You are viewing an old version of this page. View the current version.

Compare with Current View Page History

« Previous Version 18 Next »

Edouard Manet (1832-1883)
Le Chemin de Fer (The Railroad)
1872-73 (170 Kb); Oil on canvas, 93 x 114 cm (36 1/2 x 45 in); National Gallery of Art, Washington

DAY 5: Today is Tuesday, June 7th,  and we move to nineteenth century Paris and London to examine the decline of the French and British

Academies and the rise of the art dealer. Read an excerpt from Harrison C. White and Cynthia White's Canvases and Careers: Institutional

Change in the French Painting World (University of Chicago Press, 1996) to learn about the crucial role of the art dealer and the art critic in

what they have termed "the dealer-critic system". It is through the dealer-critic system and the storied careers of dealers such as Ernest

Gambart, Joseph Duveen and Durand-Ruel that the art market begins to operate on an international scale between France and England (and

later to the United States). In your response to the reading below, discuss the crucial role of the dealer-critic system using an example of an

artist, a critic, a work of art or a dealer.

Readings

Harrison C. White and Cynthia A. White, Canvases and Careers : Institutional Change in the French Painting World

ARTH 4696 FINLEY A New System Emerges WHITE WHITE.pdf

Petra Ten-Doesschate Chu, "The Lu(c)re of London: French Artists and Art Dealers in the British Capital, 1859-1914", in Monet's London : Artists Reflections on the Thames, 1859-1914 (St. Petersberg and Uitgeverij: Museum of Fine Arts, St. Petersberg and Snoeck, 2005), 39-54.

ARTH 4696 FINLEY The Lu(c)re of London.pdf

Recommended:

Pamela M. Fletcher and Anne Helmreich, "The Periodical and the Art Market: Investigating the Dealer-Critic System in Victorian England", Victorian Periodicals Reviews, 41:4, Winter 2008, 323-346.

ARTH 4696 FINLEY Periodical and the Art Market FLETCHER HELMREICH.pdf

 Meryle Secrest, Duveen : A Life in Art (*Note: This is a Cornell Networked resource*)
 
 

Individual Contributions 

Vincent Anthony Falkiewicz

Before discussing the crucial role of the critic-dealer system in the art market it is important to note a crucial factor which caused the need for this system.  The hyper-production of paintings and other art in 19th century France, "at least 200,000 reputable canvases...in each decade proceeding midcentury," created a need for some new system of critique.  These numbers are even excluding women and occassional painters.  With so many paintings being produced, a regulated system where art could be judged and sold was necessary.  However, the critic-dealer system that derived was not all positive for the art market.  As the reading provides, artists could be hindered by critics, causing a sort of reputation based system.  "The demand for an individual painter's works depended on several circles of art opinion."  Artists who might have sold numerous works could have been slowed or stopped completely by bad reviews of their work.  People always seem to believe what they hear, and no one wants to be associated with something understood as bad or distasteful.  For this reason, buyers might stray from works they like due to the reviews or reputation of the artist.  Additionally, the increasing demand for art worldwide caused a need for this system.  Social changes widened the market for artists, and this created a central system by which any individual of any country could judge art.  Especially those who were not particularly involved in the art market, but rather interested in the social appeal of it. 

An example of the art critic is the 19th century British art critic John Ruskin, who is most famous for his strong support of naturalism.  He helped support numerous artists throughout his life, as well as strongly critiquing the works of some.  His strong connection with naturalism in art shows how the art market can at times be very biased.  Many critics are not objective, and prefer certain types of works over others not because of how good they are, but because of how it appeals to them.  This can cause the critic-dealer system to be slightly skewed sometimes, although it is a necessary evil in the art market. 

Erica Gilbert-Levin  

The rise of dealer-critic system in 19th-century Europe represented both the result and reinforcement of the shift from the European art world and its market from a hierarchical one concentrated primarily in the Academy to a decentralized configuration consisting of "isolated" artists (White & White, 82) whose work was capitalized upon by dealers, who, functioning "in conjunction with" critics, "accomplished the detailed task of building up an artist in a specific circle of patrons" (White & White, 94). Critics filled the responsibility of generating publicity and establishing the intellectual legitimacy of the artist (not to mention of the critics themselves), while dealers effected the sales, and all three players – critic, dealer, and artist – benefited financially from the arrangement.

The emergence of the new system reflected a shift in the socioeonomic status of the buyers from aristocratic to middle-class. The transformation effectively rendered art a more inclusive domain, allowing for more participation across classes and geographical areas: "Dispersion of buying power was a central reality of the new situation to which the dealer-critic system could adapt much more effectively than the centralized official machine. [...] There were enough, and sufficiently varied, potential buyers so that one had to think in terms of markets rather than individuals" (White & White, 94).

The emphasis within the dealer-critic system revolved around the career of the artist rather than the artist's individual works. This benefited the artist, who could, consequently, be assured of secure and "predictable" income and thus a middle-class lifestyle (White & White, 98), and the dealer, who could forge a "monopoly of an artist's production" (White & White, 99). The dealer duo Durand-Ruel trail-blazed this strategy early on, brazenly buying up artists' work and making it effectively impossible for another dealer to intrude on their terrain. The strategy worked – for both Durand-Ruel, who discovered young artists, including the late-19th-century Impressionists, supported them with the aid of publicity afforded by critics, and profited from their monopoly over their discovery (see Chu).

The Durand-Ruel father-son dealer duo

Kimberly Ann Phoenix  

The Dealer-Critic can be both good and bad for an artist.  As pointed out in the reading if a dealer wants to take a risk on a new artist a career can be launched, but equally  if an artist work is not appreciated by the critics their paintings will not be viewed or sold.  This was the case with the 1889 showing of Monet's' painting in London

Maison du Jardinier or Bordighera, la Méditerranée, 1884

While I do not know what 20 paintings where displayed these are three that could have been a part of that exhibition.  Because of a bad review people did not some to see, although at the time it seems that the style was to new, it is sad.  History has a way of sometimes correcting the wrongs, how thrilled most people would be to go and see 20 of Monet's painting together. 

            Dealers and Critics can in a way sensor what we view and/or have the chance to buy.  I would be very costly for each artist to have there own business to promote and sell their work.  In this regard some of the creative aspect of art is lost, in order to survive you must sell paints so you need the dealers.   In what can only happen today because of the media I will be heading to the Agora Gallery to see the paintings done by Aelita Andre.  She is a four-year-old Australian girl, who is having her first solo exhibition in New York_.  _I will be interested to see her work but wonder if the price of $30,000 paid for one of her painting is really justified.  Is it a dealer asking the right price or is a critic making something out of nothing?

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/06/06/four-year-old-girl-has-fi_n_872178.htm

so I had three of Monet's painting but only one would copy?... so here is the link to view other early paintinhttp://www.impressionistsgallery.co.uk/artists/Artists/mno/monet/89-99.html

 

 

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.

  • No labels