US outbidding China in art auctions
PARIS – Agence France-Presse
The U.S. art auction market grew by 20 percent in the first six months of the year, with sales totaling $2.8 billion, nearly a billion more than China, which has sales worth $1.9 billion, said the report.
Fueled by a strong dollar, the U.S. boom is based in New York where nearly all its art auctions are held, and the Big Apple ranks more than ever as the top place to find art masterpieces.
That could be seen at Christie’s art auction in May where Pablo Picasso’s “The Women of Algiers (Version 0)” went for $179 million, the highest price ever for an art work sold at auction.
Another object of intense bidding was Alberto Giacometti’s bronze statue “Man Pointing,” which became the most expensive sculpture sold at auction for $141 million. On the global level, the number of works up for auction in January through June fell by 17 percent. Sales dropped by 5.0 percent from a year earlier, slipping from $8.0 billion to $7.6 billion, mainly due to the Chinese retreat, according to the report.
After having surged between 2009 and 2014 (by 214 percent), Chinese sales, including Hong Kong and Taiwan, slowed dramatically by 30 percent in the first half of 2015, according to figures collected by Chinese public group Artron, an institutional partner of Artprice.
The sluggish global economy has affected global art sales, but so have anti-corruption measures which have made art investors more cautious.
Artprice says these measures have paralyzed more and more sales of art that did not meet strict legal definitions.
The report also noted that China is feeling competitive heat for second place from Great Britain, with London the world’s number two city for art auctions.
Sales in Britain increased by 6.0 percent in the first half of the year after spectacular growth of 35 percent in 2014. Sales totalled around $1.9 billion, less than $100 million short of China’s.