One of the most expensive selfies bought for $30.1M

A prospective buyer browses gallery space featuring Andy Warhol's Six Self Portraits and Jeff Koons' Popeye during a preview exhibition for Sotheby's Spring Evening Sale of impressionistic and modern art, Friday, May 2, 2014, in New York. The sale will begin on May 7. AP/Julie Jacobson

NEW YORK — What's a selfie worth? If it's from Andy Warhol and made with a silkscreen rather than a smartphone, the answer is millions.

A series of six of the eccentric American artist's self-portraits sold at auction Wednesday in New York for $30.1 million.

Warhol made the vibrant images of himself wearing his famous "fright wig" in 1986 — a year before his death and just over a quarter-century before the Oxford English Dictionary made the suddenly ubiquitous "selfie" its word of the year.

Warhol's trailblazing, if not technologically parallel, take led the bidding at Sotheby's contemporary art auction and capped a triumphant week for his work.

The artist's 1960s work "Big Electric Chair," which shows an execution chamber against panels of blue, green and pink fetched $20.4 million at the same Sotheby's auction. His "12 Mona Lisas" went for $11.4 million.

Two other works from Warhol's "Death and Disaster" series sold Tuesday at Christie's for a combined $100 million.

"Race Riot, 1964" — a four-panel painting of unrest in Alabama — went for $62.9 million at Christie's auction of postwar and contemporary works.

His 1962 painting "White Marilyn," completed shortly after Hollywood star Marilyn Monroe took her life, sold for $41 million.

In all, Sotheby's sold 67 pieces Wednesday for a total of $364.4 million.

All prices included the buyer's premium.

German painter Gerhard Richter's "Blau" sold Wednesday for $28.7 million, about $9 million shy of his auction record set last year at Sotheby's.

Jeff Koons' 7-foot-tall stainless steel sculpture of the spinach-loving cartoon character "Popeye" went for $28.2 million. His "Jim Beam J.B. Turner Train," a 9½ -foot-long-stainless steel sculpture filled with bourbon, sold Tuesday for $33.8 million.

Jean-Michel Basquiat's "Undiscovered Genius of the Mississippi Delta" sold Wednesday for $23.7 million.

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