Description
Book SynopsisBy the turn of the 20th century, Paris was the capital of the art world. While this is usually understood to mean that Paris was the center of art production and trading, this book examines a phenomenon that has received little attention thus far: Paris-based dealers relied on an ever-expanding international network of peers. Many of the city''s galleries capitalized on foreign collectors'' interest by expanding globally and proactively cultivating transnational alliances. If the French capital drew artists from around the worldfrom Cassatt to Picassothe contemporary-art market was international in scope. Art dealers deliberately tapped into a growing pool of discerning collectors in northern and eastern Europe, the UK, and the USA. International trade was rendered not just desirable but necessary by the devastating effects of wars, revolutions, currency devaluation, and market crashes which stalled collecting in Europe.
Pioneers of the Global Art Market assembles original schola
Trade ReviewWithout losing touch with the intimate, collaborative relationship of artist and dealer,
Pioneers of the Global Art Market dissects the market for modern art to reveal the complex transactional networks that spanned the globe from the middle of the nineteenth century to the middle of the twentieth. In a series of authoritative studies, authors address central players in the market for contemporary European art, such as Paul Durand-Ruel and Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler, as well as less well-known figures like Paul Guillaume, whose cultivation of ties with French colonial officials opened markets for African art in Europe and America. * Michael FitzGerald, Professor of Fine Arts, Trinity College, USA *
Through its emphasis on dealers’ strategies, working in cooperation across national borders, this wide-ranging collection of essays makes an original and significant contribution to our knowledge of the processes through which art from France came to dominate the international canon of modern art. * Malcolm Gee, Visiting Fellow, Department of Arts, Northumbria University, UK *
Drawing together an international team of scholars working across an impressive range of archival materials, this volume offers fresh and compelling analyses of the role of the art dealer in fostering the market for contemporary art produced in Paris c. 1850-1950, as well as the arts of Africa prized by modernists, revealing how dealers wove a transnational web of relations to create and sustain demand and value for this new art. For anyone interested in the fate of modernist art or strategies that have powered the global art market, this book is a must read. * Anne Helmreich, Associate Director, Getty Foundation, USA *
The art market is not only driven by visionary dealers, it also relies on highly active networks that evolved in the course of an increasingly international exchange. Contrary to widespread assumptions, such networks are not a recent phenomenon:
Pioneers of the Global Art Market unites a superb selection of engrossing case studies on how, between 1850 and 1950, dealers and other players in the art world forged and strengthened increasingly far-reaching personal and business connections. The volume’s intelligent focus on Paris—then the pre-eminent hub for the trade in avant-garde art—leads to particularly revealing insights into the market’s complex nervous system. As such, this highly stimulating book provides an excellent point of departure for a deeper understanding of the history of globalization. * Johannes Nathan, Chair, The International Art Market Studies Association (TIAMSA) *
Dealer-centered, [this book] places diminished emphasis on overarching historical, national, social and critical structures that frame and inform the context of modern art. * Giovanna L. Costantini, Leonardo Reviews *
[
Pioneers of the Global Art Market] places a fresh emphasis on pragmatic, tactical, sometimes ad hoc cooperation between dealers, in particular across national borders. * Marie Tavinor, Review, The Society for the History of Collecting *
Table of ContentsList of Plates List of Figures Series Editor’s Introduction Acknowledgements 1. Introduction: Pioneers of the Global Art Market: Paris-Based Dealer Networks, 1850-1950,
Christel H. Force (The Metropolitan Museum of Art, USA) 2. Parisian Dealers and the American Market, 1860–1920,
Paolo Serafini (Sapienza Universita di Roma, Italy), translated by Angelica Modabber 3. Old and New Worlds: Durand-Ruel and the International Market for Impressionism,
Jennifer A. Thompson (Philadelphia Museum of Art, USA) 4. Moving Mountains: Paris-Based Dealers and the Economics of Translocation,
David M. Challis (Melbourne University, Australia) 5. Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler’s International Partnerships, 1907-1937,
Vérane Tasseau (Independent Scholar, France), translated by Celia Abele 6. Promoting Modernism in the 1920s: The Art Journals of Paul Guillaume, Léonce Rosenberg, and Alfred Flechtheim,
Ambre Gauthier (Marc Chagall Foundation, Paris, France) 7. Paul Guillaume, Marius de Zayas and African Arts: A Transatlantic Partnership, 1914–1923,
Yaëlle Biro (The Metropolitan Museum of Art, USA) 8. The Thannhauser Galleries: Forming International Alliances in an Era of Change,
Valerie Nikola Ender (University of Cologne, Germany) 9. “A Viking sailing over the savage sea, far, far to the north”: Walther Halvorsen,
Christel H. Force (The Metropolitan Museum of Art, USA) 10. When French Dealers “Turned their Eyes Towards Scandinavia”: The Svensk-Franska Konstgalleriet in Stockholm,
Christina Brandberg (University of Loughborough, UK) 11. The Galerie Paul Rosenberg and the American Market in the Interwar Era,
MaryKate Cleary (New York University, USA) 12. International Dealer Networks and the Market for Impressionism in London and Glasgow: Etienne Bignou, A.J. McNeill Reid, and Ernest Lefèvre,
Frances Fowle (University of Edinburgh, UK) 13. Etienne Bignou: The Gallery as Antechamber of the Museum,
Christel H. Force (The Metropolitan Museum of Art, USA) 14. Capricious Cohorts: René Gimpel’s Associates, Rivals, and Patrons
Diana J. Kostyrko (Australian National University, Australia) 15. Valentine Dudensing and the Valentine Gallery: Selling the US on the School of Paris,
Julia May Boddewyn (Independent Scholar, USA) 16. Conclusion,
Veronique Chagnon-Burke (Christie’s Education, New York, USA) Author Biographies Index