Buyer’s Guide

Don’t Know How to Start Investing in Art? Fintech Startup Arttrade Has a Solution


Art collecting has a very distinct cachet, one that is exclusive, monied, and largely opaque. Blue-chip art and artists (those with a proven sales record and a reliable history of increased valuation) regularly make headlines with record-setting sales, leaving many to believe the market is accessible only to those with incredible amounts of capital and insider know-how. In recent decades, art as a form of investment has become mainstream, as a greater understanding of its appreciation of value is more closely studied and understood. In fact, “Big Four” accounting firm Deloitte estimates that by 2026 over $2.7 trillion will be invested in collectible assets, largely comprised of art objects.

Although fine art is appreciated and collected for its cultural and aesthetic value, it is also a formidable financial asset—one that has gained tremendous traction over the past decade, with upwards of 85% of wealth managers as of 2022 recommending art as a means for portfolio diversification. Art collecting, however, is commonly thought of as a pastime exclusive to the ultra-wealthy. We’ve all seen staggering hammer prices for artworks at major auction houses, or learned of astonishing six- or seven-figure sales at fairs, with the cost leading many (frankly, most) into believing they simply cannot afford or understand how to invest in art.

 

Founders of Arttrade, left to right, Svenja, David, and Julian.

Founders of Arttrade, left to right, Svenja Heyer, David Riemer, and Julian Kutzim.

Contemporary financial technology, more commonly known by its portmanteau “fintech,” has come a long way in providing accessibility and transparency to the process of investing in art. Fintech company Arttrade was founded by Svenja Heyer, David Riemer, and Julian Kutzim with the aim of providing a means of diversifying one’s portfolio through art—specifically blue-chip art—without having to spend hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of dollars.

Arttrade maintains an extensive and knowledgeable network of gallerists and art dealers, as well as an independent art advisory board, to aid in identifying some of the most promising blue-chip artworks. Then, using data-driven analysis, including information culled from Midnight Publishing Group—the most trusted auction database in the world—the artist’s or artwork’s value appreciation is forecasted to determine which pieces meet Arttrade’s discerningly high standards. Each asset acquired by Arttrade is then fractionalized via digital security tokens that can be purchased by investors, allowing them to partake in the artwork’s accrual in value. The barrier for entry, unlike traditional art collecting routes, is incredibly low, with investments starting at only €250.

 

Gerhard Richter, 3.5.88 (1988). Courtesy of Arttrade.

Gerhard Richter, 3.5.88 (1988). Courtesy of Arttrade.

The ability to own fractions of artworks through tokenization, and soon trade and sell the said tokens, removes many of the hurdles commonly associated with entering the traditional art investment sphere. The accessible threshold of participation through Arttrade opens the door for a wider, more diverse body of investors to engage with the art market—who can do so with the confidence of having state-of-the-art technology and the backing of artworld insiders and experts’ know-how at their disposal.

Learn more about Arttrade’s assets here.

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Spotlight: Dealer Elena Ulansky on the Pleasures of Helping Would-Be Collectors Connect to Art


Every month, hundreds of galleries add newly available works by thousands of artists to the Midnight Publishing Group Gallery Network—and every week, we shine a spotlight on one artist you should know. Check out what we have in store.

What You Need to Know: As a child, Swedish-born art dealer Elena Ulansky wanted to become an artist. As an adult, she actually went on to a successful career in finance—but remained passionate about art and found herself engaging artists and curators in whatever ways she could. Then, a few years ago, she pivoted back to her first passion and earned a Master’s degree in painting from New York Academy of Art. Now, Ulanksy has transitioned once more, this time into the role of dealer.

With her business partner, Nitin Gambhir, Ulanksy founded Tethys Art earlier this year. The gallery, which has so far hosted three pop-up exhibitions in the Hamptons, shows emerging artists alongside internationally recognized names, including Keith Haring, Richard Prince, Jonas Wood, Cindy Sherman, and Barbara Kruger. One of Tethys’s core tenets is to create a learning environment that brings together artists, art lovers, collectors, and curators alike. Currently, Tethys Art is pursuing its next exhibition opportunities in Aspen and Miami this winter, along with Cannes and Venice for next year.  

