Speculation is characteristic of the art market’s long history of buying frenzies that later crash in disillusionment. In the 1980s, a strong Japanese economy and a buoyant American stock market drove art sales to new heights. When 1990 came around, Japan entered its “lost decade” of financial woes and the American stock market crashed; half the contemporary artworks offered in major auctions that fall failed to sell.
Allison Zuckerman was 27 and working in her cramped apartment in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, when the mega-collectors Donald and Mera Rubell discovered her, buying more than 20 pieces. (She stashed dirty clothes under the bed before their visit.) Since 2021, her work has sold at auction 59 times, a remarkably high volume for a young artist. “It feels very out of body,” Zuckerman said of watching auctions.
Laurent Mercier, an art dealer representing Emmanuel Taku, said in a text message that what happened to the artist was “very sad and crazy.”
In 2021, Mercier said, Taku’s paintings had nearly 500 wait-listed buyers and promises of museum donations that would improve the artist’s reputation. But in the next two years, as other dealers entered the picture, works by Taku suddenly flooded the market, with supply outstripping demand.
“Everyone wants a piece of the cake,” he said, recalling how buyers made offers over email or on Instagram. It was hard to tell genuine collectors from speculators, he said.
Then, around 2021, record high prices caused a stampede of sellers, which flooded the fragile market. Gallerists raised artists’ prices but in some cases they overshot the target, discouraging potential buyers.
Artists rarely benefit from high auction prices, since most works at auction are sold by collectors who have bought their works earlier and are now hoping to sell them for a profit. The artists also rarely speak — as they do here — about how art market speculation affects them personally and professionally. In retrospect, Ismail, 34, said he regretted selling up to five works at a time to art advisers and collectors — who swiftly resold them.
But from 2021 to 2023, the prices for these artists — “ultracontemporary” is the industry term for them — plummeted by almost a third, according to the Artnet Price Database.
Experts say the downward trend is continuing; in the first half of 2024, sales of work by young artists fell 39 percent over last year.
"The art market has been experiencing a downturn for the last few years, but the slump has been particularly acute for young artists. During the early pandemic, a speculative boom driven by a misplaced belief in quick returns set in, with collectors spending $712 million at auction in 2021 on works by artists born after 1974 — a giant leap from the $259 million buyers spent just a year earlier. "
The irony for me is that, even with the market value drop for these artists, they're still raking in a hell of a lot more money than I can even dream of getting for my art. I'm exceedingly lucky if I can sell a painting for 350 bucks, but lucky enough to sell something for roughly 100, but usually LESS.
Young Artists Rode a $712 Million Boom. Then Came the Bust.
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And then I wonder why I'm so tired by November....
The other paintings I varnished today.
#CosoArt #CoSoArtist
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Gotta finish it before I can post it!
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I hear ya! My abstract- Beautiful Chaos and my symbolist works tend to be bought by people in other states or in urban settings in general.
Self taught artist and 'indie' author.
https://www.mariaaragon.com/
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