Marie Marevna Auction Prices and Value Guide
Marie Marevna auction prices are tracked in Appraisily's artist market index, with source-directory coverage of 486 records. Use this page to review sold-lot activity, market context, and valuation factors before requesting a formal appraisal.
Marie Marevna auction prices: quick answer
Marie Marevna auction prices depend on medium, size, date, condition, provenance, edition details, attribution confidence, and recent comparable auction sales.
- Artist
- Marie Marevna
- Source records
- 486
- Market update
- 2026-02-06
Artist context
About Marie Marevna
Marie Marevna, born Maria Bronislavovna Vorobyeva-Stebelska in 1892 in Cheboksary, Russia, was a painter, sculptor, and graphic artist whose career spanned more than seven decades. Working under the mononym Marevna, she became associated with Cubism and Pointillism during the transformative early 20th century. She left Russia for France around 1912, entering the vibrant Montparnasse art community, and later lived in Dorset and London, where she died in 1984. Marevna trained formally around 1910 and maintained an active practice across painting, sculpture, and graphic media. Her cross-cultural biography—Russian-born, artistically formed in Paris, and long resident in England—places her within the broader École de Paris milieu. Collectors today encounter her work primarily through auction markets and institutional collections, with over 480 recorded lots.
CubismPointillismOil paintingSculptureGraphic art
Common works and media
Marevna produced oil paintings, works on paper, graphic prints, and sculpture. Her paintings frequently reflect Cubist fragmentation and Pointillist color techniques. Portrait and figure subjects are common, consistent with her Montparnasse-era practice. Works may be signed simply Marevna. Collectors may also encounter smaller-scale drawings, lithographs, and mixed-media pieces in auction and appraisal contexts.
Market and appraisal context
Marevna's work appears regularly at auction, with hundreds of lots recorded. Paintings—especially oil-on-canvas works reflecting her Cubist and Pointillist influences—tend to attract the strongest interest. Her graphic art and sculpture also surface in sale rooms. Provenance connecting works to her Paris years or notable Montparnasse associates can affect collector appeal. As with many early 20th-century modernists, condition, attribution, and documented exhibition history are important appraisal factors. Signed works using her mononymous Marevna signature should be verified against known examples.
Auction categories and appraisal factors
Appraisal caveats
- Market data drawn from auction-house records should be consulted for realized prices; no specific price trend is claimed here.
- Attribution should be verified for unsigned or monogrammed works, as Marevna used a mononymous signature.
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 (Netherlands Institute for Art History) 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 Marie Marevna 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 Marie Marevna artwork?
Yes. Appraisily can review photos, dimensions, signatures, condition, provenance, and comparable market data to prepare a current valuation.