George Lindemann Journal - "A Hong Kong Art Fair's Emerging Identity" @wsj by Jason Chow

George Lindemann Journal - "A Hong Kong Art Fair's Emerging Identity" @wsj by Jason Chow

Katsuro Funakoshi's Dancing as a pupa (Homage to a dancer), 2001 Katsuro Funakoshi/Beck & Eggeling

Art Basel made a splashy entrance in Hong Kong last year with its first fair in the city. Now, the Hong Kong edition of the global art franchise that's synonymous with glitzy parties and the global jet-set crowd is searching for an identity.

Art Basel Hong Kong, which kicks off May 15, is the third entry to the Art Basel calendar after Basel, Switzerland, and Miami Beach. The Swiss and U.S. shows are fixtures on the wealthy collector's calendar: The Basel fair, which takes place in early June, has become a hub for established European collectors wanting to snag a Hirst or Picasso; Miami Beach, scheduled in December, not only attracts deep-pocketed buyers but also serves as a warm escape for celebrity party-goers— Kim Kardashian, Kanye West and Demi Moore were just a few of those who attended last year.

But the Hong Kong fair hasn't yet attracted the A-list like Miami Beach, and the type of rich collectors who gather in Switzerland have yet to amass for a competitive buying spree in Hong Kong. The Hong Kong fair's calling card has yet to be determined.

Timing is part of its identity crisis. The four-day event falls in the middle of a very crowded art calendar, just a week after the Frieze Art Fair in New York and a month before the Art Basel show in Switzerland. Fair organizers, facing complaints from Western galleries and collectors that the May time slot makes it difficult for them to attend the Hong Kong event, have already responded by shifting the date of next year's show to March.

                                  
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Bow Human, 2009 Pamela Rosenkranz/Karma International

Organizers also say they are trying best for the fair to reflect geography: More than half of the 245 galleries participating at Art Basel Hong Kong are from Asia. Most of the expected 65,000 attendees are from within the region, and many are young and recently minted wealthy collectors from second- and third-tier cities in China, Indonesia and other rising economies.

"Each fair develops its own identity," said Magnus Renfrew, director of the Hong Kong fair. "This fair represents an emerging market, not a mature one. They're learning very fast here, but it's still learning."

As a result, the buying behavior differs in Asia. Compared with the other Art Basel fairs, where established collectors line up at the entrance to be first into the show and so secure a desired Old Master painting, the buying is less frenzied in Hong Kong.

"The pace of the activity here is much more measured," said Nick Simunovic, Hong Kong director of Gagosian Gallery. "In Miami or Basel, you do so much more on the first day. Here, it's not a feast or famine approach where 90% of the business is done on the first day."

Mr. Simunovic said collectors' tastes are global—what clients are seeking to buy in Hong Kong is similar to that sought by buyers in New York. Asian collectors who have already bought works of Asia's top contemporary and modern artists in recent years are now looking for earlier works of those same artists, hoping to create a deeper understanding of their oeuvre, Mr. Renfrew said.

"The art fair ends up being a place to learn about art in the absence of a major institution and gallery," he said.

Write to Jason Chow at jason.chow@wsj.

George Lindemann Journal - "Exhibition in New York Gives New Perspective on Statue of Liberty" @wsj by Kirthana Ramisetti

George Lindemann Journal - "Exhibition in New York Gives New Perspective on Statue of Liberty" @wsj by  Kirthana Ramisetti

A portion of 'Danh Vo: We the People' is seen in Brooklyn Bridge Park. Ramsay de Give for The Wall Street Journal

Viewed from most every vantage point, the Statue of Liberty is a large, dominant figure bearing a glowing torch, a symbol of American democracy.

But the Public Art Fund's newest exhibit, " Danh Vo : We the People," gives viewers a more intimate and abstract look at the statue.

"We the People" is a life-size replica of the Statue of Liberty broken into 250 components, such as Lady Liberty's ear, a curl of her hair and the folds of her drapery. The conceptual artist Danh Vo created the pieces over three years, using the same copper material and metalwork technique that French sculptor Frédéric Auguste Bartholdi used to construct the monument nearly 140 years ago.

'Danh Vo: We the People' on display at City Hall Park in New York on May 13. Ramsay de Give for The Wall Street Journal

The Public Art Fund is giving his work a special presentation that spans two boroughs. Beginning Saturday, 53 pieces from the collection will be shown at City Hall Park and Brooklyn Bridge Park, and since the two outdoor spaces are linked by the Brooklyn Bridge, visitors can cross from one park to another while taking in views of the actual Statue of Liberty.

Individual components, such as the ear, will be on display in City Hall Park, while Brooklyn Bridge Park will feature the draped sleeve of the statue's right arm. The arm, made of 13 pieces, will be assembled into three forms.

Mr. Vo said that his inspiration for "We the People" was learning an interesting fact about the statue that belied its immense size.

"When I found that the Statue of Liberty was only the thickness of two pennies, I thought that was very intriguing," he said. "Because you always think of this as, you know, a colossal thing, but in reality two millimeters is not that much."

Even before its formal opening, the exhibit is attracting attention. A small piece of the artwork, a chain-link design from the statue's foot, was stolen from City Hall Park some time between Wednesday night and Thursday morning, a law-enforcement official said. An investigation is under way.

The sculpting method involved laying thin copper sheets over a cast of the statue, which the artist hired a workshop in Shanghai to make. The pieces were then hammered into shape.

As for why he chose to re-create the statue in such a deconstructed way, Mr. Vo said he "wanted to do something that everyone had a relationship to, and make it a bit unfamiliar. It's kind of like creating a Frankenstein that gets its own life."

'Danh Vo: We the People' on display at City Hall Park on May 13. Ramsay de Give for The Wall Street Journal

Andira Hickey, the Public Art Fund's associate curator, said the nonprofit group is excited to be presenting Mr. Vo's unique perspective.

"When you're looking at a massive piece of copper that you have a very intimate relationship [with] right in front of you," she said, "and see it completely transformed into a full figure that you can recognize in the distance, it's such an evocative metaphor for the multitude of perspectives you can have of an icon like that."

Some visitors, though, might find it hard to recognize individual pieces as parts of the Statue of Liberty they know. And some of the more recognizable parts of the statue are in private collections.

Mr. Vo said that in creating "We the People," it was important to him that, unlike the heavy symbolism associated with the Statue of Liberty, his work be open to interpretation.

