The revival of Yasmina Reza’s play Artwork on Broadway this fall comes at an fascinating second for the artwork world.
Within the play, three males—performed by Neil Patrick Harris, James Corden, and Bobby Cannavale within the new manufacturing—stand in entrance of what seems to be an terrible lot like a clean canvas. In truth, it’s an avant-garde portray by a well-known artist. One of many three has simply purchased the portray for a steep worth; one other thinks it’s terrible and might’t consider his pal paid a lot for it. Over the course of a wild and comedian 90-minute dialog, Artwork raises age-old questions on human relationships—how brutally trustworthy you might be with your pals and nonetheless preserve them. It additionally, in fact, asks some elementary questions on artwork. As Michael Billington put it within the Guardian in 2016, “Reza … asks whether or not aesthetics is now inextricably confused with market worth: after we learn {that a} portray has been offered for numerous tens of millions within the public sale room, can we by some means price it extra extremely?” Within the aftermath of an overheated run on younger artists, collectors right now are assessing the purchases that confusion might have led them to.
When the play was first carried out, in Paris in 1994, the artwork market was in an analogous place: within the hangover from the go-go Nineteen Eighties, with a headache introduced on by the confusion of aesthetics with market worth. The ’80s noticed quite a few headlines about unprecedentedly expensive work splashed throughout the entrance pages of newspapers: Ryoei Saito paying $82.5 million for Van Gogh’s Dr. Gachet! Tempo’s Arne Glimcher promoting a portray by Jasper Johns (a residing artist!) to the Whitney for 1,000,000. These headlines have been attended by hand-wringing that aesthetics was certainly being confused with market worth.
Issues have solely ramped up within the intervening a long time. We’ve seen the growth of the early 2000s, the even larger growth from 2011 to 2023 with a portray attributed to Leonardo going for $450 million, and the rise of hypothesis on wet-paint artists. Nobody’s worries again within the ’80s and ’90s have been wherever close to as intense as, to take a random instance from the litany of such complaints we hear as of late, critic Jason Farago’s within the New York Instances in 2022. Beneath the headline “Catch a Rising Star on the Public sale Home,” Farago wrote that watching younger artists’ works go for tens of millions on the marquee spring night gross sales “was … like anaphylactic shock. Even after years of being inured to inventive worth tags as arbitrary as Social Safety numbers (one tries, as a critic forming a judgment, to pay them no thoughts), I watched the entire, and probably everlasting, supersedure of the previous institution by speculative hype as if I have been not alive in any respect.”
In Artwork, the 2 males’s heated argument final results in—spoiler alert—an act of (sophisticated) vandalism. So, how a lot was that costly portray? Within the unique script, Reza wrote that the piece price 200,000 francs (lower than $60,000 right now). Based on Vogue, for the brand new manufacturing director Scott Ellis consulted with a curator on the Met to give you an up to date worth—one which would appear costly in right now’s phrases, and in the end arrived at $300,000. That’s round how a lot you’ll have paid final December for, say [consults list of sales at Art Basel Miami] a Lesley Vance portray. Is $300,000 so much for a piece of latest artwork? A bit? In right now’s market, the place some collectors are calling major costs “irrational,” who is aware of!
“It’s a giant quantity and it feels horribly right,” Vogue author Adrienne Miller observes of that $300,000 her article on “Artwork”. “In an period the place the whole lot is hyperbolic and inflated—price, experience, ego, outrage—the worth needed to rise accordingly.”