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David Shapiro Fine Art

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Chubb Art Market Update

September 22, 2025

It was a pleasure and honor to give the 2025 H1 Art Market Update talk to Chubb’s Fine Art team last week. Thank you to Laura Doyle for extending the invitation, which provided an opportunity to reflect just before the fall auction season opens in New York this week.

By many measures, the art market continued to contract significantly in 2024 (e.g., auction totals down 25%, and off by 39% for $10M+ lots), and has remained soft on the whole in 2025, and yet the total picture has been much more complex than this.

Year-to-year comparisons of totals at equivalent auctions are not fully determinative with regard to the health of a market, nor can demand necessarily be wholly assessed given the circumstantial nature of supply, whether from estates or otherwise.

Strong sales in supply-challenged markets such as Old Masters have shown strength when exemplary works have become available (e.g., Canaletto), and we have seen surges in many markets, not least Surrealism (most visibly, Magritte and Carrington), key female artists in various sectors (e.g., Dumas record), and historically undervalued collecting categories such as South Asian postwar and contemporary art, as well as the personal property markets adjacent to art such as Design and collectibles, in which a series of extraordinary records have been set.

As the consignments for November are just being announced, including those at a level not seen in the first half of the year (esp. Klimt), we can begin to forecast what the fall might look like relative to the spring.

In Presentations, News, art market Tags artmarket
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(l. to r.) Pablo Picasso, Femme hurlant sa douleur, June 1937, Paul Coulon booth; René Magritte, Moralité du sommeil, ca. 1941, Paul Coulon booth; Gustav Klimt, Prince William Nii Nortey Dowuona, 1897, Wienerroither & Kohlbacher booth: all at TEFAF, New York, 2025

Comments in May edition of Artsy Insider newsletter

May 18, 2025

Thanks to Artsy Art Market Editor Arun Kakar for including my comments in the May edition of the Artsy Insider newsletter, released today. Here’s my contribution:

Artsy: For this month’s mailbag, we spoke to the independent art advisor David Shapiro. Based in New York, Shapiro is also a certified fine art appraiser and specializes in post-war and contemporary art.

How would you characterize the sentiment at this year’s New York Art Week?

DS: While I hesitate to characterize the sentiments of others, some may agree with my observations, which include the following: At Frieze, some galleries appeared to devote less to this fair than to others.

The compression of New York’s fair schedule into a single week highlighted a palpable difference in quality between Frieze and TEFAF, the latter being superior. As to the question of the extent to which larger economic factors may (or may not) be affecting commerce, one rarely knows the true volume of trade and actual extended prices in a retail sales venue.

As such, the more reliable market gauge, as usual, will be the auctions, after which sentiment will be rooted more firmly in fact.

In News Tags Artsy, TEFAF, Art market, Frieze
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