In comparison to art fairs, where the artworks on display reflect what galleries hope is most appealing to collectors while transactional information is largely kept secret, auctions represent a relatively more transparent side of the art market—with numbers flashed on giant screens and then data-mined after the fact. Though not without speculation or potential price-flooring, sales at auctions are representative of broader trends among collectors. Ultimately, the artworks’ prices reflect buyers’ speculative strategies, with certain creators becoming regulars on the auction scene, reflecting the investor-mentality that ebbs and flows across diverse categories as collectors search for good-value propositions.
Stabilizing or Uninspiring?
Celebrating its 50th anniversary in Asia, Sotheby’s raked in USD 173 million from its Hong Kong auctions (2012), which was acquired for USD 12.8 million at the Contemporary Evening Auction, surpassing Pablo Picasso’s cubist painting (1948), which hammered home for USD 11.9 million at the Modern Evening Auction on the same night.