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THE contemporary

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INTRODUCTION<br />

Contemporary art requires a different approach<br />

from Modern or Impressionist art.<br />

History has taught us there is no fixed relationship<br />

between the price of artworks at any given moment<br />

and their future value: the classic example being<br />

the Impressionists whose works were the least valued<br />

on the market of their epoch, with Paul Gauguin<br />

suffering a number of embarrassing commercial<br />

failures before becoming one of the most expensive<br />

artists in the world 1 .<br />

Today, Contemporary art is being acquired by<br />

an increasing population of amateur buyers, art<br />

professionals and institutions all over the planet.<br />

In financial terms, the Contemporary art segment<br />

is posting attractive returns for investors and has<br />

become a key area for international rivalry with<br />

the development of the museum industry. Between<br />

2000 and 2014, more museums opened around the<br />

world than during the entire 19th and 20th centuries,<br />

and the movement is continuing with more<br />

than 700 new museums a year… The museum<br />

industry naturally has a strong appetite for important<br />

art works and has thus become an international<br />

economic fact in the 21st Century and one of<br />

the primary drivers of the art market’s spectacular<br />

growth.<br />

Since the second half of the 20th century, the<br />

1) On 5 February 2015, The New York Times announced that<br />

Paul Gauguin’s painting Nafea faa ipoipo was sold privately<br />

for approximately $300,000.<br />

8

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