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Posts Tagged ‘Art Investment’

When I first started in gallery work in 1996, I was a fresh-faced kid straight out of college. I knew I wanted to work in the arts but, like all starving artists, had no idea what direction that might ultimately take. One of my early passions growing up was animation. It proved incredibly laborious and time consuming, so I migrated to comic books and political cartooning while still in school. So when I was coincidentally hired at a gallery specializing in animation cels (Walt Disney, Warner Brothers, Walter Lantz, Dr. Seuss, et cetera, et cetera) an insatiable appetite was created for knowing anything and everything I could about the media, the history and the collectibility of these works. I clinically examined each work within my budget to determine precisely what the best use of my hard-earned (and scarce) funds might be. When I bought Theodor “Dr. Seuss” Geisel’s (1904-1991) “Cat Carnival in West Venice”. My friends looked at me as if I had three heads. “You spent what?”… “On that?” It was $1,200.

Theodore “Dr. Seuss” Geisel, “Cat Carnival in West Venice”, Serigraph ( 31” x 29) Patron Proof LXII/XCIX (62/99) Full edition: 375 plus 99 P.P. plus 55 C.P. plus 8 Printer Proofs (537 total) Purchased, 2001 for $1,200. SOLD, 2010 for $4,500.

As I was fielding offers nearly a decade later for said “Cat Carnival”, a final sale price of $4,500 was settled upon. This sum represented a nearly fourfold increase, despite the worst recession since the Great Depression. Let’s think of it as my own Bailout. While this is not a huge sum by modern investment standards (or, for that matter, the interim of my career), intervening years have proven that I am not too bad at prognosticating the world of art investing, albeit now on a much grander scale.

This is not a science as much as it is educated guess-work. Art is not regulated as a security because it can, and often does, devalue itself. The reason is that art-flippers often know as much about art as they do about quantum mechanics. Stock brokers and fund managers have developed a skill in clinically examining a set of criteria over a long period of time, processing enormous amounts of information which involves many moving parts and often a complex overview of disparate factors. Conversely, day-traders are often arm-chair quarterbacks who throw the occasional touchdown pass. (Even a stopped clock is right twice a day).

Richard MacDonald, “Nureyev” (Third Life) Bronze Edition of 90 (30.5” x 16” x 11”) Private sale, 2000, $28,500., Private sale 2001, $29,000. Private Sale 2004, $35,000.

Similarly, true art advisers and consultants are examining multitudes of data from auctions, private and gallery sales, authenticity, controversy, forecasting, movements in art, epochs and eras, phases within an artists own career, popularity and rarity of various themes, among other factors. None of these factors can be taken as sole, concrete criteria for an art purchase. The Arts are a living, breathing organism capable of creating the biggest stars and one-hit wonders at the same time. Therefore, speculation about artwork must be ventured with a hearty dose of scrutiny and a trusted, relatively impartial source.

-If you read about the Art auctions… you only get part of the story.

-If you study an artist without knowing his/her most important phases… you only know some of what you will need to know.

-If you speak to one art dealer about purchasing another Art Dealer’s work… you might not get as truthful of an answer as you might hope because there is a disincentive for them to endorse someone else’s product.

The truth is that no art adviser can be an expert in every type, phase or media in art. Further, even the most forthright and honest advisers sometimes simply get it wrong. You would not ask a plastic surgeon to perform neurosurgery, despite the fact both are surgeons. But you would know either way, surgery is always risky.

One of the things I have figured out since the purchase of “Cat Carnival” is that buyers generally striate themselves into several plateaus of purchases. Works which are purchased from $1-5,000 are generally passion-based or impulse purchases. These are things that we like, feel are beautiful, are opportune, but may or may not carry an intrinsic, historical or monetary value into the future. Works between $5-10,000 represent a gray area in which there may be passion-based motives, but also a speculative intention. Whether or not this speculation trends upwards or downwards is dependent on the artist, the diligence with which the specific work was selected and the prospects that the artist will have staying power beyond the time-frame in which it was purchased. (i.e. are they a phase that will fall out of favor in the coming years?) Above $10,000 buyers are generally investors on some level as they demographically disposed to higher income, higher education, higher net-worth and greater risk-assessment capabilities that come from experience with high-end purchases. This does not imply that all buyers are motivated by the desire to “make money” on their art. Many, if not most, would never sell the works they procure through their collecting lifetimes. (By some estimates, only .5% of art is resold by the original owner.) However, along with their greater accumulation of wealth comes pragmatism to critically examine their purchases for some form of monetary security. Even if you do not break even on your purchases, they still should hold some degree of solidity as they are, at a minimum, physical.

