vernaxley
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 277
๐๐ป 138
September 2014
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Christie's Art Auctions , by vernaxley on Apr 1, 2021 9:48:39 GMT 1, Wow. Iโm surprised they didnโt take it on the chin and move on. The after effects of this will be crazy. The voice of a man who picked up something cheap on a glitched auction.
Wow. Iโm surprised they didnโt take it on the chin and move on. The after effects of this will be crazy. The voice of a man who picked up something cheap on a glitched auction.
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Christie's Art Auctions , by Lord Lucas Roham on Apr 1, 2021 9:50:55 GMT 1, Noticed a little bit of movement.
Noticed a little bit of movement.
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vernaxley
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 277
๐๐ป 138
September 2014
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Christie's Art Auctions , by vernaxley on Apr 1, 2021 9:52:45 GMT 1, Imagine the blow back if Tate Ward did this. For peace of mind, stick with the established auction houses...oh hang on.
Imagine the blow back if Tate Ward did this. For peace of mind, stick with the established auction houses...oh hang on.
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Lazarus II
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 1,804
๐๐ป 2,429
August 2019
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Christie's Art Auctions , by Lazarus II on Apr 1, 2021 9:54:10 GMT 1, Bit of a minefielld understanding the โadditionalโ costs of auction houses. So in the case of say Very Little Helps that originally hammered at 75k but the โsoldโ price listed was 93,750k (BP 25%). What does the seller actually end up getting? This correct? Seller would get 67,500k? (Based in 10% seller fee on 75k) Auction house pockets the 26k+? Not a minefield really and we should have a sticky thread on the forum for this I think @silky ? When you sell at auction the defacto position is that you pay the auction house 10% of the hammer (bid) price. So if a buyer bids ยฃ50k then you net ยฃ45k and the house gets ยฃ5k. ย In reality this is usually negotiable as has been discussed above. When you buy at auction you bid using the hammer price. ย So you bid ยฃ50k for a piece. ย There are add ons. These vary from house to house but are often broadly similar. ย On a piece of ยฃ50k there would be a 25% premium to pay (commission). ย So that's ยฃ12.5k. ย In addition to this there is VAT on the commission. ย That's 20% of 25% (so 5% of the hammer). ย Some online auctions charge 1% extra. ย Some artists in some territories attract ARR (Artist Resale Rights) where 4% on the first 50k (Euros) of the hammer price is paid to the artist... this then slides back to a lower scale as the price of the work climbs. ย So, any buyer needs to factor in the fact that what they are bidding for the work is only a part of what they will pay for it. Going back to the ยฃ50k bid. ย In the instance cited above, for an artist that attracts ARR, an extra 35% will be payable. ย 34% if the auction is in a saleroom. ย So, ยฃ50k x 35% = ยฃ17,500. ย This means the buyer will need to pay the auction house ยฃ67,500 to acquire the piece and the seller will receive ยฃ45,000. I'm sure someone will let me know if I've got the numbers wrong (notwithstanding the Euro to Sterling assumption of equality on the ARR bit). a sticky would make sense but it would remove the fun of counting the โhow much did the buyer actually payโ posts after every auction.
Bit of a minefielld understanding the โadditionalโ costs of auction houses. So in the case of say Very Little Helps that originally hammered at 75k but the โsoldโ price listed was 93,750k (BP 25%). What does the seller actually end up getting? This correct? Seller would get 67,500k? (Based in 10% seller fee on 75k) Auction house pockets the 26k+? Not a minefield really and we should have a sticky thread on the forum for this I think @silky ? When you sell at auction the defacto position is that you pay the auction house 10% of the hammer (bid) price. So if a buyer bids ยฃ50k then you net ยฃ45k and the house gets ยฃ5k. ย In reality this is usually negotiable as has been discussed above. When you buy at auction you bid using the hammer price. ย So you bid ยฃ50k for a piece. ย There are add ons. These vary from house to house but are often broadly similar. ย On a piece of ยฃ50k there would be a 25% premium to pay (commission). ย So that's ยฃ12.5k. ย In addition to this there is VAT on the commission. ย That's 20% of 25% (so 5% of the hammer). ย Some online auctions charge 1% extra. ย Some artists in some territories attract ARR (Artist Resale Rights) where 4% on the first 50k (Euros) of the hammer price is paid to the artist... this then slides back to a lower scale as the price of the work climbs. ย So, any buyer needs to factor in the fact that what they are bidding for the work is only a part of what they will pay for it. Going back to the ยฃ50k bid. ย In the instance cited above, for an artist that attracts ARR, an extra 35% will be payable. ย 34% if the auction is in a saleroom. ย So, ยฃ50k x 35% = ยฃ17,500. ย This means the buyer will need to pay the auction house ยฃ67,500 to acquire the piece and the seller will receive ยฃ45,000. I'm sure someone will let me know if I've got the numbers wrong (notwithstanding the Euro to Sterling assumption of equality on the ARR bit). a sticky would make sense but it would remove the fun of counting the โhow much did the buyer actually payโ posts after every auction.
