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The Motley Fool August 3, 2006 Stephen Ellis |
Sotheby's Brings Down the House Despite the venerable auctioneer's comeback, investors shouldn't necessarily jump in now. |
BusinessWeek March 12, 2007 Christopher Palmeri |
The Artful Investor New research calls art a smart investment, but skeptics point to high costs and high risk. |
BusinessWeek June 11, 2007 Christopher Palmeri |
The Art Of The Art Deal Sotheby's and Christie's are taking on more risk as they find new ways to profit in a hot contemporary art market. |
BusinessWeek November 12, 2007 Jessica Silver-Greenberg |
Sotheby's Surprising Sizzle Hedge fund collectors have taken a hit, but international buyers are pouring into the art market. |
BusinessWeek February 14, 2005 Toddi Gutner |
Funds To Please The Eye But with subjective valuations and steep costs, the new art funds look rather risky. |
The Motley Fool November 13, 2006 Ryan Fuhrmann |
Time to Bid on Sotheby's? Sotheby's third quarter was a non-event, but is it attractive for the long term? |
BusinessWeek August 12, 2010 Rachel Wolff |
The Rise of the Emerging Art Economy Christie's, Sotheby's, and other auction houses are playing on the patriotism of newly rich emerging-market collectors with works from home. |
Financial Planning August 1, 2008 David E. Adler |
For Art's Sake The New York City art auctions in May and June put to rest the idea that gloom in financial markets was spreading into the art market -- at least, not at the very upper end |
Financial Planning September 1, 2011 Jenny Sherman |
Art is an Asset More boutique firms that provide wealth managers with financially based art market analysis are cropping up, and a clutch of new art-focused investment funds are launching. |
AskMen.com Michael Estrin |
How To Invest In Art - Part II Learn where to track down your masterpieces and the associated costs that come with such works. |
CFO April 1, 2007 Alix Nyberg Stuart |
Investing in Oils While you don't need to be ultra-rich to begin collecting, most experts say that art or other collectibles should make up no more than 1% - 10% of a portfolio. |
Entrepreneur May 2010 Rosalind Resnick |
Fine Art of Investment When it comes to sinking your money into the art market, caution is critical. |
The Motley Fool May 10, 2004 Mark Mahorney |
Picasso to Propel Sotheby's The record-setting sale of Picasso's "Boy With A Pipe" could coax other rarities out into the market. |
The Motley Fool May 9, 2007 S.J. Caplan |
Stocks for Mom: Sotheby's Like any astute collector, do your own research prior to making a bid on Sotheby's shares so that you don't have the hammer coming down on an overly rich valuation. If the valuation seems too high by your estimates, don't do it. |
BusinessWeek February 14, 2005 |
A More Artful Portolio Investors worldwide are making art a hot market. However, get expert advice before adding a masterpiece to your financial palette |
BusinessWeek October 16, 2006 Moira Herbst |
Why Wait Till The Paint Is Dry? Auction house Phillips de Pury's focus on ultracontemporary art is starting to pay off. |
BusinessWeek July 11, 2005 Robert Barker |
Sotheby's: Worth A Bid If Sotheby's has put most of its legal woes behind it, is fixing its balance sheet, and has operations in trim, how should it be valued? |
AskMen.com Nick Kennedy |
Investing In The Art Exchange "If you can quickly list more titles produced by Van Halen than Van Gogh, then you probably don't have the background to be a successful art collector." |
AskMen.com Michael Estrin |
How To Invest In Art Here are some tips to keep in mind if you're interested in making art part of your portfolio. |
Wired April 2005 Jeff Howe |
Paint by Numbers How a tech whiz kid launched the Artist Pension Trust, a pension fund for artists. |
BusinessWeek February 9, 2004 Linda Himelstein |
Tony Auctions For Everybody Major houses like Sotheby's and Christie's are running moderately priced sales to attract a broader spectrum of buyers. |
HBS Working Knowledge August 2, 2010 Sean Silverthorne |
Modern Indian Art: The Birth of a Market The market for modern Indian art was created in three broad steps: redefinition of the category, creation of valuation metrics, and broad acceptance and understanding of the category. |
BusinessWeek February 6, 2006 |
China's New Eye for Fine Art The deputy chairman of Christie's Asia says mainlanders are buying up works from their own country as well as the West. |
BusinessWeek July 8, 2010 Lindsey Pollock |
Lehman's Louvre, on the Auction Block The company is selling its storied contemporary art collection as part of a court-ordered liquidation. Among the pieces for sale are those by Hirst and Murakami. |
Financial Advisor September 2005 Raymond Fazzi |
The Art Of Financial Planning And Investing Planning And Investing Rather than manipulate art as an investment, observers say advisors could better serve their clients by establishing what they have in terms of collections, the value of the items and, if possible, the cost basis. |
BusinessWeek November 4, 2010 Lindsay Pollock |
