Archive for the ‘auction market’ Category

May 1, 2012

With private collections constantly evolving, collectors are always looking for innovative forums to discuss and market their desirable, high-quality works.

Though these artworks may no longer fit within the narrow focus of one collection, they may be a great acquisition for another.

During the summer months, June through September, Contemporary Wing will present OFF THE WALL, a series of collaborations which bring together serious collectors and the artwork they wish to exchange or acquire with other collectors who share a common passion.

If you have an exceptional work to propose, or a collecting sector you would like to expand, please contact info@contemporarywing.com.

Seeking:
Street Art
Works on Paper/Prints/Photography
Emerging Artists
Established Contemporary Artists
Works by African American Artists
19th Century/Old Masters
Design

Top 10 Headlines While You Were Away (According to Me)

January 6, 2010

10. New York Taxis to Tout Art – Hail Shirin Neshat, Alex Katz or Yoko Ono on 500 cabs in the city.

9. Police Recover Picasso’s ‘Little Guitar’ Toy Sculpture Made for Paloma Picasso – Isn’t it cute?!

8. Polish Police Say Foreigner Behind Auschwitz Sign TheftThieves are caught and they point to a Thomas Crown living in Sweden.

7. Egypt Antiquities Chief Zahi Hawass to Demand Nefertiti Bust – Too fragile to return? excuses excuses

6. 2009 in Review: In Memoriam – Short list

5. Goodbye to Some of the Notable People in the Arts Who Left Us in 2009 – Long list

4. U.S. Firm Ordered to Turn $500 Million Treasure Over to Spain – Who else loved the discovery special on the History Channel and thinks this is BS?

3. Dutch Secret Service Take Custody of Jill Magid’s Art – Ironic BS

2.  Yale University Says Suit Over Vincent Van Gogh’s Work Imperials Other Art – I love a restitution battle

And in other Yale News, my favorite headline while on vacation…

1. Skull Linked to Secret Yale Society to be Sold at Christie’s – 10 to 20k? Please, secrecy and discretion = bidding war!

Auction Sees Record Result in DC-area

October 14, 2009

Sloans and Kenyon in Chevy Chase, MD set the Washington-area auction record this October when they sold an 18th-century unsigned oil painting of Venice’s Grand Canal (estimated at $6,000 – $8,000) for $687,125 (price includes buyer’s premium).

From the “school of” (a work by a pupil or follower of the artist, in his style) the 18th-century artist Giovanni Antonio Canaletto.

An 18th-century painting of Venice's Grand Canal is believed to be the most  expensive painting ever sold at an auction in the Washington, D.C., area. (Courtesy Sloans & Kenyon)

An 18th-century painting of Venice's Grand Canal is believed to be the most expensive painting ever sold at an auction in the Washington, D.C., area. (Courtesy Sloans & Kenyon)

There was a nice article in The Post, but since I personally use and trust Sloans & Kenyon, I asked my friend and specialist Lisa Jones for some insider information about the exciting sale:

Lisa L. Jones, Director of Silver & Decorative Arts at Sloans & Kenyon

Lisa L. Jones, Director of Silver & Decorative Arts at Sloans & Kenyon

Specullector: What kind of condition was the painting in, presumably it hadn’t been restored if it had been hung or stored by a Bethesda woman all this time?

Lisa: There was a small amount of prior restoration including some minor in-painting but overall the condition of the painting was very good.

S: Specialists make frequent trips to people’s home valuing works for resale, was the employee on this call instantly struck when they saw the work or was there a certain point when someone at the auction house, some secondary viewer said, ” I think we’ve got something…”?

L: I think a bit of both was involved with this painting. The quality of the painting is evident upon the first glance. After we started our research and marketing it became evident to both the art department and our buying audience that this painting was outstanding.

S: What was the vibe in the auction house once it came into inventory?

L: There was a very optimistic attitude among the staff concerning the painting. We knew it would achieve a handsome price at auction but we still had to rely on the current market to confirm our expectations.

S: The Grand Tour story is every valuer’s best and worst case provenance, were their other supporting documents that added value, say letters or journal entries recounting its purchase or her trip to Italy?

L: In this case because there were no supporting paper documents concerning the sale, we had to rely upon family history. It was common knowledge that the consignor’s grandmother took a Grand Tour through Italy.

S: Though the seller remained anonymous, was she present in the auction room and did you guys at least offer her a tea to calm her nerves?

