Archive for the ‘investing in fine art’ 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
Tags:19th Century/Old Masters, A Collector Forum, Contemporary Wing, Design, Emerging Artists, Established Contemporary Artists, Lauren Gentile, OFF THE WALL, Street Art, Works by African American Artists, Works on Paper/Prints/Photography
Posted in 14th Street Corridor, American art market, American Photography Market, Andy Warhol, art market, auction market, auction records, British art market, Chinese art market, Chinese contemporary art, collecting emerging art, collecting works on paper, contemporary art, Contemporary art prints, contemporary collectors, Contemporary Wing, DC, Dutch art market, global art market, International art market, investing in art, investing in fine art, Italian art market, Lauren Gentile, Modern Photography, print editions, Specullector, submissions, Washington, washington DC, young collectors | Leave a Comment »
July 10, 2010

Ashley No Love Lost by Gregory Crewdson
Apologies for the radio silence from the Specullector blog. Friendly reminder to graduate students (you know who your are):
These posts are my opinions and I retain intellectual copyright. A blog is not considered an A source so I would highly suggest not using this content for your theses. If you still decide to, please quote it, some of your professors could have second careers as private investigators.
I am happy to leave the blog up as a public archive and if there are any questions, or if you would like my opinion on an art world situation, please reach out to me at lauren@irvinecontemporary.com
One last final prediction: lets not ignore what is brewing in LA – London galleries opening outposts, NY power dealers accepting museum directorships, blockbuster Getty acquisitions, large financial and personal investments from mega-collectors - building blocks for the future of a new American and global art node.
Tags:art information node, blockbuster Getty acquisitions, Gregory Crewdson, LA art world node, large financial and personal investments from mega-collectors, Lauren Gentile, London galleries opening, Los Angeles art future, museum directorships, new American and global art node, NY power dealers, Specullector
Posted in 14th Street Corridor, American art market, art fairs, art market, art market quotes, art reporting, art world terminology, collecting emerging art, collecting works on paper, contemporary art, contemporary collectors, global art market, History of art market, International art market, investing in fine art, Lauren Gentile, Sotheby's, Specullector, washington DC | 1 Comment »
March 28, 2009
Sobering news about the leading to the the lesser.
Tags:Annie Leibovitz Bankrupt, economic downturn art market, Lauren Gentile, Lawrence Larry Salander arrested, Specullector
Posted in American Photography Market, Annie Leibovitz, art gallery lending, art inventory leveraging, Art theft, fine art funds, investing in art, investing in fine art, Lauren Gentile, Specullector | Leave a Comment »
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.

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.

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…
Tags:Armory Show NY 2009, Art Market bust 1990s, Auguste Renoir's Au Moulin de la Galette, Cai Mingchao, Christie's YSL Auction controversy, cultural rights and heritage, Japan bad economy art market, Lauren Gentile, patrimony and national sentiment, Ryoei Saito, speculative run art market, Specullector, Vincent van Gogh's Portrait du Dr. Gachet, Zhao Qizheng
Posted in Armory Show, art fairs, art market, art market quotes, auction market, auction records, China, Chinese art market, fine art funds, History of art market, International art market, investing in art, investing in fine art, Lauren Gentile, NY Armory, Sotheby's, Specullector, Volta NY | 1 Comment »
November 5, 2008
When you have a friend call you on a Sunday night, asking you to write a new post because, “Frankly Lauren, I’m bored” you realize it’s time to get over the PTSD from selling 450 Shepard Fairey prints (more on that subject) and blog about something.
My apologies, here is what has happened in the last 2 weeks:
1. Rich people are still rich. If you click on the link, that IS a Degas image Art Daily used to lead the story – ?