"When Bartholdi created the Statue of Liberty...he created an image and a political agenda," he said. "What I'm doing with it is a shift of scale and shift of meaning."

He added that his work "is more a project that should evoke discussion in the place that it is exhibited. And we'll have to wait to see what that will be."

"Danh Vo: We the People" will be on view through Dec. 5 at City Hall Park and Brooklyn Bridge Park's Pier 3 Greenway Terrace.

—Pervaiz Shallwani contributed to this article.

George Lindemann Journal "Melva Bucksbaum on What Artists She's Collecting Now" @wsj by Kelly Crow

George Lindemann Journal "Melva Bucksbaum on What Artists She's Collecting Now" @wsj by Kelly Crow

Melva Bucksbaum Keith Bedford for The Wall Street Journal

Growing up in Washington, D.C., in the early 1940s, Connecticut collector Melva Bucksbaum used to leave her Russian immigrant parents' grocery store and slip a nickel in the downtown-bound bus, so she could spend hours ambling through the National Gallery. "I wanted to be an artist," she said.

By the time she was married and studying art in Des Moines, Iowa, Ms. Bucksbaum said she realized that her peers were better than she. She put away her palette and started buying art instead. Since then, she has collected everything from Peter Paul Rubens to the Impressionists to James Rosenquist. Today, she and her second husband, former commodities trader Raymond J. Learsy, are best known for collecting contemporary art.

As vice chairman of the Whitney Museum of American Art, Ms. Bucksbaum has also gained a reputation for the Bucksbaum Award, a $100,000 prize given every other year to one artist included in the Whitney Biennial. The latest winner is Zoe Leonard. The New York artist's biennial work, "945 Madison Avenue," transformed a 1,200-square-foot room of the museum into an oversize camera obscura with help from a lens placed in the space's lone window. The result is a real-time wonder-scape, an upside-down view of the buildings and people across the street projected onto the room's otherwise empty walls.

'945 Madison Avenue' by Bucksbaum Award winner Zoe Leonard Zoe Leonard/Galerie Gisela Capitain, Cologne; Murray Guy, NY/Galleria Raffaella Cortese, Milan.

Ms. Leonard, in an interview Wednesday, said the "life-changer" prize will let her explore a new body of work.

Ms. Bucksbaum said she has no say in picking prizewinners—alums include Mark Bradford and Omer Fast—but she's well known for championing female artists. With the Whitney Biennial set to close May 25, she agreed to discuss the latest additions to her collection.

Below, an edited transcript:

"Ray and I married in 2001, and it took me a year to get into his mind-set and appreciate emerging and contemporary art. When you're collecting younger artists, you have to do a lot of footwork by going to galleries and museums. Sometimes I like things that are maybe a little bit too cute and fanciful, but I'm learning to move away from pretty. We were just in São Paulo, and I bought two things, and one of them probably doesn't fit into our collection, but I'll keep it around. You make mistakes, you learn. You just keep going.

I'll never forget walking through the Whitney Biennial in 2008 and seeing Mika Rottenberg's 'Cheese.' It's sensational. 'Cheese' is based on the Sutherland sisters, this family involved with the Barnum & Bailey Circus, and they all had very long hair. Mika built this wooden shack and embedded videos all over it that show women washing their long hair, drying their hair and living in a rural area with goats and chickens. Here in Connecticut, we're in nature—it makes me want to keep goats in the yard. Or Lalanne sheep ( a favorite subject of sculptor François-Xavier Lalanne).

One of the great pieces we got in the last two years is 'The Hunting Party' by Rosa Loy and Neo Rauch —she did one-half of the painting and he did the other, and it's just absolutely wonderful. They're both from Leipzig, Germany, and they both paint haunting and spooky scenes of people or industrial buildings. You sense something strange is going on in their paintings, but you can't tell immediately. You have to study them for a long time. In ours, you see these rabbits with big, beautiful eyes, and it makes you wonder what those rabbits are thinking.

We're always adding pieces by Laurie Simmons to the collection, lately from her 'Love Dolls' series. They're magical. I started buying her photos 14 years ago, and we have the whole set from her 'The Instant Decorator' series. They look like 1950s and '60s magazine spreads—you think they're from Better Homes & Gardens—only she's superimposed other people in them. Her "Love Dolls" series explores this phenomenon where men buy life-size dolls that they treat like girlfriends. They're quite expensive, and you can order them by saying what hip size and waist size you want, but when you look at Laurie's photographs, you don't think they're even dolls. They look real."

George Lindemann Journal - "On the Fourth Night of Contemporary Art Auctions, Rising Stars Go on the Block" By CAROL VOGEL

George Lindemann Journal - "On the Fourth Night of Contemporary Art Auctions, Rising Stars Go on the Block" By CAROL VOGEL

“Untitled (Red, Blue, Orange)” by Mark Rothko from 1955. Credit Kate Rothko Prizel & Christopher Rothko/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York, via Phillips

After three consecutive nights of contemporary art auctions, the die-hards turned out for a fourth and final helping, which took place at Phillips, the smaller, third-place auction house.

The draw was not so much for brand-name artists, who brought unremarkable prices on Thursday. Instead, buyers went for today’s rising stars, whose work has the potential to skyrocket in value.

By the evening’s end, Phillips sold nearly $131 million, above its low $124.6 million estimate. Of the 46 works on offer, nine failed to sell.

Packing the Phillips headquarters at Park Avenue and 57th Street were veteran collectors like Donald and Mera Rubell of Miami, Stefan Edlis of Chicago and David Ganek, the former New York hedge-fund manager. Leonardo DiCaprio sat in a skybox above the salesroom, with a cap pulled down tight over his forehead.

The evening’s top seller was one of Rothko’s abstract canvases — “Untitled (Red, Blue, Orange),” from 1955 — which went to an unidentified telephone bidder for $50 million, or $56.1 million with fees. And although the owner was not identified, dealers familiar with the work said it was from the collection of Paul Allen, a co-founder of Microsoft. Mr. Allen had bought the painting at Christie’s in 2007 for $34.2 million. Before the auction, experts at Phillips said they estimated it would bring around $50 million.

(Final prices include the buyer’s commission to Phillips: 25 percent of the first $100,000; 20 percent of the next $100,000 to $2 million; and 12 percent of the rest. Estimates do not reflect commissions.)

