ARTINFO.com

Font Size Font Increase Font Decrease

Limited Editions: Two Realities for Prints Dealers in Basel

By David Grosz

Published: June 5, 2008
Print

Courtesy Mixografia
Mixografia of Los Angeles sold a suite of five crochet prints by Louise Bourgeois, from an edition of 50, for €85,000. Pictured here is "Crochet I" (1998).


Courtesy Two Palms
Carroll Dunham's "Untitled (Mar–April 2008) 4" (2008) is part of a seven-monotype series that sold out at Two Palm's booth for $16–23,000 each.

BASEL— PrintBasel, the second-year, invite-only fair dedicated to editioned works, is a mere five-minute walk from Art Basel, but it might as well be a world away. In contrast to Art Basel’s sprawling, 300-gallery bazaar, PrintBasel presents an intimate 16-gallery showroom where you can actually pause to look at a work without being jostled by passersby. Unfortunately, a pleasant art-viewing experience does not necessarily equal a successful fair, and several of the dealers we spoke with clearly would have traded three-plus days of anemic foot traffic for a taste of Basel’s bustle. And yet, though ARTINFO heard more complaints at PrintBasel than at other satellites, spirits were mostly upbeat.

“The way this fair works is that most business is done in the last few days,” said London dealer Paul Stolper. “It’s been slowish so far. But sales picked up last night.”

Stolper reported sales of a 1973 Richard Hamilton print from an edition of 1,000 for CHF 2,100 ($2,025); a 2006 Damien Hirst from an edition of 55 for CHF 24,100; a Gavin Turk from an edition of 40 for CHF 4,800; and a Magne F from an edition of 50 for CHF 2,050.

“It hasn’t been bad so far. I’ve sold six pieces. If it continues like this, I’ll be pleased,” said Werner Röthlisberger of Basel’s Galerie Am Spalenberg, who had thus far sold two Eduardo Chillidas, two Jean Arps, a Giuseppe Santomaso, and an Antoni Tàpies for prices ranging from CHF 950 to 2,400.

“We’re having a blast, but there hasn’t been much business yet,” said MJ Hobby-Limon of London’s TAG Fine Arts, which reported the sale of two lambda prints, from an edition of 25, of The Little ArtistsHirst’s Shark Tank, for £550. The work comes from an eight-photograph series in which the artists re-create memorable moments from art history using Lego pieces.

Hobby-Limon did not attribute the sluggishness to the market, but rather suggested that it had to do with the fate of satellite fairs in general and the organization of PrintBasel in particular. He expressed concern that “the fair organizers have not brought many people through the door,” and mentioned that the fair location is hard to find and does not share the same shuttle service as the other satellites. (Scope, Volta, and Bâlelatina, which are all near one another in a different part of the city, share the same buses.)

Ron Valdez of West Hollywood’s Hamilton-Selway Fine Art, which had yet to make a sale, felt that PrintBasel should market itself and coordinate with Art Basel better. Still, he said that he plans to return to PrintBasel next year if his application to Art Basel, which he admitted was a “long shot,” doesn’t work out.

Some galleries, however, saw things quite differently. Mixografia of Los Angeles, whose large booth was the last one in the fair, as if it was the culmination of the journey, was having an outstanding fair — “better than last year,” according to director Lea Remba.

The gallery is offering prints, multiples, and sculptures in several media at impressive price points, and sales included a suite of five Louise Bourgeois crochet prints, from an edition of 50, for €85,000, two Mimmo Paladinos, from an edition of 50, for approximately $45,000; two Donald Sultans for $6,000 each; a John Baldessari sailboat for $15,000; and an Ed Ruscha wood print for $15,000.

Another enthusiastic dealer was David Procuniar of New York’s Procuniar Workshop, who told ARTINFO that PrintBasel drew the right sort of visitors: serious collectors who you could do business with after the fair. By contrast, he said that in other fairs he has been to (in L.A., New York, London, and Chicago), half of the visitors are young artists who approach him about collaborating.

Procuniar reported that he earned $80,000 as a result of last year’s PrintBasel, much of it after the fair ended. This time around he had yet to make a sale, but he was fairly certain that a couple from Luxembourg would purchase for $9,000 apiece two works from Louise Bourgeois’s "Fugue" (2003–05), a series of 19 screenprints with lithography published by the Workshop in an edition of nine, plus one artists proof. According to the dealer, the set would not ordinarily have been split up, but in this case, he had sold a set to another dealer who had sold them separately, and these were a few that he was able to purchase back.

Lazar Vujic Lazo of Visconti Fine Art of Ljubljana, Slovenia, also reported several sales to fellow dealers, including prints by Tom Wesselmann, Cy Twombly, David Tremlett, and Bourgeois, for prices ranging from €5,000 to €18,000.

Meanwhile, at Art Basel’s Art Editions, prints, books, and other multiples were selling like hotcakes.

“I’m crazy busy,” said Brussels publisher Michèle Didier, who hadn’t really thought about heading over to PrintBasel. “Just this morning I tried for the first time to do a small tour of my neighbors [at Art Basel].” Her booth is presenting a limited-edition series of books by On Kawara and Robert Barry that are testimonies to both artists’ obsessive-compulsiveness. Kawara presents ten years worth of daily entries about where he went during the day and what time he got out of bed, while Barry fills 25 volumes with pages that each contain 40,000 tiny dots, for 1 billion dots in total. Didier reported selling numerous editions of each set of books, but said he would not have exact totals until the end of the fair.

Evelyn Day Lasry of New York’s Two Palms was also having a successful fair, having sold out a seven-monotype series by Carroll Dunham priced at $16–23,000 each, a Richard Prince sculpture of 11 nurse books, edition of 2, for $425,000, and various prints by Prince, Chris Ofili, Mel Bochner, and Elizabeth Peyton.

Though Day Lasry noted that Art Editions is something of a ghetto within Art Basel, since many high-end collectors do not consider purchasing multiples and therefore avoid the section altogether, the fate of dealers there is certainly better than that of their colleagues at the print fair. During my two-hour stay, PrintBasel probably drew no more visitors in total than were found in many Art Edition booths at any given moment.

advertisements