Are Chinese buyers retreating from the art auction market?
linmin1984
发表于 2023-10-8 11:41:21
230
0
0
Sotheby's on Thursday sold 39 pieces from the collection of Shanghai real estate and pharmaceutical billionaire Liu Yiqian and his wife Wang Wei for a total of $70 million, well below the company's $94.4 million estimate. The Amedeo Modigliani painting 'Paulette Jourdain,' which the couple bought eight years ago for $42.8 million, fetched just $34.8 million.
Ten works by artists including David Hockney, Stanley Whitney and Zao Ou-ki went unsold; Many of these people's works are in museum collections. More than a dozen other works sold for less than the asking price, and buyers of works by star artists Mark Bradford and Javier Calleja made just one bid.
That raises questions about how active Chinese bidders will be at New York auctions later this fall, said Michael Plummer, art finance adviser at Artvest in New York. Plummer said there had been concerns before the Hong Kong auction and the final result added to those concerns.
China's rising class of entrepreneurial billionaires has become internationally known for investing their newfound wealth in art. Mr. Liu, the chairman of the investment entity Sunline Group, is a former Shanghai taxi driver who made his name in the early 1990s by investing heavily in Chinese stocks, real estate and pharmaceutical companies. He also started buying traditional Chinese artifacts, mostly at auction.
In 2014, he made an international splash when he paid $36.3 million by credit card to Sotheby's Hong Kong for a Ming Dynasty chicken cup. Photos of him drinking tea from the same chicken cup later went viral online. He told The Wall Street Journal at the time that he just wanted to know what it felt like.
His other high-profile purchase came in 2015, when he paid $170.4 million at Christie's for another Modigliani painting, "Naked Woman Lying on Her Side." Mr. Liu's wife, Wang Wei, who has long admired Chinese revolution-themed art, urged him to add Western modern and contemporary art to their collection.
Today, Mr. Liu and Ms. Wang are best known in the art world for showcasing their collection of traditional Asian art and international masterpieces at their private art Museum, the Long Museum. The couple founded the Long Museum in 2012 and now has venues in Shanghai and Chongqing, with Ms. Wang as its director.
Nicolas Chow, chairman of Sotheby's Asia and international head of its Asian art department, said Thursday's sale included Chinese and Western modern and contemporary art from Mr. Liu and Ms. Wang's private collections, and did not include the Long collection. Mr. Chow said Mr. Liu and Ms. Wang planned to keep the Long Museum open to the public and use some of the proceeds from the sale for an undisclosed amount to buy more art.
Mr. Chow, speaking on behalf of Mr. Liu and Ms. Wang, said the couple's offering on Thursday represented less than 1 percent of their vast collection.
While the Modigliani they bought for $170.4 million didn't come up for auction this time, the story behind the purchase illustrates the energy and support that Chinese billionaires have brought to the international art scene. In the Christie's sale, 10 works that failed to find buyers were left untouched, including a portrait of Lucian Freud that had been expected to sell for at least $20 million, There is also a painting by Willem de Kooning called 'Woman,' which was expected to sell for at least $14 million.
After the sale, the art world relished the seven-minute battle over Modigliani's work. The work had been expected to sell for $100 million. Thanks to the generosity of Mr. Liu and Ms. Wang, as well as a bid from a young South Korean dealer, Hong Gyu Shin, the work sold for much more than expected.
Now, if Chinese buyers can't splash out at auctions as they have in the past, it's unclear how this autumn's big evening sales will fare. Sotheby's said that between 2018 and 2022, nearly a third of the collectors who bid more than $1 million were from Asia. This year alone, Asians have won half of its top 10 modern and contemporary art auctions, the auction house said. Many of those buyers also came from Taiwan, Singapore and Japan, said Alex Branczik, chairman of Sotheby's modern and contemporary art department in Asia.
'It's too early to count out Chinese buyers,' Mr. Branczik said. In June, Chinese buyers kept their hands on some of the most expensive works at London's summer auctions, including a Hong Kong buyer who paid $108.4 million for Gustav Klimt's 1917-18 "LadyWithaFan," or "Lady Withafan." That compares with Sotheby's estimate of $80 million. The price set a new record for European art at auction.
