Gino Romiti Auction Prices and Value Guide

Gino Romiti auction prices are tracked in Appraisily's artist market index, with source-directory coverage of 239 records. Use this page to review sold-lot activity, market context, and valuation factors before requesting a formal appraisal.

Gino Romiti auction prices: quick answer

Gino Romiti auction prices depend on medium, size, date, condition, provenance, edition details, attribution confidence, and recent comparable auction sales.

Artist
Gino Romiti
Source records
239
Market update
2026-02-16

Artist context

About Gino Romiti

Gino Romiti (1881–1967) was an Italian painter born and active in Livorno, Tuscany. He trained under Giovanni Fattori, one of the leading figures of the Macchiaioli movement, and Guglielmo Micheli, a Livornese painter and teacher whose students also included Amedeo Modigliani. This artistic lineage places Romiti firmly within the Livornese post-Macchiaioli tradition, a regional current that extended the Macchiaioli emphasis on light, tonal contrast, and direct observation of everyday life into the early twentieth century. Romiti worked across several genres—landscapes, marine views, genre scenes, and animal subjects—reflecting both the Tuscan countryside and the coastal character of his native city. His work is documented in the RKD Netherlands Institute for Art History and referenced in standard biographical dictionaries including Thieme/Becker and Vollmer. Collectors most often encounter Romiti's paintings through Italian and European auction houses.

Post-Macchiaioli (Livorno school)oil paintinglandscapegenre paintingmarineanimal representation

Common works and media

Romiti is best known for oil paintings depicting Tuscan landscapes, Livorno's coastal and harbor scenes (marine views), genre paintings of everyday life, and animal subjects. These are the categories most likely to appear at auction or in appraisal contexts. Works are typically on canvas or panel. No dedicated catalogue raisonné is referenced in available sources, so attribution relies on stylistic analysis and provenance documentation.

Market and appraisal context

Romiti's paintings appear with moderate frequency at auction, particularly in sales of Italian 19th- and 20th-century art. His landscapes, marine subjects, and genre scenes are the works most commonly offered. Valuation depends on factors including subject matter, scale, condition, provenance, and whether a work can be securely attributed. Comparable sales from the Livorno school and broader post-Macchiaioli circle can help establish market context. Collectors should verify attribution and request condition reports, especially for works lacking gallery or auction-house provenance.

Auction categories and appraisal factors

Appraisal caveats

  • No specific auction records or realized prices are available in the collected source pack. Market estimates should reference comparable Livorno-school and post-Macchiaioli sales.
  • Romiti's auction presence is moderate (239 records in the Appraisily database), suggesting regular but not high-volume turnover.

Evidence

Sources for artist context

This source-grounded artist context passed Appraisily's promotion threshold: high confidence, strong sources.

Source-grounded artist Markdown

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.

LLM-readable Markdown summary for Gino Romiti

LLM summary index · LLM full index

Artist value FAQ

How much is Gino Romiti 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 Gino Romiti artwork?

Yes. Appraisily can review photos, dimensions, signatures, condition, provenance, and comparable market data to prepare a current valuation.