Berliner Boersenzeitung - Art market banking on new generation of collectors

EUR -
AED 4.294295
AFN 80.67101
ALL 97.682021
AMD 448.844558
ANG 2.092317
AOA 1072.100732
ARS 1473.739712
AUD 1.776766
AWG 2.107373
AZN 1.992177
BAM 1.955137
BBD 2.3601
BDT 142.131837
BGN 1.95535
BHD 0.440745
BIF 3438.437284
BMD 1.169139
BND 1.495693
BOB 8.094292
BRL 6.487673
BSD 1.168904
BTN 100.204045
BWP 15.605712
BYN 3.825204
BYR 22915.120971
BZD 2.347904
CAD 1.59888
CDF 3374.135072
CHF 0.931348
CLF 0.029164
CLP 1119.181986
CNY 8.381031
CNH 8.386479
COP 4677.034647
CRC 589.500242
CUC 1.169139
CUP 30.982179
CVE 110.805179
CZK 24.689762
DJF 207.779812
DKK 7.461854
DOP 70.503612
DZD 151.717642
EGP 57.845603
ERN 17.537082
ETB 158.272216
FJD 2.621502
FKP 0.861702
GBP 0.865285
GEL 3.168823
GGP 0.861702
GHS 12.163552
GIP 0.861702
GMD 83.597928
GNF 10120.066085
GTQ 8.978957
GYD 244.547133
HKD 9.177757
HNL 30.807262
HRK 7.533351
HTG 153.418013
HUF 400.227833
IDR 18958.755187
ILS 3.895261
IMP 0.861702
INR 100.371157
IQD 1531.571861
IRR 49235.363231
ISK 142.405567
JEP 0.861702
JMD 186.916661
JOD 0.828966
JPY 172.326976
KES 151.407922
KGS 102.24164
KHR 4701.107625
KMF 492.383265
KPW 1052.26462
KRW 1611.038675
KWD 0.357488
KYD 0.974062
KZT 610.72305
LAK 25171.559311
LBP 104754.839131
LKR 351.510887
LRD 234.997311
LSL 20.729277
LTL 3.452163
LVL 0.707201
LYD 6.30755
MAD 10.525177
MDL 19.789294
MGA 5179.2854
MKD 61.502849
MMK 2453.914221
MNT 4194.40823
MOP 9.451117
MRU 46.419188
MUR 53.172876
MVR 18.009109
MWK 2030.213938
MXN 21.800469
MYR 4.971767
MZN 74.77856
NAD 20.729272
NGN 1790.10397
NIO 42.966292
NOK 11.849901
NPR 160.326672
NZD 1.945581
OMR 0.449532
PAB 1.168909
PEN 4.145811
PGK 4.822406
PHP 66.036513
PKR 332.624323
PLN 4.266714
PYG 9058.930286
QAR 4.256371
RON 5.080731
RSD 117.157108
RUB 91.190148
RWF 1676.545075
SAR 4.384758
SBD 9.734819
SCR 17.066377
SDG 702.072162
SEK 11.170678
SGD 1.496749
SHP 0.91876
SLE 26.30991
SLL 24516.260876
SOS 668.16712
SRD 43.500737
STD 24198.813196
SVC 10.227534
SYP 15201.088778
SZL 20.729263
THB 37.882481
TJS 11.29712
TMT 4.103677
TND 3.39476
TOP 2.738245
TRY 46.964383
TTD 7.941309
TWD 34.16345
TZS 3039.761337
UAH 48.835851
UGX 4189.580317
USD 1.169139
UYU 47.263984
UZS 14804.224604
VES 133.595722
VND 30531.475847
VUV 140.024469
WST 3.214587
XAF 655.729191
XAG 0.030409
XAU 0.000348
XCD 3.159657
XDR 0.813035
XOF 655.306515
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.75665
ZAR 20.94521
ZMK 10523.656585
ZMW 27.058947
ZWL 376.462225
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

Art market banking on new generation of collectors
Art market banking on new generation of collectors / Photo: Fabrice COFFRINI - AFP

Art market banking on new generation of collectors

The global art market is not immune to current economic and geopolitical tensions, and is counting on a new generation of collectors to revitalise the momentum.

Text size:

Some big transactions were concluded last week during Art Basel, the world's top contemporary art fair, notably by London's Annely Juda Fine Art gallery, which sold a David Hockney painting for between $13 million and $17 million, without disclosing the exact price.

The David Zwirner gallery sold a sculpture by Ruth Asawa for $9.5 million and a Gerhard Richter painting for $6.8 million.

However, prices did not reach the heights achieved in 2022, when the art market was in full swing. Back then, a sculpture by French-American artist Louise Bourgeois was purchased for $40 million.

"The market is certainly softer," Art Basel's chief executive Noah Horowitz told AFP, though major sales still happen at such fairs "despite, somehow, all that's going on in the world".

Switzerland's biggest bank UBS and the research and consulting firm Arts Economics prepared a report for the fair.

According to their estimates, the art market slowed in 2023, then fell by 12 percent globally in 2024, to $57.5 billion, with the decline particularly affecting works valued at more than $10 million.

"In the next six to 12 months, I don't see any changes on the horizon," said Hans Laenen, an art market specialist at insurer AXA XL.

In a time of economic and geopolitical uncertainties, "investors are turning very strongly to gold", he told AFP.

In the art sector, behaviour is "more conservative" among both buyers and sellers, who prefer to wait before putting works on the market in the current climate, he continues.

"The number of transactions is increasing," but in "lower price segments," he noted.

According to the insurance firm Hiscox, the number of lots sold for less than $50,000 increased by 20 percent in auction houses in 2024, while very highly priced works saw a sharp drop, indicating a change in collector behaviour.

- New generation -

According to Jean Gazancon, chief executive of art insurer Arte Generali, a younger generation of collectors is entering the market.

"We are insuring more and more 30-somethings for collections of 300,000, 500,000, or a million euros," he noted.

"These are successful start-uppers, investment bankers, lawyers, or sometimes people who have inherited," and they begin their collections "very young", sometimes making "very radical" choices, he said.

UBS expects that trend to increase. According to its projections, an unprecedented wealth transfer will take place over the next 20 to 25 years with the general ageing of the population.

Globally, around $83 trillion in assets will change hands, it says, meaning "there's a whole new generation of collectors coming to the market with different buying patterns", said Eric Landolt, global co-head of the family advisory, art and collecting department at UBS.

The four-day Art Basel fair, which closed on Sunday, featured more than 280 galleries presenting works by around 4,000 artists.

It is a must for collectors, who can buy everything from Pablo Picasso paintings to very recent works.

The Thaddaeus Ropac galleries notably offered a portrait of Pope Leo XIV by the Chinese-French artist Yan Pei-Ming.

It also highlights young artists, such as Joyce Joumaa, 27, who jointly won the 2025 Baloise Art Prize for her work focusing on the energy crisis in Lebanon.

(L.Kaufmann--BBZ)