A lady in a bonnet is shaking up the art world.
When "After Lunch," Berthe Morisot's portrait of a doe-eyed woman, sold for 
$10.9 million in February, it set a record as the most expensive work ever sold 
by a female artist at auction. It also helped power a wave of interest among 
collectors and dealers looking to identify undervalued female artists.
 Yayoi 
Kusama/David Zwirner, Victoria Miro Gallery, Ota Fine Arts, Yayoi Kusama Studio 
Inc.
Yayoi 
Kusama/David Zwirner, Victoria Miro Gallery, Ota Fine Arts, Yayoi Kusama Studio 
Inc. 
YAYOI KUSAMA: The 84-year-old is the top-selling living 
female artist of all time, fetching $118 million total at 
auction.
 
 
 
A woman's signature in the bottom corner of a painting has long spelled a 
bargain—men in the same artistic school or period can fetch more than 10 times 
the price of a woman's best sale. While an age-old debate rages over whether 
talent, sexism or lack of promotion has held many women out of the art world's 
boys club, everyone agrees that prices for female artists have always lagged 
behind those of their male counterparts.
Today's flourishing art market—marked by last year's record-setting sale at 
auction of Edvard Munch's "The Scream" for nearly $120 million—has lifted prices 
for male and female artists alike. As the supply of great pictures diminishes, 
more collectors are priced out of blue-chip works and are combing the market for 
previously overlooked names. A number of highly regarded women artists are 
seeing their prices rise as a result.
"Remember 'plastics' from 'The Graduate'? It should be 'women,' " says Tony 
Podesta, the Washington lobbyist who is one of a handful of collectors 
aggressively buying work by women artists.
This winter, a painting by Berthe Morisot sold for $11 
million--the most ever paid for a woman's artwork at auction. Along with other 
big art-market moments for women in recent years, the record has auction houses 
and dealers re-examining this historically undervalued niche. Ellen Gamerman 
reports.
 
 
The records are toppling. Nine of the top 10 auction sales of work by women 
occurred within the last five years. The last two years marked record-high 
prices at auction for artists including Joan Mitchell, Tamara de Lempicka, 
Louise Bourgeois, Irma Stern, Barbara Kruger, Sherrie Levine, Helen 
Frankenthaler, Rosemarie Trockel and Louise Lawler.
Auction experts and collectors are anxious to see how three Morisot paintings 
will sell next month during Impressionist and modern sales in New York, two at 
Sotheby's 
BID +2.20%and one 
at Christie's.
"Whereas before we looked at female artists as the land of opportunity, with 
prices like these, collectors say the window is closing for gender-specificity 
bargain buying," says Gabriela Palmieri, a senior vice president and 
contemporary-art specialist at Sotheby's.
 Cindy 
Sherman/Metro Pictures
Cindy 
Sherman/Metro Pictures 
CINDY SHERMAN: In 2011, the artist was the auction 
world's highest-priced photographer, male or female, with a $3.9 million sale. 
Here, the artist models in an untitled portrait.
 
 
 
