NEW YORK, NY.- Two blockbuster weeks of marquee evening sales ended in Manhattan on Thursday night with doubleheader Sothebys auctions of rising stars and established contemporary names that raised a combined $283.4 million and smashed 11 records for artists, including six by women. This pushed the running total for various spring sales at Sothebys, Christies and Phillips to more than $2.5 billion.
The market is stronger than ever, said New York dealer David Benrimon, adding, The Macklowe sale made nearly a billion dollars. He was referring to Sothebys record-breaking $922 million auction of the Macklowe Collection, which concluded Monday as the S&P Index continued to slide.
When stock markets take a nosedive, Benrimon added, people look to invest in art. Its more tangible. The art market is bulletproof.
Indeed, with Sothebys auction of the Macklowe collection and Phillips setting its company record for a public sale Wednesday night, the top end of the art market still seems to be booming despite the recent slide in stocks, prompted by growing concerns over inflations impact and the war in Ukraine.
The results seemed to endorse the upbeat assessment of the latest annual Art Basel and UBS Global Art Market Report, which said international art sales had recovered strongly from the coronavirus pandemic, with sales reaching an estimated $65.1 billion in 2021, up 29% from the previous year.
But some experts, mindful of the recent sudden collapse of the market for NFTs, or nonfungible tokens, noted that sooner or later, the art world would once again be affected by events in the wider world.
Art tends to be a lagging market, said Doug Woodham, managing partner of Art Fiduciary Advisors, a New York-based firm that provides art-related financial advice. Speculative capital flooded into the market in the late 1980s, then stocks crashed in 1990, added Woodham, a former Christies executive, recalling the effect of Iraqs invasion of Kuwait. The art market didnt crash until 1991.
Woodham, along with many market observers, has noted the large amounts of international capital that has been invested in works by young up-and-coming painters, some of which have yielded massive short-term returns for speculators.
Last year, global auction sales of paintings by artists under 40 soared to $259.5 million, a 177% increase on 2020, according to data provided by Artprice, a French-based auction analytics company.
Eager to jump on this fast-moving bandwagon, Sothebys has come up with a new format called The Now sales, focusing on works by the most coveted names of the moment. On paper, this 23-lot offering was meant to be the warm-up act for the main sale of works by established contemporary artists, but with so much attention and money being focused on younger names, for many, this was the evenings main event.
Like hungry chicks in a nest, banks of Sothebys staff members screamed telephone bids as Lot 1, the 2020 painting Falling Woman, by New York-based artist Anna Weyant, set the tone. Estimated at $150,00 to $200,000, it sold to an online bidder for $1.6 million, beating the record $1.5 million set for the artist at Christies last week.
Female artists and artists of color continued to be the dominant forces in the market for works by younger contemporaries. Sothebys proudly announced before The Now sale that, for the first time, female artists outnumbered men at one of its auctions.
Capitalizing on Simone Leighs representation of the United States at the Venice Biennale (where one of her sculptures also won a Golden Lion award), Sothebys included the life-size mixed media female head Birmingham, from 2012. This triggered another feeding frenzy of phone competition, the hammer finally falling at a record $2.2 million, 10 times the presale upper estimate.
Complex, multilayered paintings of the Los Angeles-based Christina Quarles have impressed critics and visitors at the Biennales central exhibition. This acclaim appeared to supercharge her market, with the 2019 canvas Night Fell Upon Us Up On Us soaring to a record $4.5 million. The previous auction high for her works had been $685,500.
Overall, The Now sale raised $72.9 million, with all the works sold and nine artists reaching new highs. Admired American painters Avery Singer ($4.9 million) and Jennifer Packer ($2.3 million), both of whom are under 40, were also among the record breakers.
Over the last five years, so much money has gone into young and midcareer artists, said Woodham. The sort of art that speculative capital has chased tends to plummet the most.
Estimates on the sale of works by more famous contemporary names that followed were routinely higher, but with the financial stakes raised, Sothebys, like Christies and Phillips, tried to protect its high-profile lots from failure with guaranteed minimum prices pledged by third parties. Of the 27 lots on offer, eight were certain to sell courtesy of this mechanism.
The big-ticket lot of the night was Francis Bacons imposing, gold-framed painting Study of Red Pope 1962, 2nd Version 1971. Though guaranteed by Sothebys, no third party pledged a guarantee, perhaps aware that it had previously failed at auction in 2017. Nonetheless, it sold for $46.3 million to one bidder.
Just two artist records were set in this second session. Irish-born abstract painter Sean Scully achieved a new high. Scullys 1985 painting Song, a harmony of blue, yellow and orange stripes, ended the sale on a high with a price of $2 million.
Sothebys contemporary sale, the last of a marathon series of evening auctions, raised $210.5 million from 27 lots. Bidding was noticeably more subdued after all the excitement of The Now sale.
William OReilly, the New York-based president of Dickinson, the private advisers and fine art dealers, said that competition in the second sale was more muted because Sothebys had to offer high estimates to secure works. And tastes were changing.
This is the new traditional, said OReilly, characterizing the works produced by the worlds most famous contemporary artists who have either died or are over age 40. Its for connoisseurs.
Though this spring series of auctions couldnt be characterized as anything other than a success, art trade professionals expressed concern about the market over the coming few months, particularly if rising inflation and interest rates close the tap on what has been routinely termed free money, or cheap debt, that has bought so much big-ticket art at auction.
Todd Levin, a New York-based art adviser, said that when art markets dip, the problem is supply, rather than demand.
Its not so much that prices for art drop, he said. You just dont see great works on the market. They disappear. They stay on collectors walls.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.