L: The consignor was not present on the gallery floor when the painting was auctioned. Many consignors are too nervous to be present when their items sell. The consignor was contacted immediately after the sale and was absolutely floored at the selling price.

S: 6-8k is a very low estimate (sometimes auction houses use low estimates to create a buzz among collectors and build a bigger audience of those “looking for a deal”), like a very low estimate, was this your team’s strategy?

L: A conservative estimate is definitely a strategic move. We wanted to reach a cross-section of collectors and potential buyers. Today’s art market is not yesterday’s market. The pricing structure is different to reflect the changing buying atmosphere.

S:  I was thinking that if Charles Beddington was an advisor to one of the bidders (and luckily for the British, they don’t need an export license to get a work out of the US like everyone else needs for the UK), I’m thinking it will be restored, repriced and returned to where it was first acquired.  Maybe to one of our favorite Bond Street windows, Mr. Colnaghi or Mr. Green perhaps? Or maybe we’ll see it again at TEFAF. What are you thoughts on my speculation?

L: Any thoughts would be pure speculation but we know the painting is going to London. We feel sure the painting will be re-priced and will appear at some point on the market. It will most likely not be restored.

S. Lastly,  a “sleeper” in the Old Master market is every auction house and dealer’s dream, thus I assume there was a lot of excitement and even a little eccentricity. Were there any funny back stories or anecdotes that happened during the auction process you can share?

L: Luckily in this case nothing too crazy occurred. We had a bit of a commotion trying to reach a dozen international phone bidders (some in foreign languages). We had some shouting and in the end we provided the audience with some great excitement. It was a pure adrenalin rush.

Perfect NY Armory Week Cocktail Party Topic

March 7, 2009

It’s Saturday and I’m sure everyone has played out the usual art fair talk-tracks: “Hiiiiiiii, how are you?” “So, how are sales?” “Have you been affected, everything okay?” “Is it true you can roll a bowling ball down the aisles of your fair?” – here is something much more interesting to think/talk about:

An article I read this week gave me flashbacks to the 1980s. Remember the speculative run in the art market and the subsequent bust in the 1990s due to the downturn in the Japanese economy?   Many would recall the apogee of these times was when one weekend Ryoei Saito bought Vincent van Gogh’s Portrait du Dr. Gachet for $82.5 million from Christie’s NY and Auguste Renoir’s Au Moulin de la Galette for $78.1 million from Sotheby’s NY and then he and his paper company went bankrupt and he was charged with criminal activities.

The van Gogh was seized by Japan’s Fuji Bank  (even though Saito asked to be cremated with it) and resold for a fraction of the price.  In the end, Japan’s banks had confiscated over $200 million dollars of art from Japanese businessmen putting it all into bank vaults and then going under themselves.  Some Eurocentrics describe this time as the devouring of Western culture by Japanese speculators. In these days, I would describe it as familiar.

goghgachet1 renoirmoulin-galette

Vincent van Gogh’s Portrait du Dr. Gachet and Auguste Renoir’s Au Moulin de la Galette

So with that background in mind, I present the ArtDaily headline of the week: Chinese Bidder at Christie’s YSL Auction Refuses to Pay for Controversial Works of Art.  With quote of the week from this bidder who committed over $40 million dollars to 2 sculptures in the auction: “I must stress I do not have the money to pay for this”.

Um, really Mr. Cai Mingchao? Really?!  So I thought, here we go again, but now with China.

NO, it’s so much more interesting – issues of cultural rights and heritage, patrimony and national sentiment – you can read here and here.

02-ysl-auction-large

And a quote I would like to end on from Chinese Government Rep. Zhao Qizheng regarding the situation: “[Cao's bid] was a lesson to the rest of the world, including the French”.

Now go party and discuss…

SOMEONE PUBLISHED IT!

September 16, 2008

The Evening Standard published my made-up word “specullector” (spek-yuh-lek-ter) !!!

While it didn’t get top billing (scroll down to the 17th paragraph) this means the word is real now, so please send my royalties in pounds sterling and thank you Ben Lewis!

For the past two weeks Damien Hirst has been telling news crews and reporters that his auction, which begins tonight, is a way to democratise the art market. Yet far from being a new dawn in democracy, the historic Hirst sale is the most stage-managed auction ever.

Tonight, at the first session of the sale in three parts (with the other two tomorrow morning and afternoon), in Sotheby’s New Bond Street auction room, heavily invested Hirst collectors will be placed in the front rows.

