This is what youâll get weekly if you become a Pro |
Every Friday, [Artnet News Pro]( members get exclusive access to the Back Room, our lively recap funneling only the week's must-know intel into a nimble read you'll actually enjoy. This first edition is free, but you'll have to become a member (and click the "subscribe" box during checkout) to receive future editions. Every Friday, [Artnet News Pro]( members get exclusive access to the Back Room, our lively recap funneling only the week's must-know intel into a nimble read you'll actually enjoy. This first edition is free, but you'll have to become a member (and click the "subscribe" box during checkout) to receive future editions. [I'm an image] Tim Schneider Art Business Editor This week in the inaugural ð of the Back Room: Frieze NY in a flash, a divorce boom makes waves, a fractional art investment primer, and much moreâall in a 7-minute read (1,520 words). [I'm an image] Tim Schneider Art Business Editor This week in the inaugural ð of the Back Room Back Room: Frieze NY in a flash, a divorce boom makes waves, a fractional art investment primer, and much moreâall in a 7-minute read (1,520 words). The Big Picture Return of the Art Fair The Big Picture Return of the Art Fair Photo by Keith Beaty/Toronto Star via Getty Images. It happened: an international array of art-market movers and shakers converged this week to make Frieze New York a reality. (In-person! At scale! In a convention center! Are you tired of this joke yet?) The early returns suggest sales and enthusiasm are bouncing back fast in the U.S. âItâs not just New YorkâAmerica is present,â said Hauser & Wirth president Marc Payot at Wednesdayâs VIP opening. (He also claimed to have done 12 straight hours of meetings with visitors from Dallas, San Francisco, and elsewhere the day before, marking the first time in my life a humblebrag from a dealer has given me a sense of hope for civilization.) Heavy hitters from all branches of the industry were present on day one: collectors Howard and Cindy Rachofsky, Don and Mera Rubell, Mike Bloomberg, and Agnes Gund; museum directors Thelma Golden and Richard Armstrong; Christieâs C.E.O. Guillaume Cerutti; and more. Even NFT sensation Beeple (Mike Winkelmann) put in time at what he called his âfirst real art fair.â He told Katya Kazakina that â[talks are happening](â regarding a gallery show. From crypto to cryptic, this guy! Like heâs been in the art world forever... As for the trade itself, Iâve never been so pleased to run out the cliche that first-day sales were strong, especially in the mid-five and six-figure range. However, sources said a slew of booths sold out pre-sale, including five new Dana Schutz paintings priced between $500,000 and $1 million at David Zwirner. Other reported day one (or âday oneâ) transactions included: â Louse Bourgeois, Blind Manâs Buff (1984) â âaround $1 millionâ (Hauser + Wirth) â George Condo, The Drifter (2021) â $800,000 (Hauser + Wirth) â Hernan Bas, The Suspect (2021) â between $350,000 and $400,000 (Lehmann Maupin) â Ha Chong-Hyun, two paintings â âin the range ofâ $200,000 to $300,000 each (Tina Kim) â Cristina Canalesâs paintings â ânearly sold outâ from $17,000 to $53,000 each (Galeria Nara Roesler) It happened: an international array of art-market movers and shakers converged this week to make Frieze New York a reality. (In-person! At scale! In a convention center! Are you tired of this joke yet?) The early returns suggest sales and enthusiasm are bouncing back fast in the U.S. âItâs not just New YorkâAmerica is present,â said Hauser & Wirth president Marc Payot at Wednesdayâs VIP opening. (He also claimed to have done 12 straight hours of meetings with visitors from Dallas, San Francisco, and elsewhere the day before, marking the first time in my life a humblebrag from a dealer has given me a sense of hope for civilization.) Heavy hitters from all branches of the industry were present on day one: collectors Howard and Cindy Rachofsky, Don and Mera Rubell, Mike Bloomberg, and Agnes Gund; museum directors Thelma Golden and Richard Armstrong; Christieâs C.E.O. Guillaume Cerutti; and more. Even NFT sensation Beeple (Mike Winkelmann) put in time at what he called his âfirst real art fair.