However, Mr Plummer said the fact that a high-profile couple of collectors in China had decided to offload their art collection this autumn, including works bought only a few years ago, would do little to soothe the market's anxieties, especially when so many collections had performed poorly at auction.
China's economy is still suffering from shrinking exports and a troubled property sector. Recently, the World Bank cut its forecast for China's gross domestic product (GDP) growth in 2024 from 4.8% to 4.4%. In a report, the bank said economic growth across East Asia and the Pacific was also slowing more quickly than expected.
Thursday's sale follows poor sales at this year's spring auctions and mixed results at a week-long series of Asian art sales in New York last month. During its annual Asian Art Week in September, Sotheby's sold 87 percent of the lots in its $2.2 million sale of Chinese ceramics and furniture on Sept. 26, but only 68 percent in its Tibetan antiques sale and 39 percent in its Korean ceramics sale. Overall, the Asian art sale brought in a total of $30.4 million, within Sotheby's pre-sale expectations of $23.4 million to $34.3 million.
Christie's Asian art sale in New York last month fared slightly better, finding buyers for 78% of the $35 million worth of lots. But only four of the week's expected star lots, "Marchant: Eight Treasures for the Wanli Emperor," sold.
The next event to reflect the heat of the art market will be the Frieze fair in London, which opens on Oct. 11.
LogoMoney.com 系信息发布平台,仅提供信息存储空间服务。
声明:该文观点仅代表作者本人,本文不代表LogoMoney.com立场,且不构成建议,请谨慎对待。
声明:该文观点仅代表作者本人,本文不代表LogoMoney.com立场,且不构成建议,请谨慎对待。
猜你喜欢
- Tesla China: Buy Model Y and get a 10000 yuan discount on the final payment of the current car
- Tesla China launches policy of "immediate reduction of final payment for current car purchases"
- KFC China raises prices by 2%
- Amazon Web Services re: Invent 2024 China Tour: Based on Practical AI, Capturing Different Scenario Needs
- The spokesperson of the Ministry of Commerce issued a statement on the US's 301 investigation into China's chip industry related policies
- The Nasdaq China Golden Dragon Index closed up 0.79%, while Fangduoduo rose over 5%
- The Nasdaq China Golden Dragon Index closed up 0.42%, while Fangduoduo rose nearly 13%
- Yihang Intelligence collaborates with China Communications Information Technology Group to jointly layout and construct low altitude industrial ecosystems such as air traffic digital and ground infrastructure
- Lincoln China responds to rumors of Lincoln merging with Ford China, NIO Ledo L60 delivers over 20000 vehicles
- Most popular Chinese concept stocks in the US stock market closed down, while the Nasdaq China Golden Dragon Index fell 1.9%
-
美股市场:纽约股市三大股指4月30日涨跌不一。截至当天收盘,道琼斯工业平均指数比前一交易日上涨141.74点,收于40669.36点,涨幅为0.35%;标准普尔500种股票指数上涨8.23点,收于5569.06点,涨幅为0.15%;纳斯 ...
- joey791216
- 9 小时前
- 支持
- 反对
- 回复
- 收藏
-
美国总统特朗普近日在接受媒体采访时表示,他第二个任期不仅治理美国,也治理全世界。 特朗普于4月24日接受了《大西洋》(The Atlantic)月刊采访,这段专访于4月28日发布。 “第一次当总统时,我要做两 ...
- lfancn
- 昨天 12:10
- 支持
- 反对
- 回复
- 收藏
-
东风有限回应武汉工厂关停事宜 据第一财经,4月29日,东风汽车有限公司证实,该公司武汉工厂目前正常运行,后续也不会关停。东风有限称,该公司将在东风与日产母公司的支持下平稳有序发展,持续加速向新能源 ...
- king19831101
- 昨天 09:56
- 支持
- 反对
- 回复
- 收藏
-
4月29日凌晨,阿里巴巴开源新一代通义千问模型Qwen3(千问3),参数量为DeepSeek-R1的三分之一,成本大幅下降。据称,该模型性能全面超越R1、OpenAI-o1等领先模型,登顶全球最强开源模型。 千问3是国内首个“ ...
- 风雨中行走
- 前天 10:32
- 支持
- 反对
- 回复
- 收藏