The evening was filled with paintings by Basquiat and Warhol, and even an example of the two artists’ working together. “Zenith,” a 1985 collaboration, melded Basquiat’s graffiti figures (a skull, angry black faces, a she-goat) and Warhol’s pop culture references (a 50 percent off sign, a sports car). It was expected to sell for $10 million to $15 million, and went to a lone telephone bidder for $11.3 million.

Stavros Merjos, a Los Angeles dealer, was the only taker for one of Warhol’s “Flowers,” from 1964. Although the piece was expected to sell for $10 million to $15 million, he managed to buy it for $9 million, or $10.2 million with fees.

But sculptures by Dan Flavin, Claes Oldenburg, Roy Lichtenstein and David Smith failed to get so much as one bid.

For younger artists, competition heated up. A canvas filled with black X’s by Wade Guyton, estimated to bring $1.5 million to $2 million, sold for $2.1 million with fees to Daniella Luxembourg, a private dealer. Mr. Guyton, who produces paintings on inkjet printers, is one of the few artists working today who is trying to keep the hype down. This weekend, to protest an enormous price being asked for one of his 2005 flame paintings at Christie’s, he made copies of the image from his original disk and posted them on Instagram.

A suite of four white canvases filled with nothing but pigeon droppings by Dan Colen, another popular American artist, also brought a strong price. David Mugrabi, a New York dealer, bought the work for $545,000, in the middle of its $400,000 to $600,000 estimate. Mr. Colen has a one-man show at the Brant Foundation Art Study Center in Greenwich, Conn.

Prices for other young artists soared. “Standing Nude,” a 2007 vinyl on canvas by Joe Bradley that was estimated to sell for $200,000 to $300,000, brought $581,000. And a messy two-year-old painting of colorful scrawls by the Colombian-born artist Oscar Murillo went for $389,000, more than twice its high estimate of $150,000.

After the sale, the chief executive of Phillips, Michael McGinnis, called the evening “energetic,” adding that although Asians were visibly dominant at auctions earlier this week, their participation on Thursday night was “certainly not a stampede.”

George Lindemann Journal - "Wooing a New Generation of Museum Patrons" @nytimes By DAVID GELLES

George Lindemann Journal - "Wooing a New Generation of Museum Patrons" @nytimes By DAVID GELLES

A Young Collectors dinner at the Guggenheim. Exclusive events for young donors help museums cement ties with new benefactors. Credit Karsten Moran for The New York Times

 

Several hundred millennials mingled under the soaring atrium of the Guggenheim Museum on Fifth Avenue one recent frigid February night. Weaving around them were black-clad servers bearing silver trays piled high with doughnuts, while a pixieish D.J. spun Daft Punk remixes.

The occasion was the museum’s annual Young Collectors Party, and the increasingly tipsy crowd thronged in a space usually filled with visitors eager to see the 73-year-old institution’s priceless artworks. But on this night, the galleries displaying an exhibition of Italian Futurism were mostly cordoned off. Instead, youthful, glamorous and moneyed New Yorkers were the main attraction.

Many museums, including the Guggenheim, view events like this as central to their public programming. They get a new generation through the front door and keep potentially staid institutions relevant with a cultural landscape in flux.

 

But events like this are also, at some level, central to the future financial health of the museum. Before the Young Collectors Party, museum executives held an exclusive dinner for a select group of young donors already contributing at a high level. If all goes well, some of those in attendance will one day become trustees of the Guggenheim. Together, the dinner and the party took the museum one step closer to cementing relationships with these rising philanthropists and their friends.

Photo
The Young Collectors Party at the Guggenheim in Manhattan. Credit Karsten Moran for The New York Times

“You don’t just go on the board overnight,” said Catherine Dunn, the Guggenheim’s deputy director of advancement. “You engage people in the life of the museum so that they can ultimately join the board.”

Across the country, museums large and small are preparing for the eventual passing of the baton from the baby boom generation, which for decades has been the lifeblood not only of individual giving but of boardroom leadership. Yet it is far from clear whether the children of baby boomers are prepared to replicate the efforts of their parents.

While charitable giving in the United States has remained stable for the last 40 years, there is reason for concern. Boomers today control 70 percent of the nation’s disposable income, according to data compiled by the American Alliance of Museums. Millennials don’t yet have nearly as much cash on hand. And those who do, the alliance found, are increasingly drawn to social, rather than artistic, causes.

Now, as wealth becomes more concentrated, tax laws change and a younger generation develops new philanthropic priorities, museums — like other nonprofit organizations — are confronting what, if unaddressed, could become an existential crisis.

“The generational shift is something a lot of museums are talking about,” said Ford W. Bell, president of the American Alliance of Museums. “The traditional donors are either dying, stepping back or turning it over to their children or grandchildren.”

Generational change is always occurring as new blood takes the place of the old. But as the boomers’ children take over, there is concern among administrators and trustees that millennials are not poised to meet the financial and leadership demands of increasingly complex — and expensive — museums.

“We’re not just talking about replacing one generation with another generation,” said Kaywin Feldman, director of the Minneapolis Institute of Arts. “We’re talking about a new generation that behaves so differently than the last one.”

 

Two-thirds of millennials want specific information about how their dollars will “make a difference,” according to the 2011 Millennial Donors Report. That can pose a problem for museums, which rely on individual donations to support everyday operations and build endowments.

“Younger philanthropists and donors today are looking for measurable results,” Mr. Bell said. “It used to be you gave because it was the Metropolitan Museum of Art. But today younger donors have a lot of things they can give to. They ask what the impact is going to be and how you’re going to measure that impact. The Rockefellers gave, but they weren’t looking for specific metrics.”

Moreover, many are disinclined to contribute to long-term capital campaigns. “An older generation of philanthropists really understood the value of an endowment,” said Maureen Robinson, a member of the Museum Group, a consortium of senior museum professionals. “But endowments are looked at by younger people as dead money. They think, ‘I’m giving you a dollar to do something different.’ ”

What is more, there is a swelling debate about the merits of different types of charitable giving, with many arguing that arts institutions are less deserving than social and health causes. Writing in The New York Times last year, the philosopher Peter Singer said that “a donation to prevent trachoma offers at least 10 times the value of giving to the museum.”

This line of thinking is “a matter of some dismay to a generation that worked to build out community engagement in museums,” Ms. Robinson said. “All these things are great, but it’s as though museums appear to represent a lesser value and less moral use of time.”