Art + Celebrity = Value Inflation The number of auctions of celebrity-owned art shows the premium of star ownership. Then again, there's Mel Gibson... |
BusinessWeek December 25, 2006 Thane Peterson |
Art's New Frame Of Reference India, China, Russia... Art collecting is going global, and prices have room to run. |
BusinessWeek June 5, 2006 Manjeet Kripalani |
India's Art Appreciation Modern works are zooming in value - leading some to fear a shakeout. |
Financial Planning March 1, 2007 Marshall Eckblad |
5 Questions Art consultant Michael Mendelsohn fields questions about ways advisors can help clients with their art collections. |
On Wall Street April 1, 2013 Charles Paikert |
New Rules for Art Collections Do your clients have plans in place to protect their valuable treasures from the elements? |
BusinessWeek November 11, 2010 Rachel Wolff |
The Chinese Love Late Picassos His 1960-73 works were considered vulgar and/or incoherent, but not by newly wealthy Chinese collectors |
Information Today November 30, 2009 |
EBSCO Introduces Art & Architecture Databases These new art and architecture resources include cover-to-cover indexing and abstracts for more than 620 academic journals, magazines, and trade publications as well as more than 140 books. |
BusinessWeek June 18, 2007 Maria Bartiromo |
Eli Broad On The Art Bubble One of the world's great art collectors talks about soaring prices. Is there a bubble? |
CIO July 15, 2006 Meridith Levinson |
Sold! On Open Source Building an open source-based infrastructure has helped mid-market, London-based Bonhams compete with the auction industry superpowers. |
Entrepreneur May 2007 Farnoosh Torabi |
Passion Play Investors looking to expand their portfolios are putting their money where their hobbies are. |
The Motley Fool January 18, 2008 John Rosevear |
A Millionaire's Lifestyle for the Rest of Us How to feel rich without having a fortune. |
Registered Rep. June 1, 2008 John Churchill |
Renting Richness Keeping up appearances can be expensive, even for the rich. |
Information Today May 6, 2014 |
OCLC Adds Art History Resources to WorldCat OCLC introduced the Art Discovery Group Catalogue to bring together information from global art libraries into a single, searchable database in WorldCat. |
BusinessWeek September 30, 2010 Rachel Wolff |
Investing: Diamonds Are a Guy's Best Friend Amid the recession, jewelry is increasingly viewed as valuable art. Guess who's buying it? Male collectors are currently coveting pendants and rings with large colorless, D-grade diamonds. |
The Motley Fool February 23, 2010 Dave Mock |
A Big Upgrade for Art Technology Group After being stuck for more than a year at no better than a three-star rank, enough top-performing CAPS members have turned bullish on e-commerce software provider Art Technology Group to upgrade it to a more formidable four stars. |
Reason June 2003 Charles Paul Freund |
The Pull of Culture Yes, that's a cigarette machine, or at least it was. The goods it currently vends aren't packs of butts; they're works of art. Each is about the size of a Lucky Strike package, and you buy it by inserting your coins and yanking on the machine. This is an Art*o*mat�. |
Searcher September 2004 Dave Mattison |
Looking for Good Art: Web Resources and Image Databases, Part 1 Art images on the Web represent one of the first and last frontiers in terms of pools of knowledge: millions of historic art images served and more to come. Here are links to some of the best Web sites. |
Inc. June 1, 2003 Nicole Gull |
Packaging's Folk Revival As folk art grows in popularity, marketers are using folk imagery to sell goods ranging from cookies to CDs. |
BusinessWeek June 5, 2006 Frederik Balfour |
China: Cultural Evolution Prices for contemporary works by Chinese artists have been skyrocketing as connoisseurs both domestically and abroad have been snapping them up. |
AskMen.com Michael Estrin |
5 Things You Didn't Know You Could Buy At Auction Auctions are not only for fancy works of art and antiques, the truth is that just about anything can be sold at these events. Here's a list of things you can save big bucks on at auction. |
The Motley Fool February 11, 2005 Lawrence Meyers |
Are Auction Houses on the Block? Mega-auctioneer eBay could turn the auction house business upside down. |
BusinessWeek September 26, 2005 Mara Der Hovanesian |
Antiquities To Grow Old With As new controls on illicit trading bite, the interest in ancient art treasures is on the rise - and so are the prices |
HBS Working Knowledge May 6, 2015 Christian Camerota |
A Flood of Picassos Threatens to Water Down the Art Market Though Picasso is no longer producing masterpieces, a noticeable increase in the number of his works available for sale may cause some lasting effects in the art market, says associate professor Mukti Khaire. |
PC Magazine September 5, 2008 Albanesius, Heater & Rhey |
Has eBay Outbid Itself? The monolith of online auctions is weathering big changes, lawsuits, and customer backlash. |
Reason December 2008 Nick Gillespie |
Sharks Stuffed With Money In the insightful and compulsively readable book The $12 Million Stuffed Shark author Don Thompson discusses the curious economics of contemporary art. |