|
BEIJING, Jan. 17 -- Collectors will buy and sell more
than US$20 billion of art this year, according to sales tracker Artnet AG, and
many are trying to decide if they are buying their Cattelans and Picassos at the
top of the market.
"This market does remind me of the
wildness of the NASDAQ boom before it ended in 2000," says Robert Harshorn
Shimshak, a California radiologist who collects contemporary paintings. "I'll
know it's time to sell if I start hearing art tips at my local coffee shop."
Art prices are being driven up by collectors ranging
from Eli Broad's Broad Art Foundation and Charles Saatchi of London's Saatchi
Gallery to speculators seeking alternatives to stocks. Prices of the top 25 per
cent of the most expensive Contemporary pictures sold at auction more than
trebled since 1996, according to London index-maker Art Market Research.
Some collectors say buyers may face losses if they
try to sell paintings bought recently, like investors who gobbled dot-com stocks
late in the boom. Values will not keep rising forever just because wealthy
people are building collections, says Marvin Ross Friedman, a Miami dealer and
collector of works by artists including Andy Warhol and Roy Lichtenstein.
"If anything, the feverish buying suggests a kind of
herd instinct and the market may well be in for a serious correction," Friedman
says. "Many of the new collectors do not have a grounding in art history or a
fundamental understanding of what they are buying."
Pricey
accessory
Works by living artists from Maurizio Cattelan to
Marlene Dumas now sell at auction for US$1 million or more and even works by
relatively unknown artists are snapped up at art fairs. Shimshak says he tried
to buy a piece by a "hot" African artist, Wangechi Mutu, at the Art Basel Miami
Beach fair in December and it had been sold at the outset.
"Art has become the chips in the poker game of life
for people of means," Friedman says. "I mean it has become a very pricey
lifestyle accessory."
Timing is everything for art buyers, as it is for
investors. Shimshak says his best buys have been artists, including Edward
Ruscha, before they were famous.
Before art prices crashed in 1990-91 there was also a
surge in speculative buying of Contemporary works, with sudden jumps in prices,
according to "True Colors: The Real Life of the Art World," a 1996 book by
Anthony Haden-Guest.
Cattelan's "Ninth Hour," showing Pope John Paul II
felled by a meteorite, had a US$2.7 million hammer price at a Phillips de Pury
& Co New York auction in November. The sculpture, one of two copies made of
wax, cloth, resin and rock powder, took US$800,000 at a Christie's International
auction in 2001, according to Art Sales Index, a London data service.
New
collectors
Art was bid up in the 1980s by new European and
Japanese collectors, then collapsed as the effects of the 1987 stock-market
crash spread. The top 25 per cent of works in Art Market Research's Art 100
Index peaked at 9040 in 1990, up from 1658 in 1985. It dived 59 per cent to 3686
by 1992.
The Art 100 index, which tracks prices from 1976,
includes artists from Rembrandt van Rijn to Pablo Picasso. The Contemporary
index fell harder and longer. Higher-priced works in the Contemporary Art 100
Index peaked at 4979 in 1990, and fell to 1915 in 1996.
More than US$20 billion of fine art is traded
annually, says Joe La Placa of Artnet, a Frankfurt-based online gallery and data
company. New York-based Sotheby's Holdings Inc, the No 1 auction house,
disclosed US$2.7 billion of auction sales for 2004, and privately held
Christie's International of London usually has similar results.
The most heavily attended auctions in New York and
London are sales of Old Masters, Impressionist and Modern, and Contemporary
works. New York's main auctions are in May and November with smaller sales in
between, while London's key sales are in February, June, July and December.
"Strong
nerves"
Tefaf Maastricht, a Dutch fine art and antiques fair
in March, draws Old Master collectors while those seeking Contemporary works
throng the stalls at Art Basel in June, its Miami offspring in December, New
York's Armory Show in March and London's Frieze Art Fair in October.
"You need strong nerves to be buying" after the
trebling of Contemporary prices, says Robin Duthy of Art Market Research, a
stockbroker-turned-art analyst. "If prices go up that steeply there's trouble
ahead - but you don't know when."
Ali Bagherzadeh, a London-based manufacturer and
collector just back from the Miami fair, says he will decide where the market's
heading after watching London's February sales and New York's Armory show in
March.
Here are highlights of the coming Contemporary,
Impressionist and Modern, and Old Master auctions:
Supermodel Kate Moss posed for Lucian Freud, one of
Britain's top selling painters, in 2002 when she was pregnant. The result,
"Naked Portrait," will star at Christie's London sale of Postwar and
Contemporary art on February 9. It carries a top estimate of 3.5 million pounds
(US$6.8 million).
Basquiat's graffiti
Two of Jean-Michel Basquiat's untitled 1980s acrylic
paintings are being advertised by Christie's and Sotheby's for their
Contemporary sales.
Top estimates are 850,000 pounds (US$1.53 million)
and 800,000 pounds (US$1.44 million), respectively. Sotheby's Basquiat, a little
smaller, shows one of the cult artist's African masks with graffiti decorations.
Sotheby's sale is on February 10.
Private collectors of Basquiat, who died in 1988 of a
drug overdose, include the Broad Art Foundation, Santa Monica, California, and
Zurich-based UBS AG, Europe's biggest bank.
Shimshak, who spends as much as US$100,000 a year on
art, mainly at dealers, says he's looking for "somewhat undervalued" works by
Alighiero Boetti and Richard Artschwager. "I am trying not to chase the train
that has left the station."
For its February 8 Impressionist and Modern sale in
London, Sotheby's is advertising Picasso's "Femme au Chapeau," a split- faced
woman in a blue hat, and for its German and Austrian sale the same day, Max
Beckmann's "Dame mit Spiegel," showing a woman with a mirror.
Both paintings date from the 1940s and carry top
estimates of 3.5 million pounds (US$6.6 million). Christie's ad for its February
7 Impressionist and Modern sale features Gustave Caillebotte's 1877 "Portrait de
Femme Dans un Interieur" for as much as 2 million pounds (US$3.6 million).
Another van
Gogh?
The best of such works tend to appreciate because the
artists are dead and their paintings end up in museums. The May 1990 sale of
Vincent van Gogh's "Portrait of Dr Gachet" for US$82.5 million in New York
marked the peak of the last art boom. Did the sale of Picasso's "Garcon a la
Pipe," which went for US$104.2 million in May 2004, signal the top for the
current rise?
While values are high, "I'm not seeing an irrational
rise in prices in my market," says David Norman, Sotheby's co-chairman of
Impressionist and Modern art.
In the late 1980s, the art market was "walloped" by
economic and political events including the Iran-Iraq war, while this time
collectors absorbed the September 11 attacks and the conflict that followed, he
said.
Old Master sales draw buyers who fight for the few
top-quality works that aren't in museums, passing over the rest.
Christie's New York sale on January 26 will offer
15th-century Florentine painter Filippo Lippi's "The Penitent Magdalen," valued
at as much as US$1.2 million, with 10 other works from the heirs of art
journalist Denys Sutton.
Sotheby's, a day later, will auction Sandro
Botticelli's "Fortune," a portrait of a goddess valued at as much as US$600,000
that may have been commissioned by the artist's patron, Lorenzo de'Medici, the
auction house says.
(Source: China Daily, by Linda Sandler) |