March 16 (Bloomberg) -- Dealers at the world’s biggest art and antiques fair cut prices of some modern works by as much as 20 percent as collectors sink cash into Old Masters, whose prices have held steady to defy the economic gloom.
Paintings by Peter Paul Rubens and Gabriel Metsu were sold at the European Fine Art Fair -- Tefaf -- in the Dutch city of Maastricht. Modern art dealers reduced prices, while contemporary-art exhibitors were less busy, with some sticking to 2008 levels even after auction prices declined between 30 and 50 percent. Many dealers said that buyers were taking longer to decide, with attendance down 5 percent on 2008.
“The disparity in price rises between Old Masters and contemporary has been crazy,” Richard L. Feigen, a New York dealer, said in an interview. “Some Old Master pictures haven’t increased in price in the last 20 years and there are people with a lot of cash at Tefaf looking for a place to park it.”
Saturday Night In A House Of The Rising Sun
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The person who made this cover of "House of the Rising Sun" by The Animals
made this version of "Bohemian Rhapsody" as well.
2 days ago
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