KAZIMIR MALEVICH (1879-1935) SUPREMATIST COMPOSITION sold $60,002,500
2. I really don’t have ptsd from selling the Rose Girl print and was happy to help out people that could not make it in to the gallery from Australia, the Philippines, California… to acquire one. What I wasn’t happy about was the presumptuous flippers that POSTED THE PRINT ON EBAY BEFORE I EVEN SENT IT TO THEM.
Listen, I’ve been doing this for 10 years and I’m not some bimbo (and once you read the next line, also obviously crazy). I went under an assumed Ebay name “Rosa Grrl” (creative right?) and found out what edition numbers were being sold, checked my records, and pulled them before they were shipped.
So if you didn’t get your print yet, this is why, I have already sold it to someone else and please don’t waste any more of my time by contacting me. AND to the young man in NJ whose “girlfriend” flipped the print (right after she bought it) I hope you broke up with her like I asked you to.
3. The art market has not crashed, everything is going to be okay, just keep a close eye on the European banks because if something big and bad happens over there before Miami… I don’t need to finish that sentence, but you will be able to find me crying in booth 180 at SCOPE. What I am also keeping a close eye on are the winter auction catalogues, will there be works from the former AIG and Lehman Brother’s collections? I bet so
4. In regards to my promised review of The International Art Markets: The essential guide for collectors and investors, I kinda left the book on a Croatian Airlines flight and just got it back this weekend… so Kogan Page, Limited, it’s coming soon – I promise!
5. If you live in DC, there are some important dates to mark on your calendar.
November 14 – Fixation
November 15 – Transformer Auction
November 15 – 22 – FotoWeek
December 3 – 7 – Miami
December 13 – Aspect:Ratio Opening
6. Update on a post I made a while back about an MFA at the Corcoran – The MFA program is still being worked on and the estimated launch date is for 2012.
7. I hope that is enough for now (Mike, still bored?). Off to the election night parties with my stuffed donkey!
Tags:AIG art collection, art market bubble burst, art market crashed, Aspect:Ratio Opening, Banks and the Art Market, Corcoran MFA, Fixation, flipping Shepard Fairey prints on Ebay, FotoWeek, he International Art Markets: The essential guide for c, Lauren Gentile, Lehman's art collection, Rose Girl print, SCOPE MIami 2008, Shepard Fairey, Specullector, SUPREMATIST COMPOSITION sold $60, Transformer Auction
Posted in American art market, art fairs, art market, contemporary art, Contemporary art prints, Contemporary Photography, global art market, Hedge funders fine art, International art market, investing in fine art, Lauren Gentile, Master of Fine Arts in DC, Specullector, washington DC | 4 Comments »
September 25, 2008
The publishers of The International Art Markets: The essential guide for collectors and investors kindly sent me a copy to read and review. It has obviously taken me forever to do this because this book covers the markets in Sub-Saharan Africa, Argentina, Australia, Austria, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, Chile, China, Czech Republic, Denmark, Iceland, Finland, France Germany, Greece, India, Indonesia, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, Middles East, North Africa, The Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, The Philippines, Poland, Portugal, Russia, Singapore, South Africa, South Korea, North Korea (just kidding), Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan, Thailand, Turkey, United Kingdom, USA and Venezuela. I guess since I already spent 70k at Sotheby’s Institute learning about all of this, I was the right person to ask
Edited by James Goodwin, with contributions by some of my old grad school professors and other associates, I have to admit that I was a little nervous to read and then publicly review. Especially since the chapters on the markets in Sub-Sahara Africa and Portugal are each twice as long as the one on the American market. And because the book cost $100 and there are advertisements for a diamond company on the first page … but I was pleasantly surprised, who knew the market in the Czech Republic was so interesting?
Each week I will write on a country above, starting tomorrow with Sub-Sahara Africa…
Tags:global art market, James Goodwin, Lauren Gentile, Specullector, The International Art Markets, The International Art Markets by James Goodwin
Posted in American art market, art book reviews, art market, art reporting, collecting emerging art, collecting works on paper, contemporary art, fine art funds, global art market, Hedge funds and art market, History of art market, International art market, investing in art, investing in fine art, Lauren Gentile, Specullector | 1 Comment »
September 25, 2008
To everyone frantically diversifying their portfolios – don’t put your money in timber, choose a different wood, like an oil on panel.