Installation view "Les Femmes" 2021. Courtesy of Tethys Art.

Installation view “Les Femmes” 2021. Courtesy of Tethys Art.

Why We Like It: For each of Tethys Art’s first three exhibitions, Ulansky worked with a curator to create exhibitions that facilitate discussion and introduce new perspectives: Its most recent exhibition, “Les Femmes,” a group show curated by Indira Cesarine, which closed in September, explored the contemporary narrative of the female gaze, including works by Cindy Sherman, social-media sensation Leah Schrager, pioneering feminists Robin Tewes and Grace Graupe-Pillard, alongside a crop of emerging women artists. Right now, Ulansky is exploring projects relating to NFTs, which she believes are here to stay. 

In Her Own Words: “I would love for my role to be the conduit that allows people to see art as a way of linking human consciousness. Art is a way to start a conversation that is more nuanced than the typical ‘I’m a Republican and I’m a Democrat,’ this or that. Right now I’m working on putting together some group shows that I help spark curiosity in people who haven’t collected before. In one of our shows this summer, a Ph.D. student studying the history of the feminist movement, bought a work that spoke to her, her very first art purchase. That’s the beginning of her art collection. To me, one of the most inspiring things a person can do is to engage with people who haven’t been exposed to art, who maybe don’t understand why someone should buy it, and help them find a personal connection.”

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Don’t Miss These 6 Lots Heading to Auction at New York’s Showplace, From an Art Deco Polar Bear Clock to a Charming Raoul Dufy Seascape


For over two decades, New York’s Showplace has served as a unique shopping destination offering a wealth of fine art, design objects, jewelry, and luxury fashion, as well as a mix of vintage ephemera to in-the-know collectors. Along with selling exhibitions, Showplace also hosts a bevy of auctions each year, and this fall it is presenting Important Fine Art & Design (October 10), a 145-lot auction that brings together fine art by Jean Dubuffet, Joan Miro, and Pablo Picasso, premier design objects by Knoll and Carlo Scarpa, and much more.

The auction featured works from some esteemed New York collections too, drawing from the Fifth Avenue residence of the MacArthur Family; the Park Avenue estate of American film producer Martin Bregman; and the Fifth Avenue residence of Jill and Ken Iscol. 

While collectors can certainly bid online, those in New York are welcome to preview lots at Showplace’s newly renovated galleries on 25th Street, where the auction will take place live. Below, check out 6 lots you won’t want to miss.

 

Raoul Dufy
Saint-Adresse (circa 1950)
Estimate: $60,000–80,000

Raoul Dufy, L'entrée du port à Sainte-Adresse (circa 1950). Courtesy of Showplace.

Raoul Dufy, L’entrée du port à Sainte-Adresse (circa 1950). Courtesy of Showplace.

Raoul Dufy’s vibrant seaside oil painting L’entrée du port à Sainte-Adresse (circa 1950) stands as one of the fine art highlights of the sale. The work encapsulates the best of Dufy, with an aerial view of an energetic French waterfront filled with pedestrians, marked by his signature passages of bright blue. The work also has an impressive provenance, coming from the collection of Wally Findlay Galleries.

 

Jean Dubuffet
Three Palm Trees (1948)
Estimate: $40,000—60,000

Jean Dubuffet, Three Palm Trees (1948). Signed and dated upper left: "J. Dubuffet '48." Courtesy of Showplace.

Jean Dubuffet, Three Palm Trees (1948). Signed and dated upper left: “J. Dubuffet ’48.” Courtesy of Showplace.

This 1948 watercolor on paper work shows an abstracted trio of palm trees, brimming with character. It predates Dubuffet’s move toward the “art brut” style for which he is best know but nevertheless showcases his movement towards intense gesturalism. The work bears a Cordier & Ekstrom, Inc. (New York) gallery label on verso.

