# Peter Phillips artist context and auction value notes

Canonical page: https://appraisily.com/artist/peter-phillips/
Profile generated: 2026-05-12T01:51:26.690Z
Quality: high confidence, strong sources

## Artist identity

- Nationality: British, English
- Movements: Pop Art
- Common media: Oil on canvas, Collage, Multi-media compositions, Prints, Sculpture

## About Peter Phillips

Peter Phillips (1939–2025) was an English painter, collage artist, and sculptor recognized as a leading figure in British Pop Art. Born in Birmingham, he studied at the Birmingham College of Art (1955–1959) before attending the Royal College of Art in London (1959–1962), where he was a contemporary of David Hockney, Allen Jones, and Derek Boshier. Phillips's work spans conventional oil paintings, multi-media compositions, collages, prints, and sculptural forms, drawing on consumer culture, pin-up imagery, and mechanical reproduction. His paintings are held in major public collections including the Museum of Modern Art in New York and Tate in London. Active from the late 1950s through the 2000s, Phillips maintained an extensive exhibition career and an official catalogue of works organized by decade.

## Common works and media

Phillips produced oil paintings on canvas, mixed-media and collage compositions, limited-edition prints, and sculptural works. Common subjects include stylized figures, consumer-goods motifs, and mechanical or automotive forms rendered with a hard-edged, graphic quality. His prints, typically screenprints or lithographs, appear regularly at auction. Works span the 1950s through the 2000s, with the 1960s Pop period being the most widely recognized and traded.

## Market and appraisal context

Peter Phillips's work appears at auction primarily within Post-War and Contemporary Art and Prints and Multiples sales. His early Pop Art paintings from the 1960s tend to attract the strongest collector interest and highest realized prices. Later works, prints, and editions offer more accessible entry points. Valuation factors include the work's medium and scale, its period of creation, exhibition and publication history, provenance continuity, and condition. The artist's official site provides Certificates of Authenticity, which can assist in verifying attribution. Collectors should consult published auction records for comparable sale results.

## Appraisily data basis

Appraisily artist pages combine verified artist identity research from museum, library-authority, and institutional sources with public auction records, auction-house context, sale dates, realized prices, and comparable lots when those records are available. For Peter Phillips, identity data is grounded in records from MoMA, Tate, Getty ULAN, VIAF, the Library of Congress, the RKD, and the artist's official site.

## Sources

- Wikidata: https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q5482171
- RKD – Netherlands Institute for Art History: https://rkd.nl/en/explore/artists/63204
- The Museum of Modern Art: https://www.moma.org/artists/4602
- Tate: https://www.tate.org.uk/art/artists/peter-phillips-1763
- Getty Vocabulary Program: https://vocab.getty.edu/page/ulan/500001509
- VIAF: https://viaf.org/viaf/92377914/
- Peter Phillips: https://www.peterphillips.com/
- Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Phillips_(artist)