And not only are 20- and 30-somethings today more interested in social causes like education, the environment and international aid than they are in the arts, but because of shifting demographics, there may simply be fewer wealthy young patrons to write checks.

“We’re seeing some significant changes in income distribution,” said Dan Monroe, director of the Peabody Essex Museum in Salem, Mass. “You’ve got a shrinking middle class. And there’s a huge amount of wealth and philanthropic capability that is centered in a smaller number of people than was previously the case.”

Already anticipating this generational changing of the guard, some museums are racing to pursue younger donors and trustees.

At the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, 75 percent of the board membership has turned over in the last seven years. That has brought new life to the Walker, which focuses on modern and contemporary art. But it has also meant the loss of several stalwarts who could be relied on for big checks and sage advice.

“Most of the oldest generation has completely gone off,” said the Walker’s director, Olga Viso. In its place, Ms. Viso said, a group of trustees in their 50s and 60s has moved into senior leadership roles and begun giving at higher levels, while a younger group of trustees in their early 40s and even late 30s has joined the board.

Among the more youthful members Ms. Viso has recruited of late are John Christakos, founder of the furniture company Blu Dot, who is in his late 40s and serves as the Walker board’s treasurer, and Monica Nassif, the founder of the fragrance and cleaning companies Caldrea and Mrs. Meyers Clean Day.

As well as being proactive, another way to attract young donors and trustees is to be a cultural powerhouse. Many prominent art museums in major metropolitan areas, in particular, are so far navigating this transition with ease.

“The very big institutions are doing very well,” said Ms. Robinson of the Museum Group. “They have a gravitational field.”

 

Take the Museum of Modern Art in New York, which has well-oiled machinery for cultivating young patrons and turning the exceptional ones into trustees at MoMA or its sister institution, PS1.

“We’ve been doing this since 1949,” said Todd Bishop, MoMA’s senior deputy director of external affairs. That was the year that it set up the Junior Council, a group for young patrons. MoMA refreshed the effort in 1990 with the founding of the Junior Associates, a membership group open to those 40 years old and younger.

At a recent Junior Associates event, about 50 young patrons gathered to sip white wine in the museum’s lobby after work, giant Brice Marden paintings looming over the makeshift bar. The occasion was a private tour of MoMA’s retrospective of the German sculptor Isa Genzken, hardly the most accessible show.

After 45 minutes of schmoozing, the Junior Associates dutifully followed Laura Hoptman, the curator, on a walk-through of the sometimes jarring exhibition. Ms. Hoptman spoke of Ms. Genzken’s “physicalization of sound waves” and the artist’s battles with depression.

Not all of the Junior Associates were impressed, but others delighted in the access. David Snider, 28, grew up in Boston, where his parents were involved with the Institute of Contemporary Art. Mr. Snider, who works at a real estate website, has recruited 10 friends to the Junior Associates since joining, and said the group’s events “resonate with people because it’s not just another happy hour.”

“There are very few Junior Associate events where two-thirds of the time isn’t about learning,” he said.

At the end of the tour, with young patrons standing amid Ms. Genzken’s flamboyant sculptures, Ms. Hoptman implored the young guests to stay involved with MoMA, and keep giving. “It’s groups like the Junior Associates that allow us to do this, to keep pushing,” she said.

Absent this tireless wooing of a younger generation, museums can quickly slip up. The Delaware Art Museum is facing funding challenges now, in part because of the erosion of individual giving by moneyed locals.

Wilmington, where the museum is, has fallen on hard times, and the wealthy families that once supported the arts there have seen their fortunes divided up over a number of generations.

“This is a scenario that’s playing out in other places as well,” said Mr. Bell of the American Alliance of Museums.

This year, the museum of Randolph College in Lynchburg, Va., was moved to sell a painting by George Bellows for $25.5 million to fund its endowment, a task usually met by donors.

Hoping to avoid the plight of Delaware, some museums have doubled down on recruiting new board leadership in recent years.

Donald Fisher, the late co-founder of Gap and a longtime board member of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, was particularly passionate about the issue.

The museum’s director, Neal Benezra, remembers that at a board meeting eight years ago, Mr. Fisher pounded his fist on the table and said: “We need to prepare for this and we shouldn’t be nominating anyone over the age of 50!”

The museum has not followed Mr. Fisher’s advice to the letter. “But it was a powerful statement,” Mr. Benezra said. “And Don, as was often the case, was not wrong.”

Since then, the museum has worked hard to rejuvenate its board, with half of the trustee positions turning over in the last 10 years. Mr. Benezra hosts regular dinners for potential young board members, introducing them to longtime trustees including Mr. Fisher’s son, Robert, and Charles Schwab, the financier.

“It’s a way of engaging in a very personal way people who are already close to the museum and getting them to understand what the experience of trusteeship might mean,” Mr. Benezra said.

 

Among the new faces in the San Francisco museum’s boardroom are Marissa Mayer, the Yahoo chief executive, and the prominent entrepreneur Dave Morin. Those additions represent the museum’s success in forging ties with the technology industry, which is minting thousands of new millionaires in the Bay Area.

A similar story has played out across the country in recent years. In Boston, which has also enjoyed a boom in venture capital and biotechnology investment, the Institute of Contemporary Art has embarked on a refashioning of its board at the same time it built its first permanent building ever, a waterfront structure designed by Diller Scofidio and Renfro.

“While we were building a new building, it was critical that we build a community in Boston to support contemporary art,” said the institute’s director, Jill Medvedow. “We tried to find people that were not already on other boards. We looked to the venture, tech and biotech communities. And we managed to transform the board of trustees.”

Thanks to those new faces on the board, Ms. Medvedow was also able to bolster the institute’s endowment, increasing it from $1 million when she took over in 1998 to $20 million today. Nearly half of that came from people under the age of 50, she said.

Among the younger trustees are Jonathan Seelig, co-founder of Akami Technologies; Rich Miner, a co-founder of Android, the operating system acquired by Google; and Hal Hess, an executive of American Tower, the cellphone company.

Mr. Hess was initially drawn to postwar American painting, but, with some hand-holding by the institute’s curatorial staff, grew to love contemporary art as well. He is now on the finance committee, where he has gotten to work closely with James Foster, a more seasoned board member who is chief executive of the pharmaceutical company Charles River Laboratories. “It’s given me an opportunity to be involved at much deeper level,” Mr. Hess said.

