Date: Fri 09-Jul-1999
Date: Fri 09-Jul-1999
Publication: Ant
Author: SHIRLE
Quick Words:
Vose-new-collectors
Full Text:
NANTUCKET SECTION: Notes For New Collectors
(with 10 cuts)
By Marcia Latimore Vose
How can one set a price on a unique object? In answering this critical and
frequently asked question, we'll try to make some sense out of a task that
requires connoisseurship, a comprehensive knowledge of the art market and
popular taste. Please keep in mind that all rules have exceptions!
When a painting comes into Vose Galleries, we rely not only upon our memory of
an artist's entire body of work, but also on our own extensive inventory of
records and photographs of over 36,000 sold paintings. We consult auction
records and have first-hand knowledge of the prices other dealers are asking.
The first thing we do after identifying the artist is rank the quality based
on a general impression. Most artists produce works of varying success. The
artist might be experimenting with a new technique which may not work.
Financial crises might require the artist to dash off a few canvases to refill
the bank account. Or mental and physical problems may be the cause of poor
quality work.
Whatever the reason, quality is one of the most important factors in setting
price, and the eye of an expert who has seen the entire scope of an artist's
work is crucial. Aldro Hibbard (1886-1972), for example, was a prolific
painter, known for his ability to paint snow in many different lights.
Hibbard's landscapes are crisp and detailed at their best, but in his later
years, Hibbard's work became much sketchier. Those paintings that lack detail
and vibrant color -- and fail to include Hibbard's famous snow -- command
one-quarter the price of a top-notch canvas.
Image 1 -- Aldro T. Hibbard (1886-1972) "Logging, Southern Vermont," 24 by 32
inches, oil on canvas, $34,000.
Image 2 -- Aldro T. Hibbard, "Snow Melting in the Valley," 28 by 40 inches,
oil in canvas $26,500.
Despite its much smaller dimensions, "Logging, Southern Vermont," is Hibbard
at his best, commanding a much higher price tag. Hibbard's valley painting is
much sketchier and most probably painted later in life.
Gallery co-president Bill Vose notes, "Many people tell us what a bargain they
got at auction. Often, they paid too much for a below average example that is
sketchy or done when the artist's eyesight was waning. We also caution clients
against basing prices solely on auction results. It is a small sample in the
world of painting sales and the results are often skewed."
Underlining the importance of quality is another pricing maxim: masterpieces
sell for many times an artist's average, and for good reason. Masterpieces
hold their values better. For example, paintings by marine artist Gordon Grant
(1875-1962) generally bring less than $20,000. However, one of his
masterpieces of Gloucester Harbor, which measures 40 by 50 inches, sold for
$44,000.
Image 3 -- "Nantucket men" by Gordon Grant, 28 by 36 inches, oil on canvas.
Masterpieces sell for many times the artist's average price. This thoroughly
typical canvas by Grant is priced at $13,500. Vose Galleries sold one of his
masterpieces for $44,000.
The popularity of the artist is perhaps the most important determinant in
setting price after authenticity and condition issues have been settled. The
painting must be thoroughly typical of the artist and be painted during his
best period to bring the highest price. The early paintings of Nineteenth
Century Artist Ralph A. Blakelock bring less on the market than his later,
more subjective works. But those painted during the last two decades of his
life bring nothing -- he was in an asylum for the insane and unable to produce
quality paintings.
Subject Matter
And Popular Taste
Subject matter is another major component of price. European scenes by
American painters, for example, generally bring far less than canvases
depicting American scenes or subjects. Thomas Moran's Nineteenth Century
scenes of the American West are his most desirable, followed by his Long
Island works; least sought after are his Venetian scenes. Impressionist
painter Edward Potthast's Swiss mountain scenes languish on the market, while
his highly desirable beach scenes bring six-figure prices.
Image 4 -- "Chateau Montreuil Bellay" by George Loftus Noyes (1864-1954), 30
by 34 inches, oil on canvas, $38,000.
Image 5 -- "The Foot Bridge, Annisquam," Mass. by George Loftus Noyes, 18 by
34 inches, oil on canvas $38,500.
Even though Noyes' Annisquam scene is considerably smaller than this French
Chateau painting, the latter's European subject matter commands a lesser price
with an American public.
Small beach scenes are the most popular items in our stock and command top
dollar. An exceptional eight by ten inch beach scene can sell for more than a
much larger figural painting.
Works from the current popular Nineteenth century Luminist movement (Fitz Hugh
Land, Frederick Edwin Church, Martin Johnson Heade) that show calm bodies of
water bring much more than those depicting turbulence.