Salvador Dali (Spanish, 1904-1989) “Space Venus" (1977-1984) Edition of 350 with 35EA in bronze. 65cm (including base). Literature: Catalogue Raisonne "Le Dur et le Mou" by Robert & Nicolas Descharnes, pg. 239, Ref #616. Examples: Sold Privately, 2004, $18,000., Sold Privately 2004, $19,000., Sold Privately 2005, $23,700., Sold Auction 2005, $31,215, Sold Auction 2005, $25,797., Sold Privately 2006, $27,500., Sold Privately 2006, $27,500., Sold Auction 2008, $33,051.

According to an article from CNN.com, “In 2005, the Mei/Moses Fine Art Index showed compound annual returns of 14.52%, while total returns for the S&P 500 were 4.9% and the U.S. Treasury 10-year notes returned 2.68%” (“Add Picassos To Your Portfolio?“, February 2006). Mei/Moses generally sticks to auction-only sales of names you may be familiar with if you took a college art history course: Pablo Picasso, Marc Chagall, Salvador Dali, Auguste Rodin, Paul Gauguin, Vincent Van Gogh, Gustav Klimt, Francis Bacon, Amedeo Modigliani, Edouard Manet, Joan Miro Claude Monet, Edgar Degas, and a host of other 19th and 20th Century masters. This is because they can serve as a barometer of the auction market as a whole, and while most of us will not rush out to purchase the first Picasso that crosses our path, we may be inclined to locate a well-priced, hand-signed and numbered aquatint or lithograph from him. A bronze from Salvador Dali can be in the $10-50,000 range, whereas a painting can be hundreds of thousands. Each has a prospective upside if you know which works to get, how much to pay for them and what questions to ask to know that the work will endure.

Can any dealer promise a four-fold increase in less than a decade? Not without holding two fingers behind their backs.

But what we can do is serve as honest arbiters of information about the purchases you wish to make, whether they are purely impulse driven or purely investment motivated (or somewhere in between). By giving impartial advice and by building a network of references who will vouch for the record we can, at a minimum, provide you with an honest sounding board from which you can make decisions which will serve you and your heirs for generations to come.

Now… How about a replacement for my Seuss?

From:http://www.scversillee.com/2009/06/interview-with-an-art-dealer-ii/
reeds-headshots-031a-3
Interview with an Art Dealer II

From time to time I’ll use this blog to feature interviews with professionals that serve key roles in the fine art community. International art dealer Reed V. Horth of Florida was kind enough to answer questions for a two-part interview. Part one dealt with questions for artists; below is part two which answers questions for art collectors. Enjoy!

Robin Rile Fine ArtPlease describe what you do and how you help collectors find the perfect artwork to add to their collection.

My particular role as a Fine Art Concierge often involves collectors telling me what artwork they want. This is sometimes a more clinical process than the pure, visceral feeling of buying artwork at a show, auction or gallery. This being said, I present a broad spectrum of artists, works, price ranges and media to them, then gauge their responses trying to find out their feelings whether positive or negative. I ask questions, and I listen to their answers. I do not try to fit a round peg into a square hole. Just because I have a work does not make it perfect for them. Perhaps there is another work or artist that suits them perfectly. That is the piece I want to find for them.

Do you advise your collectors to purchase for “pleasure” or for “investment”?

In this day and age, no one purchases anything they ostensibly do not need without thinking long and hard about it. I do not advocate Art being bought specifically “to make money”. That being said, art has much more solidity than many of the more “safe” traditional investment vehicles. I doubt many investment advisors were prescient enough to know that their “safe” investments would be selling at roughly half their value presently.

