viewfromthenorth
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to be honest we can't predict what the second hand prices for Liks work will be , because he hasnt been arround long enough, it may be that the fact that someone paid $6.5M will mean that that shot has a similar worth if/when it changes hands.
This section of the NY Times article from the second post suggests that second hand prices of his work are less than the initial price:
A tiny fraction of that sum is the answer. A subscription service called Artnet — which bills itself as the most comprehensive database of its kind — captures the resale value of Lik photographs by cataloging auction results, and the most anyone has ever paid for one his photographs is $15,860, for a copy of an image called “Ghost,” in 2008. (It’s a color version of “Phantom.”) After that, it’s a long slide down, to $3,000 for a copy of “Eternal Beauty (Antelope County, Arizona)” in 2014. Fifteen images have sold for between $1,000 and $2,500, and four have sold for between $400 and $1,000. Another handful failed to sell. And that’s it.
Mr. Hulme usually directs Lik owners to ArtBrokerage.com, a site where they can post images of their art along with an asking price. Currently, there are more than 770 Liks for sale on ArtBrokerage.com, the most of any artist on the site. As of Friday, that included 27 copies of one image, “Tree of Hope,” with prices that ranged from $5,000 to $29,000.
Or you can buy a copy at the gallery, where it has achieved Second Level Peter Lik Premium status, for $35,000.
His work is produced in a factory, so he's hugely successful commercially. If there are more than 100000 copies of his work in circulation though there just isn't the scarcity (other than for the reputed $6.5million one off) in his work for it to appreciate in value longer term.