Polite Sotheby’s sales staff will open phone lines to oligarchs to facilitate anonymous bids. Two different senior sources from the London art world have told me that in recent days the auction house has contacted clients on its books, even those who don’t collect Hirst, and urged them to bid at the auction, intimating that the future of the art market depends on its success. This suggests a dire warning: “Buy Hirsts or watch your own collections lose value.”

Only carefully vetted art critics will fill the press pen and sympathetic TV channels pack the camera podium. Several members of the press thought to be critical of Hirst has been refused accreditation — among them me.

I have been banned from attending the sale in a professional capacity. The reason? Because I criticised the contemporary art boom in the pages of this newspaper last November, in an article titled: Who put the “con” in contemporary art?

Citing that article, Matthew Weigman, the head of sales publicity at Sotheby’s, wrote to me: “In the ordinary course of things, your impressive credentials as a journalist, film-maker and commentator would have provided easy entrance through Sotheby’s doors. But these are not ordinary circumstances. The frank bias, even contempt, you have expressed in your commentary about the world of contemporary art, which is an important part of our business, is impossible to ignore … Therefore … we have taken the virtually unprecedented decision not to allow you to film during our upcoming exhibition and sale of works from the studio of Damien Hirst, nor to allow access into the press area for the print media.”

Sotheby’s has more than me to fear. Tonight Damien Hirst will attempt to sell 223 new works of art amid damaging revelations that he and his business partners were less than frank about the £50 million sale of his diamond-encrusted skull last year when they purchased a controlling stake in the object themselves, and that White Cube, the gallery of Hirst’s London dealer, Jay Jopling, has £100 million worth of unsold “Damiens” in its store.

On top of that comes a fortnight of grim economic data from tumbling stock markets and bursting asset bubbles. Bloomberg even reported a fall in Sotheby’s share price on Friday — amounting to $188 million — stating that analysts and dealers cited “investor unease” about the sale.

Hirst has always taken risks, but never have the stakes been so high. By 9pm tonight, the contemporary art world will have changed irrevocably, yet there are two starkly different possible outcomes.

In the first, the majority of lots in Beautiful Inside My Head Forever, the name Hirst has given his auction, will sell for a total of £80 million-£120 million, as Sotheby’s hopes. They did, after all, sell Lullaby Spring last summer for £9.6 million, briefly making Hirst the most expensive artist at auction. In this case, the growth of the contemporary art market will be proven to be continuing, immune to the economic rules which govern lesser mortals who aren’t artists or billionaires.

There would be huge implications for art-dealers. This is the first time that an artist has offered a new exhibition of work directly at auction (even if the idea of artists sending new works to auction comes from the Chinese art markets). If the gambit works, Hirst will break the link between artist and gallery, opening the way for a new era in which auction houses and celebrity artists dominate the art world, as gallerists have until now.

But there is another — doomsday — scenario, in which many of the lots fail to sell or sell for close to their reserve price — perhaps mostly to anonymous phone-bidders. Finally, the auction makes not much more than its low estimate of £65 million. Prices for Hirst’s work then fall steeply, and, as the world’s most successful contemporary artist, Hirst’s collapse impacts on the rest of the contemporary art market. What could then happen is exactly what happened in the early Nineties art crash — much contemporary art loses 50 per cent of its value overnight.

To Hirst’s credit, he is always proving the nay-sayers wrong. In 2004 analysts said the auction of the contents of his Notting Hill restaurant, Pharmacy, would not work, but it made £11 million. Hirst’s 2005 show at Gagosian, his New York gallery, which was full of clumsy paintings executed by his assistants, was panned by critics but sold well. This month, he was on the cover of Time magazine: his imagery is known across the world; his spot paintings are icons of our time (even if they are symbols of the emptiness of our lives).

He started with nothing except his imagination and audacity. No artist is more widely collected, which means there is an army of multi-millionaires who don’t want to see his prices plummet. Only the foolhardy would predict that this auction will bomb. But I’m foolhardy.

Until two weeks ago, everyone imagined that Hirst shows sold out and that there were long waiting lists for his work. Then the Art Newspaper published details of White Cube’s inventory of Hirst pieces in stock. This revealed that many of the works from his last exhibition, Beyond Belief, last summer failed to sell. Among them, Hirst’s lazy blown-up reproduction of the periodic table of elements could still be had for £3 million. There were plenty of the photorealist paintings of Hirst’s wife giving birth left over, some of which carried the ludicrous price-tag of £2 million. White Cube had almost 30 monochrome butterfly paintings (£475,000-£675,000) executed in 2007-8, and were still trying to offload 23 spin paintings from 2007 (£225,000-£300,000), even though Hirst is selling heaps of new spin and butterfly paintings in the auction. One might question whether the demand for “Damiens” was slack and that his work was over-priced.

