Affordable art
fair exhibit
seeks to lure new buyers
LONDON — Affordable art sounds like a
contradiction in terms these days.
Booming prices for contemporary works, with British graffiti
artist Banksy fetching $600,000 and compatriot Damien Hirst selling a
diamond-encrusted skull for $100 million have deterred many people from
collecting original art.
But a twice-yearly fair in London, that has branched out to
New York and now Amsterdam, aims to lure them back by offering paintings and
sculptures priced anywhere from 50 pounds ($100) to a maximum of 3,000 pounds
($6,000) each.
"Naturally the press talks about headline-grabbing stuff, be
it the prices or the shock factor, and so the general public thinks that that is
all there is out there," said Will Ramsay, who founded the Affordable Art Fair
nearly a decade ago.
"Actually, there is stuff pretty much anyone can afford."
According to Gerald Laing, a British artist who rose to
prominence during the pop art movement of the 1960s and whose works fetch tens
of thousands of pounds, artists also feel alienated by endless success stories
in the media.
"This is a refuge for the artists too, because they feel
sidelined by this stuff quite naturally," he told Reuters.
"One of things about success in the contemporary art world is
that once an image is recognized it gains in value. This is a wonderful way for
artists to interact with the public and for the public to do so with them."
Ramsay’s brain child has caught on, with up to 20,000 people
pouring into an exhibition space in Battersea Park in the south of the capital
every time he holds a fair.
In its first year, around one million pounds changed hands, a
figure which tripled by the third edition. Now, with two fairs held annually,
the Affordable Art Fair sells about seven million pounds of art a year.
Those figures are dwarfed by Frieze Art Fair, a high-end
exhibition held in London in October where the cream of the art world converges
and tens of millions of pounds change hands.
But for Laing, the Affordable Art Fair holds its own
alongside its more famous cousin.
"There is quite a contrast between this and Frieze. Frieze
has got a wider range of status but somehow there seems to be more rubbish in
Frieze than this particular exhibition."Ramsay said Ramsay said Affordable Art
Fairs are also held in New York and, starting next month, in Amsterdam.
He explained that galleries used the fair to build their
client base, while young, unknown artists have showcased work there and gone on
to succeed commercially.
"This is not only for fledgling collectors. Half of those who come are
existing collectors and they come here to find new emerging artists," Ramsay
said. "However rich you might be, people always enjoy picking up a bargain." –
Reuters