Albert Fullwood Auction Prices and Value Guide
Albert Fullwood auction prices are tracked in Appraisily's artist market index, with source-directory coverage of 376 records. Use this page to review sold-lot activity, market context, and valuation factors before requesting a formal appraisal.
Albert Fullwood auction prices: quick answer
Albert Fullwood auction prices depend on medium, size, date, condition, provenance, edition details, attribution confidence, and recent comparable auction sales.
- Artist
- Albert Fullwood
- Source records
- 376
- Market update
- 2026-02-06
Artist context
About Albert Fullwood
Albert Henry Fullwood (1863–1930) was a painter and etcher recognized for his role in the development of Australian art in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Born in England, Fullwood emigrated to Australia and became closely associated with the Heidelberg School, the movement widely regarded as Australian Impressionism. He painted alongside Tom Roberts and Arthur Streeton and joined them at the artists' camp at Sirius Cove in Sydney, producing landscape and figurative work that captured the distinctive light and character of the Australian environment. During World War I, Fullwood served as an Australian official war artist attached to the 5th Division, creating works that documented military life and operations. His output spans oils, watercolours, and etchings, and his work is held in Australian public collections. Collectors most often encounter Fullwood through his landscape paintings, harbour scenes, and prints.
Heidelberg School (Australian Impressionism)oil paintingetchingwatercolorAustralian landscapewar subjectsSydney Harbour and urban scenes
Common works and media
Common work types encountered at auction and in appraisal contexts include oil paintings of Australian landscapes and Sydney Harbour scenes, watercolour landscapes and figurative studies, and etchings. Fullwood also produced war-related works from his official artist commission. Prints and works on paper appear with some frequency. Collectors should expect to see landscapes, urban scenes, and harbour views as dominant subjects across his output.
Market and appraisal context
Fullwood's work appears regularly in Australian and international auction sales. His association with the Heidelberg School places him within a circle of artists whose paintings attract sustained collector attention, particularly in the Australian market. Works in oil on canvas generally command stronger results than works on paper or prints, though his etchings also have a collector base. Provenance linking a work to the Sirius Cove period or to his war artist service may add historical significance. As with most artists of this era, condition, attribution, subject matter, medium, and documented provenance are the primary factors in determining value. Comparable auction results should be reviewed for individual appraisal.
Auction categories and appraisal factors
Appraisal caveats
- Auction records and price data should be consulted for current market position; no specific price claims are made here.
- Attribution should be verified against catalogue raisonné or expert opinion where available.
- RKD classifies Fullwood as English while Australian sources treat him as Australian; this dual classification may affect how works are catalogued at auction.
Evidence
Sources for artist context
This source-grounded artist context passed Appraisily's promotion threshold: high confidence, strong sources.
- Wikidata library authority
- Wikipedia wikipedia
- Getty Vocabulary Program library authority
- VIAF library authority
- Library of Congress library authority
- RKD library authority
Data basis
This page is built from Appraisily's public auction market index. Private transactions, incomplete sale feeds, and attribution changes may not be fully represented.
Artist value FAQ
How much is Albert Fullwood worth?
Comparable public auction sales are the best starting point, but final value depends on the specific artwork, condition, size, medium, provenance, and attribution confidence.
Can Appraisily value my Albert Fullwood artwork?
Yes. Appraisily can review photos, dimensions, signatures, condition, provenance, and comparable market data to prepare a current valuation.