The newest proof that the artwork market is down however not out arrived in the present day (16 July), as Christie’s introduced choose outcomes from the primary half of 2024. The public sale home’s whole income from reside and on-line public sale gross sales throughout this era reached $2.1bn worldwide, round $600m much less (-22%) than it made beneath the hammer throughout the opening six months of 2023. The drop is even steeper when in comparison with the identical interval in 2022, when competitors for the collections of Anne Bass, Thomas and Doris Ammann and Hubert de Givenchy propelled Christie’s to a hearty $4.1bn in income from public sale gross sales—practically double its equal outcomes this yr.
But a number of different metrics confirmed that Christie’s has held surprisingly regular within the face of current turbulence. Its wholesome 87% sell-through price was on par with that in each 2023 and 2022. The index of hammer value to low estimate was 111% by this June, that means that the successful bids for all tons offered (earlier than charges) outperformed their minimal expectations by round 11%. The equal determine for 2023’s first half was 107%, that means a year-on-year enchancment of 4%. (Christie’s didn’t publicise the index of hammer value to low estimate in 2022; as a privately held firm, it has the fitting to decide on which operational outcomes it divulges.)
“Regardless of a decline in our whole public sale gross sales, resilience is the important thing phrase to characterise Christie’s outcomes for the primary half of the yr,” says Guillaume Cerutti, the public sale home’s chief government. “In a difficult macroeconomic setting, we now have maintained or improved on all the opposite key metrics by which we measure our efficiency.”
Though inflation continued easing within the yr’s first half, the worldwide economic system stays beneath duress from excessive rates of interest, ongoing wars in Ukraine and the Center East and nervousness among the many gathering class concerning the political outcomes from a historic yr of elections. Echoes of those challenges have been maybe most evident in Christie’s gross sales of top-end artworks.
The priciest lot offered by the public sale home by June of this yr was René Magritte’s 1958 canvas L’ami intime (the intimate pal), which fetched £33.7m (with charges) in London. For comparability, the highest lot throughout the first half of 2023 was Henri Rousseau’s Les flamants (1910), which offered for a premium-inclusive $43.5m, whereas Andy Warhol’s 1964 silkscreen portray Shot Sage Blue Marilyn took first prize within the equal interval of 2022 by bringing in $195m (with charges), essentially the most ever paid for a Twentieth-century work at public sale.
Sale income from single-owner collections has additionally been noticeably down in 2024. Essentially the most useful assortment offered by Christie’s by this June was that of the Barbier-Mueller household, whose holdings of African and Oceanic artwork made €73m (with charges) total in Paris this March—a fraction of the $210m price of artwork offered from the Gerald Fineberg assortment in Could 2023, not to mention the $363m sale of the Bass assortment the spring earlier than.
By sale class, practically two-thirds of Christie’s $2.1bn in first half public sale income got here from Twentieth- and Twenty first-century artworks, with such tons bringing in simply over $1.3bn. Luxurious items have been the second most profitable class beneath the hammer, contributing $362m (round 17% of the worldwide whole by worth). Artworks from Asia and the remainder of the world rounded out the highest three by making $217m (round 10% by worth).
Information on personal gross sales was absent from the public sale home’s first half outcomes. “Non-public gross sales stay at a excessive degree and proceed to make an vital contribution to the enterprise,” a Christie’s spokesperson mentioned when requested concerning the omission. After attaining $850m from January by June 2021, income from personal transactions considerably declined within the equal interval of the succeeding two years, reducing to $600m in 2022, then to $484m final yr.
Christie’s first half efficiency did, nevertheless, reinforce its logic for investing in a brand new 50,000 sq. ft Asia Pacific headquarters, set to open within the Zaha Hadid Architects-designed Henderson constructing in September. Hong Kong remained the public sale home’s high market within the area throughout the first half of 2024, adopted by mainland China. Patrons within the Asia Pacific zone additionally equipped greater than one-quarter of the worldwide public sale income amongst patrons who have been new to Christie’s throughout this span, in addition to 38% of spending amongst its millennial purchasers worldwide.
Purchasers from Europe, the Center East and Asia made up one other development demographic, albeit a modest one. The share of public sale gross sales amongst this group within the first half of the yr rose to 38%, up from 35% throughout the identical interval in 2023. The worldwide share of bids positioned on-line additionally elevated 3% year-on-year, from 79% within the first half of 2023 to 82% this yr up to now—a very noteworthy consequence given the cyberattack suffered by the public sale home simply forward of its marquee gross sales in New York this Could. This information level underlines an vital reality about weathering troublesome cycles within the artwork market: sellers can solely be resilient if patrons are prepared to satisfy them midway.