American Art department. In addition to overseeing the department, he assists clients with all aspects of art collecting, from acquisition and sales to appraisals.

    With a particular affinity for Western American Art, Tylee has played key roles in Christie’s marquee single owner auctions The Legend of the West: Iconic Works from the T. Boone Pickens Collection and Visions of the West: American Paintings from the William I. Koch Collection. Notable auction results within these collections include Thomas Moran, Frederic Remington, N.C. Wyeth among others. Tylee has also contributed meaningfully to noteworthy results for artists ranging from Alfred Jacob Miller to Victor Higgins and Rebecca Salsbury James.

    Prior to joining Christie’s, Tylee held roles across the art world, including with another major New York auction company, as an independent art advisor, and at private galleries. He has also authored over 50 articles on the American and Western American Art markets. Tylee holds a Bachelor of Arts degree in Art History and Business from Franklin & Marshall College and a Masters in Art Business from the Sotheby’s Institute of Art – London.
  • Paige Kestenman

    Paige Kestenman

    Vice President, Senior Specialist

    New York

    Paige Kestenman, a Specialist in Christie’s American Art department, is responsible for sourcing and sale curation for the American Art auctions in New York. Paige regularly provides clients with market updates, valuations and proposals for sale, and she works with a wide array of collectors on both auction and private sale acquisitions.

    Since joining Christie’s in 2013, Paige has worked on several important consignments by American Modernist masters, including the world-record Abstraction by Marsden Hartley ($6.7 million), Edward Hopper’s Windy Day ($1.2 million) and Norman Lewis’s Street Scene (a record for a figurative work by the artist at $440,000). Other notable auction sales include Boston School Impressionist Frank Weston Benson’s The Reader ($2.9 million), iconic illustrator Norman Rockwell’s The Christmas Coach ($1 million) and Hudson River School painter Sanford Robinson Gifford’s Mansfield Nose ($519,000). Paige has also assisted clients with private treaty transactions for artists ranging from Rockwell, Milton Avery, Jacob Lawrence and Andrew Wyeth to John Singer Sargent and George Inness.

    Paige earned her Masters in History of Art and Art World Practice: Art, Style and Design with Distinction from Christie’s Education London. She received her Bachelor of Arts from Princeton University with High Honors and is a member of the Sigma Xi Research Society and Phi Beta Kappa Society.
  • Quincie Dixon

    Quincie Dixon

    Associate Specialist, Head of Sale

    New York

    Quincie Dixon, Associate Specialist, Head of Sale, is responsible for running Christie’s dedicated American Art auctions and serving her private and institutional clients with their art collecting, selling and appraisal needs. Quincie has worked in the art and auction field concentrating in American Art for nearly ten years and has been quoted in several financial and art market news outlets. She graduated from Syracuse University with a Bachelor’s degree in Art History.

    Prior to joining Christie’s, Quincie worked for another major auction house as well as a prominent American Art dealer. She joined the Christie’s American Art department in 2018 as a Cataloguer when her first auction was the record-breaking sale of The Barney A. Ebsworth Collection in which the department achieved an historic $91,875,000 for Edward Hopper’s Chop Suey, still the record price for a work of American Art. Since then, Quincie has worked with the department on sourcing, appraising, researching, cataloging and selling property across both the private sale and auction channels and has been involved in the department’s most notable single-owner collection sales including but not limited to The T. Boone Pickens Collection, The Knobloch Collection, The Ann & Gordon Getty Collection, The Ted Shen Collection and importantly The Paul G. Allen Collection, which cemented several of the department’s world auction records including Andrew Wyeth’s Day Dream at $23,290,000. In the private sale context, Quincie has been involved in transactions for a wide range of artists up to the eight-figure price point and has experience with the placement of works in major institutions.
  • Emma Carrig

    Emma Carrig

    Cataloguer

    New York

    Emma Carrig is the cataloguer for the American Art department in New York. She is responsible for researching and cataloguing all property for auction and private sales. Before joining Christie's in 2022, Emma received her Bachelor's degree from New York University, where she studied Art History and Media, Culture and Communications.
  • Eric P. Widing

    Eric P. Widing

    Deputy Chairman

    New York

    As Deputy Chairman and one-time head of our American Paintings Department, Eric Widing has worked at Christie’s for over twenty-five years. His interest in art started early, when at the age of eleven he purchased his first art book, an exhibition catalogue of the paintings of Andrew Wyeth. Prior to joining Christie’s, Mr. Widing worked for seventeen years as a dealer in American Art, including eleven years as the director of the Richard York Gallery. In 1998, he established his own gallery, Widing & Peck Fine Art, on East 66th Street. His gallery represented the estate of George Bellows and handled important American art from 1750 to 1950. In all, Mr. Widing has devoted 43 years to the American art business.

    Mr. Widing’s responsibilities as Deputy Chairman focus primarily on the American Paintings Department. Additionally, he works closely with colleagues across many business categories at Christie’s.

    During his tenure, Christie's American Paintings became a market leader in the field, establishing new world records for hundreds of artists in virtually every category of American art. In 2018, among major collections managed by Mr. Widing and the Christie’s team was the Collection of David and Peggy Rockefeller, which achieved $114,000,000 for its American art alone – a record immediately succeeded by the sale of American art from the Barney A. Ebsworth Collection, which achieved $323,103,500. Among the Ebsworth highlights was Hopper’s Chop Suey, which sold for $91,875,000, becoming the most expensive pre-war American artwork ever sold at auction. More recently, with the sale of American paintings included in the epic “Visionary: The Paul G. Allen Collection” sale, Mr. Widing and his team auctioned works by Andrew Wyeth, Georgia O’Keeffe, and many others. The American art in the collection realized $108,455,000.

    Private sales also continue to play a major role in American art at Christie’s, encompassing both the sale of individual artworks and entire collections, often led by Mr. Widing. Perhaps most notably, he was one of the team of two which sold Thomas Eakins’ The Gross Clinic in 2006 for $68,000,000, still the highest private sale price ever achieved for a work of art of 19th-Century American Painting.

    A recognized authority on American painting and sculpture, Mr. Widing is the author of a chapter entitled ‘Connoisseurship and Quality in American Art’ published in “American Art: Collecting and Connoisseurship” (London, 2020). He has been quoted in The New Yorker, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Antiques and The Arts Weekly, Art + Auction, Architectural Digest, Town & Country, The Art Newsletter, The Maine Antiques Digest, The Huffington Post and numerous other newspapers and magazines.

    Mr. Widing has been interviewed by National Public Radio and has appeared on Bloomberg TV. He continues to be a frequent source of information on the American field. Mr. Widing has also lectured widely at museums across the country and on occasion to university students. He is a graduate of Williams College, where he was elected to Phi Beta Kappa and was awarded the Karl E. Weston prize for his senior thesis in Art History.

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