â He told Katya Kazakina that â[talks are happening](â regarding a gallery show. From crypto to cryptic, this guy! Like heâs been in the art world forever... As for the trade itself, Iâve never been so pleased to run out the cliche that first-day sales were strong, especially in the mid-five and six-figure range. However, sources said a slew of booths sold out pre-sale, including five new Dana Schutz paintings priced between $500,000 and $1 million at David Zwirner. Other reported day one (or âday oneâ) transactions included: â Louse Bourgeois, Blind Manâs Buff (1984) â âaround $1 millionâ (Hauser + Wirth) â George Condo, The Drifter (2021) â $800,000 (Hauser + Wirth) â Hernan Bas, The Suspect (2021) â between $350,000 and $400,000 (Lehmann Maupin) â Ha Chong-Hyun, two paintings â âin the range ofâ $200,000 to $300,000 each (Tina Kim) â Cristina Canalesâs paintings â ânearly sold outâ from $17,000 to $53,000 each (Galeria Nara Roesler) The Bottom Line The opening of Frieze New York 2021 came off as close to a best-case version of the ânew normalâ as could have been hoped. Yes, health checks and masks were a drag. But much of the industry showed up, timed entry made the experience uncharacteristically pleasant, and sales were brisk. The virus situation makes European fairs a question mark, but Friezeâs success bodes well for the Armory Show and Independentâs return in September. The Bottom Line The opening of Frieze New York 2021 came off as close to a best-case version of the ânew normalâ as could have been hoped. Yes, health checks and masks were a drag. But much of the industry showed up, timed entry made the experience uncharacteristically pleasant, and sales were brisk. The virus situation makes European fairs a question mark, but Friezeâs success bodes well for the Armory Show and Independentâs return in September. [Read More]( The Art Detective Breakups and Sell-Offs The Art Detective Breakups and Sell-Offs Photo by Keith Beaty/Toronto Star via Getty Images. A pandemic-driven divorce boom is shaking up the world of elite wealthâand it should keep the art market jumping well into 2023. Thatâs the message in Katya Kazakinaâs inaugural edition of The Art Detective, her weekly column sleuthing through the marketâs best-kept secrets. (Another Artnet News Pro perk, folks.) Some of the names parting ways and splitting collections are familiar: Bill and Melinda French Gates, Linda and Harry Macklowe, and even Sothebyâs private sales guru David Schrader, who just finished divvying up a 20-year collection with his ex-partner. Appraisers are the first to benefit from the acrimony. Divorce-related valuations of fine art and collectibles are up 25 percent compared to just before lockdown, according to Winston Art Groupâs Elizabeth Von Habsburg. The reason? You canât finalize a divorce settlement without agreed-upon asset valuations. Splitting amicably saves collecting couples money, too, and not just because they avoid paying trial lawyers. Quietly sorting out who gets what means soon-to-be-exes also avoid hefty capital-gains taxes that would come from selling to outsiders. But if a divorcing couple canât come to terms privately, theyâll be forced to liquidate at auction, meaning auction-house fees and sales taxes, too. The dueling can even extend to the salesroom. Lawyers agree spouses often wage bidding wars against one another, sometimes strictly to inflict painâexemplified by one husband threatening to win a piece just so he could burn it on video. Expect 12 to 36 months of art-market action from all this, according to Schrader. Between appraisals, settlement negotiations (or trials), and a pandemic-induced bottleneck in divorce courtâto say nothing of the private sales and auctionsâthe trade is in for a different kind of COVID-related long haul. A pandemic-driven divorce boom is shaking up the world of elite wealthâand it should keep the art market jumping well into 2023. Thatâs the message in Katya Kazakinaâs inaugural edition of The Art Detective, her weekly column sleuthing through the marketâs best-kept secrets. (Another Artnet News Pro perk, folks.) Some of the names parting ways and splitting collections are familiar: Bill and Melinda French Gates, Linda and Harry Macklowe, and even