Spanning centuries and a wide variety of styles, work by women is hardly a 
cohesive market category. Still, some collectors eagerly seek out female 
artwork.
Prominent women like Wal-Mart 
WMT +1.47%heiress 
Alice Walton, pop queen Madonna and 
songstress Barbra Streisand have long collected work by women. Barbara Lee, a 
national activist for women in politics, has filled her collection almost 
entirely with work by women partly to support artists she believes are 
underrepresented by museums and galleries. She recalled visiting Louise 
Bourgeois's studio in the early 1990s. "It was filled with sculpture from every 
period of her life—no one had purchased it," says Ms. Lee.
Others have less-altruistic motives. "A lot of collectors look for 
undervalued groups of art, and women could easily be considered the last big 
group," says Michel Witmer, a New York collector and board member of the 
European Fine Art Fair.
Dealers and auction experts are using several tactics as they scour the 
market. One is to find female artists whose works, backgrounds or artistic 
movements mirror those of prohibitively expensive male artists. These artists 
include: Joan Mitchell, who worked in the shadows of Willem de Kooning and 
Jackson Pollock; Natalia Goncharova, one of the turn-of-the-century Russian 
artists led by Wassily Kandinsky; and Agnes Martin, who forged a path in a 
male-dominated period led by minimalists like Donald Judd.
Others track female artists whose works have hovered just under $1 million at 
auction, expecting them to pop into seven figures. Among those attracting 
attention: conceptual artist Sherrie Levine, known for appropriating photographs 
by artists like Edward Weston and Walker Evans; and Barbara Kruger, who plasters 
black-and-white photographs with loud slogans. Both their prices have been 
dwarfed by the multimillion-dollar sums fetched by fellow contemporary artists 
like Richard Prince or Christopher Wool.
Another contender: Helen Frankenthaler. There's some debate over the merits 
of the late abstract expressionist's work compared with those of the men who 
came before her—like Pollock, whose biggest auction sale topped $40 million—but 
collectors have shown they're ready to bet on her. Frankenthaler's auction 
record is just under $1 million, but her early work was recently featured in a 
show at New York's Gagosian Gallery, where a canvas sold privately for $3 
million, according to a gallery official.
The evolution in the market for Joan Mitchell's work illustrates how 
collectors have recently "discovered" an artist long in the shadows of her male 
counterparts.
Mitchell, the late Chicago-born painter known for splattering strokes and 
bold colors, operated just outside circles of older abstract-expressionist peers 
like de Kooning and Pollock. In 1951, she exhibited alongside them in New York, 
but by the 1960s she had exiled herself to France.
In 2006, as the art market boomed, a 1970s de Kooning sold for $27 million at 
Christie's. A Mitchell work fetched $2 million, a big sum for the artist at the 
time, but one that suddenly had the whiff of a good deal in the Christie's 
salesroom. New York art adviser Abigail Asher remembers the scene: "A client 
turned to me and said, 'Wow, doesn't that seem inexpensive?' " she recalled of 
the collector, who had just bought a Mitchell privately earlier that week.
By 2011, Mitchell's market had climbed as hedge-fund managers and other 
trophy hunters pegged her work as a good investment. Ms. Asher recalled chasing 
a Mitchell canvas past its $6 million high estimate against another bidder at 
Sotheby's. The piece, a large-scale canvas in a riot of colors, sold for $9.3 
million—her highest sum ever at auction. Ms. Asher, who lost out, slumped in her 
seat after the hammer fell: "It was the feeling of: 'The cat's out of the bag.' 
"
Last year, Mitchell's canvases were the two most expensive works by any woman 
artist sold at auction, according to auction database Artnet. Her work now hangs 
in museums around the world, including Ms. Walton's Crystal Bridges Museum of 
American Art in Bentonville, Ark. A 1958 Mitchell painting will be on the block 
next month at Christie's.
A number of theories exist for why women have languished in the art world's 
bargain basement. Experts point to the smaller supply of work by women from 
certain periods—after all they're called Old Masters, not Old Mistresses—which 
limits the frequency of sales and holds down prices. Women also are 
underrepresented by major museums, where purchases and exhibits boost prices. 
Famous artists like Georgia O'Keeffe and Frida Kahlo do appear in museum shows, 
but the permanent modern art collections of most major institutions are 
comprised largely of work by male artists.
Others say women haven't marketed themselves as well as men. "Male artists 
are much more pushy and power-related," says Eva Presenhuber, a Zurich-based 
dealer who noted she recently threw a toned-down party for the artist Karen 
Kilimnik because the artist doesn't like to promote herself with splashy 
events.
Indeed, the upper echelons of the art world still belong to men: All of the 
top 100 works ever sold at auction were created by male artists, and fewer than 
3% of auctioned works over $1 million last year were by female artists, 
according to Artnet. No living woman has cleared $10 million at auction to date, 
compared with scores of men.
One reason Morisot took off, experts say, is because she and artists like 
Mary Cassatt have styles similar to those of famous male painters of the period, 
in this case Manet and Renoir. They also have recognizable brand looks that are 
easy to live with. "It's no coincidence that the art you see reproduced in 
doctors' waiting rooms is [their] type of Impressionist work," says Philip Hook, 
a senior specialist in Sotheby's Impressionist and modern art department.
Morisot and Cassatt were prolific artists, but most of their work is ferreted 
away in museums, making those paintings that do crop up on the market highly 
sought-after.
In a packed Christie's salesroom in London last February, the Morisot canvas, 
"After Lunch," sold for roughly three times its high estimate after a protracted 
back-and-forth between two telephone bidders from Russia and the U.S. The piece 
is believed to have gone to an American.
The market prizes other female artists because of artistic styles and 
cultural sensibilities that translate well over time. Tamara de Lempicka, a 
Polish-born artist with a booze-and-party-fueled lifestyle, moved to Hollywood 
in 1939 and became a wild fixture on the movie-industry scene. Her Art Deco 
paintings, brimming with men in tuxes, busty blondes and lesbian trysts, draw 
famous admirers today—and have reached record auction prices in recent years. 
Sotheby's will feature a moody Manhattan skyline by the artist during next 
month's sales.
Madonna, who owns at least two de Lempickas, has collected her for decades 
and considers her work a source of inspiration, a spokeswoman confirmed. When 
the singer's "Vogue" video came out in 1990, featuring Madonna's de Lempickas in 
the background, it sent a frisson through auction houses and art galleries. For 
years later, whenever anyone had a de Lempicka to sell, the reaction was always 
the same: "Everyone said, 'Oh, offer it to Madonna,' " says David Norman, 
Sotheby's co-chairman of Impressionist and modern art world-wide.
Other avid collectors include Barbra Streisand, who was first drawn to the 
artist's paintings in the 1970s when she was building a house in Art Deco style. 
"I found Lempicka's work to be so original," Ms. Streisand said in an email, 
praising the artist's style and technique. "The fact that she was a woman artist 
made her even more intriguing."
The gender gap narrows within smaller niche markets like photography. Cindy 
Sherman, a 59-year-old chameleon who spends years planning portraits of herself 
in various personae, briefly held the title as the auction world's 
highest-priced photographer, female or male, in 2011. An image of herself 
splayed across a brown linoleum floor sold for $3.9 million. Ms. Sherman's 
works, which sold for $1,000 at her long-standing gallery Metro Pictures in 
1981, now typically fetch $450,000 at the gallery and are collected by 
art-market heavyweights such as Los Angeles billionaire Eli Broad and Christie's 
owner François Pinault.
An older generation of women artists sees a much different art market today 
than the one they grew up with. Pat Steir, a 74-year-old New York artist who 
pours paint down her monumental canvases, recalled one summer in 1964 visiting a 
friend whose father was an abstract painter. One of his guests was Mark Rothko. 
Ms. Steir approached him, explaining that she had just gotten out of art school. 
"I said, 'Mr. Rothko, you're such a great artist, I admire your work so much,' 
and he said, 'You're a pretty girl. Why aren't you married?' "
Ms. Steir's art now hangs in most major museums across the U.S., including 
the Metropolitan Museum of Art.