Global Times

Sigh of relief

Art market eyes rebound as basel fair kicks off

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The global art market appeared to collective­ly sigh with relief as deep- pocketed collectors descended on Art Basel this week after two years of dwindling sales.

The world’s biggest contempora­ry art fair opened to the public on Thursday, while VIPs got an advance peek at the vast array of artworks for sale.

They range from 20th century masters like Pablo Picasso to today’s cutting- edge creations.

Nearly 300 galleries representi­ng more than 4,000 artists from around the world have put their best goods on display at the show, which has become unmissable for sellers and collectors alike.

“The mood is very, very strong,” enthused Art Basel director Marc Spiegler.

“There are great collectors here. Great artworks. There is a very good energy. Very good atmosphere,” he told AFP ahead of the public opening, adding that “sales are being made.”

That is good news for the global art market, which in 2016 was valued at $ 56.6 billion ( 50.5 billion euros) – down 11 percent from a year earlier, according to a study by Swiss banking giant UBS, the fair’s organizers.

It was down a full 17 percent compared to 2014, when the global art market reached its pinnacle value of $ 68.2 billion, before geopolitic­al turbulence put the brakes on investors’ ebullience.

Private jets

As a sign the pendulum may be swinging back in their favor, 116 private jets were expected at Basel airport on Tuesday when rich collectors descended on the show – 18 more than last year.

Galleries boasted numerous large sales in the fi rst hours after their booths opened.

“We did a few sales around a million dollars,” Mathias Rastorfer, the head of the Gallery Gmurzynska, told AFP just an hour after the doors opened. Works by Fernand Leger, Wilfredo Lam and Roberto Matta were among those that had found new homes, he said.

Marc Glimcher, president of Pace Gallery, agreed that “Art Basel is fantastic this year... People are being very excited about the art they’re buying.”

His gallery sold about a quarter of its booth within the fi rst hour, he told AFP, mainly pocketing checks in the $ 100,000-$ 800,000 range.

And he said most of the multi- million- dollar pieces were already on reserve for museums, while he had numerous collectors vying for a $ 6.5 million David Hockney.

Brett Gorvy of the new Levy Gorvy gallery also hailed the “fantastic energy” at the fair. Works were selling “very, very quickly,” including an Alberto Burri piece for $ 4.5 million.

The gallery also had Jean- Michel Basquiat’s painting Baby

Boom on reserve, the asking price a smooth $ 32 million.

Middle market struggling

But while the high- end galleries and the top artists are raking in sales, they acknowledg­e that the entire market is not faring as well. “The top end, if you want to say the bluechips, have become so strong that it has in some ways disadvanta­ged the middle market,” Andreas Leventis, associate director at Lisson Gallery in London, told AFP. This is because mid- level artists are “neither a sure thing or just affordable enough to be a viable risk, from a purely investment point of view,” he said.

Rastorfer agreed that there have been “some correction­s in the contempora­ry middle section... I think they are having a harder time.”

But he said the dip in the market last year had had a positive impact for “knowledge- driven” galleries.

When the market is booming and “everything is going up, you don’t need much expertise. It just goes up,” he pointed out.

But when times are a bit more challengin­g, “you go to a gallery like us, because we focus on expertise and knowledge,” he said.

“So I’m not unhappy about the current developmen­t.”

Thailand box- office hit comedy film ATM will be adapted into a Chinese movie, iQiyi Pictures announced on Wednesday when releasing its list of new film projects.

Directed by Zha Muchun, who has worked as a scriptwrit­er on popular films like Go Away Mr. Tumor and Buddies in India, Welcome to Xiongren Town will closely follow the story set out in the original Thai film, but set it in a Chinese town.

The 2012 romantic comedy about a couple who work at a bank that does not allow employees to fraternize became one of Thailand’s alltime top- grossing films shortly after its release.

The Chinese adaptation is currently filming in East China’s Zhejiang Province and is scheduled to reach Chinese mainland cinemas in 2018.

Additional­ly, iQiyi Pictures also announced it would produce a series of films inspired by Qing Dynasty ( 1644- 1911) writer Pu Songling’s Strange Stories from a Chinese Studio, one of China’s most famous collection­s of ghost stories and strange tales.

The first film in the series will be 3D animated film Detective Pu Songling, adapted from young online novelist Tengda’s popular work.

“We have numerous film and TV adaptation­s of [ Journey to the West]. It is time to develop Pu Songling into a big IP,” Ya Ning, president of iQiyi Picutres, said at the press conference.

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 ?? Photos: AFP ?? Top: Vivian by New Zealand artist Francis Upritchard on display at the Anton Kern Gallery during the preview day of Art Basel on Tuesday. A couple takes a close look at the artwork Monochrome Yellow by British artist Sir Anish Kapoor during the preview...
Photos: AFP Top: Vivian by New Zealand artist Francis Upritchard on display at the Anton Kern Gallery during the preview day of Art Basel on Tuesday. A couple takes a close look at the artwork Monochrome Yellow by British artist Sir Anish Kapoor during the preview...
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