Sothebyâs private sales guru David Schrader, who just finished divvying up a 20-year collection with his ex-partner. Appraisers are the first to benefit from the acrimony. Divorce-related valuations of fine art and collectibles are up 25 percent compared to just before lockdown, according to Winston Art Groupâs Elizabeth Von Habsburg. The reason? You canât finalize a divorce settlement without agreed-upon asset valuations. Splitting amicably saves collecting couples money, too, and not just because they avoid paying trial lawyers. Quietly sorting out who gets what means soon-to-be-exes also avoid hefty capital-gains taxes that would come from selling to outsiders. But if a divorcing couple canât come to terms privately, theyâll be forced to liquidate at auction, meaning auction-house fees and sales taxes, too. The dueling can even extend to the salesroom. Lawyers agree spouses often wage bidding wars against one another, sometimes strictly to inflict painâexemplified by one husband threatening to win a piece just so he could burn it on video. Expect 12 to 36 months of art-market action from all this, according to Schrader. Between appraisals, settlement negotiations (or trials), and a pandemic-induced bottleneck in divorce courtâto say nothing of the private sales and auctionsâthe trade is in for a different kind of COVID-related long haul. [Read More]( Stock in Trade Can Masterworks Master Scale? Stock in Trade Can Masterworks Master Scale? Courtesy of Masterworks. Masterworks, the investment platform securitizing fractional shares in blue-chip paintings, is on a mission to become âthe largest buyer in the marketâ according to founder Scott Lynn. After acquiring more than $100 million in paintings in 2020 alone, and attracting more than 140,000 users to date, the companyâs Silicon Valley-style growth strategy is premised on the notion its shareholders can consistently beat the niche art trade through its Wall Street models, proprietary market analytics, and economies of scale. But art-industry veterans questioned three elements of the Masterworks sales pitch: â Fee Structure: Masterworks, the investment platform securitizing fractional shares in blue-chip paintings, is on a mission to become âthe largest buyer in the marketâ according to founder Scott Lynn. After acquiring more than $100 million in paintings in 2020 alone, and attracting more than 140,000 users to date, the companyâs Silicon Valley-style growth strategy is premised on the notion its shareholders can consistently beat the niche art trade through its Wall Street models, proprietary market analytics, and economies of scale. But art-industry veterans questioned three elements of the Masterworks sales pitch: â Fee Structure: Is it too much to charge a 10 percent fee inside the initial offering price, a 1.5 percent management fee yearly, and a 20 percent fee on the resale profit when a painting is finally dealt? Is it too much to charge a 10 percent fee inside the initial offering price, a 1.5 percent management fee yearly, and a 20 percent fee on the resale profit when a painting is finally dealt? â In-House Data Accuracy: â In-House Data Accuracy: Has contemporary art at auction really posted bigger gains and softer losses than the S&P 500, global equities, and other assets since 1995? And is an index tracking repeat sales of U.S. homes really the best model for tracking changes in individual artistsâ historical results under the hammer? Has contemporary art at auction really posted bigger gains and softer losses than the S&P 500, global equities, and other assets since 1995? And is an index tracking repeat sales of U.S. homes really the best model for tracking changes in individual artistsâ historical results under the hammer? â Aggressive Growth: â Aggressive Growth: With plans to spend $300+ million on art by EOYââtypicallyâ resulting in its acquiring new work every weekâcan Masterworks consistently buy low and sell high on top-quality paintings for the long run? Or will this torrid pace prove incompatible with the narrow supply and irregular market conditions of blue-chip art? With plans to spend $300+ million on art by EOYââtypicallyâ resulting in its acquiring new work every weekâcan Masterworks consistently buy low and sell high on top-quality paintings for the long run? Or will this torrid pace prove incompatible with the narrow supply and irregular market conditions of blue-chip art? âAuction houses were knocking themselves out to get good pictures. I didnât have any clients coming to me desperate to sell. If you spent $100 million in 2020, were you getting the best opportunities?