 

Rare Gem-Set Gold Clock, Vacheron Constantin
Estimate: $40,000–60,000

Art Deco revival gem set gold clock, the 18K gold case with diamonds, ebellished gold hands nestled in the upright paws of a reclining bear with ruby eyes outlined in gold.

Art Deco revival gem-set gold clock, the 18K gold case with diamonds, embellished gold hands nestled in the upright paws of a reclining bear with ruby eyes outlined in gold.

The title for most adorable lot likely belongs to this Art Deco revival gem-set gold clock featuring a reclining polar bear with ruby eyes. The bear balances the clock’s face upon its paws like a ball, while itself being perched atop a stepped onyx base, outlined in 18-carat gold trim and raised on 18-carat gold feet.

 

Diego Giacometti
Table Berceau
Estimate: $150,000–250,000

Diego Giacomett, Table berceau (designed circa 1965). Stamped signature "Diego." Courtesy of Showplace.

Diego Giacometti, Table berceau (designed circa 1965). Stamped signature “Diego.” Courtesy of Showplace.

This low, patinated bronze table is rare in Diego Giacometti’s oeuvre. The table was acquired directly from the artist by Gallerie Gianna-Sistu in Paris during the late 1970s and was subsequently imported by Hirschl-Adler, New York, for dealer Jeffrey Hoffeld in 1987. The work now arrives at auction from a private Park Avenue collection, where it has resided since 1993.

Moise Kisling
Anemones Dans Un Vase
Estimate: $30,000–50,000

Moïse Kisling, Anémones dans un vase. Courtesy of Showplace.

Moïse Kisling, Anémones dans un vase. Courtesy of Showplace.


Polish-born French painter Moïse Kisling moved to Paris at the age of nineteen and would spend the majority of his life there (aside from a few years in the U.S. during World War II). A friend and contemporary of Amedeo Modigliani, Kisling became well-known from his slightly stylized portraits of women. This charming painting, Anémones dans un vase, comes from the collection of the Wally Findlay Galleries.

 

Joan Miro
La Metamorphose
Estimate: $15,000–25,000

Joan Miro, La Métamorphose (1978). Courtesy of Showplace.

Joan Miro, La Métamorphose (1978). Courtesy of Showplace.

Joan Miro’s colorful 1978 etching and aquatint on paper titled La Métamorphose is perhaps the highlight of the print works offered in the sale, with swirling, lyrical shapes in Miro’s bold color palette of red, black, and white, plus pops of green, yellow, and blue. The print is number 17 from an edition of 50.

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The New Art App Limna Helps Collectors Discover Artists in Their Price Range (and a Whole Lot More)


This weekend, as art lovers explore fairs across the new Armory Art Week in New York, some would-be collectors might be seen swiping on an exciting new app. Limna, which debuted in July, is not the art world dating app we’ve all been waiting for—but it can help you find “the one”: the perfect artwork for your budget, and even assurance that the price is a fair one.  

Limna has been billed as an “AI-powered art advisor in your pocket,” and for good reason. The app allows users to explore the works of 700,000 living artists (those included are required to have had at least one exhibition in a recognized institution), as well search functions that sort by dimension and estimated price range, which is based on analyses of vast database systems that blend momentum and cultural recognition. Unlike other databases, the app is focused squarely on primary market purchasing—as opposed to auction results and provenance.

“We conceived the idea of Limna to enable more people to buy fine art with confidence, with a focus on the contemporary primary market, and thus support more living artists,” said founder Marek Claassen. 

Marek Claassen, founder of Limna.

Marek Claassen, founder of Limna.

Now, just this week, Limna launched a new feature called “Discovery,” which allows would-be collectors to not just validate pricing, but to search through the app based on price range, scale, medium, and even artists’ gender or nationality.

“We’re excited to open up the market even further to a new set of potential collectors or even one-time buyers, as well as provide a new way in for existing collectors,” said Claassen, “We are giving them a starting point from which to dive into the art market. Whether that’s based on what’s personally important to them (such as supporting younger, emerging women artists), their maximum budget (because we all have one!), or the limited space that they are trying to enliven with a new painting.” 