I believe that all art, no matter what the price, should be purchased for pleasure (whatever “pleasure” encompasses for you… pride, imagination, tranquility, lust, money, inspiration, discomfort, etc.) At prices under $5,000, collectors may buy without a reasonable expectation of monetary returns on that purchase. At about $10,000 the mentality shifts to a more pragmatic mode where collectors may desire some form of appreciating asset.

What documentation should accompany a piece of artwork so a buyer can prove authenticity if they decide to sell the piece later?

Generally, a writ of sale (i.e. a purchase order, invoice, or letter of origin) should accompany any fine art purchase. If the artist chooses, they may issue a “Certification of Authenticity” which certifies this work as being by their own hand. As their sphere of influence grows and there is more of a risk of duplication and/or fakes surfacing on the market, these Certifications become even more important. If an artist’s work is distributed by a publisher, the publisher will issue these certifications.

Additionally, artists should sign their works and keep an inventory of the works they have produced in their career. I would encourage them to give each work a reference number. Artists should know the date, name, size, media, consignment date, sale date and end user name (Oftentimes this is the gallery, and the gallery is not under any obligation to tell you the buyer’s name, although they may) This lineage establishes provenance so that an artist can retrace steps if and when there is a question of authenticity, or when a catalogue raisonne is prepared.

When a collector sells an original piece of artwork from their collection, do they have any responsibilities to the artist who created it? For example; reporting the sale, paying the artist a percentage of the profit, etc.

No. Once the artwork leaves the artist’s hands, the ownership rights are handed over. While Artists do maintain their copyrights to prohibit unauthorized reproduction, they do not have claim to any profits from sales.

(Note to readers: in the U.S. only California recognizes Resale Rights for artists. For more information do an internet search for “California Civil Code Section (§) 986”)

Many people who would like to become art collectors or learn more about art in general express a feeling of “intimidation” about the subject. Have you run across this sentiment before and if so, can you explain where you think it might come from?

Art is somewhat of an intimidating subject because we all feel that we “should” know more about it than we generally do, kind of like fine wines. There is a tendency to want to know about different varietals and appellations, but few of us will take the time or effort to discover the nuances that differentiate one bottle from another. It becomes more and more daunting because there is such a massive amount of information to disseminate. This is why dealers, artists, experts, clients and those who work in the arts oftentimes will specialize in one genre, era, style, artist or movement.

What qualities should novice collectors look for in a good art consultant or gallery? Should an art dealer have a long history in the arts arena?

Good dealers will make certain that customer service is such a focus that the sale will not be a one-time occurrence, but a long-term relationship that can be nurtured. Clients want to be loyal and come back to their comfort zone. It is difficult to gain this trust and all too easy to lose it from one bad piece of advice.

Great dealers do not always have backgrounds in Art, but most possess some degree of knowledge and can balance passion for the Arts with a pragmatic business-sense. I have seen dealers who know very little about Art or its history, but are gifted salespeople and marketers. Conversely, I have seen salespeople who are so knowledgeable that they bog clients down in Art minutiae and bore prospects out of buying. A balance between the right-brain and the left-brain must be struck.

But, my primary criteria for a person I work for or with is “respect”. I feel that everything we do in life boils down to this concept. Respect for oneself, for others, for time, for your business, for your contracts, for Art in general and the artists and clients you represent in particular. Respect in all things is paramount.

Name two or three of the biggest mistakes first-time art buyers often make.

Many buyers think that they are instant experts because they Googled something. They will develop a picture in their head of how things are based on half-truths and innuendo. As with everything, we must take information with a grain of salt. Consider the source and remember that your research is cursory at best. Simply reading a few articles about art cannot substitute for an expert’s years of experience.

Buyers should also understand that reading auction figures only provides one minute cross-section of the pricing spectrum. The criteria being measured may or may not be based upon the same criteria with which you are dealing. Auction cycles, time, location, other items being offered and rarity are some of the myriad factors at work in an auction price. Some prices are anomalies and should not be taken as indicators of the market as a whole.

Are there any factors that make one particular piece of art more worthy of collecting in comparison to another?

I see a confluence of factors including being in the right place at the right time, rarity, speculation and being first or the last of a trend or series. There is not a tried-and-true, fool-proof method of determining which works are more important than others, but typically your gut will give you a good indication on whether or not the work you are obtaining is worthy of what you are paying for it.