â â Megan Fox Kelly, president of the Association of Professional Art Advisors, on Masterworksâs shutdown-era buying spree. âAuction houses were knocking themselves out to get good pictures. I didnât have any clients coming to me desperate to sell. If you spent $100 million in 2020, were you getting the best opportunities?â â Megan Fox Kelly, president of the Association of Professional Art Advisors, on Masterworksâs shutdown-era buying spree. The Bottom Line Masterworks acts as a Rorschach test, even for finance-savvy collectors: Do you see great paintings as an asset whose value can be standardized, quantified, and diversified invisibly into a portfolio⦠or a highly specific, irregular good whose value must be experienced, not just traded? If the former, read the fine print. If the latter, ignore the whole enterprise. The Bottom Line Masterworks acts as a Rorschach test, even for finance-savvy collectors: Do you see great paintings as an asset whose value can be standardized, quantified, and diversified invisibly into a portfolio⦠or a highly specific, irregular good whose value must be experienced, not just traded? If the former, read the fine print. If the latter, ignore the whole enterprise. [Read More]( Data Dip March 2021 Fine-Art Auction Sales Up 22 Percent Vs. March 2019 Data Dip March 2021 Fine-Art Auction Sales Up 22 Percent Vs. March 2019 © Artnet Price Database and Artnet Analytics 2021. You read those dates right: global fine-art sales at auction this March ($1.1 billion) were more than one-fifth higher than in March 2019 ($940 million)âa full year before shutdownâaccording to the Artnet Price Database. The biggest difference? Fifteen lots sold for $10 million or more this March, against only seven in March 2019. Even on its own, the resurgence in trophy sales would have boded well for supply and demand at the houseâs this spring. Add in the bonanza of choice pieces pushed onto the block by marital strife, and signals suggest May will be an epic bounce-back month for the auction market. Smash the button below for more detailed analysis from Julia Halperin. You read those dates right: global fine-art sales at auction this March ($1.1 billion) were more than one-fifth higher than in March 2019 ($940 million)âa full year before shutdownâaccording to the Artnet Price Database. The biggest difference? Fifteen lots sold for $10 million or more this March, against only seven in March 2019. Even on its own, the resurgence in trophy sales would have boded well for supply and demand at the houseâs this spring. Add in the bonanza of choice pieces pushed onto the block by marital strife, and signals suggest May will be an epic bounce-back month for the auction market. Smash the button below for more detailed analysis from Julia Halperin. [Read More]( âShortly after I arrived at [MOCA Los Angeles], Eli asked us to print out all of the museumâs financial records from the past several years. I delivered to Eli a two foot stack of accounting records. This would be his weekend reading. Eli was unique in combining this financial acumen with an enthusiasm for the latest artistic innovations.â â Jeffrey Deitch remembering Eli Broad, whose death at age 87 was announced last weekend. âShortly after I arrived at [MOCA Los Angeles], Eli asked us to print out all of the museumâs financial records from the past several years. I delivered to Eli a two foot stack of accounting records. This would be his weekend reading. Eli was unique in combining this financial acumen with an enthusiasm for the latest artistic innovations.