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Poster Bob
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 5,891
๐๐ป 5,527
September 2013
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Christie's Art Auctions , by Poster Bob on Apr 1, 2021 10:07:37 GMT 1, I can't get the original link to the auction to load ๐คฃ
I can't get the original link to the auction to load ๐คฃ
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Reader
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 1,272
๐๐ป 2,833
June 2016
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Christie's Art Auctions , by Reader on Apr 1, 2021 10:26:25 GMT 1, Apart from the US GWB and the signed TM it's all looking pretty solid. Most are close to or breaking the high estimates. Surprised the owners of the GWB and the TM didnt drop their starting prices to get a few bids in, seems to have worked for the others.
Apart from the US GWB and the signed TM it's all looking pretty solid. Most are close to or breaking the high estimates. Surprised the owners of the GWB and the TM didnt drop their starting prices to get a few bids in, seems to have worked for the others.
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ricardob
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 451
๐๐ป 250
March 2008
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Christie's Art Auctions , by ricardob on Apr 1, 2021 10:30:28 GMT 1, Apart from the US Girl With Balloon and the signed TM it's all looking pretty solid. Most are close to or breaking the high estimates. Surprised the owners of the Girl With Balloon and the TM didnt drop their starting prices to get a few bids in, seems to have worked for the others.ย
Really? That is not what I see here
Apart from the US Girl With Balloon and the signed TM it's all looking pretty solid. Most are close to or breaking the high estimates. Surprised the owners of the Girl With Balloon and the TM didnt drop their starting prices to get a few bids in, seems to have worked for the others.ย Really? That is not what I see here
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Reader
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 1,272
๐๐ป 2,833
June 2016
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Christie's Art Auctions , by Reader on Apr 1, 2021 10:34:00 GMT 1, Apart from the US Girl With Balloon and the signed TM it's all looking pretty solid. Most are close to or breaking the high estimates. Surprised the owners of the Girl With Balloon and the TM didnt drop their starting prices to get a few bids in, seems to have worked for the others. Really? That is not what I see here I'm adding the additional 25% on top of the hammer, so the price to the buyer not the seller. puts most of them over the high estimate no ?
Apart from the US Girl With Balloon and the signed TM it's all looking pretty solid. Most are close to or breaking the high estimates. Surprised the owners of the Girl With Balloon and the TM didnt drop their starting prices to get a few bids in, seems to have worked for the others. Really? That is not what I see here I'm adding the additional 25% on top of the hammer, so the price to the buyer not the seller. puts most of them over the high estimate no ?
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ricardob
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 451
๐๐ป 250
March 2008
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Christie's Art Auctions , by ricardob on Apr 1, 2021 11:16:28 GMT 1, Really? That is not what I see here I'm adding the additional 25% on top of the hammer, so the price to the buyer not the seller. puts most of them over the high estimate no ?
Not sure if this is correct, I was always under the impression that the estimates were related to hammer price. Anyway...
Really? That is not what I see here I'm adding the additional 25% on top of the hammer, so the price to the buyer not the seller. puts most of them over the high estimate no ? Not sure if this is correct, I was always under the impression that the estimates were related to hammer price. Anyway...
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kfroms
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 1,782
๐๐ป 2,731
October 2011
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Christie's Art Auctions , by kfroms on Apr 1, 2021 11:20:00 GMT 1, Estimates are at hammer price, correct.
Estimates are at hammer price, correct.
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ricardob
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 451
๐๐ป 250
March 2008
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Christie's Art Auctions , by ricardob on Apr 1, 2021 11:20:08 GMT 1, It seems that so far there are no bids for the signed TM and unsigned GWRB.
It seems that so far there are no bids for the signed TM and unsigned GWRB.
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E9Boy
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 285
๐๐ป 192
October 2020
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Christie's Art Auctions , by E9Boy on Apr 1, 2021 11:22:16 GMT 1, Signed CND not getting much love ?
Signed CND not getting much love ?
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Reader
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 1,272
๐๐ป 2,833
June 2016
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Christie's Art Auctions , by Reader on Apr 1, 2021 11:24:54 GMT 1, I'm adding the additional 25% on top of the hammer, so the price to the buyer not the seller. puts most of them over the high estimate no ? Not sure if this is correct, I was always under the impression that the estimates were related to hammer price. Anyway... Ah ok, got it. Misunderstood. Then they really did set high estimates.