Is there any type of work that you would advise clients against buying? If so, please explain why.

I advise clients not to buy works all the time. If it is over-priced or there is ambiguity in the documentation on a work or if has not been properly vetted by third-party experts. Your role as a dealer should be to advocate the best possible advice for your clients. Sometimes it is not in their interest to buy a particular work at a particular time. Sometimes it is in their interest to tell them to avoid it altogether. This is how you build trust with a client. Not merely seeking their hard-earned cash, but truly having their interests in mind and doing the best job you can for them.

Can you elaborate a bit more on what you mean by “vetting by third-party experts”? Who are these experts and what is the vetting process?

Depending on the artist, age, type, size and scale of the transaction dealers and/or clients will call in independent, third-party experts to verify the veracity of the information provided and transactional aspects. Third-party experts are generally dispassionate observers with no vested interest in whether or not money changes hands as they have no stake in the transaction’s completion, only in denoting their expertise as it relates to the work itself.

These third party experts include, but are not limited to: Appraisers, authenticators, attorneys, import/export officials, police and investigatory officials (who investigate a work’s clearance on the international market) and title insurance advisors (to ensure a work is available to be sold without title encumbrances).

Dealers do not necessarily serve in this capacity as there may be a monetary motivation preventing them from complete neutrality in the process. Not to insinuate that dealers cannot compartmentalize, but experts should primarily not have a buying and/or selling interest thereby ensuring no bias.

What should collectors know about copyright laws? For example; a collector buys a painting and would like to have the image scanned and placed on a mug, is this acceptable use of the purchased art?

Collectors purchase no copyrights whatsoever when they purchase a piece of artwork. If they wish to reproduce the artwork in any way, shape or form, they must obtain explicit written permission from the artist or copyright holder (sometimes this is the publisher) to do so. Copyright attorneys will be able to expound of the legal jargon behind this assertion a bit more fully, but if you are in doubt about whether or not you can…. you probably can’t.

Have you noticed a big difference between the American art market in comparison to the European art market?

Over the past several years the disparity between a weak US Dollar and the EURO and British Pound has caused many more Europeans to purchase high-end commodities in the United States. Exchange rates trading at over 2/1 caused British buyers to frenzy to the US to snatch up undervalued properties, art, gold, silver, diamonds, etc. The recent weakening of both currencies has curtailed much of this spending, but many investors still feel that they can milk the boom for a bit longer.

Tell a little bit about how you came into your line of work and where curious art lovers can go to procure your services.

I started in the Art business in 1997, and established ROBIN RILE FINE ART (www.robinrile.com) at the end of 2008. My passions and studies have always been focused on art. Once I realized my talents lay more in Art promotion and writing than production, I found my niche. That forte is in locating rare blue-chip investment-level works for high-end clientele. Through research, tenacity and connections many unbelievable deals can be located for investors right now. Oftentimes, I will receive very strange requests (Like one gentleman who wants a full-scale example of Auguste Rodin’s “Bourgeois du Calais”). But mostly they will ask for a blue-chip artist in a given price range.

I also really like to work with and mentor young talented artists. While I cannot work with everyone, I love to help artists establish themselves as professionals, make their passion their career, and develop long-term strategies which can build their reputations and oeuvre. It is a privilege to deal with such talent. I am humbled by it and will never take it for granted.

Thanks Reed!

Further information:

S. C. Versillee has been creating images since the age of three and under her mother’s early tutelage she honed her craft, developing a life-long love and respect for the arts.

A contemporary realist painter who works primarily in oils, Versillee sold her first painting at the age of 16 to a local shop owner and participated in her first group show at the age of 18. She has been juried into various distinguished fine art exhibitions including, the Catharine Lorillard Wolfe Art Club and the National Oil and Acrylic Painters Society’s “Best in America” annual show. She has appeared in both print and media and was included in a 2006 book, “Painter: The World’s Finest Painter Art”. Currently she has collectors of her figurative works throughout the United States. Some of Versillee’s other interest include creative writing, web design and research on the subjects of anthropology, symbolism and myth.