Image 6 -- Alfred Thompson Bricher (1837-1908), "Watching the Sailboats," oil
on canvas, 18 by 36 inches. Luminist paintings depicting a calm body of water,
such as this one by Bricher, command much higher prices than turbulent scenes.
As for the impressionist movement, bright outdoor scenes with identifiable
locations attract top prices. Popular taste plays the important role here, not
necessarily the merits of the painting. All things being equal, a collector
who can ignore what is fashionable and be guided by personal taste can acquire
a high-quality painting at a lesser price.
Image 7 -- John J. Enneking, (1841-1916) "Cattle by a River," 16 by 22 inches,
oil on canvas, $12,500.
Image 8 -- John J. Enneking, "Spring Orchard," 18 by 24 inches, $35,000.
New England landscapist John J. Enneking's bright, colorful landscapes fetch
far more today than the darker tonalist scenes for which he was most famous at
the turn-of-the-century.
Popular Taste
Changes in popular taste are one reason that we rarely advise buying paintings
for investment. A particular artist sometimes becomes a hot commodity for no
apparent reason. Nowadays there is an insatiable demand for light,
Impressionist paintings, while the Hudson River School palette of the
Nineteenth Century is less sought after. None of these taste issues relates to
quality, and if you happen to like the Hudson River School style, your
pocketbook will feel less of a pinch... And you can be sure that good quality
paintings from this period will again become popular, as they have in the
past.
Image 9 -- Lee Lufkin Kaula (1865-1957), "The Green Shade," 34 by 24 inches,
oil on canvas $37,500.
Image 10 -- Lee Lufkin Kaula, "The Letter," 29 by 24Ã inches, oil on canvas,
$16,00.
The insatiable demand for high key color as seen in "The Green Shade" fetches
more than twice the price of the darker canvas.
Size, Shape & Condition
Small paintings often cost more per square inch, but they are affordable and
have a spontaneous, jewel-like quality. If you are greatly concerned about
resale, however, we often suggest buying larger canvases which have a better
chance of holding value. The ideal size for a Nineteenth Century painting is
24 by 36 inches and for a Twentieth Century work, 25 by 30 inches. Paintings
that are over-sized, unless of museum quality, are slower to sell, but a
contrarian buyer again can acquire a high-quality work for less than the
average. As for a painting's shape, horizontal paintings bring top dollar,
followed by vertical, oval, and the least desirable, round.
A severely over-cleaned painting, even by a top artist, can be nearly
worthless. Condition of a painting, whether it has been unpainted or
over-cleaned (skinned) is crucial to price. A dealer's responsibility is to
thoroughly examine a work and describe its condition in detail to clients.
Dealers who specialize in the finest paintings, however, simply will not
handle works with major condition problems.
We are always wary of a painting's provenance, or history of ownership. Robert
C. Vose, Junior (1912-1998) recalled, "Years ago, a man named William Roberts
used to invent an extremely professional looking provenance for $25 for
unscrupulous sellers. Only a provenance which can be verified will add to a
painting's value, particularly if the painting has been in a collection known
for quality." Inclusion in a catalogue raisonne -- the complete listing of an
artist's work -- is highly desirable and nowadays crucial for a major work. A
painting that has been exhibited or has won prizes will also bring a premium
price.
A dealer's crucial role is to determine authenticity. We have continually
found that when an artist's prices begin to climb, fakes and forgeries abound.
When artist Ralph Blakelock sold a painting in 1916 for $20,000, he became one
of the most faked artists in history. An expert on Blakelock, Robert C. Vose,
Jr, was asked often to authenticate the artist's work and routinely found only
one out of 100 canvases to be genuine.
If an artist signed his paintings -- and many did not -- then a signature can
add to the price. Vose Galleries does not put heavy emphasis on signatures
because most fakes are signed. If we see a signed Willard Stuart or John
Smibert, for example, we become suspicious since neither of these two early
artists signed his work.
Robert W. Holmes, Jr, a Boston attorney who specialized in art transactions,
cautions, "Fakes come in many different forms, such as questionable works with
fake signatures, works by students, followers and contemporaries which are
sold as originals, and newly fabricated fakes, in many cases utilizing old
stretchers, antique frames, artificially induced cracking and the like. The
best way to avoid being defrauded is to deal only with well-established,
reputable dealers who are willing to give guarantees and back them up with
refund policies which are honored in practice."
î Copyright 1998, Vose Galleries of Boston, Inc.