Such mentorships are a hallmark of effective board succession plans.

“You’re not born a philanthropist,” Mr. Benezra said. “With a board that’s 65 members strong, it’s very easy for new members to feel unengaged.”

To avoid any alienation, many museums encourage new trustees to join committees as a way of working with other board members and learning the ropes.

The former Wells Fargo chief executive Richard Kovacevich is chairman of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art’s finance committee, allowing younger trustees to learn from a legend. “They observe how they think, how they act, how they interact with the staff,” Mr. Benezra said. “Mentoring is a big part of what we do. It’s how newly elected trustees find their way.”

Another accommodation made for younger trustees — who may still be in the prime of their careers — is the division of responsibilities. At the Peabody Essex Museum, for example, the board has two young co-chairmen — Samuel Byrne and Sean Healey — instead of one leader.

“They’re still building their careers and fortunes, and this allows us to divide responsibilities and provide coverage for people who are extremely busy and lead very demanding lives,” said Mr. Monroe, the Peabody’s director. “It’s worked very well for us, even though it’s unorthodox.”

And while in some cities, like Wilmington, family wealth fractures over the decades, many fortunes remain intact across generations.

In Minneapolis, the money made by the Dayton family, which founded the Target Corporation, continues to have an impact at both of the city’s major art museums.

 

Bruce Dayton, 95, is still on the board of the Minneapolis Institute of Arts after 72 years, making him, the institute says, the longest-serving trustee at an American museum. His son Mark, the governor of Minnesota, has an honorary seat on the board. And Mark’s son Eric, who is in his early 30s, is among the youngest members of the institute’s board.

Members of the Dayton clan also remain involved at the Walker. James Dayton, 49, is the current board president, having become a trustee when he was just 41.

However, the changing priorities of today’s youth are reflected in the concerns of the various generations of the Dayton family.

“When I talk to Bruce Dayton about the best moments of the museum, he talks about the meeting when we acquired the Bonnard,” said Ms. Feldman, the Minneapolis institute’s director. “That’s not the focus of his grandson, Eric, who works with us much more on audience engagement, the M.I.A.’s brand and attracting new audiences.”

And when the San Francisco museum realized it had to shut down its existing building to begin a huge expansion, in part to display the Fisher family collection, it turned to its board for advice on how to proceed in the interim. Instead of renting one space as a temporary home, the museum decided to engage in a series of public programs that would bring the collection into the community.

The young designer Yves Béhar, then on the board, became involved with the process and helped develop a program for Los Altos, a city in Silicon Valley, where the museum currently has 10 installations on display.

“It probably wouldn’t have happened without him,” Mr. Benezra said.

Yet as young professionals jump from job to job, taking their families across the country, many museums are having a harder time forging lasting ties with community leaders.

“It’s a significant challenge for us,” said Mr. Monroe of the Peabody Essex, noting that his museum was still fortunate to have strong support from donors in Boston.

Also exacerbating matters is that in recent decades, jobs, professionals and wealth have concentrated in urban areas, leaving smaller regional institutions in the lurch.

At the Walker, Ms. Viso had a wonderful young patron who was working at 3M and getting progressively more involved with the museum. But after a few years he accepted a job at Pepsi and moved to New York.

“In the corporate community in particular, there’s a lot more transition and change,” Ms. Viso said. “It’s not the norm for people to stay here for 20 years anymore.”

Ms. Robinson of the Museum Group noted that in some colder climates, older trustees were now fleeing during the winters, making them less reliable board members. Some of these snow birds then forge relationships with museums in balmier locations, like Miami, which has a vibrant arts community.

“The transience issue will come back to haunt everybody,” Ms. Robinson said. “Institutions need steady, lifelong relationships with supporters, and the opposite ends of the age spectrum are equally mobile, but for different reasons.”

Other demographic changes are also at play, forcing museums to rethink the future of their boards and major donor bases.

“Many museums are white both literally and figuratively,” said Mr. Bell of the American Alliance of Museums, noting a dearth of diversity at the highest levels of many museums.

And a new generation, raised on pop culture, is not always eager to support niche collections.

“If a museum’s primary collection area is antiquities, its not so easy to find young people to join that board,” said Robert Fisher of the San Francisco museum board.

All these changes are coming to a head as museums see their funding mix gradually change. Instead of relying on a handful of major donors to carry the museum each year, many are trying to nurture an “Obama fund-raising model” — smaller donations from a vastly larger audience.

Ultimately, however, museums may have to accept that the next generation coming into positions of power may simply be less generous to museums than the baby boomers have been.

“It’s one thing if you grew up in a philanthropic household,” Robert Fisher said. “But to expect that young people will turn around and start making million-dollar gifts because someone asks them to is unreasonable. Someone who’s 35 and made a lot of money may not give it away until they’re 50. It takes patience.”

Yet on balance, museum directors and their trustees think that, with time, millennials will rise to the challenge.

“I’m certainly optimistic,” said Mr. Schwab of the San Francisco museum. “If not, museums will degenerate and will eventually fall into the hands of government budgets and be in a death spiral. I hope that’s not the case.”

Correction: March 25, 2014
An article on Thursday about efforts by art museums to attract a new generation of benefactors incorrectly included the Detroit Institute of Arts among financially ailing museums that are under pressure to sell art from their collections to help fund their operations. While the Art Institute faced the threat of having part of its city-owned art collection sold, the money from the sale would have gone to the city in its bankruptcy proceedings, not to the museum itself. The article also referred incompletely to the source of pledges intended to avert such a sale. The pledges came from local and national foundations as well as from the museum itself, not just from local groups.

George Lindemann Journal - "Art Matters | Highlights from a Frieze Week of Art and Revelry" @nytimes By KEVIN MCGARRY

George Lindemann Journal - "Art Matters | Highlights from a Frieze Week of Art and Revelry" @nytimes By KEVIN MCGARRY 

Greengrassi a London gallery was awarded the Stand Prize at Frieze New York for its presentation of postwar Japanese artAdam ReichGreengrassi, a London gallery, was awarded the Stand Prize at Frieze New York for its presentation of postwar Japanese art.

The third edition of Frieze New York cemented the second week in May as the highlight of the city’s art calendar. The festivities’ official start date is fuzzy, but if social media is any indication, it might have been Tuesday at the heavily Instagrammed unveiling of the colossal sugar sphinx by Kara Walker at the Domino Sugar Factory in Williamsburg, where Creative Time, the public art organization that commissioned the work, held its annual gala.