Tags:art investment, collapse of global finance, investing in timber, Lauren Gentile, Specullector
Posted in art inventory leveraging, art market, investing in art, investing in fine art, Lauren Gentile, Specullector | 1 Comment »
August 15, 2008
Thank you Dean Shanson of Photopreneur for the great reporting!
Content below, but I suggest subscribing to their feed – all the posts are info packed:
Edgy Photos Sell In the Art World
Posted 08/14/08 by Dean

Photography: voteprime
For most workaday photographers, the world of auctions, collectors and the art market can seem very far away. But that doesn’t stop just about everyone who picks up a camera from dreaming about it. While few photographers seriously expect their wedding formals or baby portraits to change hands for six-figure sums, many would certainly like to believe that one day, just maybe, they’ll see their landscapes or their street photography hanging in a gallery, reviewed by critics, adored by curators and fought over by collectors.
Not only it could happen for photographers with the right talent but according to art expert, Lauren Gentile, photographers might even be in an enviable position in comparison to some other artists. Because many copies of a photo can be produced from a single shot, the prices for each print are lower and therefore easier for art-lovers to add to their collections.
“Photography is becoming more collectible because it is accessible in terms of price,” Lauren told us. “You can get a nice photograph for a couple thousand – this is so, and differs from collecting painting because photography is editioned like traditional prints.”
Blue-Chip Photographs
For major buyers, though, those low prices aren’t necessarily an attraction. Lauren, who is an Assistant Director and Director of Sales at the Irvine Contemporary gallery in Washington D.C., reports that her collectors are now buying “blue-chip” photographs (works by top-sellers like Andreas Gursky whose 99 Cent II Diptych sold for $3.34 million in 2007) or artworks from “the emerging sector,” and often both. From new artists, collectors are interested in photographs that she describes as either edgy or nostalgic. Irvine Contemporary’s list of artists includes Marla Rutherford, for example, a fashion, editorial and advertising photographer whose photographs includes fetish images that have been exhibited at SCOPE Miami Art Basel.
If all that talk of “blue-chips” and “emerging sectors” sounds very financial however, perhaps that’s not too surprising, despite the artistic context. Lauren’s own background includes researching art funds – investment portfolios made up of artworks that are intended to rise in value like stocks – and she describes herself as a “specullector,” a fine art collector who looks not only at a work’s artistic value but also its market price and the potential of that price to grow.
Clearly, predicting those changes is not easy to do — which is why Lauren says that she can only speculate. The prices of works created by artists completing their Masters in Fine Arts (MFA), such as those included in Irvine Contemporary’s “Introductions4″ on show through August, can only rise, she notes, but for established photographers, some research can offer clues to the chances an artist’s work will become more valuable.
“If the artist is mid-career I look at what exhibitions they have scheduled for the future, who they will be showing with, is their work being contextualized with the works of higher valued artists? Whether or not critics are reviewing their works in Aperture, ArtForum, etc. and what curators have included them in shows and where? Also if museums have started to collect their work, and what ‘tastemakers’ do too.”
The increasing numbers of buyers in China and Russia is also raising the prices of work by established artists, Lauren notes, but as the art heads east, the money flowing west leaves European and American collectors more cash to spend on new, lower-priced emerging artists.
Chinese Buyers Help Emerging Photographers
So what can a photographer dreaming of breaking into the art world do to raise their profile and take their share of the sales?
Building a website is one necessity, says Lauren. Finding gallery representation is another. While one of those is obviously much easier than the other, working with a gallery can provide all sorts of benefits that allow the artist the freedom and time to work. The gallery will also provide guidance, career management and help to develop price structures.
But there is a price to be paid for this success and it goes beyond the share of the sales price taken by the gallery. The photograph can disappear from view.
“Works of art that are bought purely for investment reasons are put in a storage facility,” Lauren explained. “[F]or tax purposes these works of art cannot be displayed because then the collector (or fund manager) is deriving physical benefits from being able to view the work — the IRS has a big problem with that.”
Artists still waiting for their big gallery break then can console themselves that while their photographs have yet to make the big time, people can at least see and enjoy them.
Tags:American Photography Market, art market, art market quotes, Chinese art market, Contemporary Photography, Dean Shanson, fine art funds, global art market, hedge funds art, Introductions4 Irvine Contemporary, Irvine Contemporary, Lauren Gentile, Marla Rutherford, Modern Photography, Photopreneur, Specullector
Posted in American Photography Market, art market, art market quotes, art reporting, Chinese art market, Contemporary Photography, fine art funds, global art market, hedge funds art, Introductions4, Intros4, investing in fine art, Irvine Contemporary, Lauren Gentile, Modern Photography, Scope Irvine Contemporary, Specullector, Vintage Photography, washington DC | 1 Comment »
April 22, 2008
to buy your Artini tickets!
Don’t forget that Fall Fete tickets sold out last year creating a black market …
Did you know that in SE Asia (most notably Thailand & Burma) due to censorship and isolation paint, canvases and other art supplies must be bought on the black market … one would argue that this is probably a good indicator that these “emerging markets” aren’t quite ready to open up

