Maxwell Armfield Auction Prices and Value Guide

Maxwell Armfield auction prices are tracked in Appraisily's artist market index, with source-directory coverage of 202 records. Use this page to review sold-lot activity, market context, and valuation factors before requesting a formal appraisal.

Maxwell Armfield auction prices: quick answer

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

Artist
Maxwell Armfield
Source records
202
Market update
2026-02-06

Artist context

About Maxwell Armfield

Maxwell Ashby Armfield (1881–1972) was an English painter, illustrator, printmaker, and writer whose career spanned more than seven decades. Active from around 1896 until near the end of his life, Armfield worked across a broad range of media, including oil painting, tempera, watercolour, engraving, and book illustration. He is represented in the collection of Tate, London, and his biography appears in major reference works including Bénézit, Thieme/Becker, and the Witt Checklist of British Artists. Armfield's versatility as both a fine artist and a commercial illustrator means his work surfaces in a variety of collecting contexts, from museum holdings to the print and illustration markets.

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Common works and media

Collectors may encounter Armfield's work as oil paintings, tempera panels, watercolours, engraved prints, and published book illustrations. He also produced architectural and design-related work. Signed paintings and limited-edition prints tend to appear most frequently in auction contexts, while his illustration output may be found both as original artwork and within published volumes.

Market and appraisal context

Armfield's work appears regularly at auction, with over 200 recorded lots across major and regional houses. Collectors are most likely to encounter original paintings, prints, and illustrations. Value depends heavily on medium, with original oils and tempera works generally commanding stronger results than prints or book illustrations. Provenance, condition, date of execution, and subject matter are all material factors. His long career means works span a wide date range, and early versus late pieces may differ substantially in style and market interest.

Auction categories and appraisal factors

Value drivers

  1. Medium (oil, tempera, watercolour, print) significantly affects value
  2. Institutional representation (Tate collection) supports long-term market recognition
  3. Illustration work may appear separately from fine art in auction contexts
  4. Long active period (c. 1896–1972) means wide range of dates and styles may be encountered

Appraisal caveats

  • Source pack excerpts did not include detailed auction results or movement affiliations; auction categories and valuation factors are inferred from occupation and institutional data
  • Attribution should be confirmed against signed works and catalogue references, as Armfield worked across painting, printmaking, and illustration

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 Maxwell Armfield

LLM summary index · LLM full index

Artist value FAQ

How much is Maxwell Armfield 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 Maxwell Armfield artwork?

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