What happens when you unexpectedly buy that $20 million painting

JUST 15 months after Peter Doig鈥檚 The Architect鈥檚 Home in the Ravine fetched $20 million at Sotheby鈥檚, the landscape was back on the market.
Displayed at the Gagosian booth at Art Basel with an asking price of $25 million, it was one of the most expensive works at the world鈥檚 top modern and contemporary art fair last month.
The painting, which has been sold so often one dealer calls it a 鈥渇requent flier,鈥 last appeared at Sotheby鈥檚 in March 2018 in London, where the auction house used an increasingly common financing technique to reduce its risk. In exchange for a fee of about $1 million, client Abdallah Chatila made an irrevocable bid that ensured the work would sell. No one made a higher offer, and he ended up taking it home.
鈥淚t sold twice for the world record for the artist and I believed it would set the record for the third time,鈥 Chatila, 44, a Geneva-based investor, said in a phone interview. 鈥淚 ended up with it.鈥
Such outcomes have become more common in the past year as auction houses increasingly turn to third-party investors to place prearranged bids in exchange for a share of the profit from the sale. Expensive works that ended up with their backers include Andy Warhol鈥檚 Double Elvis [Ferus Type], which went for $53 million at Christie鈥檚 in May, and Jean-Michel Basquiat鈥檚 Pollo Frito, bought by the guarantor for $25.7 million in November at Sotheby鈥檚.
鈥楨ASY MONEY鈥
鈥淲hen the market is going up an up and up, easy money was made on guarantees,鈥 said Thomas Danziger, a partner at Danziger, Danziger & Muro. 鈥淣ow that the market is not as robust, people end up being the proud owners of the works they didn鈥檛 expect to own.鈥
And like the Doig landscape at Art Basel, which has been offered at auction five times since 2002, an increasing number of works are making the round trip for resale, Danziger said.
A painting of a carpet by Rudolf Stingel, which fetched about $3 million at Christie鈥檚 in Hong Kong in 2017, was listed on Sotheby鈥檚 website as part of its June 26 contemporary art sale in London. It was estimated at $1.5 million to $2.3 million.
A Christopher Wool painting, spelling the word 鈥淔OOL鈥 in big capital letters, which was bought by a guarantor for $14.2 million at Christie鈥檚 in 2014, sold in May for $14 million at Sotheby鈥檚.
Lower prices for resales are not uncommon.
鈥極NLY BIDDER鈥
鈥淚f these pictures return to the market very soon, people realize that the value is not what the auction prices reflect,鈥 Danziger said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not a competitive situation. Someone made a bet and ended up being the only bidder.鈥
For seasoned collectors, guarantees used to be a sure way to get a good deal. They either got the work they wanted at a slightly reduced price, or they received a fee if the painting sold to someone else.
鈥淕uarantees are brilliant if you want to own the work,鈥 said Gabriela Palmieri, who advises collectors, including the Berkowitz Contemporary Foundation in Miami. 鈥淥therwise it鈥檚 not worth doing at all. Unless you really know the market of the artist, you are playing with fire.鈥
Chatila, who also invests in diamonds and real estate, said he鈥檚 been guaranteeing art for 10 years. 鈥淟ast year, the market was slightly softer,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 ended up buying most of them.鈥
He said he鈥檚 selling The Architect鈥檚 Home in the Ravine to buy 鈥渁nother very important painting,鈥 and still thinks he got a good deal on it. 鈥淚 believe it鈥檚 worth much more,鈥 he said. 鈥 Bloomberg

