(Drivebycuriosity) - Contemporary art is full of surprises and the market is booming. Paintings by Andy Warhol, Gerhard Richter, Francis Bacon and other top stars are selling at auctions worldwide for more than $50 billion dollars.
The book "The Supermodel and the Brillo Box: Back Stories and Peculiar
Economics from the World of Contemporary Art" by Don Thompson describes
this world (amazon). I learned a lot there, but I also had much fun. The book is
written in an amusing style and it is spiced with a lot of facts and funny anecdotes.
The author, who calls himself an economist and contemporary
art enthusiast, describes precisely the world of art collectors, artists, auction
houses and galleries. Thompson sees the universe of contemporary art
through the lens of a market economist, "puzzled by the alchemy that
causes a Warhol to be valued at $63 million rather than $5 million or
even $100,000." He explains the peculiar economy of the art
market, illustrated with a lot of success stories and flops.
Innovation & Shock
What is driving the market? "Beautiful or not, the central characteristic of twenty-first-century
contemporary art is that traditional artists skills of composition and
coloration have become secondary to originality, innovation &
shock - however achieved", says Thompson.
The
title of the book refers to the lifelike, nude waxwork of former
actress and
supermodel Stephanie Seymour which you can see on top of this post.
Thomson provides not just the amusing background story to "Stephanie",
he also describes - with many more examples - how strange this market
functions. For instance the artist Félix González-Torres´s created 1992
an installation, called "Untitled" (Portrait of Marcel Brient): 200
pounds (90 kg)
of cellophane-wrapped candy, intended to be piled in the corner of a
room and consumed by guests. To avoid shipping costs from his usual
candy supplier in Chicago the artist purchased from a local store.
Estimated at $4 to $6 million, the installation sold for $4.4 million.
I enjoyed Thompson`s well written reports about auctions, for instance of Takashi Murakami`s
1997 "Miss ko2", a 6-foot (1,8 m) tall fiberglass sculpture of a
big-breasted cocktail waitress, a high-heeled secret agent character from
a popular Japanese animated cartoon; "hammered down for 46.8 million".
The author delivers amusing and elaborated portraits of mega-star artists like Banksy, Damien Hirst, Ai Weiwei, Takashi Murakami and dedicates a whole chapter to Andy Warhol´s factory and their "products". He describes the complex issue of authentication of "Warhols" by the "Andy Warhol Art Authentication Board",
which accepted sometimes work, which is not the work by Andy Warhol,
but which is signed, dedicated and dated by him. But Thompson also
writes about artists who had risen like a comet and fell out of favor
again.
We also get introduced to famous and important art collectors who have
strong influence on the market, the prices and the reputation of certain
artists. And he describes the competition between the powerful auction houses
Sotheby´s, Christie`s and Phillips and the struggle between the auctioneers on the one hand and Gagosian and other art dealers (art galleries)
on the other hand. Furthermore he explains how auctions and other
marketing strategies function and highlights the growing importance of Art Basel, Frieze and other art fairs.
In addition Thompson outlines the globalization of the art market, its
rapid growth in China and its expansion to Abu Dhabi and Quatar which
both influence demand and prices worldwide
"The Supermodel......." is entertaining and inspiring. Recommended for art lovers, broad minded economists and everyone who is interested how the complicated world around is functioning.
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