As champagne glasses clinked ahead of the Sotheby's contemporary month and the great art sale earlier this and good of the art world gossiped about Frieze, behind the scenes things weren't so rosy. So slim were the number of lots in one of the most prestigious sales of the year that works from the lower value day sale had to be brought upstairs and installed in the main galleries, "so they didn't look like they'd been robbed", according to one insider.
In fatter times, London's marquee sales in October used to be big-ticket affairs, with several hundred million pounds-worth of art being traded at Sotheby's, Christie's, Phillips and Bonhams during Frieze Week. Not now.
That evening sale racked up just £37.5m from a meagre 23 lots-compare that with £96.1m in 2022. If it wasn't for national treasure David Hockney, whose sun-drenched tribute to the south of France, L'Arbois, Sainte-Maxime sold for £13.2m, "the Sotheby's sale would have been a complete disaster", says one former auction house executive.
Christie's equivalent sale brought in £81.9m from 52 lots, and while that was up a little on the previous year, commentators point out that this was effectively two sales in one. For the first time in decades Christie's pulled its June sales in London to focus on October - a sure sign of a market in decline. Phillips also took a hit with its October evening sale, which fell by 17 per cent in value.
The London art market has suffered particularly, blighted by post-Brexit regulations and the subsequent rise of Paris as an art centre, but there is a wider problem of a global fall in auction sales too. Ongoing wars in Ukraine and the Middle East, a depressed Chinese economy and a looming US presidential election have made the wealthy jittery about buying and selling high-value art. Some American buyers are said to be funnelling their coffers into political campaigns rather than art.
Bu hikaye The London Standard dergisinin October 24, 2024 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye The London Standard dergisinin October 24, 2024 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
Vamos Rafa! It's time to go for Spain's brave warrior
'Shy and funny' Nadal bows out as sport's ultimate competitor
Does Angeball have a winning future at Spurs?
Head coach divides supporters with his ultra-attacking tactics
The £5bn-a-year tax timebomb that's set to devastate London hospitality
The capital will bear the brunt of Rachel Reeves’s National Insurance raid
Live like a Queen...
...in the house gifted to Anne of Cleves by Henry VIII in 1540 and now onsale for 3.75 million
At home with...Matthew Williamson
The designer’s Belsize Park flatis a grand canvas for his ever-changing colour palette
Hidden London
The first time I made my way to Maison Assouline was with a broken foot, in a tragic boot and crutches.
Jameela Jamil on why New York will always have her heart...
..and her stomach. The actor and activist shares her favourite brunch spot, a secret bar and her brownstone fantasies
My life in bespoke suits
Back in the Eighties, suits were so wide that even the shoulder pads had shoulder pads. Suits back then were boxy, square, and designed to make you look like a quarterback, a bouncer or a tank.
Cher's wild world
The singer's memoir is full of jaw-dropping tales
'I was told I could stay in the UKthen kicked out of my asylum accommodation'
As our appeal hits 1m, we turn the spotlight on an official policy that’s making newly recognised refugees homeless