Global art sales plunged in 2016 as the number of high-value works
sold dropped by half, while China
regained its status as the world’s top market, Artprice said in an annual
report released Monday.
Art auctions worldwide totalled $12.5 billion (11.8
billion euros) last year, down 22 percent from $16.1 billion in 2015, the
report said.
The world’s biggest database for art prices and sales,
working with Chinese partner Artron, attributed the drop to a plunge in the
number of works worth more than $10 million each – from 160 in 2015 to 80 last
year.
“On all continents, sellers are choosing a policy of
‘wait-and-see,'” Artprice CEO Thierry Ehrmann said.
Top-dollar auctions last year included that of an
Impressionist painting of a haystack by Claude Monet, “Meule”, which went for
$81.4 million at Christie’s.
A Peter Paul Rubens masterpiece, “Lot
and his Daughters”, sold for $58.1 million, also at Christie’s.
Contemporary art had its stand-out moments, too. An
untitled painting from American painter Jean-Michel Basquiat went to a Japanese
collector for $57.3 million.
Wassily Kandinsky’s “Rigid and Curved” from 1935 went
under the hammer for $23.3 million.
But it was China
which chalked up the highest total sales and “established itself clearly as the
superpower” of the art world, the report said.
After five years of dominance, the country lost its title
as top art market to the United
States in 2015, but a year later was back,
recording $4.8 billion in auction sales.
That figure represented 38 percent of total world sales,
said Artprice, which compiled the data with its partner firm Artron of China.
Traditional calligraphy and painting comprised the vast
majority of sales in China .
The country’s biggest sale in 2016 was a scroll painting
of “Five Drunken Kings Return on Horses” by early 14th-century Chinese artist
Ren Renfa that went for $45.89 million.
But contemporary art sales, too, are becoming frequent in Hong Kong which “has become an unmissable spot on the art
market,” Artprice said.
A year of consolidation
Despite the drop in overall value of sales, the global art
market witnessed an 11-percent rise in “fine art” transactions, a category that
excludes antiques, applied art like pottery, and furniture.
“The range of prices under $50,000 shows the strongest
progression and currently makes up 96 of the market in the West,” the art
database said.
In 2016, “the principal objective was to consolidate the
core of the market, to the detriment of a new race to reach record prices,” it
said.
Chinese artists were also the main moneymakers in the
auction world, taking three of the five top spots for 2016 sales.
Works by China ’s
Zhang Daqian fetched the highest amounts, followed by 20th-century master Pablo
Picasso, the Chinese watercolorist Qi Baishi, the “father” of Chinese
contemporary art Wu Guanzhong, and the German contemporary artist Gerhard
Richter. JB
This article first appeared on Inquirer.net.
http://lifestyle.inquirer.net/255698/global-art-sales-plummet-china-rises-art-superpower/
http://lifestyle.inquirer.net/255698/global-art-sales-plummet-china-rises-art-superpower/
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