Other indications of the diminishing demand for his work have been accumulating. In July, the US art world tip-sheet Baerfaxt noted “how sparingly Damien Hirst material was offered by Christie’s and Sotheby’s [in their summer contemporary art auctions] … and how actively White Cube was involved in acquiring or supporting his work [at auction]”.

In recent times, some heavily invested Hirst buyers, such as Helly Nahmad, scion of the world’s richest family of “specullector” art dealers, have sold up.

This would explain why Sotheby’s stated that its ambitious Hirst auction would target new buyers from Asia and the Middle East. But the leaked inventory has put a spanner in their well-oiled publicity machine. In New Delhi, art critics and newspapers interpreted the list of unsold work as evidence that Hirst was trying to palm them off with his sloppy seconds, because Western collectors had wised up to him.

Then, earlier this month, Hirst’s business adviser, Frank Dunphy, admitted that when, on 30 August last year, he and White Cube announced the sale of the diamond skull, For the Love of God, at the £50 million “full asking price”, they weren’t telling the whole story. Dunphy now says that he, Damien and Jopling bought “a controlling stake” in the skull. White Cube has so far refused to specify what that is, but a controlling stake can be 100 per cent.

If Hirst and his cronies were corporate directors managing a share issue, they could be prosecuted for fraud for this, just as Natwest was in the Eighties in the Blue Arrow scandal. Confusingly, however, Hirst recently told an art critic something different: that he owns a third share in the skull and that an investment group owns two-thirds.

Now Hirst is leaving the protection of his galleries behind, and embracing the relatively public world of the auction room. Feed into that stock market woes and the collapse of property markets across the world and there’s just two words for it: bad timing.

And then there is the art itself. No one who earns a living in the contemporary art world will go on record openly criticising Hirst’s new work, but the verdict of the dealers I spoke to last week was unanimous: these are all the old Damien formulae with jewels stuck on. This time around the butterfly paintings have diamonds glued on and the cow in formaldehyde comes in a gold-plated case. Some Hirst acolytes have sought to explain this as a reflection of our contemporary “bling” culture. If so, it is an extremely uncritical one, and poorly suited to the new age of austerity.

Other works in the sale hybridise the Damien trademarks — skeletons and skulls are given the spin-painting treatment, while diamonds now line the vitrines that once contained pills. A third set of works, which were impressive first time around, are barely altered grandiose repetitions of preserved fish and fish skeletons in display cases, an office chair and table in a giant glass box, a load of cigarette butts lined up in a vast vitrine.

There are still works of marvellous aesthetic intensity, such as the dense collages of butterfly wings in the style of stained glass and kaleidoscopes, but there is no originality here, and plenty of pomposity. This is not art that is developing, but art that is turning in on itself, whose only notion of progress is greater scale and expense. This is work by an artist who thinks the shinier it is, the better it is.

In addition, we all know that Hirst’s assistants help make his work, but this time it appears that his studio helpers may actually have devised or designed them. Speaking to this newspaper last week, Hirst remarked, “I’ve started making black butterfly paintings — they were all very bright colours at first — and I’ve just noticed [the canvases] have got rosary beads, scalpel blades, broken glass on them [too]. It’s all gone a bit dark, and then suddenly I thought: Oh well, maybe these kinds of paintings are not the right vehicle for communicating what I’m feeling at the moment.’”

Perhaps this is Hirst reviewing his paintings up on the wall, but it sounds like he is looking at something he has never seen before. Perhaps one of his staff came up with the tedious idea of combining butterflies and scalpels?

It’s the message of this work, as much as the over-production, that’s likely to alienate Sotheby’s bidders. There is a tragic subtext of Hirst’s contempt for himself and his market in these pieces, that first emerged in the diamond skull, a mockery of the vast prices collectors are paying for his art today. The works that are new no longer offer a reminder (you say immediate, I say obvious) of the brevity of life.

Instead there is a convergence of price-tag and subject matter — this is literally art about how over-priced it is. Hence the centrepiece of the auction, the Golden Calf, estimated at £8 million-£12 million: a biblical symbol of a false God.

This theme may indicate why Hirst is taking his work to auction. In interviews he claims one motivation — democracy aside — is that his galleries take all the money. Many critics have fallen for this sob-story, but Gagosian and White Cube have spent millions building Hirst’s reputation, and now he’s giving them the finger.

