Watson then helped shape fielded proposals from multiple auction houses. The winning house offered the architect some extra financial and marketing incentives to sell the art in a single-owner sale, allowing the auction house to use the collection and collector’s story to generate more excitement. This approach resulted in every piece being sold, with the top lot selling for more than its high estimate, and the auction raised tens of millions of dollars. The proceeds plus the incentives enabled the architect to fully fund his trust.
Not all fiduciaries are art world experts
If you’re an executor of an estate, you may have little knowledge about the deceased person’s collection, and yet, as a fiduciary, you are responsible for maximizing the proceeds from an estate disposal. That was the case for the executor of a prominent arts patron’s estate, which had a collection of over 450 works.
After viewing the collection, the Art Services team procured proposals from three top auction houses. The winning bid, negotiated by the team, stated that the auction house would waive all seller’s fees for a single-owner sale, numerous smaller auctions and private sales transactions, provide a financial guarantee, and fund some conservation work, says Dana Prussian, Art Services Specialist.
The Art Services team also worked with the auction house on the marketing plan, a unique challenge given the timing of the single-owner sale.
Art rich nonprofits may have cash flow constraints
Managing art sales effectively is not just an issue for individual collectors, heirs and executors, notes Watson. Benefactors may gift art to a nonprofit, but institutions don’t always have the ability, desire or the funds to house an art collection. Watson recalls an artist-endowed foundation that held both a large collection of artworks by the founding artist, as well as a collection of works bequeathed by other artists and benefactors. While the foundation appreciated the gifts, it had an otherwise small endowment, which could not support its vision for charitable programming.
After the foundation met with the Art Services team and walked them through its collection, the team suggested they have their collection appraised to determine what their next step should be. After receiving preliminary estimates from auction houses, the foundation decided it would be financially advantageous to sell its bequeathed collection. The team negotiated preferred pricing from the auction house and helped with the marketing strategy, resulting in a successful sale that raised millions of dollars for the foundation’s endowment.
Art acquisition is a passion. But when it comes time to sell, it’s primarily a business transaction. Recognizing the difference and making sure you can manage the intricacies, or bring in the professionals who have the time and expertise to do so, is critical to meeting your goals as a seller.