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The Best… or a Bargain

The current reset may dissuade speculators who have entered the market in recent years from gambling on fast, outsize returns, experts say.

“I keep hearing ‘opportunity costs, opportunity costs,’” one major art advisor said. The phrase refers to what collector-investors are not buying when they choose to buy an artwork, which doesn’t yield any interest or dividends. With the same money, they could buy stock in Meta, a share of a private company, or a U.S. treasury bond.

“That is causing people to be a little more cautious,” said a senior executive of a major art business. “They say, ‘I’m going to buy a painting that I really, really need at this moment’ rather than ‘Let me get a big exposure to art.’”

There are plenty of “opportunity cost” conversations taking place within the art space, too. “When someone wants me to buy a Mark Bradford for $7 million primary, look what else I can get for that price,” the major advisor said. “I can get great things. I can buy a great Picasso work on paper. I can buy something made 50 years ago that stood the test of time in categories that take us in a whole new direction.”

As liquidity dries up, the pendulum is starting to swing back from untested hot names toward tried-and-true blue-chip fare. The clients of the Fine Art Group are looking for classics, according to Hoffman.

With prices for ultra-contemporary works less likely to shatter estimates, smart money is investing in historical, but still comparatively affordable, work. During Christie’s day sale of the Fineberg trove, newly rediscovered market darling Lynne Drexler’s Summer Blossom (1962) fetched $1.4 million, obliterating its $200,000 high estimate, while Abstract Expressionist Grace Hartigan’s On Orchard Street (1957) generated $1.2 million, 12 times the low estimate of $100,000.27

“Anything uncommercial, anything out of fashion—it’s zero interest,” Hoffman said. “The wrong Picasso, the wrong Magritte, the wrong Cézanne—no interest. The right Van Gogh—huge interest. The right diamond—huge interest. The right book—huge interest. Our clients are happy to pay record prices.”

Going forward, if works are not extremely rare, of high quality, and in excellent condition, “their prices will suffer,” said art advisor Todd Levin.

To be sure, there are still in-demand artists with wait lists and sold-out shows. But there’s a growing awareness that a tremendous amount of product changed hands over the past two years.

“A lot of people are saturated,” Cromwell said.


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