But it wasn’t until Thursday that the first V.I.P.s made their way all the way to Randall’s Island for the actual fair. And what a lot of V.I.P.s there were! By midday, it was so difficult to get a table at any of the restaurant outposts dotting the super-sized tent that even Uma Thurman was told by a Frankies Spuntino host to leave her phone number if she would like to sit down for pasta in about an hour.

The model Lily McMenamy danced rowdily at the Fairytale Lounge just before a police raid ended the festivitiesDaniele BaliceThe model Lily McMenamy danced rowdily at the Fairytale Lounge just before a police raid ended the festivities.

Frieze succeeded in galvanizing a superlative art week. Greengrassi, from London, was awarded the Stand Prize for the most inventive presentation out of almost 200 participating galleries. Co-curated by Cornelia Grassi and the independent curator Joshua Mack, the gallery’s booth showcased politically charged paintings and works on paper by five Japanese artists spanning the second half of the 20th century.

As a counterpoint to all the lavish sit-down dinners hosted by galleries and fancy fundraisers for nonprofit organizations, on Friday, the Paris gallery Balice Hertling rented out a slightly seedy gay bar in Hell’s Kitchen, the Fairytale Lounge, to celebrate the curator Alexander May’s group show, “Warm Math,” opening in the nearby Film Center building. Just as things were heating up, the model Lily McMenamy jumped onto the bar to grind alongside a burly go-go dancer, only to be interrupted by undercover cops who stormed the bar. Days later, the place remains closed.

One of the aforementioned splendid meals was Artists Space’s annual dinner on Saturday in honor of the artist Christopher Williams, held at the Ukranian National Home in the East Village and catered by the London-based chef Margot Henderson. Jutta Koether and John Miller’s noise band XXX Macarena flooded the speakers, and the legendary Lawrence Weiner led a toast. The place was packed with artists, including Michele Abeles, Rebecca Quaytman, Rachel Harrison, Kimsooja, Zoe Leonard, Nick Mauss, Tony Oursler, Sam Pulitzer and Lari Pittman.

Korakrit Arundachaoi Untitled History Painting 2013 at MoMA PS1Courtesy of Clearing, New YorkKorakrit Arundachaoi, “Untitled (History Painting),” 2013, at MoMA PS1.

That same night, MoMA PS1 celebrated the three-year anniversary of its Volkswagen sponsorship with a new installment of its popular “Night at the Museum” series. The museum swelled with guests, as well as with a slate of excellent shows celebrating young, local talent — Korakrit Arundachaoi, James Ferraro and G.C.C., a collective of artists originally from the Persian Gulf — and several departed European greats, including the German provocateur Christoph Schlingensief and the Austrian painter Maria Lassnig, who passed away last week at 94.

Those with serious art stamina awoke on Sunday to trek up to Greenwich, Conn., to visit the Brant Foundation Art Study Center, which feted Dan Colen’s solo show there with an afternoon luncheon. The event’s exclusive nature was perhaps best represented by a photo, reposted to Instagram by the artist Jeannette Hayes, of Larry Gagosian napping on a grassy knoll.

By Monday, many dealers had already flown 12 time zones east to set up shop for the second edition of Art Basel in Hong Kong, which opens tomorrow. An atypically modest denouement for the week was held that night in the East Village studio of the artist Izhar Patkin, where the International Association of Art Critics (A.I.C.A.) held an awards ceremony for the 2013 exhibitions and writers chosen to be honored by its members. Museum directors like Thelma Golden, Lisa Phillips and Klaus Biesenbach shared space with the often faceless heroes of the art world’s writer class, including the blogger Tyler Green of Modern Art Notes and Barry Schwabsky of The Nation, who received awards for their criticism. The bonds in that room seemed to have been forged not through money but time — decades of watching artists, curators, writers and dealers grow up in this strange, somehow self-sustaining world where all art, all the time, is the norm.

"George Lindemann Journal by George Lindemann - "For a Day, a Reprieve From the New York Art Circuit" @nytimes By JULIA CHAPLIN

"George Lindemann Journal by George Lindemann - "For a Day, a Reprieve From the New York Art Circuit" @nytimes By JULIA CHAPLIN

“Frieze week is a nightmare,” the artist Nate Lowman said. “To have the same limp handshake 400 times? I don’t go to anything except this.”

Mr. Lowman, wearing sneakers and a flannel shirt, was sitting last Sunday in the very civilized tent on the green polo fields in Greenwich, Conn., where the tycoon and art collector Peter Brant was holding his coveted luncheon reception.

“I don’t participate in many art-world functions,” said the actress Chloë Sevigny, who was lined up at a buffet that was set with platters of roasted lamb and fresh asparagus. “But this is different.” It was Mother’s Day, so she had her mother in tow.

Mr. Brant’s soiree, held twice a year in May and November to inaugurate exhibitions at the Brant Foundation Art Study Center, a private museum in a converted stone barn, has become a must stop on the bloated art circuit. Timed to fall on the Sunday between Frieze New York and the contemporary art auctions, the Brant event is welcome reprieve from the usual snarl of gallery openings, cocktail receptions, fancy dinners and after-parties, as the entire New York art world seems to decamp from Manhattan to the airy Connecticut estate for a day.

By noon, weary art worlders, with wispy designer clothes and sunglasses concealing hangovers, began arriving by Uber and private cars, Instagramming images of the brilliant sun refracted through Mr. Brant’s impressive lawn ornaments, including his 43-foot-tall “Puppy” topiary by Jeff Koons and a lumpy clay-like tower by Urs Fischer.

Mr. Brant was standing on the patio in a brown suit and tie, greeting guests like the art dealer Alberto Mugrabi, the gallerist Larry Gagosian and Leonardo DiCaprio, an art fair regular hidden under a baseball cap (and who declined to be photographed).

“When I was very young and started collecting, I used to go to Philip Johnson’s place in New Canaan, and it was always such a great treat to come out from the city to Connecticut and see some art,” Mr. Brant said. “And that’s really what this is about.”

It is also a family affair. Allison Brant, one of his nine children from two marriages, is the director of the Brant Foundation. “I think there’s about 1,000 people here today,” said Ms. Brant, 33, who wore a white Theory dress. “We always get a bigger crowd when the weather is good.”