S. C. Versillee earned a Bachelor’s Degree in Art from the Cleveland Institute of art in 1999 and a Master’s in Library and Information Science from Kent State University in 2005. She currently works and lives in North East Ohio. She is an associate member of the International Guild of Realism and Oil Painters of America. http://www.scversillee.com/

A friend recently asked me, “Do you think Art will save the world as Dostoyevsky said?”

While pondering the answer to this query, my mind flooded with visions of a Superman carrying paintbrushes, a smock and modeling clay saving us from annihilation at the hands of a villainous fiend whose plot is to turn the world into a drab, colorless, amorphous mass. While preposterous, the truth is that art has dictated our history as much as it has been a barometer of it. Artists provide a distilled view of the world. It is up to us, as viewers, to digest it and either absorb, process, or reject it.

warhol_superman21

How many of us will forget the Sheppard Fairey’s propaganda-styled poster simply entitled “HOPE” which defined much of this past election cycle? “HOPE” was an intriguing counterpoint to living in an Orwellian Masterpiece. In the 1940’s Rosie the Riveter urged “We Can Do It”… and we did. Uncle Sam posters stated, “I Want You”… and we lined up. Sheppard Fairey urged “Hope”… and we had it.

As to Dostoyevsky’s dictum, I believe “Beauty will save the world” is the popularized version of his phrasing in The Idiot, in which the character Prince Myshkin is shown a portrait of a young woman. He notes, “Beauty like that is strength… One could turn the world upside down with beauty like that”.
Whether Art’s role in the formation of ideals and our perception of beauty can provide a basis for us to actually “turn the world upside down” is for smarter people than I to decide. What I will say is this, Art is not merely symptomatic, it is the collective voice of our zeitgeist both as leaders and as reactionaries. And by “Artists”, I do not merely include those who can place paint on a brush and apply it to a canvas in a pleasing way. “Artist” embraces writers, satirists, poets, sculptors, actors, designers, architects, dancers, photographers, musicians, and thinkers who continually push the envelope outward regardless of public perception. These artists reinvigorate thought and stimulate change to “save” ourselves from ourselves.
In literature, Upton Sinclair’s seminal muckraking masterpiece “The Jungle” changed the meat packing industry and established the Food and Drug Administration because an outraged public demanded that Teddy Roosevelt establish standards and regulations for public consumption. Alexander Solzhenitsyn’s “One Day in the Life of Ivan Desnisovich” was a horrifying indictment of Russian internment camps which changed the ways in which Western Intellectuals contextualized the Soviet record of human rights violations. While each book was compacted and digestible by the masses, each achieved incredible sea-changes in the ways in which people thought, behaved, lived and breathed.

The Works Progress Administration (WPA) was one of the salves Franklin Delano Roosevelt instituted as part of the New Deal to lead the United States out of the Great Depression. A great portion of the WPA was made up of projects geared at shoring up national identity and pride, just as the banks, institutions and government were rethinking the rules of governance. Artists such as Mark Rothko, Paul Cadmus, Aaron Bohrod, Childe Hessam, Jack Levine, Thomas Hart Benton, Raphael Soyer, Grant Wood and Karl Zerbe formed a cadre whose works (inspired by the recent renaissance of Italian masters by Diego Rivera, David Alfaro Sequeiros, Jose Clemente Orozco and others), created public and private works which redefined the age and persevere to this day as some of the early 20th century’s most quintessential images.

loose-lips-sink-ships-posters

Art was used to foment fear during the run-up to World War II, whether through Leni Riefenstahl’s Nazi propaganda film “Triumph of the Will”, “Loose Lips Sink Ships” posters, or ads urging us to “Buy War Bonds”. Even the notably light-hearted illustrator Dr. Seuss (Theodore Geisel) expressed biting political commentary on the United States’ isolationist position in the years leading up to the Japanese invasion of Pearl Harbor. After the war, George Segal’s “Holocaust” figures elicited images far too horrible to imagine. Vacant absentness stood sentinel in a world still numb with fear.

