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- Newsgroups: rec.antiques
- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!cc.gatech.edu!cc.gatech.edu!mike
- From: mike@cc.gatech.edu (Mike McCracken)
- Subject: Resort Art
- Message-ID: <1993Jan21.210624.15866@cc.gatech.edu>
- Sender: news@cc.gatech.edu
- Organization: Software Research Center, Georgia Tech.
- Date: Thu, 21 Jan 1993 21:06:24 GMT
- Lines: 89
-
-
- I recevied enough responses to motivate the paraphrasing of the article in
- Forbes. For your reference it appeared in the January 18. 1993 issue.
- Title "Resort Art", by Christie Brown
-
- The basic theme of the article is that buying what they call Resort Art is a
- good way to burn money (literally).
- What I'll do is select items from the article, avoid specifically stating
- gallery names (who sell the stuff) and give you an idea of what they are saying.
- I'll first quote from the finale of the story.
- "Gilbert Edelson, legal counsel to the Art Dealers Association of America
- has these pointers to determine the quality of a gallery and the art offered
- for sale:
- 1) Run if you hear "investment".
- 2) Keep running if the dealer says a painting is worth x, but he
- will sell it to you for half x.
- 3) Beware artwork sold with papers of authenticity. A fine arts
- gallery will give you an invoice, which is the legal proof needed
- for a painting or artist.
- 4) Ignore appraisers chosen by the gallery.
-
- Questions to ask a salesman about a supposedly well-known artist.
- 1) Which museum has the artist shown in?
- 2) Have the artist's works ever sold at auction at Christie's or
- Sotheby's, and if so, when and at what price.
- 3) Are there any books or reviews of the artist's works in
- publications like Art-Forum or Art in America?
-
- De gustibus non disputandum est - if you like something and can afford it,
- why not buy it? But don't buy on the word of a salesperson you don't know."
-
- Now for the meat of the article.
- One gallery sells dreamy, pastel-colored scenes by Constantine Kluge for
- $30,000, with the comment he is in his 80's and is about to die.
- Another gallery sells a limited edition (300) print by Judith Bledsoe
- called Odalisque for $1200. Bledsoe is very well known, said the salesman,
- her paintings are priced up to $20,000.
- In checking with an appraiser, formerly of Sotheby's, it was found that
- Judith Bledsoe's works would fetch about 10% of their retail prices if sold
- at auction, and of the few Kluge paintings that had been sold recently, they
- maxed out at $7500.
- Another quote.
- "We get hundreds of calls from people who say they bought a print by
- Salvador Dali, Leroy Neiman, Peter Max, Vasarely, and they want to know
- what can they get for those pieces, says Leslie Hindman, owner of Chicago's
- Leslie Hindman Auctioneers. We say under $1,000, and the person flips out,
- and says, I paid $7,000 for it and have a certificate of authenticity, and
- I was told it was going to appreciate in value".
-
- "Welcome to the world of commercial art. The originality, esthetics, and
- historical significance of some works deem them fine art in the eyes of
- museum curators, art critics, certain dealers and collectors. Commercial
- art lacks that consensus. But if you want to decorate a wall or match
- your decor, there's nothing wrong with it. Just don't think its value
- will hold, let alone increase. Think of it rather as fairly expensive
- wallpaper."
-
- Leroy Neiman is another example of a commercial artist.
- His bold works feature male oriented scenes of gamblers, girls and sporting
- events. His paintings sell at retail for $5,000 to $300,000. His limited
- edition prints sell from $2,000 to $20,000. Yet when the author consulted
- Butterfield and Butterfield (a major California Auction house), they stated
- that Neiman's paintings can be estimated in the $2,000 to $4,000 range
- (5 to 20 cents on the dollar is shown in Gordon's Print Price Annual for
- Neiman's prints).
-
- Other commercial money losers they mention are paintings by Red Skelton,
- Tony Curtis, and other entertainers turned artists.
-
- Get the gist? One glaring (to me anyway) missing artist was Erte. The
- problem with his work (currently as commercial as you can get), is that
- some of his earilier work is truly valuable. The question is where does
- the line get drawn?
-
- The other point to be made is, this is also relevant to the collectibles
- market place. If you buy contemporary "collectibles" because you like them
- and enjoy them, fine. If you buy them as investments, you are probably
- making a mistake. There was an article by Harry Rinker in one of the
- antiques rags recently about a person who had asked him about the value of
- some sort of collectible plate the person had just inherited. The person
- figured it must be worth something. It turns out, it was worth 10% over
- the purchase price. Not a good way to get rich quick or slow.
-
- If you're interested in learning more about how to avoid these types of
- problems in the art world, a good book is Buy Art Smart, by Alan Bamberger.
-
- Mike
-
-
-