I'm adding the additional 25% on top of the hammer, so the price to the buyer not the seller. puts most of them over the high estimate no ? Not sure if this is correct, I was always under the impression that the estimates were related to hammer price. Anyway... Ah ok, got it. Misunderstood. Then they really did set high estimates.
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Rubberneck
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 1,050
๐๐ป 1,433
October 2018
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Christie's Art Auctions , by Rubberneck on Apr 1, 2021 11:47:36 GMT 1, No love for cwsb either .. even with a lowered reserve
No love for cwsb either .. even with a lowered reserve
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Lazarus II
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 1,804
๐๐ป 2,429
August 2019
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Christie's Art Auctions , by Lazarus II on Apr 1, 2021 11:52:08 GMT 1, No love for cwsb either .. even with a lowered reserve condition report is somewhere on this thread and it doesnt read well, this may put some folks off.
No love for cwsb either .. even with a lowered reserve condition report is somewhere on this thread and it doesnt read well, this may put some folks off.
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kfroms
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 1,782
๐๐ป 2,731
October 2011
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Christie's Art Auctions , by kfroms on Apr 1, 2021 11:57:42 GMT 1, Strong auction results = condition doesnโt matter anymore, everything sells at crazy prices
Weak auction results = no surprise - have you seen the condition report?
Funny.
Strong auction results = condition doesnโt matter anymore, everything sells at crazy prices
Weak auction results = no surprise - have you seen the condition report?
Funny.
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wave
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 1,046
๐๐ป 179
March 2007
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Christie's Art Auctions , by wave on Apr 1, 2021 12:05:01 GMT 1, Bit of a minefielld understanding the โadditionalโ costs of auction houses. So in the case of say Very Little Helps that originally hammered at 75k but the โsoldโ price listed was 93,750k (BP 25%). What does the seller actually end up getting? This correct? Seller would get 67,500k? (Based in 10% seller fee on 75k) Auction house pockets the 26k+? Not a minefield really and we should have a sticky thread on the forum for this I think @silky ? When you sell at auction the defacto position is that you pay the auction house 10% of the hammer (bid) price. So if a buyer bids ยฃ50k then you net ยฃ45k and the house gets ยฃ5k. In reality this is usually negotiable as has been discussed above. When you buy at auction you bid using the hammer price. So you bid ยฃ50k for a piece. There are add ons. These vary from house to house but are often broadly similar. On a piece of ยฃ50k there would be a 25% premium to pay (commission). So that's ยฃ12.5k. In addition to this there is VAT on the commission. That's 20% of 25% (so 5% of the hammer). Some online auctions charge 1% extra. Some artists in some territories attract ARR (Artist Resale Rights) where 4% on the first 50k (Euros) of the hammer price is paid to the artist... this then slides back to a lower scale as the price of the work climbs. So, any buyer needs to factor in the fact that what they are bidding for the work is only a part of what they will pay for it. Going back to the ยฃ50k bid. In the instance cited above, for an artist that attracts ARR, an extra 35% will be payable. 34% if the auction is in a saleroom. So, ยฃ50k x 35% = ยฃ17,500. This means the buyer will need to pay the auction house ยฃ67,500 to acquire the piece and the seller will receive ยฃ45,000. I'm sure someone will let me know if I've got the numbers wrong (notwithstanding the Euro to Sterling assumption of equality on the ARR bit). Wow....so the auction house screws everyone. With the ยฃ involved....why would they charge the seller an additional fee when they already make a large % on the buyers premium?
Bit of a minefielld understanding the โadditionalโ costs of auction houses. So in the case of say Very Little Helps that originally hammered at 75k but the โsoldโ price listed was 93,750k (BP 25%). What does the seller actually end up getting? This correct? Seller would get 67,500k? (Based in 10% seller fee on 75k) Auction house pockets the 26k+? Not a minefield really and we should have a sticky thread on the forum for this I think @silky ? When you sell at auction the defacto position is that you pay the auction house 10% of the hammer (bid) price. So if a buyer bids ยฃ50k then you net ยฃ45k and the house gets ยฃ5k. In reality this is usually negotiable as has been discussed above. When you buy at auction you bid using the hammer price. So you bid ยฃ50k for a piece. There are add ons. These vary from house to house but are often broadly similar. On a piece of ยฃ50k there would be a 25% premium to pay (commission). So that's ยฃ12.5k. In addition to this there is VAT on the commission. That's 20% of 25% (so 5% of the hammer). Some online auctions charge 1% extra. Some artists in some territories attract ARR (Artist Resale Rights) where 4% on the first 50k (Euros) of the hammer price is paid to the artist... this then slides back to a lower scale as the price of the work climbs. So, any buyer needs to factor in the fact that what they are bidding for the work is only a part of what they will pay for it. Going back to the ยฃ50k bid. In the instance cited above, for an artist that attracts ARR, an extra 35% will be payable. 34% if the auction is in a saleroom. So, ยฃ50k x 35% = ยฃ17,500. This means the buyer will need to pay the auction house ยฃ67,500 to acquire the piece and the seller will receive ยฃ45,000. I'm sure someone will let me know if I've got the numbers wrong (notwithstanding the Euro to Sterling assumption of equality on the ARR bit). Wow....so the auction house screws everyone. With the ยฃ involved....why would they charge the seller an additional fee when they already make a large % on the buyers premium?