picasso_guernica_1

Pablo Picasso’s very personal and seminal masterpiece “Guernica” was borne out of the bombing of the small Basque town on April 26, 1937. While apolitical, Picasso’s Paris studio was not immune to intrusion by the Gestapo. When asked by a Nazi officer about the work,”Did you do that?”, he replied simply, “No, you did.”
Years later, in 1974, gallerist Tony Shafrazi spray painted “KILL LIES ALL” on the surface of Guernica in response to Nixon’s commutation of the sentence of William Calley for his involvement in the My Lai Massacre. When asked in 1980 about the incident, Shafrazi noted “I wanted to bring the art absolutely up to date, to retrieve it from Art History and give it life”.

warhol-cream-of-mushroom

Pop Art was borne out of our post-war obsession with mass-produced commodities and prompted a sea-change in the way that collectors, thought of, purchased and invested in Art, as well as changed the way artist marketed, branded and editioned themselves. Andy Warhol’s Campbell’s Soup Cans and Roy Lichtenstein’s comic book-styled panels epitomized and personified our consumer-oriented milieu. No longer was Fine Art confined to the wealthy. This new thought process opened a whole new buyer-class to the world of fine arts which, in turn, brought a broader focus to the arts as a whole. In turn, perception-based speculation turned fine art into a commoditized asset which was bought and sold with the idea of making money. Rarity, speculation and innovation became as prominent of motivators as image quality and talent.
Whether or not commercialization has marginalized art or brought it to the masses is a hotly debated and divisive subject. Whether or not either scenario is a good or bad for art itself is also a topic of debate. British graffiti artist Banksy has reinvigorated the “outsider” art scene while remaining relatively anonymous. His clandestined, controversial (and often hysterical) works keep him comfortably behind the curtain, despite their popularity and commercial success. Other artists, poets, musicians and writers who become commercially successful are often derided as having “sold out”, but new blood enters the market seeking to become “discovered” all the same. In every generation there are a handful of individuals who alter our perceptions so greatly that we turn our world upside down because we simply cannot justify the status quo any longer…. we call them Artists.

Will Beauty save the world?… Perhaps…. considering the counterpoint is “Ugliness will doom it

macd-romeoandjuliet

Forbes Magazine (October 13, 2008)

The Color of Money by Claire Obusan

Rising art prices have provided a salve for several bruised fortunes.

Volatile markets have bruised several fortunes of The Forbes 400. But swelling contemporary art prices have provided an unexpected hedge.
Eli broad should be a lot poorer this year. worth $7 billion last fall, the insurance and housing maven saw his 46.6 million shares of aig–received a decade ago when he sold SunAmerica to the insurance giant for $18 billion–drop 70% between last summer and August 29, the day we priced The Forbes 400 (they’ve fallen much further since). That decline erased $2 billion from his personal balance sheet.

broad1

But Broad’s net worth fell only $300 million. One reason: the soaring value of his 2,000-piece art collection. Comprising mostly contemporary pieces by artists like Jeff Koons, his collection was recently appraised at $1.9 billion, up 72% in a year………….

 

Major collections and apprecation:
Thomas H. Lee
“5 Deaths Twice 1 (Red Car Crash)” (1963)
Andy Warhol
Gain: 285%in 4 years.
The investor acquired the piece for $6.5 million at a 2004 auction. Amy Cappellazzo, head of Christie’s contemporary art division, says it’s now worth as much as $25 million.

Steven Cohen
“The Physical Impossibility of Death In the Mind of Someone Living” (1991)
Damien Hirst
Gain: 144% in 4 years.
The hedge fund tycoon bought the iconic shark installation for $8.2 million in 2004. Cappellazzo says it’s worth perhaps $20 million today.

hirst-shark

Norman Braman
“Diver” (1962)
Jasper Johns
Gain: 2,281% in 20 years.
The Forbes 400 newcomer paid $4.2 million in 1988 for this Johns piece. Cappellazzo says it would fetch perhaps $100 million today.

Lorenzo Fertitta
“Jersey Joe Walcott” (1982)
Jean-Michel Basquiat
Gain: 245% in 3 years.
The blood sport billionaire bought this piece in 2005 for $1.45 million. It’s worth $5 million today.

Frank Fertitta III
“Suite of 12 24-Inch Flowers” (1964)
Andy Warhol
Gain: 213% in 2 years.
The casino mogul purchased all 12 of Warhol’s flowers in 2006 for $9.6 million. Today they are worth $30 million.

