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Ladies and Gentlemen...The Roncey Boys

Date published : March 8, 2010 - Windsor, Ontario

What was supposed to be a low-key gig is suddenly “all over Facebook.” Christian steps up to the mike.
 
“Those communities that are richest in their artistic tradition are also those that are the most progressive in their economic performance and most resilient and secure in their economic structure.”   - John Kenneth Galbraith

For years Christian made a living as an artist in Windsor, but like many working artists in Canada and around the world, he is feeling the effects of the economic downturn.

Primary vs secondary art markets: The art market is divided into two main arenas: the primary market, which deals in new work, appearing for first time sale; and the secondary market, which deals with artwork being resold, either by private sale or auction.

Highs & lows: According to the French agency ArtPrice, which monitors markets around the world, Canada’s secondary art market attained a record worth of $57,642,612 in 2007 - but then tumbled sharply in 2008 to $44,301,496, with sales for the first quarter of 2009 totalling $14,449,072.

2008 saw a dramatic drop both in the number of transactions and prices, with prices for high-end artwork dropping by about 30% between November 2008 and the 2nd quarter of 2009. The drop was less marked for work priced at under $5000.

Getting accurate sales figures from art galleries is difficult, but Jean-François Bélisle, director of Canada’s Contemporary Art Galleries Association, confirms that the country’s primary art market has also been hit: “The market began to slow down last autumn, and lots of us had a difficult winter. A number of galleries, particularly in Toronto, either closed or suffered long periods without sales. The good news: the situation seems to be looking up since early summer.”

And the artists themselves? “It’s a pretty resilient milieu,” says Louise Poulin, president of the Montreal-based consultancy firm ArtExpert.ca. “To the extent that they often work within financial limits, artists are already used to working with little – and they will get through this.”

Some facts & figures

1/ About 17,000 Canadians make their living in the visual arts.

Average annual salaries:
  •     Dancer: $13,167
  •     Visual artists: $ 13,976
  •     Musicians: $14,439
  •     Writers: $32,045

2/ New York is home to the world’s biggest art market.

3/ Canada’s most important auction houses for fine art are:

  •     Heffel Fine Art (Vancouver)
  •     Sotheby’s (Toronto)
  •     Waddington’s (Toronto)


Sources: Artprice.com, Cyberpresse
 
Field director
Matt Gallagher

Editor
Miguel Raymond

Director-coordinator

Hélène Choquette

Proginal score
Christian
Robert-Marcel Lepage


© 2009 NFB – All rights reserved
 
Is part of the story:
 
Theme
 
  • The power of art
  • "Those communities that are richest in their artistic
  • tradition are also those that are the most progressive
  • in their economic performance and most resilient and
  • secure in their economic structure."
  • - John Kenneth Galbraith, economist
 

Comments(11)

Source of nutrition, for real

 

By Sean Martindale - Date published: March 8, 2010 - Toronto, Ontario

This art is part of the Recession Survival Tips project.

More+
 

Illegal ads, a source of nutrition?

 

By Sean Martindale - Date published: March 8, 2010 - Toronto, Ontario

This art is part of the Recession Survival Tips project.

More+
 

Ride it out

 

By Sean Martindale - Date published: March 8, 2010 - Toronto, Ontario

This art is part of the Recession Survival Tips project.

More+
 

Ad here

 

By Sean Martindale - Date published: March 8, 2010 - Toronto, Ontario

This art is part of the Recession Survival Tips project.

More+
 

Do not consume

 

By Sean Martindale - Date published: March 7, 2010 - Toronto, Ontario

This art is part of the Recession Survival Tips project.

More+
 

No trespassing

 

By Sean Martindale - Date published: March 7, 2010 - Toronto, Ontario

This art is part of the Recession Survival Tips project.

More+
 

It is no longer just money

 

By Sean Martindale - Date published: March 7, 2010 - Toronto, Ontario

This art is part of the Recession Survival Tips project.

More+
 

Beware of toxic emissions

 

By Sean Martindale - Date published: March 7, 2010 - Toronto, Ontario

This art is part of the Recession Survival Tips project.

More+
 

Makeshift canvases

 

By Sean Martindale - Date published: March 7, 2010 - Toronto, Ontario

This art is part of the Recession Survival Tips project.

More+
 

Stop wasting paper

 

By Sean Martindale - Date published: March 7, 2010 - Toronto, Ontario

This art is part of the Recession Survival Tips project.

More+
 

Call yourself an artist

 

By Sean Martindale - Date published: March 7, 2010 - Toronto, Ontario

This art is part of the Recession Survival Tips project.

More+
 

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