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- BUSINESS, Page 69Business NotesCOLLECTIBLESFine Art's Blue Period
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- Prices for fine art during the past decade seemed to move
- in only one direction: up, up, up. But with real estate values
- sagging and stock markets slumping, prices for paintings are
- starting to stumble too. In auctions last week at Sotheby's and
- Christie's in New York City, artworks on the block sold for a
- total just under $100 million, or about 40% below expectations.
- An estimated one-third of the pieces went unsold. Among the
- jilted paintings: Willem de Kooning's Woman as Landscape, which
- was expected to fetch as much as $12 million.
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- A prime reason for the disappointment was that the auction
- houses had placed vastly inflated reserves, or minimum
- acceptable bids, on their paintings. Says Richard Feigen, an
- international art dealer: "Their estimates and reserves are now
- insane, sometimes double what the market will bear." Prices for
- older masterpieces are expected to hold up well. Van Gogh's
- Portrait of Dr. Gachet should bring more than $40 million at
- auction this week. Other safe bets: 20th century classics
- (Picasso, Matisse) and postwar Americans (Jackson Pollock, Mark
- Rothko). But experts think prices will soften dramatically for
- paintings by some young superstars (David Salle, Eric Fischl,
- Anselm Kiefer). Says Feigen: "No more seven-figure prices for
- artists barely out of their 30s."
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