Eli Broad
“Rabbit” (1986)
Jeff Koons
Gain: 567%in 3 years.
Broad’s 41-inch, stainless steel bunny was worth $12 million in 2005. A similar piece sold privately for $80 million earlier this year.

broad_inaugural_13

More at: http://www.forbes.com/global/2008/1013/114.html

Reed V. Horth Interview, March 19, 2009

 http://www.lifeisartfest.org/blog/2009/04/19/reed-v-horth-interview-march-19-2009/

Name: Reed V. Horth
Company Name: Robin Rile Fine Art
Opening Date: June 2008
Location: Miami
Website: www.robinrile.com
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· How did your interest in the business of art start?
I have always generally leaned towards art throughout my life. I think the realization that I was better at the “Business side” than the “Art side” was a tough pill to swallow. But when you surround yourself with talented people, it is both humbling and inspiring. My first job was an animation gallery just out of college. Then I was hired and managed several galleries throughout Florida for many years, till I decided to branch out and open my own firm.

· Are you an artist, yourself?
Let’s just say I am a bit better at the “business side” than the “art side”. While I have my aspirations, I leave most of it to the professionals.

· What do you see as the main difference between a Gallerist/Gallery owner and an Art Dealer?
Semantics and a physical location. Most of the Gallerists I know also are Dealers and vice versa. However, a dealer does not necessarily require a physical space. I find that more people purchase during exhibitions set up by Dealers than a stroll through a brick-and-mortar gallery particularly in this day and age. While there are obviously exceptions to every rule, I feel that if you know how to put on a good exhibit, there is no need for a physical space.
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· If you worked in the gallery business previously, what brought you to changing to being an art dealer?
I sort of fell into it. I built a virtual model for my last gallery position that was entirely web-based. When the physical location moved to a new town, it was time to make the change. All of the pieces were in place and I know how to perpetuate the structure. Thus far, it has been absolutely wonderful.
hart-daughters-ens
· What made you decide to open in Miami?
Miami is one of the 3 major cities in the US (perhaps the world) that are forerunners in everything related to style. New York, Los Angeles and Miami. The rest of the country and the world look to these cities to determine what the next fashion, music, art and style is going to be. Miami has everything one could want in a city, high style, variant cultures, luxury, relaxation, great weather, fun, the list goes on. This is Home.
hart-exni-exni-maq-bz
· Do you have a specific artistic vision or style?
I lean toward figurative or representational works as a personal and professional preference. I like works that challenge me to “read” them… interpret them. They have a story. As a writer and historian, I like works that inspire me to launch into uncontrollable schpiels of prose, interrelations with works of the past and visions of the future. Obviously, certain people can do this with a blank canvas, but not me. I want something that displays both technical aptitude and original concept.
jones-sis
· Who is your favorite artist ever? Who is your favorite current Miami artist?
Impossible question. I could pick one per genre and era throughout history.
As far as Miami-Based artists presently, I would be hard-pressed to choose only one. However, I really enjoy the work of The Mac, Federico Uribe, Benjamin Forbes, Robert Curran, Phil Stapleton and Karina Chechik.
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· Have you seen any effects of the economic downturn this past year?
I don’t think anyone is immune to the economic downturn. However, as my work is primarily based around locating “opportunity” works for collectors, buyers are still buying. Actually, it is a perfect time to buy right now if you have the financial security to do so. Art is a commodity that can statistically maintain it’s intrinsic and monetary value provided that the artist is on a expanding sphere of influence beyond their own region. This goes for Artists of yesterday and tomorrow. If the art is a fad or phase, it will have a statistically diminished capacity to offer returns than something that translates from decade to decade. The tough part is determining which artists and artworks have that type of staying power.

· Do you show at any art fairs, either locally or in other cities? If so, how have those experiences gone for you?
I have shown in New York and throughout Florida in the past and had variable results depending on the crowd we were appealing to. I feel that these experiences will allow me to tailor my exhibitions to bring in both buyers and artists that people will want to see and be around.

· What would you say is the one most important idea for an artist to know when it comes to getting recognized by an art dealer?
Be a professional. This is your job as much as it is your passion. You want to deal with professionals, so your ethics and standards should be as high as the people you wish to deal with. www.robinrile.com