5/17/13

Skate's Art Market Research Tracks Trends

As a lowly, newbie collector, I am fascinated by the workings of the upper echelon art world--particularly in light of the record-setting auction that took place at Christie’s that took place a few days ago. A selection of 66 postwar and contemporary artworks by well-known  artists (such as Jackson Pollock, Roy Lichtenstein and Jean-Michel Basquiat) sold for a total of $495 million (Wow!).

One great source of information about how the top-level art market works is Skate’s Art Market Research. Established in 2004, the organization provides unbiased research to support art investment decisions. Skate’s goal is to develop information tools and services that can help shift the balance of power in the art investment world from intermediaries (such as dealers and auction houses) to art collectors, art investors and artists. Earlier this year, Skate’s published a two-part Annual Art Investment Report for 2012. Part 1 discussed the world’s top 5,000 most valuable artworks based on public auction prices. Part 2 addressed trends in the global “art industry,” which includes auction houses, dealerships, e-commerce platforms, art investment funds, art financial services, and publicly traded art industry companies.


Part 1: Top 5,000 Artworks

To understand trends in the premium segment of the art market, Skate’s evaluates year-to-year changes in the 5,000 most expensive art works that sell at auction worldwide. In December 2012, these top 5,000 artworks were worth $33.3 billion, up 9% from 2011.

The study also showed that fewer people are buying more expensive art and are focusing on established names.

According to the report, “While 2012 showed that buyers have devoted more substantial funds to art purchases, it also revealed that they have become more selective in terms of their choices. The overall number of top-value works selling has decreased, and buyers have been selecting artworks from a far smaller number of artists than they did in 2011. A clear illustration of this can be seen in the number of new artists appearing in the ranking; in 2012.” In 2012, only 38 new artists were represented among the top 5,000 artworks, compared to 81 in 2011.

Download the full report here:


Part 2: State of the Global Art Industry

In this report, Skate’s analysts conclude that art buyers are “the creative force behind the art industry and its operatives. It is buyers who are encouraging established players to expand overseas to tap markets where demand for art is growing. Buyers are pushing for the conversion of brick-and-mortar stores into online businesses that offer e-commerce solutions.”

Furthermore, they believe that the growing and increasingly diverse universe of art buyers “makes it literally impossible to create marketable art using old cliches of beauty, taste, and discovery of new ideas.”

The report points out that “Comtemporary art buyers are not only carefully selective when it comes to their art purchases, but they also requires high-level services to help them manage the works they acquire and abundant information to help them refine their ideas regarding art collecting.”

The report describes trends in auctions, events, and online sales, noting that the art trade is undergoing some major changes.

Overall, “Skate’s sees bright prospects for the art industry as entrepreneurs and innovators continue to tweak old models and invest in new business models to play on the increasing attractiveness of global arts to global consumers.”

Skate’s observes that the quest for new art collectors is making it difficult for many dealers to operate as local enterprises. Their analysts predict that “Those galleries that are undercapitalized, poor on risk management, and unable to grow their trade to meet the tastes of international buyers will eventually face a slow death. The successful gallery now must possess recurring access to third-party financing, the ability to operate internationally by attending multiple fairs and having points of presence in a few geographies, and a management team with a strong combination of artistic and commercial skills.”

But the report also acknowledges an influx of new faces to the art trade, including some who want to push “consumer-grade” art and serve as specialty retailers: “These developments may forever change the centuries-old tradition of art dealing based on selling to a privileged class.”

Download the full report here:


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5/10/13

Three Good Sites for Learning about Art

If galleries and art fairs seem intimidating, increase your confidence by learning more about art and building virtual collections online. Studying art online has become easy and enjoyable, thanks to sites such as Artsy, Google Art Project, and Artspace.

“It’s easy to practice choosing art, when you are browsing online from the privacy of your own home,” says Fleur Allen, director of the Interactive Arts gallery.

Here are three good sites for learning more about art, artists, and art collecting.


Artsy is an online platform for discovering and collecting art. On the Artsy site, you can see  more than 30,000 artworks by more than 6,000 artists from leading galleries, museums, private collections, foundations, and artists’ estates. Artsy has partnered with 400+ galleries and 100+ museums and foundations.

To make it easy for collectors to find specific types of works online, Artsy initiated The Art Genome Project. Like an art-focused search engine, the Art Genome Project enables you to explore art by style, subject matter, medium, technique, or region.



For example, when you hit the term “collage,” you will see a definition for collage (“a two-dimensional work created from an assemblage of different materials”) and more than 1,200 examples of collages by various artists. Choose “sort by year” and you will see how collage styles have evolved from 1913 until the present.

The Art Genome Project can be used either for self-guided learning or to discover works for sale. More than 10,000 of the works on Artsy are available for sale, with prices ranging from under $1,000 to more than $1 million. You can use Artsy to contact the seller directly, or discuss questions about the work with an Artsy specialist.

The Artsy blog features easy-to-read posts about artists, their projects, and various exhibitions.


Thanks to Google high-resolution imaging technologies and expertise from collection curators, you can study 30,000 works of art from over 150 collections in our 40 nations. You can examine works at brushstroke-level detail, take virtual tours of museums around the world, and build world-class virtual collections without spending a dime. 



Some of the art institutions you can “visit” online include: The Art Institute of Chicago, the Auckland Art Gallery, the Acropolis Museum, the George Eastman House, and Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum, the Museum of Russian Icons, the J. Paul Getty Museum, the Hong Kong Museum of Art, the Israel Museum, the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), the National Portrait Gallery, and the Tate Britain.



Expertly narrated videos, audio guides, and viewing notes make it easy for you to learn more about the paintings, drawings, sculptures, historic artifacts, and photographs in the museum collections.

Using Google’s online tools, you can create and share virtual art collections that would be impossible to match in real life.


Artspace is a digital marketplace for fine art and design. The site offers limited editions and original works from rising stars to the most recognized artists. For beginning collectors, they have a page of artworks starting at $100.



Part of the Artspace mission is “to help collectors and aspiring collectors discover, learn about and collect fine art.” In keeping with their role of online “art advisor,” they publish dozens of feature articles and interviews with artists, advisors, and collectors.

For example, their “Art 101” page contains a variety of useful features such as:


As you spend more time studying art online, you will become less anxious about asking “dumb” questions when you view art in person. Most experts agree that viewing art online can be fun, but it is no substitute for experiencing art in the size and form the artist intended.  

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