• News/Talk
  • Music
  • Entertainment

Marketplace

Monday, May 5, 2008

Listen to the show

N.Y. art auctions immune to economy

Henri Matisse's Portrait au manteau bleu

New York City's art auction season opens today. Sotheby's and Christie's are hoping to sell $1.8 billion worth of works -- 25% more than last year. Jill Barshay reports on the art bubble that's just getting larger, despite a struggling U.S. economy.

Henri Matisse's "Portrait au manteau bleu," valued at $17 million, at Christie's New York Impressionist and Modern Art Evening Sale and Post-War and Contemporary Art Evening Sale May 1, 2008 in New York City. (Mario Tama/Getty Images)

More on The Economy, Arts - Culture

TEXT OF STORY

TESS VIGELAND: Contemporary art from China is all the rage these days. Sotheby's sold more than $227 million worth of Chinese art and jewelry during a recent sales event in Hong Kong. Meanwhile, the New York art auction season opens today. Sotheby's and Christie's are hoping to sell $1.8 billion worth of Impressionist and contemporary works, 25 percent more than last year.

Jill Barshay paints a picture for us of an art bubble that's just getting larger, despite Wall Street layoffs and a struggling US economy.


JILL BARSHAY: The auction houses are so confident of the art market that they're guaranteeing half the sales. That means they'll buy the art at a minimum price if no one else does. Amy Cappellazzo is the deputy chairman of Christie's. She says prices are so high that veteran collectors are unloading famous paintings by Monet, Rothko and an Andy Warhol print of Marlon Brando perched on a motorcycle.

AMY CAPPELLAZZO: It's an estimate of request, and since you're requesting it, it's $30 million.

Cappellazzo says new foreign investors from China, Russia and the Middle East are fueling the New York art auctions, and ultra-rich Americans are still buying.

CAPPELLAZZO: The art market might be more akin to very, very high-end real estate in Manhattan, whereby you're seeing anything that's sort of rare, precious, special, one of kind, unique is actually kind of holding up.

But cracks are showing. Joan Whalen is a veteran New York art dealer and consultant. She says the Wall Street crowd stopped buying art after their year-end bonuses dwindled or vanished.

JOAN WHALEN: The middle market has suffered a great deal. If you have a painting for $500,000 or $1 million, it'll be gone tomorrow. If you have a painting, $20,000, $30,000, $40,000, $50,000, you're going to have trouble selling it.

That explains Christie's and Sotheby's new policy. They no longer accept consignments for less than $50,000.

In New York, I'm Jill Barshay for Marketplace.

Music From This Show

  • Fair Weather Friends Daedelus Buy
  • Magic Spells Crystal Castles Buy
  • Major Tom (Voellig Losgeloest) Peter Schilling Buy
  • Searching for the Ghost Heartless Bastards Buy
  • Hangliders Supersuckers Buy

Marketplace Confessional

"Chris Farrell calls this a 'blue-collar recession'. According to journalist Nan Mooney and professor of financial law Elizabeth Warren, the white-collar middle-class may not be losing jobs, but they are falling behind in earnings and growing in debt, so are feeling -- and are -- less secure than their parents. Job loss, wage stagnation (or retreat) for white-collar workers, job insecurity . . . really rankle when we see the top 1 percent continue to grow richer each year, and often because today's business practices squeeze the rest of us till we bleed."

More

Share your own rant

The Specials

Conversations from the Corner Office

Marketplace goes one-on-one with CEOs, company founders, head honchos...

Sit in

Working

Intimate profiles of workers in the global economy.

Meet them

Consumer Consequences game

Find out what the world would look like if everyone lived like you. An interactive game from American Public Media.

Play

Marketplace on iTunes U

Marketplace is now available in iTunes U, Apple's online education platform. Get free, downloadable content in subjects like History, Science, Business and more. Study up

Sustainability

What is "sustainability?" It boils down to this: Don't eat your seed corn.

Learn more

 ©2008 American Public Media