The market for 20th Century design expanded rapidly over the last
half decade with both classic designers and emerging talents receiving
ever-growing positive market attention. As the market has grown and
discovered extraordinary examples of design in furniture and decorative
objects, the number of collectors expanded but not at the same rate as
the turnover of lots. This has left the 20th Century Design market with
an imbalance between the number of lots offered and the level of
interest from buyers.
June's sales of 20th Century Design
objects in New York demonstrated this. There were 648 lots offered at
all three auction houses combined. An additional 349 lots had been sold
at Wright in May. This was clearly a number greater than what the
market could absorb. And though the individual sales ranged from 148
lots at Sotheby's to 555 lots at Wright, each house had similar
sell-through rates, from 57% to 64%.
Christie's also held a
sale of decorative bronze and ivory figures that netted $2,135,750 from
14 lots but these Art Deco items are not comparable to the objects sold
at the other three auctions and so have not been included in the
combined numbers.
In the 20th Century Design sales, buyers
were searching for unique lots, especially items that were new to the
market either because they had been held in one family for generations
or because they represented an emerging talent whose work had been
thinly traded. When collectors found these rare works of high quality,
they bid with enthusiasm, proving that real support remains in the
market.
Significant Sales
"Our department
strategy was to keep this sale as edited as possible," said Jodi
Pollack, Vice President and Senior Specialist of Sotheby's 20th Century
Design Department. "That's been the pattern over the last two seasons:
our clients respond to more edited sales of fresh, exciting and rare
examples."
The top lot of the week is a prime example. The
Tiffany "Apple Blossom" table lamp had been owned by one family since
the 1950s who thought they had one of the firm's iconic "Wisteria"
lamps. But upon inspection, Sotheby's determined that the lamp was
something that had never come to auction before. That fact alone
brought many Tiffany fans into the auction house. "All the top Tiffany
collectors came out to look at this lamp," Pollack said. "We were
hearing from collectors we'd never worked with before."
Selling
for $932,500, nearly the triple the high estimate for the lot, the lamp
proved the thesis that 20th Century design is experiencing the same
"flight to quality" seen in other major collecting categories. Half of
the top ten lots in the sale were Tiffany lamps where a deep, seasoned
and educated group of collectors hold sway.
Among the
remaining lots were a rare stylized sculpture of a locomotive by the
Martel brothers and a George Nakashima "Conoid" table that sold well
above the high estimates with strong bidding. Nakashima, now one of the
blue chip names in this field, offers a good example of the dynamic at
work as collectors adjust to a market of super fluidity. "As expected,
great Nakashima pieces performed strongly," Pollack said. "But for the
first time, we're also starting to see more marginal examples of
Nakashima pass at auction. People are getting a bit more discerning.
They are willing to compete aggressively for something truly
exceptional they don't think they'll have another opportunity to
acquire."
An Isamu Noguchi table offers another facet.
Noguchi's market is connected to the Contemporary art market because of
the sculptor's range of work. As prices rise for Noguchi's sculpture,
they seem to be having an effect on the value of his design work. The
prismatic table in Sotheby's sale is the mate to one that was auctioned
at Wright in 2006 for $132,000. This one sold for $290,500, a rapid
appreciation in just two years or a good example of the broader
international marketing reach of a large auction house. Sotheby's would
be happy with either explanation for the price rise.
The
final demonstration of the market power of rare work comes in the form
of three lots by Wendell Castle that all appear on the list of items
that exceeded their estimates by the greatest margin. In this case, the
Castle pieces all came from the original family who had commissioned
them. Thus they were both unique and part of the growing interest in
design work from the 1960s and 1970s. As collectors migrate from the
classic names of the 1950s, the appearance of Wendell Castle works that
had never seen the market was sure to entice bidders. "Anytime we can
present iconic studio pieces consigned by the original commissioning
family," Pollack stated, "there is surely going to be great market
demand."
Significant Bidders
The best way
to illustrate the fact that the 20th Century Design collectors are
consolidating their holdings is to look at the number of bidders in
recent sales.
In the Fall of 2007, Sotheby's held two
sales: one of 20th Century Design in November and another of Post-War
Design in December. The goal was to accommodate the flood of collectors
and objects on the market. Because there were two sales, the number of
bidders may be exaggerated as there are surely collectors who bid in
both sales.
Nonetheless, June's sale saw fewer than half
the bidders at Sotheby's than were present last Fall. In a direct
comparison to June 2007, the number of bidders dropped by 40%.
The number of bidders steadily rose in that period
reflecting the growing interest in design as an auction category until
this last sale when there was a substantial drop.
Market Trends
A
market consolidation is a natural part of the cycle of interest and
growth. At Sotheby's, the process of reducing the number of lots on
offer has already begun. The number of lots purchased reflects this
conservative approach. But, at the same time, the average lot value in
Sotheby's design sales rose dramatically in the June sale capping a
longer-term trend to higher value lots.
With fewer lots
sold, the average lot value was much higher. So Sotheby's has been able
to locate better examples of 20th Century Design work that can command
higher prices even in the new market environment.
Again,
this pattern is hardly confined to the 20th Century Design category.
Throughout the art market, there is a continuing focus on quality with
price action following that quality.
Perhaps more
interesting to note is the way that estimates at Sotheby's have kept
pace with the market. Total sale value in the 20th Century Design field
came back to levels close to the Spring of 2006. In accelerating
markets, prices will exceed estimates as collectors set new valuation
levels.
In the Fall of 2006
and Spring of 2007, Sotheby's sale totals rose sharply for the 20th
Century Design field. Those totals represented more than 135% of the
Median Estimate for all lots for both sales. In other words, the sale
total was greater than the value represented by the mid-point between
the overall low and overall high estimate.
In the Fall of
2007, estimates caught up with the new market conditions. The sale
total continued to rise—indeed, by a substantial margin—but the
estimates were higher. This Spring one would expect to see estimates
overshoot sales as consignors, expecting high prices established in the
more aggressive phase of the market cycle, hold out for top dollar.
Instead,
we see the estimates hold steady at roughly the same range as the
previous sale. This indicates that Sotheby's experts did a good job of
anticipating the market in both the number of lots they chose to offer
and the valuation the placed on those lots.