Tags:1869 Society, art markets in Asia, Artini, contemporary art, Corcoran, Corcoran Gallery of Art, Corcoran School of Art, DC, Fall Fete 2007, investing in art, investing in fine art, Lauren Gentile, SE Asia emerging art markets, Specullector, Thai art market, The Corcoran Gallery of Art, washington DC
Posted in 1869 Society, Artini, contemporary art, Corcoran, Corcoran Gallery of Art, Corcoran School of Art, DC, Fall Fete 2007, investing in art, investing in fine art, Lauren Gentile, Specullector, The Corcoran Gallery of Art, washington DC | Leave a Comment »
February 29, 2008
That’s an oxymoron.
I was reading Hoogrrl and below that awesome picture of the Dissident Display boys and me on a fried egg, is a comment:
- John D. said…
- I like the idea of collecting up-and-coming, or already-sort-of-there artists. I do some of that myself, and like you [Hoogrrl], I think about the future market value of the work. To that end, are you aware of any readily accessible auctions or other secondary markets where such works are bought and sold, hopefully for more than the was previously paid for them?
There is not a secondary market for emerging artists. Galleries and dealers try their hardest to prevent this from happening; it can ruin the career of a young artist. Most invoices include a clause that entitles the gallery first right of refusal if the collector decides to resell the object. Some people, who are not serious collectors and think they’re being a clever specullector, will buy and then try to quickly flip the work in an auction or other public domain. Doing this will get you blacklisted and the gallery, dealer and artist will never sell to you again (and trust me, we find out).
It takes time to develop a young artist’s career and committed galleries do this by developing different structures; for example, the price structure is dependent on published reviews in respected media (Art in America, Art Forum), the right curator including them in a group or museum show, a taste-maker collecting the work, etc. So by exposing the artists early on in their career to a secondary market makes all of the above difficult to achieve. Look at what Saatchi did to Sandro Chia … (obviously there is a huge scale difference in that comparison but it’s an interview everyone should have read if they haven’t already).
Back down to our scale, nobody wants to see a young artist they collect, their newest acquisition, in some random regional auction in New Jersey.
My suggestion, buy what you like and enjoy it. Spend time getting to know the artists you collect. By buying their work, you are providing them with a paycheck and supporting their career (1). Begin a relationship with the gallery who represents the artist, they in turn will develop a relationship with you and offer perks such as a price courtesy or a private viewing of new work (3). Soon you will meet others who also share your passion for work by that artist and they won’t sell too early in NJ either (10).
These are all benefits of collecting emerging art and there are at least 14 new friends to be made in the above interactions!
But if you need to resell before “it’s time” (mid-career or established, think years) go to the gallery you bought the work from. They will either buy it back or use one of their many outlets to sell it for you – it’s the best way to keep your respect and all those friends I promised you.
Tags:14th Street Corridor, art market, art market quotes, collecting emerging art, contemporary art, International art market, investing in art, investing in fine art, Lauren Gentile, Philippa Hughes, Specullector, The Art Newspaper
Posted in 14th Street Corridor, art market, art market quotes, collecting emerging art, contemporary art, International art market, investing in art, investing in fine art, Lauren Gentile, Philippa Hughes, Specullector, The Art Newspaper | 3 Comments »