Limna's interface.

Limna’s interface allows users to search artists by increasing momentum.

Claassen says that in the research stages of creating Limna, the commonly cited barrier to entry for potential collectors was simply not knowing where to start. This sense of confusion entailed uncertainties around price and value, but also with the artist names themselves. The app has tried to allay these concerns by providing a range of artists that match a budget (and other needs) alongside further information on each artist, along with a contextual comparison to other artists. 

Claassen believes that the app can offer collectors a certain level of confidence. That said, he still believes seeing art in person has no comparison—which is why the app’s “Available In” filter is his favorite. “It’s truly great because I can ask Limna to show me real art around the corner (so to speak) that fits my budget, by displaying artists who are on show or have recently shown in my chosen city.” 

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Artist Robin Hextrum Reimagines the Still Life Tradition in the Age of the Anthropocene


Every month, hundreds of galleries showcase new exhibitions on the Midnight Publishing Group Gallery Network—and every week, we shine a spotlight on the exhibitions we think you should see. Check out what we have in store, and inquire for more information with one simple click.

What You Need to Know: Painter Robin Hextrum considers ideas of the “Feminine Sublime” in her new exhibition, “Reimagining the Sublime,” on view at Denver’s Abend Gallery. Her brightly colored botanicals and animals (horses, foxes, deer) appear staged against almost theatrical backgrounds, from acidic-colored clouds to icebergs. Hextrum, a Colorado native, sees these images in opposition to traditional notions of the sublime, in which humankind ultimately exerts its control and authority over nature. Instead, Hextrum’s strange oppositions reflect on “how our relationship to nature is ever-evolving, uncertain, and chaotic,” she said.

Why We Like It: Hextrum manages to breathe new life into the still life tradition. Her chromatically bold compositions juxtapose motifs of flora and fauna through the very timely lens of the climate crisis, imbuing the works with a certain uneasy weightiness. There are touches of ’90s graphic design aesthetic in the works too—imagine if a Dutch master collaborated with Lisa Frank. The results are captivating, and not exactly what one would expect,  

According to the Gallery: “Although uncertainty about the collective future is palpable in her paintings, the overarching themes of healing and transformation soothe the turbulent compositions. Hextrum believes that these paintings do not offer solutions or answers but instead allow their viewers to sit with and meditate on these feelings of uncertainty… Drawing heavily from Dutch still life masterpieces, many works embody a contemporary version of the vanitas theme, which is a reminder of our mortality.”

 

Robin Hextrum
Flowers Turning in the Sky (2021)
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Robin Hextrum, When Flowers Outgrow Trees (2021). Courtesy of Abend Gallery

Robin Hextrum, When Flowers Outgrow Trees (2021). Courtesy of Abend Gallery.

 

Robin Hextrum
Black Horse with Mandala (2021)
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Robin Hextrum, Black Horse with Mandala (2021). Courtesy of Abend Gallery.

Robin Hextrum, Black Horse with Mandala (2021). Courtesy of Abend Gallery.

 

Robin Hextrum
Tulips with Glacier (2021)
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Robin Hextrum, Tulips with Glacier (2021). Courtesy of Abend Gallery.

Robin Hextrum, Tulips with Glacier (2021). Courtesy of Abend Gallery.

 

Robin Hextrum
Leaping Horse on Purple Background (2021)
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Robin Hextrum, Leaping Horse on Purple Background (2021). Courtesy of Abend Gallery.

Robin Hextrum, Leaping Horse on Purple Background (2021). Courtesy of Abend Gallery.

 

Robin Hextrum
When Flowers Outgrow Trees (2021)
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Robin Hextrum, When Flowers Outgrow Trees (2021). Courtesy of Abend Gallery.

Robin Hextrum, When Flowers Outgrow Trees (2021). Courtesy of Abend Gallery.

Reimagining the Sublime” is on view at Denver’s Abend Gallery through September 4, 2021. 

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