The auctions in New York hit a new ceiling for the art market. Sotheby’s wasn’t able to sell a portrait of Picasso belonging to William Achenbaum, victim of Bernie Madoff and head of the hotel group Gansevoort based in Miami Beach.
The Madoff effect is also being felt by Christie’s. The discreet performance of its closest competitor inspired a less ambitious policy on the part of the auctioneer of the property of François Pinault (FNAC, Gucci, Au Printemps). His experts sold a Picasso of the collection of Jerome Fischer, founder of the shoe company Nine West, with an estimated maximum of $18 million for $14 million.
Is it a sign of the times? The conservative bases and logical prices result in an optimal equation for recovering economies. As we anticipated, there were six hands up for an early landscape by Monet painted in Argentuil, that besides being beautiful, had the origin of the Havemeyer family. The piece sold for $3.4 million, twice its estimated price.
The results indicate that the shoppers have become selective. There are no longer the billionaires of the fast and easy check; the financial tsunami and Madoff have decimated them. A cat in bronze by Giacometti did not sell, but a painting by Mondrian, with a price estimated at $5 million sold for $9.2 million.
The geometric admired by the Argentine Luis Tomasello is rising. Two months back, in the auction of the Saint Laurent collection, The Louvre Museum bought a Mondrian for the new headquarters in Abu Dhabi. This is the kind of information that is quoted in the art world. Meanwhile, in Buenos Aires, American Express prepares to buy in arteBa, as in every year, a work of art for the National Museum of Fine Arts.
Las subastas neoyorquinas fijaron un nuevo techo para el mercado de arte. Sotheby´s no pudo vender el retrato de Picasso propiedad de William Achenbaum, vÃctima de Berni Madoff y cabeza del grupo hotelero Gansevoort con base en Miami Beach.
¿Signo de los tiempos? Las bases conservadoras y los precios lógicos resultan una ecuación óptima para economÃas en terapia. Tal como anticipamos, hubo seis manos en alto por un paisaje temprano de Monet pintado en Argenteuil, que, además de ser lindÃsimo, tenÃa la impecable procedencia de la familia Havemeyer. La pieza se vendió en 3,4 millones de dólares, el doble de lo estimado.
Los resultados indican que los compradores se han vuelto selectivos. Ya no están en escena los billonarios del sà fácil y la chequera pronta, el tsunami financiero y Madoff los han diezmado. No se vendió un gato de bronce de Giacometti, pero dobló el precio una tela de Mondrian, estimada en 5 millones de dólares y vendida en 9,2 millones.
Donald Trump has grandiose and sometimes extravagant plans to resolve conflicts across continents, but in reality he always struggles to implement them.