Damien Hirst and the $200 million art bubble
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Future generations will remember September 15, 2008 as the day that Lehman died. But the art world has another memory of that fateful day: the opening of a London auction of works by artist Damien Hirst. Over a period of two days, Sotheby鈥檚 rapped the gavel on almost $200 million of his new works, marking the high point of the contemporary art bubble that accompanied all the other asset bubbles.
Not familiar with Damien Hirst? He鈥檚 probably most famous for a 14 foot tiger shark preserved in formaldehyde (titled 鈥溾), spot paintings, and an as-yet-unsold skull covered with diamonds (鈥溾).
marks this anniversary with enjoyable retrospective on the auction, which was notable not only for the amount of money that changed hands, but also because it was a very rare example of an artist using an auction in the primary market. Artists usually sell through galleries, where dealers try to place new works in the hands of 鈥渨orthy鈥 buyers. But Hirst decided to take his new work directly to the auction market 鈥 with stunning, if transient, success:
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The Economist suggests that Hirst was frustrated with the traditional model, in which initial buyers sometimes flipped pieces at a profit in the auction market after buying from a gallery. Hirst thus set himself a mission, saying 鈥淭he first time you sell something is when it should cost the most鈥 and 鈥淚鈥檝e definitely had the goal to make the primary market more expensive.鈥 And he certainly succeeded, albeit with a little help from the credit market.
Other interesting economic tidbits about Hirst鈥檚 work are his exceptional reliance on assistants to execute the works (he clearly understands the idea of the division of labor) and the uncertainty about just how many works he (and his team) have created over the years.
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