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A Surprisingly Steady and Solid Beat at Art Basel’s Day Two

Courtesy Paul Kasmin Gallery
Walton Ford's "Housatonic Ghost Cats" (2008) sold for around $400,000 at Paul Kasmin Gallery's booth.

By Judd Tully

Published: December 5, 2008
MIAMI BEACH—On the second full day of Art Basel Miami Beach, exhibitors, collectors, art advisors, and general tire kickers received a clearer picture of a re-calibrated art market that shows a surprisingly steady and solid beat.

“It’s so much better for me,” said New York real-estate developer Hadley Martin Fisher. “I don’t have to make a split-second decision; now you have a day to decide as a collector.”

Fisher, accompanied by his New York art advisor, Kimberly Marrero, bought a large-scale and decidedly abstract C-print by German artist Wolfgang Tillmans at New York’s Andrea Rosen Gallery, Silver 73 from 2008, for around $80,000; a found object sculpture of a nose cone from a MiG jet, Viking from 2008 by British mainstay Fiona Banner, from Berlin’s Galerie Barbara Thumm, in the $20–40,000 range; and two new fantasy clay animation and digital video pieces from an edition of 4 by the Berlin-based Nathalie Djurberg, Moving on to greener pastures and Putting down the prey, with music in both instances by her frequent collaborator Hans Berg, from New York’s Zach Feuer Gallery for approximately $18,000 each.

“This is my second art fair experience,” said Fisher, “and it’s a different atmosphere. It’s like real-estate now, not so fast-paced.”

Veteran art advisor and Miami resident Manuel Gonzalez was equally pleased with his acquisitions for various American clients, including works by Sigmar Polke, Michelangelo Pistoletto, Luc Tuymans, and Morris Louis.

Gonzalez declined to further identify the pieces or the galleries he bought them from, but noted, “Things are slow, but people are buying. It’s a great fair. People thought it was going to be a complete and total dud.”

That perception was also echoed by New York curator and advisor Matthew Armstrong, who bought a secondary market piece, an untitled work from 2003 by German painter Tim Eitel, at Leipzig/Berlin’s Eigen+Art, for around $100,000.

“We bought one thing,” said Armstrong, who works for Donald Marron’s private equity firm, Lightyear Capital, “and there are two other things in the fire. The fair is doing just fine.”

Some dealers expressed relief that the feeding frenzy is over, such as New York gallerist and Art Basel Miami Beach exhibitor Ann Freedman, the president of Knoedler & Company. “It’s not the running of the bulls anymore — it’s the strolling of the bears, and the pigs are gone," she observed. "It’s no longer all about seeing art through the lens of money, which was all wrong.”

A number of exhibitors simply registered amazement at how well their wares had fared.

“I expected a total disaster and came down here totally depressed,” said Lisa Spellman of Chelsea’s 303 Gallery. “But we’ve had really good sales of large, complicated works, so there’s no flight to safety, as some have predicted.”

Spellman acknowledged that “we’ll give collectors we know a bigger discount than we would have a year ago, but it’s not a souk.”

Among the works that sold at 303, all of which were made specifically for the fair, were New York artist Doug Aitken’s neon light box in three interlinked sections from an edition of 4, Start Swimming, which depicts images of a groundbreaking for a McMansion development and went for $175,000; Honkys, an 82-inch-high sculpture in stainless steel, leather, fabric, and pins of rehab pop star Amy Winehouse by Irish artist Eva Rothschild, priced at ₤18,000 ($26,500); and British duo Jane and Louise Wilson’s 86-by-69-inch C-print, Oddments Room IV, depicting a London book shop interior about to be demolished, from an edition size of 4, priced at ₤23,000.

The gallery also found buyers for Winnipeg artist Karel Funk’s acrylic on paper Untitled #33, a hyper-real view of the backside of a long-haired woman, at $90,000, and a beautifully rendered abstraction in silver leaf and acrylic on panel, Untitled by recent gallery addition Nick Mauss, which is scaled at 15 ¾-by-19 ¾ inches and went for $6,500.

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