With Financial Crisis a Distant Memory and as Art Market Booms, Some See the Risk of Bust
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With Financial Crisis a Distant Memory and as Art Market Booms, Some See the Risk of Bust
A Sotheby's employee poses with David Hockney's "Hotel L'arbois Sainte-Maxime" at Sotheby's Auction House in London. The piece is to be auctioned as part of the forthcoming Contemporary Art sale on February 15, 2011 and is estimated to reach $2.3million). REUTERS/Luke MacGregor.

By: Mike Collett-White



LONDON (REUTERS).- At the top end of the art market, the financial crisis seems a distant memory -- surging prices saw Christie's and Sotheby's post impressive 2010 results that were back to, or above pre-crisis levels.

Yet while the market leaders are confident the recovery from 2009's deep slump can be sustained, the prospect of speculative money pouring into art, driven partly by rich Chinese investors, increases the risk of boom and bust, some analysts believe.

"This bull market trend could go on for some time, supported by China's rising class of super-wealthy, but eventually the bubble will burst, as it did in Japan in the early 90s and the global art market crash in 2008," ArtTactic said in its latest analysis of the contemporary art market.

"Too much speculative money will push art prices beyond their long-term, intrinsic art historic value, and it will become a game of who's the Greatest Fool."

The research company said it believed more "hot" money, lured by recent spectacular gains, would enter not only emerging markets but also established Western markets too, with Andy Warhol paintings a prime candidate for further speculation.

"We will experience mini-booms and busts more frequently than in the past as speculators move in and out of different markets trying to cash in on the latest trend," ArtTactic said.

"We see 2011 being the start of this new era, where art is increasingly moving from a collectable asset toward a financial asset."

PICASSO AND GAUGUIN LEAD
Over the next two weeks in London, the two big auctioneers are offering works worth around $650 million at impressionist and modern, surreal, and post-war and contemporary art sales.

While New York is still the art market hub, London is not far behind and an increasingly international client base, plus the rise of internet bidding, means the February sales should give a fair picture of the state of the global art market.

Jussi Pylkkanen, president of Christie's Europe, said he was confident going into 2011 that the strength of the market was sustainable and that there was room for further growth.

The number of new clients who registered for a sale at the world's largest auction house last year rose 23 percent on 2009, and the number of people who bought an item was up 13 percent.

"It's that rise of new registrants which really for me signals both sustainability and actually further potential growth," he told Reuters in a recent interview.

"This new influx of buyers ... continues to grow, and that really is the vital piece for me," he added. "I am very comfortable that it is sustainable."

As long as prices remain high, experts argue, top quality works will continue to come on to the market, creating a cycle that is vital to the market's future expansion. A knock in confidence hits supply just as much as demand, they add.

Christie's posted record annual sales of 3.3 billion pounds ($5 billion) in 2010, up 53 percent on 2009. Sotheby's boasted an auction total, not including private sales, of $4.3 billion in 2010 versus $2.3 billion in 2009.

The next test for the market comes on February 8 at Sotheby's, with impressionist and modern works worth 56-79 million pounds going under the hammer. Among its star lots is Pablo Picasso's "La Lecture" of 1932 valued at 12-18 million pounds.

The following evening, Christie's opens its account at an auction valued at 55-81 million pounds (excluding surreal works) that includes a still life by Paul Gauguin in tribute to Vincent Van Gogh estimated to fetch 7-10 million pounds.

It was at the equivalent sales in 2010 that Sotheby's broke the auction record when a Giacometti statue raised $104.3 million. Months later, Christie's sold Picasso's "Nude, Green Leaves, and Bust" for $106.5 million in New York.

(Reporting by Mike Collett-White)










Today's News

February 4, 2011

Wallraf-Richartz Museum in Cologne Presents Over 60 Works by Alexandre Cabanel

Major New Hepworth Wakefield Gallery Designed by David Chipperfield Architects to Open on May 21

New Portrait of the Princes William and Harry at National Portrait Gallery in London

Morgan Library Presents Exhibition Focusing on the Controversial Shakespeare Portrait Question

Art Institute Presents Works by Swiss Contemporary Artists Peter Fischli and David Weiss

With Financial Crisis a Distant Memory and as Art Market Booms, Some See the Risk of Bust

Historic, Three-Year Preservation Project Restores The Landmark Façade of the Library

Jean-Marc Bustamante's 'Dead Calm' Exhibition On Display The Fruitmarket Gallery

Christian Viveros-Fauné and Jota Castro Appointed Curators for Dublin Contemporary 2011

Toronto Duo Young & Giroux Unveil New Work Specially Made for the Musée d'art Contemporain

Jewellery Owned by Last Link to World of Proust and Monet for Sale at Bonhams, Edinburgh

BFI Gallery Presents the First London Showing of 'Marxism Today' by Artist Phil Collins

New Artists/New Work Series at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago Presents Melika Bass

Anri Sala's First Solo Exhibition in Canada Opens at the Musée d'art Contemporain de Montreal

Mid-Career Overview of Vicky Civera's Work at the Valencian Institute of Modern Art

Auschwitz Decays Due to Age and Mass Tourism, Prompting Preservation Effort

5 Million Manuscripts, Films and Texts for Europeana

Under the Big Top: The Fine Art of the Circus in America at the Fleming Museum

First Solo Museum Exhibition by Rashaad Newsome at Wadsworth Atheneum

World's First Museum Exhibit Dedicated to Women Who Rock Opens at the Rock Hall this Spring

Solo Exhibition of New Paintings and Works on Paper by Robert Zandvliet at Peter Blum Gallery

SFMOMA Launches Collections Campaign with 195 Promised Gifts of Art from Bay Area Collectors

Exhibition of Polish Design 1955-1968 from the Collection of the National Museum in Warsaw

The Great Upheaval: Modern Art from the Guggenheim Collection Opens in New York

'Sesame Street' to Help Create New National Children's Museum Near Washington

James Madison Chess Pieces Unearthed at Virginia Estate

Court Denies Heirs' Claims Over Stolen World War II Art

Long List for Inaugural £10,000 Clore Award for Museum Learning Announced




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