The general economy and also the art economy is clearly headed for some choppy waters…” This is what mega-dealer Larry Gagosian told his staff in a tough-talking, if ungrammatical, memo published last November in Flash Art, as the global financial meltdown continued to panic investors, the US recession was officially confirmed and unemployment figures for the country soared by 533,000 in that month alone.
Elsewhere in this issue, we look at the effect the credit crunch is having on the art world as the new year begins. In the art market, there have been a few early victims of the crisis, including the 18 employees sacked by PaceWildenstein in New York, and the 17 “fabricators” of pill cabinets, butterfly paintings and pickled animals axed by Damien Hirst. “I want to make sure that we are the best swimmers on the block. The luxury of carrying under-performing employees is now a thing of the past,” warned Mr Gagosian, in a similar vein, in the same memo to his staff.
In Miami, the trendy French dealer Emmanuel Perrotin has shuttered his gallery, and now will only reopen it for Art Basel Miami Beach next December. Sotheby’s is also trimming its workforce, and has announced it has abandoned guarantees for the foreseeable future. The firm, and its arch-rival Christie’s, were badly hit by the collapse in art prices during New York’s sales of impressionist, modern and contemporary art in November, which garnered only half the expected totals. Those sales were prepared before the autumn, when art prices were still riding high. Some works sold in November for half their low estimates, and up to 75% of the works in some sales were bought in.
Today a different reality prevails. The lacklustre 2008 autumn fairs, Frieze and Art Basel Miami Beach, saw dealers prepared to be flexible on prices, accepting discounts of up to 30%. But, as journalist, sociologist and lecturer (and The Art Newspaper contributor) András Szántó points out: “Just as designer brands are now being offered at huge discounts in the high street—were those shoes or handbags really worth the previous prices?—so those [pre-financial meltdown] prices should never have been so huge. Some dealers priced art so aggressively, and the prices went up with such velocity, that it is inevitable that they should fall back sharply.”
These prices rose with the greatest speed for contemporary art. But the picture of the art market, as 2009 opens, is far from simple. It is always worth remembering that the market is not a single block, but a whole series of sub-sections.
More traditional categories, where prices did not rise so dramatically, have weathered the downturn better. The London sales of old master paintings in December, for example, saw enthusiastic bidding for the best works on offer, with Christie’s selling a rediscovered Tiepolo for £2.8m and Sotheby’s making £3.6m for Frans van Mieris the Elder’s A Young Woman In a Red Jacket Feeding a Parrot, 1663, (est. £500,000-£700,000). And there was extraordinarily strong take-up and an 87.6% sell-through rate (by lot) for Victorian narrative painting, an unfashionable category if ever there was one, from the Scott Collection, held at Sotheby’s London in November.
The sale of stock of traditional antique furniture in London by Christie’s from the Jeremy and Hotspur dealers was by no means a rout, and made near its (admittedly “realistic”) pre-sale estimate. Elsewhere, a Seurat drawing made $6.3m in Paris, five times higher than expectations. Everywhere, while sell-through rates are down, there is still money being spent on art and buyers available for the best works.
Against this must be placed dire results for the over-estimated, over-supplied Russian market and severely weakening totals for contemporary Chinese art and Middle-Eastern art. At Christie’s sale in Dubai last autumn, Parviz Tanavoli’s sculpture, Poet in Love, 1998-2007, fetched $242,500, well under its low estimate of $400,000. Again, these were categories where prices had risen the highest, and the fastest, supported by speculative buying.
As this year starts, what are the prospects for the art market? “As long as you see wild fluctuations on Wall Street, no one will spend a lot of money on art. I think 2009 is going to be very difficult,” says Per Haubro Jensen of the venerable New York dealers Knoedler & Company. To this must be added the psychological impact of the meltdown—for many, it seems the wrong time to be buying what is, after all, an inessential purchase.
Supply presents an ambiguous picture. On the one hand, vendors are holding back from selling, for fear of “burning” their pictures by seeing them unsold; the auction houses are struggling to bring in good material for next month’s sales. On the other hand, forced sales by cash-strapped collectors may bring desirable works onto the market. Dealers claim that it is a great time to buy, and a number were acquiring inventory at Art Basel Miami Beach last month. “Cash is king at the moment, and there will be great buying opportunities,” concludes Mr Szántó.
The writer is editor-at-large of The Art Newspaper
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20 Sep 09
15:14 CET
adart24, New York
The overall sentiment of buying hesitancy and instability is difficult to miss at any art world event you attend. That said, it's a collector's market right now, and for those with the stomach to buy, there are A-level works being offered at opportunistic prices. There are also new platforms emerging to minimize the inherent riskiness this article outlines. One new one I know of is called Untitled Partners. They created a fractional ownership platform that enables collectors to buy works together. It's not an art fund, but it does allow collectors to diversify their risk by purchasing fractions of multiple works, or by committing less capital up front to the works they want. There are also companies like Fine Art Capital Group that offer art financing. For collectors with a tolerance for a bit more risk, the potential for big rewards in the form of great, valuable pieces seems high right now.
20 Sep 09
15:14 CET
sholto, Edinburgh
Some artists won't come back from this and the generation of artists, especially the London artists will never recover their prestige as their work gently leaks onto the market over time. I bought a Robyn Denny painting for £100 that had once sold for £20,000. There will be more and more like that. And lets face it: much of the work was utter rubbish anyway. Art was fashionable, soon it won't be and so prices will drop.
14 Oct 09
17:17 CET
Fred Lisaius, Seattle
Art galleries that want to survive the global recession need to position themselves for the eventual upturn. Clear out the "rubbish", look for contemporary artists that are selling in this economy and create new excitement about the future.
19 Nov 09
21:41 CET
Jose Acosta, Poughkeepsie, NY.
I think 2009 has been a year of opportunity for the hard working artists who have original vision. The adjustment in market rate gave the emerging artists a chance to play catch-up and more opportunities to exhibit. I for one am having the best year ever and plan to continue right through the hardest of times. You see it takes planning, patience, dedication and lots of will to succeed in these times. I have always created art for the love of creating and no market good or bad dictates what I choose to create. Special thanks to all those collectors who continue to patronize the artists they admire. They are the true heroes in these hard times.
Also in opinion:
Could the art market be undergoing a fundamental restructuring?
What is the sin MoCA and Jeffrey Deitch have committed?
Response from the Barnes Foundation
Also by Georgina Adam:
The going is tough: but stronger sales at all levels than last year
Brighter mood as blue-chip art finds buyers at Miami Beach
US marshals seize works from Gmurzynska’s stand
Auction report: post-war and contemporary art
Owner cancels insurance claim on his missing Warhol “Athletes” set
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Could the art market be undergoing a fundamental restructuring?
The Caravaggio season opens for scholars
20 Sep 09
15:14 CET
Jamie Vandenberg, Brooklyn, New York
Of course the art market is only going to continue to plummet in 2009. Anyone who tells you otherwise is either a fool or attempting to deceive you. However, it is just as obvious that there is an upside to this predicament. 2009 is the perfect year to take advantage of the record instability of the financial markets. It may be hard to believe but now offers a once in a lifetime opportunity. Whether you are a contemporary art buyer or contemporary art maker the potential payoff is huge. All anyone has to do is gain access to reliable art data analysis and art data pattern processing. Cheers to the New Year! Jamie Vandenberg of Contemporary Artistic Technologies