By Scott Reyburn / New York Times News Service
THE singularity and relatively high cost of most fine art have made it resistant to sales on the Internet. There aren’t many collectors who seem willing to spend millions of dollars online. But Instagram has quietly become a commercial gamechanger for the art market, a force in influencing auction and gallery transactions, especially for younger buyers.
“I often get contacted by collectors about specific objects I’ve shown on Instagram, and then that turns into a different conversation,” said Matt Carey-Williams, London-based deputy chairman for Europe and Asia at the Phillips auction house.
Recently, Carey-Williams used his personal Instagram account (5,644 followers at the time) to highlight the inclusion of a 1969 Josef Albers painting, Study for Homage to the Square: Wet and Dry, in Phillips’s March 8 contemporary art auction in London. The work is estimated at £150,000 to £250,000 (about $180,000 to $306,000).
Phillips has 95,400 Instagram followers, twice as many as in 2015. That is about four times the number of its followers on Facebook and three times the number of its followers on Twitter, Carey-Williams said. Sotheby’s (417,000 followers) and Christie’s (261,000) are also making the most of Instagram as a marketing tool. In London in June, Sotheby’s sold a Fabergé silver, enamel and seed-pearl icon for £245,000—10 times its estimate. The buyer had seen it on the auction house’s Instagram feed.
“Instagram has become the leading social-media tool for discovering, showing and following art, particularly for people below the age of 35,” said Anders Petterson, an author of the Hiscox Online Art Trade Report. Of the more than 650 art buyers questioned for the 2016 report, 48 percent said Instagram was their preferred social-media platform. The figure rose to 65 percent among the younger buyers contacted. “It has hit a sweet spot in the market for sharing information,” Petterson said, “but no one saw this coming as a sales tool.”
Its direct effect on art sales, however, remains difficult to quantify, apart from anecdotal evidence. Last month a Jean-Michel Basquiat canvas priced at about $24 million was hailed by Bloomberg News as a breakthrough Instagram sale.
Brett Gorvy, then Christie’s global head of contemporary art, had posted an image of the Basquiat, a 1982 painting of boxer Sugar Ray Robinson, on his personal Instagram site (57,900 followers) as he boarded a plane for the auction house’s private selling exhibition in Hong Kong. When he landed, Gorvy said he had messages from three collectors—in the United States, London and Asia—expressing interest in buying the painting. The unidentified US collector completed the transaction two days later.
Christie’s declined to comment on the Basquiat, though it would technically regard it as a private sale, rather than an online transaction. But Gorvy, who is a partner in the newly branded Lévy Gorvy dealership, said, “From the buyer’s point of view, this was a total Instagram sale.”
Gorvy’s Instagram account is all the more influential for having no corporate branding and a strong individuality.
“It allows you to get into the hearts and minds of important collectors,” Gorvy said. “People think they know you, and that pulls down barriers. People saw that I had a daughter, a dog and a home. I became less of a guy that sells paintings.”
The quirkily personal Instagram accounts of tastemaking specialists, like Gorvy and Carey-Williams, or of high-profile private collectors and dealers, like Japanese billionaire Yusaku Maezawa (38,500 followers), Simon de Pury (177,000) and art world “disrupter” Stefan Simchowitz (77,600), remain the unquantifiable “soft power” of today’s art market.
Just as difficult to gauge is the impact of the huge Instagram followings on sales at the world’s major galleries. Gagosian Gallery’s Instagram site has at least 593,000 followers, with that of Pace not far behind at 506,000.
“It’s a two-way thing,” said Stefan Ratibor, director of Gagosian’s London galleries. “We put out the information and we value the feedback. This has led to conversations that have led to sales, but they can’t be quantified.” There is one, perhaps slightly unlikely, area of the market in which Instagram has proved a true sales platform: affordable collectibles.
Mikki Towler, a dealer in antique kitchen items in Norfolk, England, has been active on Instagram for 12 months, drawing 2,427 followers and averaging two sales per day. “I put a piece on Instagram and it’s sold before I get to put it on my web site,” said Towler, a trader for 26 years. “Some people don’t even ask the price, they just say, ‘I’ll have it’.” Towler added that the Instagram-friendliness of her business was helped by having few pieces priced at more than £200.
To keep things in perspective, though, Kylie Jenner, 19, the reality star turned cosmetics magnate, recently announced on her personal Instagram account that her sold-out $45 range of Royal Peach Palette eye makeup would be restocking on KylieCosmetics.com. After 14 hours, the post had attracted 781,373 likes.
Image credits: Sotheyby’s/New York Times, Mikki Towler/New York Times