The Economist - UK (2021-11-20)

(Antfer) #1

70 Business The Economist November 20th 2021


Theartmarket

Monet, Manet, Money


W


hensotheby’sraisedthegavelon
theseason’sbiggestart auctionon
November15ththesellers,HarryandLinda
Macklowe,didnotarriveasonetowatch
theproceedingsfromthediscreetskybox
abovetheauctionfloor,asthosedisposing
ofacollectionoften do.Thecouplecan
hardlystandtobeinthesameroomto­
gether.Theirdivorce,afternearlysixde­
cadesofmarriage,wassocontentiousthat
in 2018 a judgeorderedthemtosell 65 of
theirmagnificent 20th­centuryartworks
andsplittheproceeds.
Death,debtanddivorcearetheauction
market’s traditional catalysts. Sotheby’s
wonthisparticulardealbyguaranteeing
theMacklowesatleast$600m fromthe
sale.Atthetimeitwasagreedsucha ful­
somepromise,thebiggesteverofferedtoa
clientbyanauctionhouse,seemedtohark
backtoa bullishagebeforecovid­19roiled
theartmarket.ButSotheby’spanachewas
welljudged:theeveningbroughtin$676m
includingfees,towhichtheproceedsofa
secondauctioninMaywillbeadded.For
beyondtheMacklowesale,theartmarket
ischanging,inthreeimportantways.
It startedeven beforethe pandemic.
ThetakeoverofSotheby’sbyPatrickDrahi,
a Frenchtelecomsandcableentrepreneur,
for$3.7bninthesummerof 2019 looked
withhindsightlike anerrorwhencovid
struckninemonthslater.Lockdownsshut­
teredauctioneersandgalleriestheworld

over. Artcollectorsquickly decided  that
2020 wasa badtimetosell.The best­con­
nectedauctionhousesmovedswiftly into
tryingtobrokerprivatedeals;the more en­
trepreneurialbolsteredonlinesales  with
digitalauctions.
Mr Drahi’s commercial nous  has
broughtnewmeaningtothefamous  art­
marketquipthatSotheby’sare  “auction­
eerstryingtobegentlemen”,incontrast to
Christie’s,a firmof“gentlementrying to be
auctioneers”.Thetycoon,whotook on well
over$1bnofdebttofinancethe deal, now
hasaccesstodetailsofthe300,000  or  so
richestpeopleintheworld.Thenew Soth­
eby’sisbentonsellingthemnot  just  art,
buthandbagsandhistorytoo.
Histimingmayproveprescient.  Con­
temporaryart,whichaccountsfor the sin­
glebiggestshareoftheartmarket, saw a re­
cord­breaking$2.7bnchangehands during
the year to June, according to  Artprice,
which tracks sales. Both Sotheby’s  and
Christie’ssaytheyexpecttheirsales in 2021
tomatchthe$4.8bnand$5.8bn  they  re­
spectivelymadein2019.
Inpartthatisbecauseboth  the  main
auction houses are expanding  beyond
theirconventionalofferingofart, watches
andwine—themarket’sfirstbig  shift.  In
2020 Christie’s sold a dinosaur  fossil
namedStanfor$31.8m.Earlier  this  year
Sotheby’s auctioned Kanye West’s  Yeezy
trainersfor$1.8m.Bothfirmshave jumped

into  crypto­art,  selling  non­fungible  to­
kens  (nfts)  to  techies.  All  of  these  have
brought  in  new  buyers,  especially  from
Asia,  the  fastest­growing  market.  Of  the
top 20 lots auctioned by Sotheby’s last year,
Asian clients bid on ten and bought nine. 
A  second  new  development  is  that  the
two houses are wooing new customers by
making  buying  at  auction  more  fun.  Last
month  Sotheby’s  organised  a  weekend
jamboree  in  Las  Vegas  for  40  clients.  The
main  business  was  the  auction  of  $100m­
worth of artworks by Picasso. But in an ef­
fort to turn the affair into more of an expe­
rience, Sotheby’s also laid on wine­tasting,
a session on how to gamean auction and a
talk by Jay Leno about vintage cars. At the
party  after  the  sale,  the  djwas  Picasso’s
great­grandson.

Going, going, gone
The  most  far­reaching  shift,  though,  may
be  the  auction  houses’  new  cosy  relation­
ship with commercial galleries and private
dealers. Historically these were their great
rivals. Galleries know where the art is and
what  their  clients  might  be  prepared  to
sell, but lack the access to buyers who flock
to auction houses. Now the two work more
closely together, to find the right buyer for
a piece and vice versa. 
When  a  Düsseldorf  gallerist  recently
wanted  to  sell  a  Gerhard  Richter  from  the
1970s,  an  under­appreciated  period,  he
turned to Sotheby’s. The private sale to one
of  its  clients  was  at  a  far  better  price  than
he  would  have  got  at  auction  or  selling  to
one of his own collectors, he says. In April
2020, a month after the pandemic hit, Ra­
fael Valls, an dealer in Old Masters in Lon­
don, was able to sell nearly 100 pictures in
an  online  Sotheby’s  auction;  in  a  normal
year the gallery would sell around 200. 
In  a  move  that  highlights  this  rap­
prochement  between  auction  houses  and
dealers, Sotheby’s recently hired Noah Ho­
rowitz,  a  director  of  the  Art  Basel  art  fair
who  is  known  to  be  particularlyclose  to
galleries. “Sotheby’s is tearing up the tradi­
tional playbook,” says a rival. The marriage
is partly one of financial convenience: gal­
leries lack the pools of capital big auction
houses deploy to offer guarantees and thus
lure  potential  sellers.  Teaming  up  with
dealers  helps  auctioneers  find  works  to
sell,  which  is  almost  as  hard  for  them  as
identifying the next generation of buyers. 
Sotheby’s and Christie’s hope their new
approach will help both sides of the trade.
When Christie’s sold its first piece of cryp­
to­art  earlier  this  year,  its  boss  Guillaume
Cerutti points out, almost all of the 33 bid­
ders were new to the firm. A few days later
one  of  those  who  had  been  outbid,  a  31­
year­old Chinese­American tech entrepre­
neur  named  Justin  Sun,  wentontobuy  a
$20m Picasso—and, in the Macklowesale,
a Giacometti sculpture for $78m.n

A galloping auction at Sotheby’s paints a new picture of the art world

Twombly for the price of one
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