“There’s a hell of a lot of money in art — but artists don’t get it,” says Hirst, owner of some 40 properties, who buys Bacons for tens of millions of pounds and has a net worth of several hundred million.

He has made plenty of money out of art, but he wants more.

One of our own

June 25, 2008

Nice interview on NPR this morning with collector Aaron Levine. (wife Barbara is not in the interview but I wanted to mention her because she’s very knowledgeable – and charming).

A good point to develop on was the lack of Americans at Basel this year. The art market as a whole (from collectors of objets d’art at regional auctions to those picking up an $80 million Monet) is 50% American, but that is not where half of the money is coming from. It’s the money from Russia and China (secondarily, UAE and India, too) flowing through the UK and the rest of Europe that’s feeding us.

I’ll say it again, we will all be alive to see the center of the art market pass from New York to London.

Pigeonholing the Player

January 30, 2008

On January 28th, Artprice.com, a pretty reliable, yet clunky price database primarily used for European artists, has devised a way to measure the art “Players’ confidence” with their new Art Market Confidence Index (AMCI), live.

What’s become one of my favorite things is when a group or individual attempts to use an assessment created for financial services to gauge the art market. There are characteristics intrinsic to the art market which make this impossible (quickly: information asymmetry, absence of mark-to-market prices, no price standardization or transparency, costs, conflicts of interest, the fact that the art market is the largest unregulated money market, etc…).

So back to AMCI. All you have to do is go to their website and answer these 4 simple questions:

According to you, would now be the appropriate time to buy art works?

YES

NO

INDIFFERENT

Is your financial situation better or worse than it was 3 months ago?

BETTER

WORSE

STABLE

In the next 3 months, will you expect the economic climate to be:

FAVORABLE

UNFAVORABLE

IDENTICAL

What do you expect art prices will be in the next 3 months:

RISE

FALL

STABLE

You are then taken to this screen (link takes you into my account so you don’t have to share your info with ArtPrice or use LAUREN@IRVINECONTEMPORARY.COM and password – LAUREN) to see the live graph.

Looks like the Consumer Confidence Index doesn’t it? Generalized, and vague – self-fulling rather than foretelling. This indicator is not revealing. I just hope it will not influence behavior.

(confidence has decreased from -5.8 to -8.6 in the time it took me to write this)

$21.3

December 19, 2007

and DC thanks you, Mr. Rubenstein, for keeping the Magna Carta here

$23.6, $57.2 … $30 million next?

December 12, 2007

A new record for a living artist at auction was set when Jeff Koons’ stainless steel Hanging Heart brought $23.6 million yesterday at Sotheby’s evening sale of Contemporary Art in New York. Sold to Gagosian Gallery to applause, Hanging Heart, 1994-2006 is considered one of the most important works by Koons ever offered at auction. The sculpture was offered for sale by a private American collector and had a pre-sale estimate of $15 million to $20 million.

koons-hanging-heart.jpg

The Guennol Lioness is a 5000-year-old Mesopotamian statue found near Baghdad, Iraq. Depicting a well-muscled anthropomorphic lioness, it sold for $57.2 million at Sotheby’s auction house on December 5, 2007. The price was the highest ever paid for a sculpture in history.

8373guennol2.jpg


6 more days until… the Sale of the Magna Carta from Ross Perot’s private collection previously housed 5 blocks away

25magna600.jpg

Miami Bound

November 30, 2007

I’m sorry I haven’t written in a while but holidays + Miami prep = no posting time.

I am sitting here adding centimeters to inches in inventory and converting our price lists into Pounds and Euros (not Rubels,Yen or HK$ – which may have made it onto the score boards of Sotheby’s and Christie’s sales, but I don’t expect to see much of it in Miami) This conversion though especially freaked me out:

$10,000

6800

4800

Thus, if you have a British accent, come to booth 74 for special attention and I’ll send you home with something/somethings good … I expect many foreign buyers next week and I’ll be posting info and pictures from the fair when I can.

Highlights of what we have: a new 30 x 30 Dalek, several 24karatgold on gesso Teo Gonzalez’s, Paul D. Miller aka DJ Spooky video New York is Now which is being featured at the Rubell Collection and the Scope VIP party (and video stills in C-Print to accompany) So come visit me in booth 74 and please bring me a bottle Smart Water if you can – sensory overload, dehydration and grandness!

Example of Dalek’s new acrylic on panel ………… This one is sold, the one I have is going to be a surprise! painting9june07.jpg


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