Inside, the artist Dan Colen, who is the subject of the current retrospective, seemed to be rebelling against the country club spirit. Wearing a black T-shirt, dirty jeans and Yankees cap, Mr. Colen presided over his large-scale installations, including a curtain made of 150,000 glass crack pipes that hung from the ceiling. A cluster of his signature boulders defaced with graffiti and chewed-up gum filled another room. And under a skylight was a giant nest made of rubble, wires and junk, with candy-colored canaries flying about.

“The whole question is how do I go to a preppy Greenwich polo field and bring my attitude?” Mr. Colen said. That seemed to be a presiding concern for many guests who had gathered in the tent for lunch and Champagne. Among those sitting at the long tables were the artists Richard Prince, Marilyn Minter and Mr. Fischer, who was with his girlfriend, the actress and fashion designer Tara Subkoff. There were various members of the Schnabel family: Stella, Lola and Vito Schnabel (but no sign of Heidi Klum, whom Mr. Schnabel is reportedly dating). And there was the filmmaker and artist Harmony Korine, who had an opening the following night at the Gagosian Gallery that seemed to be on everyone’s list.

By midafternoon, a crowd had gathered on the lawn, spread on blankets and pillows around two 14-foot-tall box trucks that had been buried in the dirt, marring the otherwise bucolic landscape. Two female musicians who make up the band I.U.D. climbed atop the trucks and performed what Artforum once called “minimal, pounding, contagious noise-music.”

Among those listening were an expensive-looking group of young people led by Mr. Brant’s sons, Harry Brant and Peter Brant II. “I love this party,” said the younger Peter, who was wearing linen Lanvin and had his arm around a model. “I like to lie around on the polo field. The grass is particularly soft and well kept.”

By 5 p.m., the party had begun to wind down. Guests started spiking their fruit punch with Champagne and vodka for the ride back.

“Peter is a true patron,” said the gallerist Andrea Rosen, who was standing by the bar in a black Belstaff dress. “If you look around there’s tons of artists here. But no one would come all the way to Connecticut if the show were not great.”

George Lindemann Journal by George Lindemann "Sugar? Sure, but Salted With Meaning" by ROBERTA SMITH

George Lindemann Journal by George Lindemann "Sugar? Sure, but Salted With Meaning" by ROBERTA SMITH

A Subtlety, or the Marvelous Sugar Baby 

With her stinging, site-specific installation at the former Domino Sugar compound on the edge of the East River in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, Kara Walker expands her imposing achievement to include three dimensions and monumental scale. In the process, she raises the bar on an overused art-spectacle formula as well as her own work. And she subjects a grand, decaying structure fraught with the conflicted history of the sugar trade and its physical residue to a kind of predemolition purification ritual.

Titled “A Subtlety, or the Marvelous Sugar Baby,” the piece runs the gamut in its effects. Dominated by an enormous sugarcoated woman-sphinx with undeniably black features and wearing only an Aunt Jemima kerchief and earrings, it is beautiful, brazen and disturbing, and above all a densely layered statement that both indicts and pays tribute. It all but throws possible interpretations and inescapable meanings at you.

This is par for the course with Ms. Walker, who is best known for wall installations in which cavorting black paper silhouettes depict the often sexualized, variously depraved yet comedic interactions of discernibly white slaveholders and black slaves in the antebellum South. Combining reality and metaphor with a great gift for caricature, these works demonstrate unequivocally that America’s “peculiar institution” was degrading for all concerned.

Photo
“A Subtlety, or the Marvelous Sugar Baby” features blackamoors on the way to the main attraction of the exhibition. Credit Sara Krulwich/The New York Times

A looming 35 feet tall, Sugar Baby is ensconced toward the back of an enormous warehouse, built in the late 19th century, that Domino once used for storing raw sugar cane as it arrived by boat from the Caribbean for refinement and packaging. Once a luxury — subtleties were sugar sculptures made for the rich as edible table-decorations — sugar became more widely available due in large part to slave labor. No wonder its journey north may bring to mind the Middle Passage endured by Africans forced across the Atlantic.

Sugar Baby fills the space between two rows of steel columns. Evoking an Egyptian temple, the columns also cage her: the scene of King Kong arriving in New York in the hold of a ship comes to mind. And yet, this creature is a power image, a colossal goddess of the future awaiting veneration. With blank eyes, she might also be a blind diviner who knows that the American future is much less white, racially, than its past.

Adding to her scale, the blocks of polystyrene from which she was built show through the sugar coating like seams of quarried stone. The long approach to her is dotted by 13 molasses-colored boys — underage blackamoors — made of cast resin or cast sugar, who introduced further dichotomies of light and dark, raw and cooked. Carrying either big baskets or bunches of bananas, they are enlarged from small cheap ceramic figurines still made in China. They could be pilgrims bringing offerings or workers returning from the cane fields.

As you approach, Sugar Baby’s extra-large hands create a foreshortening that makes her seem to loom all the more powerfully. Her left hand is clenched in the ancient “fig” fist, of thumb through first two fingers. It is variously an obscene gesture, a protection against the evil eye and, furthest back in time, a fertility symbol. Like I said, multiple meanings.

Continue reading the main story Slide Show
View slide show|13 Photos

Race, Power and ‘A Subtlety’

Race, Power and ‘A Subtlety’

Credit Abe Frajndlich for The New York Times

“A Subtlety” uses a familiar festivalist-art recipe: to wit, take a historically freighted figure or motif and remake it, enlarged if possible, in a historically freighted material. The resulting application of one ready-made to another is usually a simplistic one-liner.

But slavery, the sphinx and sugar are too overt and too embedded in this rough, sugarcoated place. Its walls are dark and rusted. When it rains, the ceiling drips molasses as evidenced by the dark spots forming on Sugar Baby, part of a larger deterioration that will continue until the piece closes on July 6. (A very small justice, considering: the land occupied by the warehouse will become a public park, not a condo, according to Creative Time, the nonprofit art organization that commissioned the project).

In addition, unlike most festival-art frivolities, Sugar Baby is an actively sculpted form in which Ms. Walker goes beyond both caricature and realism, making exaggerations and taking liberties that have their own psycho-formal effects. (And possibly some roots in African and pre-Columbian sculpture.) In addition to the Sugar Baby’s enlarged hands, pendulous breasts and her narrow, lioness shoulders, there is her magnificent rear, swooping up almost like a dome from a shortened spine, above shortened thighs and calves. From the back this dome turns into a perfect heart shape, buttocks whose cheeks protect a vulva that might almost be the entrance to a temple or cave, especially factoring in her boulder-size toes as steps. A powerful personification of the most beleaguered demographic in this country — the black woman — shows us where we all come from, innocent and unrefined.

