PRICE LIST (TEN PAINTINGS BY ANDY WARHOL FROM THE COLLECTION OF FREDERICK W. HUGHES)
Enamel and acrylic on canvas.
36 x 48" (91.44 x 121.92 cm.)
2010
PRICE LIST (THE REAL MCCOY)
Enamel and acrylic on canvas.
36 x 48" (91.44 x 121.92 cm.)
2010
PRICE LIST (SOTHEBY'S CONTEMPORARY)
Enamel and acrylic on canvas.
36 x 48" (91.44 x 121.92 cm.)
2010
PRICE LIST (GREEN BURNING CAR)
Enamel and acrylic on canvas.
60 X 80" ( 152.4 X 203.2 cm.)
2010
BLACK PRICE LIST (TEN PAINTINGS BY ANDY WARHOL FROM THE COLLECTION OF FREDERICK W. HUGHES)
Enamel and acrylic on canvas.
36 x 48" (91.44 x 121.92 cm.)
2014
PRICE LIST (WARHOL COLLECTION)
Enamel and acrylic on canvas.
36 x 48" (91.44 x 121.92cm.)
2010
PRICE LIST (MICHAEL JACKSON AND BUBBLES)
Enamel and acrylic on canvas.
36 x 48" (91.44 x 121.92cm.)
2010
PRICE LIST (CODE NAME SIMONE)
Enamel and acrylic on canvas.
24 x 36" (60.96 X 91.44 cm.)
2010
PRICE LIST (GREEN 1889)
Enamel and acrylic on canvas in two parts.
34" X 59" (86.3 X 149.8 cm)
2010
NEW VALUES (2007 SALES CHART PAINTING)
Acrylic and enamel on canvas.
50 x 72" (127 x 182.8 cm.)
2010
WELL OILED MACHINE
Acrylic on canvas.
24 x 36" (60.96 x 91.44 cm.)
2010
NEW VALUES (SILVER 2007)
Acrylic enamel and aluminum paint on canvas.
40" x 40" (101.6 c 101.6 cm)
2010
"Specialists"
Automatic process oil paint on jute canvas over panel in 6 parts.
28 x 22" (71.12 x 55.88 cm.) each
2011
Charles Lutz's Price List paintings engage with the abstraction of value transfer within the art market, drawing inspiration from the imagery and content of art auctions and auction catalogs. By repurposing the familiar language of pricing, lot numbers, and auction house vernacular, Lutz creates works that reflect the commodification of art in the contemporary market. These paintings transform the transactional into the visual, blurring the lines between art and commerce. The seemingly cold, numerical structures that populate his compositions mirror the way value is assigned, re-assigned, and inflated in auction houses, where prestige and perception often dictate price over intrinsic artistic merit. Through this strategic appropriation, Lutz questions the complex interplay of economic forces in the art world, offering a critique of how market-driven values shape artistic identity. His work becomes a visual commentary on the fragility of perceived worth, highlighting how the art market, much like any financial system, is influenced by trends, power dynamics, and subjective valuation. The Price List series, then, is not just a reflection of market mechanics, but a nuanced exploration of how art is enmeshed in the complex web of capitalism and cultural capital