Digital Editions
Newsletters
Subscribe
Digital Editions
Newsletters
Art market
Museums & heritage
Exhibitions
Books
Podcasts
Columns
Technology
Adventures with Van Gogh
Art market
Museums & heritage
Exhibitions
Books
Podcasts
Columns
Technology
Adventures with Van Gogh
Art market
news

Sotheby's launches Gallery Network online sales platform

Featuring galleries like Petzel, Lehmann Maupin and Jack Shainman, the buy-now marketplace transacts sales through the auction house at publicly listed prices

Margaret Carrigan
28 April 2020
Share
Alex Katz's White Roses 7 (2012) is offered for $900,000 by Gavin Brown's Enterprise. Courtesy of Sotheby's

Alex Katz's White Roses 7 (2012) is offered for $900,000 by Gavin Brown's Enterprise. Courtesy of Sotheby's

As the stream of new online art sales platforms converges into an Amazonian river of virtual commercial offerings during the coronavirus (Covid-19) crisis, Sotheby’s is introducing Gallery Network, a buy-now marketplace for galleries.

Launching today, the platform features individual viewing rooms for each of the auction house's inaugural gallery partners, which include Gavin Brown’s Enterprise, Lehmann Maupin, Luhring Augustine, Kasmin, Petzel, Sperone Westwater, Van Doren Waxter and Jack Shainman.

Users will not be redirected to the gallery to make a purchase and instead will buy the offered works directly through Sotheby’s. All prices are publicly listed, and purchases of works valued up to $150,000 can be completed as point-of-sale transactions—the same kind of credit-card-based purchases that can be made at retail sites like Amazon. Buyers will have the option to “enquire” regarding the sale of works listed in excess of $150,000.

“On a technical level the Gallery Network is distinguished among most platforms by our transactional technology,” says Saara Pritchard, Sotheby’s senior specialist of contemporary art, adding that she believes the primary benefit to the galleries is the exposure of their artists to the auction house’s clients. “Given the universe of objects we sell, from fine art to luxury goods, there is significant potential for crossover promotion and sales that I think is unique to our business.”

Unlike Artsy, another online sales platform that introduced a “buy now” function last year, there is no membership fee for participating galleries, although Sotheby’s receives a flat commission that is reflected in each purchase price listed online.

Works include White Roses 7 (2012) by Alex Katz, offered by Gavin Brown for $900,000; a 1983 photograph of Robert Mapplethorpe taken by Andy Warhol for $22,000 at Kasmin; and a 2019 painting by Angel Otero, Window Seat, offered for $100,000 by Lehmann Maupin.

"The digital world is so important these days. This was true long before Covid-19, but is ever more apparent to us now,” says Rachel Lehmann, the co-founder of the New York-based gallery. “One of Sotheby's strengths is its commitment to curatorial integrity, even when dealing with the marketplace. We trust they will provide rich curatorial context for our artists when showcasing artworks online.”

Though auction houses are generally focused on secondary market sales, the emphasis on the Gallery Network platform will be on primary sales, something Sotheby's has rather famously dabbled in before at the onset of a different economic crisis with its direct-to-consumer sale of artist Damien Hirst’s new works in the 2008 Beautiful Inside My Head Forever sale.

As the art world “continues to grapple with and acclimate to the circumstances of our current moment”, Pritchard says, “we believe this type of cooperative arrangement can be a model for success not only during the short-term, but also as a long-term reciprocal project to support all levels of the market."

Art marketSotheby'sAuction housesLehmann MaupinJack ShainmanOnline sales
Share
Subscribe to The Art Newspaper’s digital newsletter for your daily digest of essential news, views and analysis from the international art world delivered directly to your inbox.
Newsletter sign-up
Information
About
Contact
Cookie policy
Data protection
Privacy policy
Frequently Asked Questions
Subscription T&Cs
Terms and conditions
Advertise
Sister Papers
Sponsorship policy
Follow us
Instagram
Bluesky
LinkedIn
Facebook
TikTok
YouTube
© The Art Newspaper

Related content

Art marketnews
16 October 2023

Lines redrawn: how artists and auction houses are shaking things up with new ways of working together

Phillips’s recent private selling exhibition of Damien Hirst works marked 15 years of artists collaborating with auction houses, with or without gallery cooperation

Anny Shaw
Art marketnews
15 December 2021

Sotheby’s sales for 2021 surpass $7.3bn, the highest total in company history

The firm’s sales were bolstered by a sharp increase in online bidders, who accounted for 92% of all bids this year

Daniel Cassady
Art marketnews
8 September 2022

Sotheby’s launches primary market channel selling works directly from artists’ studios

For each work sold, 15% will go to a charity or institution of the artist’s choice—but will the new sales format ruffle dealers’ feathers?

Anny Shaw