London is driving the growth of the international art market, helping to double its value in just four years.
A report commissioned by the European Fine Art Foundation underlines the capital’s contribution to worldwide art sales – worth €43.3bn in 2006, a rise of 95 per cent from 2002’s figure of €22.3bn and the highest total ever recorded.
The boom has been especially pronounced in the UK, which has 27 per cent of the global market and is one of the world’s fastest growing sectors. Sales have grown by an average of 31 per cent over the past three years.
Many wealthy Russian, Chinese and Indian collectors have been attracted to the London market, while young, bonus-rich City high-flyers had helped to fuel the boom in contemporary art.
Technological innovations have also propelled it, with the internet increasingly used as a source of prices, promotion and marketing. A section of wall from London’s Portobello Road decorated with a drawing by Banksy last Monday night raised £208,100 in an auction on Ebay.
But insiders claimed that cherished frontrunner status could be under threat both from the mooted tax crackdown on “non-doms”, which could lead to an exodus of wealthy people, and from a resurgent China, which has seen a 100-fold increase in turnover in the contemporary auction market between 2002 and 2006.
Against that backdrop, experts say, London could struggle to hold its own, despite the appeal of new British contemporary art stars such as Damien Hirst and Banksy, as well as enduringly popular traditional names such as Lucian Freud and Francis Bacon, who have helped to give the capital an edge over some international rivals.
“There is no doubt that that the presence of a lot of very rich people in London contributes substantially to the success of the city as an art market,” said Anthony Browne, chairman of the British Art Market Federation. But Mr Browne cautioned: “Art is a global and mobile phenomenon. It doesn’t have to be sold in London. The growth of Chinese auction houses recently has been phenomenal.”
The report, “The International Art Market: A Survey of Europe in a Global Context”, by Clare McAndrew, an economist and editor of the financial quarterly magazine “Wealth”, showed that individual transactions were also up, by almost a quarter, over the same four-year period.
Part of the reason is art’s appeal to investors amid increasingly tough regulation of more conventional investments.
Here, too, London has an edge, the report suggests, describing it as the “epicentre” of the European art trade.
“The UK has always maintained as open a regulatory regime as possible, and its free market ideology has helped the art trade to flourish,” it said.
The UK was also the largest importer and exporter of art in Europe, with figures of €3.5bn and €5.4bn respectively in 2006.
But the report warned that the introduction of resale royalties in February 2006 could damage the UK art market: “Although it is too early to show the real effects of the directive, which was also introduced at a time of unprecedented buoyancy in the contemporary market, it potentially affects a sector that is particularly vulnerable to international competition.”
And that is not the only cloud over the horizon. The UK market is second only to the US market, which saw sales worth €19.8bn in 2006.
But China is breathing down its neck. The country’s art boom of 2006 “was a result of the combined effects of enhanced demand from wealthy Chinese and western buyers and a boost in supply with a much larger amount of works coming on to the market,” says the report.