â â Jeffrey Deitch remembering Eli Broad, whose death at age 87 was announced last weekend. Express Checkout Adam Chinn's Incognito Sales Platform + Three More Market Morsels Express Checkout Adam Chinn's Incognito Sales Platform + Three More Market Morsels Ex-Sothebyâs dealmaker Adam Chinn will launch LiveArt Market, a peer-to-peer online sales platform powered by machine learning and extreme discretion, this month. ([Wall Street Journal]() Aimed at cutting out the middleman for high-end sales, features will include... â Free automated estimates via algorithms that crawl auction data â Control over what data remains anonymous (including a workâs current owner) â In-house provenance researchers and conservators â Flat 10 percent buyerâs premium (vs. up to 25 percent at major auction houses) Ex-Sothebyâs dealmaker Adam Chinn will launch LiveArt Market, a peer-to-peer online sales platform powered by machine learning and extreme discretion, this month. ([Wall Street Journal]() Aimed at cutting out the middleman for high-end sales, features will include... â Free automated estimates via algorithms that crawl auction data â Control over what data remains anonymous (including a workâs current owner) â In-house provenance researchers and conservators â Flat 10 percent buyerâs premium (vs. up to 25 percent at major auction houses) Veteran collectors (surprise!) have almost no interest in NFTs. ([New York Times]() Veteran collectors (surprise!) have almost no interest in NFTs. ([New York Times]() Zona Maco was lively thanks to a focus on local galleries and restriction-free travel from Europe and the U.S. ([Artnet News Pro]() Zona Maco was lively thanks to a focus on local galleries and restriction-free travel from Europe and the U.S. ([Artnet News Pro]() Positive outlooks for economic growth and corporate profits have led investors to greet Joe Bidenâs proposed tax hikes as follows: ¯\_(ã)_/¯. ([New York Times]() Positive outlooks for economic growth and corporate profits have led investors to greet Joe Bidenâs proposed tax hikes as follows: ¯\_(ã)_/¯. ([New York Times]() Artwork of the Week Roy Lichtensteinâs Interior: Perfect Pitcher Artwork of the Week Roy Lichtensteinâs Interior: Perfect Pitcher Courtesy of Christieâs Images Ltd. 2021. Date: 1994 Seller: Private Collection, New York Presale Estimate: $20 million to $30 million Selling At: Christie's 20th-Century Evening Sale, New York Sale Date: Tuesday, May 18 Date: 1994 Seller: Private Collection, New York Presale Estimate: $20 million to $30 million Selling At: Christie's 20th-Century Evening Sale, New York Sale Date: Tuesday, May 18 Clocking in above 10 feet by 16 feet, this vibrant example of Lichtensteinâs âInteriorsâ series epitomizes the value of a sterling provenance. Only the artist himself and his estate held the painting before its current unlisted owner⦠who sources claim is none other than Larry Gagosian. (A Gagosian spokesperson denied the claim.) What we do know is that the painting is backed by a third-party guarantee, so no matter what happens on auction night, someone will walk away with this bravura paintingâand Iâll bet you that someone owns exactly zero NFTs. Clocking in above 10 feet by 16 feet, this vibrant example of Lichtensteinâs âInteriorsâ series epitomizes the value of a sterling provenance. Only the artist himself and his estate held the painting before its current unlisted owner⦠who sources claim is none other than Larry Gagosian. (A Gagosian spokesperson denied the claim.) What we do know is that the painting is backed by a third-party guarantee, so no matter what happens on auction night, someone will walk away with this bravura paintingâand Iâll bet you that someone owns exactly zero NFTs. Top Image: © Taylor Crothers/Getty Images. Follow us [Facebook]( [Twitter]( [Instagram]( This email was sent to {EMAIL} by Artnet Worldwide Corporation.
233 Broadway, 26th Floor, New York, NY, 10279, USA [Unsubscribe]( from this list, [register]( to receive Artnet newsletters, or [update]( your profile. For more information, please contact us at marketing@artnet.com. [Terms]( [Privacy]( [FAQ]( Follow us [Facebook]( [Twitter]( [Instagram]( This email was sent to {EMAIL} by Artnet Worldwide Corporation.
233 Broadway, 26th Floor, New York, NY, 10279, USA [Unsubscribe]( from this list, [register]( to receive Artnet newsletters, or [update]( your profile. For more information, please contact us at marketing@artnet.com. [Terms]( [Privacy]( [FAQ]( Having trouble viewing this email? [Click here.]( Having trouble viewing this email? [Click here.](