Bangkok Post

Global art sales suffer sharp fall

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PARIS: Global contempora­ry art sales slowed by a quarter in the year to July 2016 as demand in China dried up, according to online art price database Artprice.

Turnover was $1.5 billion compared with $2.1 billion in the previous year.

“The market saw a healthy period of adjustment, which was as necessary as it was predictabl­e,” Artprice founder and chief executive Thierry Ehrmann said in the report released at the weekend.

“Despite the correction, contempora­ry art remains a particular­ly high-performing long-term investment,” Artprice said.

It said the sector has experience­d growth of 1,370% since 2000 and has produced an annual return of nearly 5% in the same period in a market in which t he number of artworks has quadrupled.

The return rose to 9% for works with a purchase price exceeding $20,000.

But Chinese collectors, who have driven the contempora­ry art scene in recent years, turned their back on modern art and bought classic works.

Chinese buyers snapped up Monets worth $214 million, a single Van Gogh work, L’Allee des Alyscamps, that sold for $66 million and Modigliani works worth $170 million.

As a result of the change in Chinese buyers’ priorities, China slipped to third in the global contempora­ry art market behind the United States and Britain — or more precisely New York and London, which account for the overwhelmi­ng majority of the sales.

Sales in the US and Britain accounted for 65% of the global sales.

The United States sold $582 million worth of contempora­ry art in one year. Although that represente­d a 24% drop year-on-year, it still represente­d 38% of the market.

Sales in Britain were also down, but only by 10%, to $399 million.

Untitled by Jean-Michel Basquiat sold for $57.2 million at Christie’s in New

York in May, setting a new record for the late artist.

Two other stars of the contempora­ry market, the Americans Jeff Koons and Christophe­r Wool, still sold more than $10 million of art each.

 ??  ?? In this April 29, 2016, file photo, a visitor inspects ‘Untitled’ by Jean-Michel Basquiat on display during the press preview of ‘Bound to Fail’ at Christie’s auction house in New York. The painting sold for $57.2 million.
In this April 29, 2016, file photo, a visitor inspects ‘Untitled’ by Jean-Michel Basquiat on display during the press preview of ‘Bound to Fail’ at Christie’s auction house in New York. The painting sold for $57.2 million.

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