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The Lehman Brothers corporate sign enters Christie's, London for a September 29, 2010 sale. Image via the NY Times.

DAY 18 Today is Friday, June 24January 20,th and we close with the art market crash of 2008. Examine the posted readings, especially

...

discuss with regards to its assessment of the crash and/or projection for the future.

Readings

AO Auction Results: Christie's sale of Artwork and Ephemera from Lehman Brothers fetches a further $2.6 million for the collapsed bank's creditors in London, September 29th, 2010

http://www.zoodisk.com/ao-auction-results-christie-rsquo-s-sale-of-artwork-and-ephemera-from-lehman-brothers-fetches-a/174180

Art and Its Markets, ArtForum International, April 2008

http://go.galegroup.com/ps/i.do?ty=as&v=2.1&u=nysl_sc_cornl&it=search&s=DA-SORT&p=AONE&st=T002&dblist=AONE&qt=PU~%22Artforum+International%22~DA~120080401IU%228%22~~VO~46&sw=w

http://www.e-flux.com/shows/view/5288

Accounting for Taste: Olav Velthuis on the Economics of Art, ArtForum International, April 2008

http://find.galegroup.com/gtx/retrieve.do?contentSet=IAC-Documents&resultListType=RESULT_LIST&qrySerId=Locale%28en%2CUS%2C%29%3AFQE%3D%28JN%2CNone%2C24%29%22Artforum+International%22%3AAnd%3ALQE%3D%28DA%2CNone%2C8%2920080401%24&sgHitCountType=None&inPS=true&sort=DateDescend&searchType=PublicationSearchForm&tabID=T002&prodId=AONE&searchId=R1&currentPosition=12&userGroupName=nysl_sc_cornl&docId=A178085088&docType=IAC

Individual Contributions

Panel

Vincent Anthony Falkiewicz

Panel

Erica Gilbert-Levin  

If Olav Velthius knows his stuff (and I think he does), an art market crash will have a silver lining: the effect of returning "democratic values" to the art world.

Wiki Markup
Velthius [argues|http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0268/is_8_46/ai_n31487376/?tag=mantle_skin;content] that the [latest boom in the art market|http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/9e496bbc-96a4-11db-8ba1-0000779e2340.html] beginning in the 1990s was, in a manner that mirrored previous art market rises, most beneficial to the [elites of the art world|http://www.artlex.com/ArtLex/E.html], particularly dealers and the most prominent artists whom these dealers represented. Each art market boom has materialized primarily as a result of an inundation of excess economic capital into the market. The flooding of the market with more money "than it can readily absorb," according to Velthius, is really a reflection of an influx of new buyers who have extra cash and seek to "buy access to a social world" -- that is, to enhance the measure of their social status by purchasing goods that represent cultural prestige. But the rise in demand leads to an "erosion to egalitarian values," and those who already possess an "elite" status go up the social-status totem pole, while all others slide farther down from the positions they covet. Sought-after works of art become "less affordable," and the "wealth needed to buy these works \[increases\] dramatically." The culmination is a contemporary art world that "is receding toward a kind of commercial sublime, barely accessible to all but a few."

Wiki Markup
To Velthius, the "phenomenon" of the waiting list epitomizes and perpetuates the polarizing trend propelled by a boom in the art market. Because the possession of money no longer holds much sway (since there is already so much money flooding the market), other measures of prominence, measures bound up in status and reputation and embodied in [Bourdieu|http://www.pierrebourdieu.com/]'s notion of [symbolic capital|http://changingminds.org/disciplines/sociology/theorists/bourdieu.htm#pow], assume greater value; "money no longer suffices to gain access to goods." Those involved in the art market, then, turn to devices like the waiting list to distinguish who is "worthy" of possessing [coveted works of art|http://www.interpol.int/public/workofart/poster/default.asp] -- and those with mere money, who are lacking in status and renown, are disregarded. The waiting list "enables art dealers to accumulate symbolic capital," Velthius explains. "By claiming they are not interested in selling to the highest bidder, dealers are \[...\] denegrating the economy. In showing that they are working for art and not for money," and will therefore only sell to the worthy who are higher up on (or have bypassed altogether) the waiting list, "they establish and reaffirm their reputation in the art world. This, in turn, enables them to consecrate \[...\], or bestow legitimacy and value on, the artists they represent." And the more "legitimacy and value" the dealers' artists accumulate, the more successfully the dealers can profit from selling these artists' work. A crash in the art market, then, which would spell the end for devices like the waiting list, and for the broader dynamics that undergird, necessitate, and facilitate the use of such devices, and the result would be a much-needed process of [democratizing the art market|http://www.forbes.com/2008/05/08/artadia-moma-competition-ent-sales-competition08-cx_mf_0508artadia.html] and the art world at large.

Panel

Kimberly Ann Phoenix  

 

 

Charles Saunders

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Day 18 - Charles Saunders
Day 18 - Charles Saunders
Panel

Christina Chaplin

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Day 18 - Christina Chaplin
Day 18 - Christina Chaplin
Panel

Dalanda Jalloh

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Day 18 - Dalanda Jalloh
Day 18 - Dalanda Jalloh
Panel

Daniel Chazen

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Day 18 - Daniel Chazen
Day 18 - Daniel Chazen
Panel

Elena Cestero

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Day 18 - Elena Cestero
Day 18 - Elena Cestero
Panel

H. Hunt Bradley, III

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Day 18 - H. Hunt Bradley, III
Day 18 - H. Hunt Bradley, III
Panel

June Shin

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Day 18 - June Shin
Day 18 - June Shin
Panel

Kelly Zona

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Day 18 - Kelly Zona
Day 18 - Kelly Zona
Panel

Khrystyne Wilson

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Day 18 - Khrystyne Wilson
Day 18 - Khrystyne Wilson
Panel

Kwame Nana-Atoo

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Day 18 - Kwame Nana-Atoo
Day 18 - Kwame Nana-Atoo
Panel

Lipei Yu

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Day 18 - Lipei Yu
Day 18 - Lipei Yu
Panel

McKenzie Sullivan

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Day 18 - McKenzie Sullivan
Day 18 - McKenzie Sullivan
Panel

Nicholas Krislov

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Day 18 - Nicholas Krislov
Day 18 - Nicholas Krislov
Panel

Tadd Phillips

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Day 18 - Tadd Phillips
Day 18 - Tadd Phillips

Consider & comment:
Please use this space to respond to your classmates' work and to engage in lively discussions on the day's topic. Keep your comments concise and conversational by responding to others, rebutting or supporting their ideas. Use the comment box below for these observations 
 
Consider & comment:
What did you think of today's readings and wiki features? What issues if any did they raise for you? How did the audio visual material provided support your understanding of this topic? Comment on your classmates' posts. Leave your comments in the box below.