Which brings us to our own self-destructing present, where sugar is something of a scourge, its excessive consumption linked to diseases like obesity and diabetes that disproportionately affect the poor. The circle of exploitation and degradation is in many ways unbroken. No longer a luxury, sugar has become a birthright and the opiate of the masses. We look on it like money, with greed. Heavily promoted, it keeps millions of Americans of all races from fulfilling their potential — an inestimable loss in terms of talent, health and happiness.

A final part of the web of meaning that Ms. Walker has woven around this resonant work can’t help including a black first lady trying to get people to avoid sugar, and a black president whose skin color alone has brought this country’s not-so-buried racism roaring back to furious, mindless life.

Correction: May 13, 2014

An art review on Monday about “A Subtlety or The Marvelous Sugar Baby,” an installation at the former Domino Sugar factory in Brooklyn by the artist Kara Walker, who is best known for work caricaturing slavery in the antebellum South, misstated a phrase applied to slavery when it was legal in the United States. It is “peculiar institution,” not “curious institution.”

George Lindemann Journal by George Lindemann - "The Ups and Downs of The Spring Auctions" @wsj by Kelly Crow

George Lindemann Journal by George Lindemann - "The Ups and Downs of The Spring Auctions" @wsj by Kelly Crow

                                  
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Midway through New York's major spring auctions, collectors of Impressionist and modern art appear to be showing signs of sticker stock, even as contemporary-art buyers prepare to splurge on.

Earlier this week, Sotheby's BID -0.05% Sotheby's U.S.: NYSE $40.48 -0.02-0.05% May 14, 2014 9:51 am Volume (Delayed 15m) : 39,739 P/E Ratio 18.97 Market Cap $2.79 Billion Dividend Yield 0.99% Rev. per Employee $576,249 41.0040.7540.5040.2510a11a12p1p2p3p 05/07/14 The WSJ's Kelly Crow at the So... 05/07/14 Loeb Wins by Losing at Sotheby... 05/07/14 Court Ruling Bolsters New Type... More quote details and news » BID in Your Value Your Change Short position and Christie's sold a combined $611.2 million worth of Impressionist and modern art, a total that fell within their presale expectations and exceeded a similar series last May that sold for $478 million.

Bidding proved thin for some of Christie's priciest works Tuesday—dealer Paul Gray was the lone bidder on a $22.6 million Pablo Picasso —and around a third of Sotheby's offerings on Wednesday went unsold. Sotheby's failures included a Picasso portrait of his mistress Marie-Thérèse Walter, expected to sell for at least $15 million.

But the same collectors who sniffed at Sotheby's art trophies turned up in force the next day for its sale of lower-priced material. It was a clue that this seasoned subset of collectors is willing to bid—but at price levels below $5 million, unless the art on offer is truly museum-worthy.

New York collector Donald Bryant thought he had hit his limit at Christie's on Tuesday after he offered $6.1 million for Constantin Brâncusi's toaster-size stone sculpture of a kissing couple, "The Kiss." But when he bowed out, he got a nudge from his wife, Bettina, and jumped back in at $7.2 million. "Is it because of her?" auctioneer Andreas Rumbler asked, adding with a grin, "She's the boss." The extra effort didn't pay off, though: The Brancusi sold to another bidder for $8.7 million.

Auction specialists say the art market has seen this divergence in collecting categories before. Decades ago, Old Masters enjoyed top billing until Impressionist and modern art became fashionable among wealthy collectors. Suddenly, its roster of artists such as Claude Monet began fetching the kinds of prices once reserved for Rembrandt and Canaletto. Now the art market appears to be shuffling again: With the majority of Impressionist and modern masterpieces now tucked away in museum collections, new buyers are finding it difficult to amass an enviable collection in a short time.

Many Asian collectors are still trying. At least eight of Sotheby's pricier works on Wednesday went to Asian collectors—including a $19.2 million Henri Matisse view of a woman painting at her easel, "The Afternoon Session."

Dealers say the art market will undergo its greater stress test this week, when both houses, plus boutique house Phillips, hold their sales of contemporary art. In recent seasons, auction prices for contemporary artists such as Jean-Michel Basquiat and Christopher Wool have quadrupled—a pace that's encouraged speculators to buy up even younger artists in hopes of profiting later in resales.

Last November, Christie's sold a yellow Francis Bacon triptych for $142.4 million, almost $60 million above its estimate and the most ever paid for a work of art at auction. Next Tuesday, the house will offer up a seafoam-green Bacon triptych, 1984's "Three Studies for a Portrait of John Edwards," for an estimated $80 million. The seller is computer-chip maker Pierre Chen.

Mr. Chen's Bacon carries a third-party guarantee. This means the auction has promised him it will sell—to an outside investor who has pledged to buy it for an undisclosed sum if no one during the sale offers more. If the guarantor is outbid, he or she will reap a share of Mr. Chen's potential profits and take home a financing fee from Christie's no matter what. (Sotheby's doesn't offer financing fees.)

Unlike Impressionist and modern art, next week's contemporary sales are swimming in guarantees—at least $650 million worth across the three houses. The amount eclipses Sotheby's entire guarantee portfolio for 2008, the last market peak.

Both Christie's and Sotheby's say they feel comfortable with their volume of guarantees.

For the Tuesday sales, third-party guarantors claim a financial interest in 39 of Christie's 72 contemporary artworks, which means that 54% of the estimated $500 million sale will change hands whether anyone even shows up with a paddle. This includes Andy Warhol's "Race Riot," a red-white-and-blue silk-screen that recently belonged to a trust of dealer Bill Acquavella's family and that Christie's estimates will sell for around $45 million.

All this means that contemporary collectors, unlike buyers of Impressionist and modern art, are going to unprecedented lengths to keep fueling their segment's momentum, even if they must bankroll the offerings themselves ahead of time. If the strategy works, it could reshape the way art gets auctioned, with sellers essentially preselling their art privately but angling for a higher, backstop price at auction. If the broader financial markets sour suddenly, bidders could get spooked, and these deal makers may be left owning art at prices that may appear inflated. Stay tuned.

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