RESEARCHING ART MARKET PRACTICES FROM PAST TO PRESENT AND TOOLS FOR THE FUTURE,11-12 June 2021

[category conference / symposium]

ONLINE PROGRAMME

All times are Paris, Continental Summer Time

The conference will be held online for all attendees.
For registration:

www.eventbrite.com/e/financial-structures-and-practices-on-the-art-market-registration-154255114199

DAY 1, June 11 – ONLINE (hosted by Université Sorbonne Nouvelle/Crew)

9.45

Opening

Bénédicte Miyamoto (Université Sorbonne Nouvelle, France)

Nathalie Moureau (Université Paul Valéry Montpellier 3, France)

10.00 -11.00 keynote:

Sophie Cras (Université Panthéon-Sorbonne, France): Art as an investment: between fact and fiction

11.00-11.25

Coffee break

11.25 – 12.50

Session One – Privatization and financialization of art

Chair: Bénédicte Miyamoto

Henrique Grimaldi Figueredo (University of Campinas, Brazil/ École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, France)

A brief history of patronage in France: political and institutional roots of the public-private model in contemporary art (1950s to 2000s)

Christine Zumello (Université Sorbonne Nouvelle, France)

Corporatization and monetization of art in the United States in the last 20 years: hard and soft

Charlotte Gould ((Université Sorbonne Nouvelle, France)

Buying art before it is made: creating the British model of (semi-) independent art commissioning agencies since the end of the 20th century

12.50- 13.50 Lunch break

13.50-15.15

Session Two – Government, Subsidies and Taxation

Chair: Charlotte Gould

Sela Kodjo Adjei (University of Ghana Business School, Ghana)

Ghanaian artists on the global art market: A socio-economic inquiry into the “Silent Revolution”

Shuo Hua (University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong)

Rise of Hong Kong as Asia’s art hub (1990-2020)

Nizan Shaked (School of Art, California State University, USA)

Toward taxing the American resale market

13.50-15.15

Session Three – Private Investment

Chair: Nathalie Moureau

Anne-Sophie Radermecker (Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands & Université libre de Bruxelles, Belgium)

Investing in the low-end art market

Antonia von Appen (Bocconi University, Milan, Italy)

The untouchable – the art market as last bastion of unregulated investment?

Sarah Bakkali (Université Paris Nanterre, France)

Speculating on Old Master paintings during the French Revolution: the Trumbull, Parker and Lebrun partnership

15.15-15.30 Break

16.40 – 17.50

Session Four – Digitization and New Financial Structures

Chair: Christine Zumello

Giovanni Maria Riccio (University of Salerno, Italy) and Federica Pezza (Hogan Lovells Alicante, Spain)

Crowdfunding and art market: rise and regulation of contemporary forms of patronage

Elisabetta Lazzaro (Business School for the Creative Industries, University for the Creative Arts, UK) and Daniel Nordgärd (University of Agder, Norway)

Crowdfunding for visual artists: alternative or complementary source of income?

Paul Melton (Fashion Institute of Technology, State University of New York, USA)

Instagram is to the art market as Bloomberg is to the stock market

DAY 2, June 12 – ONLINE (hosted by IESA Arts&Culture)

9.45

Welcome and introduction

Adriana Turpin (IESA, France)

Elisabetta Lazzaro (Business School for the Creative Industries, University for the Creative Arts, UK)

10.00 Keynote:

Dorothée Wimmer (Centre for art Market Studies, Technische Universität Berlin, Germany)

Art as a subsidized asset class? Tax Politics and Art Collecting in Berlin 1871-1933

11.00- 11.25

Coffee

11.25-12.50

Session Five – Agents & Agencies

Chair: Adriana Turpin

Marie Tavinor (Royal Academy of Arts, UK)

One should always play fairly when one has the winning cards’: Duveen’s support of living British artists, 1927-1934

Darius A. Speith (Louisiana State University, USA)

Nineteenth-century auction house satires’ relation to stock markets and behavioral finance

Ginevra Odone (Université d’Aix-Marseille, France) and Maurizio Vaccari (Business consultant and entrepreneur)

“Caylus Ltd” or the informal international art dealing company designed by the Count of Caylus (1692-1765)

12.50-13.50 Lunch

13.50-15.15

Session Six – Intermediaries Strategies
Chair: Elisabetta Lazzaro

Marie Blum (Université de Strasbourg, France)

Understanding the impact of auction houses and auctioneers on sale outcomes: evidence from art auctions

Tom Simpson (University Western Australia, Australia)

Revisiting the art market burn effect: are auction reserve prices efficient? 

Mina Soltangheys (Wondeur Ai, USA)

Quantifying the power of representation in the art market network

15.15-15.30 Break

15.30 – 16.40

Session Seven – Museums’ strategies

Chair: Nathalie Moureau

Marek Prokůpek (Prague University of Economics and Business, Czech Republic) and Diana Betzler (Basel University, Switzerland), Ellen Loots (Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands)

Are museums pulling out all the stops? An exploration of museums’ financial strategies during and after COVID-19

Yvonne Muchitsch (TU Dortmund University, Germany)

Museum collections and strategies. A quantitative analysis of budgets, acquisitions and donations

Leandro Leão (University of São Paulo, Brazil/École des Haute Étude en Sciences Sociales, France)

New vertice in São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro axe of art and architecture modern historiography: Brasília through Wladimir and Tuni Murtinhos

16.40 -17.50

Chair: Bénédicte Miyamoto

Session Eight – Economic Valuation

Filip Vermeylen and Alessia Crotta (Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands)

Does nudity sell? An econometric analysis of the value of female nudity in Modigliani portraits

Avigail Moss (University of Southern California, USA)

Valued risks: insuring exhibitions in nineteenth-century Europe

Chiara Pilozzi (Università di Roma, Sapienza, Italy)

Art funds and fractional ownership: two sides of the same coin?

17.50 – 18.00
Closing of the workshop: Adriana Turpin and Bénédicte Miyamoto

For further information, please contact

benedicte.miyamoto@sorbonne-nouvelle.fr