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Former Sotheby's chairman Al Taubman and former Guinness PLC chairman Anthony Tennant.
(Photo: From left, Neil Rasmus/Patrick McMullan; Alastair Grant/AP Photo)

DAY 11 Today is Wednesday, June 15,th and we will probe deeper into the relationship between auctions and the art market through the case of

the Sotheby's price-fixing scandal, which shocked every corner of the art world from 2000 to 2002, when the case was finally settled. Read about

how Sotheby's, led by Chairman Al Taubman and CEO Dede Brooks, colluded with retired former chairman of Christie's, Sir Anthony Tennant, to

fix commission rates charged to buyers and sellers who did business with their respective auction houses. Both firms were charged by U.S.Justice

Department with breaking the Sherman Anti-trust Act of 1890, which was hugely important for safeguarding against under-the-table agreements to

set prices at levels that would not prevail in a competitive market and thusly, preventing monopolies that would hurt consumers by overcharging them

while reaping high profits and slowing production. Comment on at least two ways in which this scandal has (or has not) changed the perception

of the auction house as a necessary and essential place to do business in the art world. In other words, could the art world do without the auction

house and if so, what might that look like?

Readings

Listen to author Christopher Mason explain how he began covering the price-fixing conspiracy http://video.cnbc.com/gallery/?video=697473416

hear Alfred Taubman's thoughts on his meetings with Sir Anthony Tennant http://video.cnbc.com/gallery/?video=697487072; and see some of

the handwritten notes detailing the terms of the "fix" http://www.cnbc.com/id/23812895/ from CNBC's American Greed, Season 2, Episode 16,

"Soaking the Rich at Auction".

Read Orley Ashenfelter and Kathryn Graddy,"Anatomy of the Rise and Fall of a Price-Fixing Conspiracy: Auctions at Sotheby's and Christie's,"

Journal of Competition Law and Economics I (I) 3-20, 2005 http://www.econ.ucsb.edu/~tedb/Courses/Ec1F07/ashenfeltersothebychristie.pdf 

and James B. Stewart's, "Bidding War: How an Antitrust Investigation into Christie's and Sotheby's Became a Race to See Who Could Betray

Whom," the New Yorker, Anals of Law, October 15, 2001, p. 158 https://www.msu.edu/course/ec/360/george/Readings/Bidding%20War.htm

Individual Contributions

Vincent Anthony Falkiewicz

Erica Gilbert-Levin  

Kimberly Ann Phoenix  

It does not seem like the scandal have had a negative affect on the art auction.  In November 2010 during the evening sale at Sotheby's the 49 lots sold for a total value of $222,454,500 (Ferreira).    The evening sale at Christie's of 70 lots had a value of $272,873,000.  The auction attracts big money and a group of buyers who like the thrill of the win.  In the art world the auctions at Sotheby's and Christie's are the place to be, as pointed out in the reading from Monday a good seat is a coveted thing, this has not changed since the scandal. The major players in the scandal have all moved on and not into hiding, Alfred Taubman has written his memoir.  At the book signing release he was surrounded by powerful people (Peers).  Patricia Hambrecht is a mover and shaker in the jewelry world (Peers).  DeDe Brooks retired to her Florida home but had recently been spotted at art auctions (Peers).   Christopher Davidge is living well partly because of the severance package he received and moved on to speculating in contemporary Asian painting (Peers).  The auction house is just one more way that people with money can purchase contemporary art work.  Those with connection and relationship with dealers can purchase from the galleries other prefer the auction.  The Auction houses have been around for over 200 years and if the resent sales are any indication they will still be around for a long time.  

http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa5377/is_201103/ai_n57241264/

 http://nymag.com/arts/art/features/30620/

 

 

 
 
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.

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