Monday, October 11, 2010

MANIFESTA'S DIRECTOR HEDWIG FIJEN AT OUR SHOP!

Yesterday Hedwig Fijen visited our shop, and shreeked with enthusiasm when seeing our Saint Card of curator Boris Ondreička (Boris was enthusiastic himself, see the post about our first day). She was impressed with our appearance in the newspaper the day before (see previous post). Of course the Golden Coffee table Busts of Hedwig Fijen were the main eye catcher - Hedwig's family particularly liked them.









2 comments:

  1. Art is a better investment than shares

    27 Jan 2011
    Unit: Wageningen UR

    Art has been an excellent form of investment over the past ten years, but it can be very risky too, LEI researchers have shown.

    Investing in art is a strong option when the stock market is in the doldrums, research by LEI (part of Wageningen UR) economists Ernst Bos and Aris Gaaff has suggested. The average return on investments in post-war and contemporary art has been between 35 and 40 percent over the last ten years, while the value of shares dropped by 20 percent. For anyone with an old master in the attic, the returns were minus four percent on average. Bos and Gaaf based their findings on data from 2,900 art auctions.
    They did find considerable differences between art works, some of which were sold at a great loss. The differences in profits varied tremendously between artistic periods too. Contemporary and post-war art saw the biggest price rise. Older art works only come onto the market sporadically because most of them are owned by museums, which hardly ever sell them off.

    Auctioned art works fetch the most
    The chance that an art work bought at an auction is later sold on for a higher price is 2.5 higher than for art bought in a gallery. It does need to be a work that stands out from other works and to be by an artist who is still working. And the same applies to art as to shares: high risks and high returns go hand-in-hand. Prices often rise steeply over several years, only to plummet afterwards. The price of older art works, which have already changed hands a number of times, is much more stable. The art market is not particularly transparent, says Bos. The goods are extremely heterogeneous and the volume of trade is much lower than with shares. Price development is determined by sales at auctions, as these are the most transparent. Bos sees his conclusions as 'good news in times of budget cuts affecting art.' / Astrid Smit

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