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GMA
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 1,962
๐๐ป 2,994
October 2015
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Christie's Art Auctions , by GMA on Apr 1, 2021 12:18:50 GMT 1, Not a minefield really and we should have a sticky thread on the forum for this I think @silky ? When you sell at auction the defacto position is that you pay the auction house 10% of the hammer (bid) price. So if a buyer bids ยฃ50k then you net ยฃ45k and the house gets ยฃ5k. In reality this is usually negotiable as has been discussed above. When you buy at auction you bid using the hammer price. So you bid ยฃ50k for a piece. There are add ons. These vary from house to house but are often broadly similar. On a piece of ยฃ50k there would be a 25% premium to pay (commission). So that's ยฃ12.5k. In addition to this there is VAT on the commission. That's 20% of 25% (so 5% of the hammer). Some online auctions charge 1% extra. Some artists in some territories attract ARR (Artist Resale Rights) where 4% on the first 50k (Euros) of the hammer price is paid to the artist... this then slides back to a lower scale as the price of the work climbs. So, any buyer needs to factor in the fact that what they are bidding for the work is only a part of what they will pay for it. Going back to the ยฃ50k bid. In the instance cited above, for an artist that attracts ARR, an extra 35% will be payable. 34% if the auction is in a saleroom. So, ยฃ50k x 35% = ยฃ17,500. This means the buyer will need to pay the auction house ยฃ67,500 to acquire the piece and the seller will receive ยฃ45,000. I'm sure someone will let me know if I've got the numbers wrong (notwithstanding the Euro to Sterling assumption of equality on the ARR bit). Wow....so the auction house screws everyone. With the ยฃ involved....why would they charge the seller an additional fee when they already make a large % on the buyers premium? Greed.
Not a minefield really and we should have a sticky thread on the forum for this I think @silky ? When you sell at auction the defacto position is that you pay the auction house 10% of the hammer (bid) price. So if a buyer bids ยฃ50k then you net ยฃ45k and the house gets ยฃ5k. In reality this is usually negotiable as has been discussed above. When you buy at auction you bid using the hammer price. So you bid ยฃ50k for a piece. There are add ons. These vary from house to house but are often broadly similar. On a piece of ยฃ50k there would be a 25% premium to pay (commission). So that's ยฃ12.5k. In addition to this there is VAT on the commission. That's 20% of 25% (so 5% of the hammer). Some online auctions charge 1% extra. Some artists in some territories attract ARR (Artist Resale Rights) where 4% on the first 50k (Euros) of the hammer price is paid to the artist... this then slides back to a lower scale as the price of the work climbs. So, any buyer needs to factor in the fact that what they are bidding for the work is only a part of what they will pay for it. Going back to the ยฃ50k bid. In the instance cited above, for an artist that attracts ARR, an extra 35% will be payable. 34% if the auction is in a saleroom. So, ยฃ50k x 35% = ยฃ17,500. This means the buyer will need to pay the auction house ยฃ67,500 to acquire the piece and the seller will receive ยฃ45,000. I'm sure someone will let me know if I've got the numbers wrong (notwithstanding the Euro to Sterling assumption of equality on the ARR bit). Wow....so the auction house screws everyone. With the ยฃ involved....why would they charge the seller an additional fee when they already make a large % on the buyers premium? Greed.
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Harveyn
Full Member
๐จ๏ธ 7,746
๐๐ป 4,900
July 2007
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Christie's Art Auctions , by Harveyn on Apr 1, 2021 12:25:38 GMT 1, Signed CND not getting much love ? One of my favourites. It will have its day again. All these prints have their mini roller coaster sales history but the trajectory in the last decade is an upward trend in general.
Signed CND not getting much love ? One of my favourites. It will have its day again. All these prints have their mini roller coaster sales history but the trajectory in the last decade is an upward trend in general.
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Lazarus II
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 1,804
๐๐ป 2,429
August 2019
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Christie's Art Auctions , by Lazarus II on Apr 1, 2021 12:48:26 GMT 1, Not a minefield really and we should have a sticky thread on the forum for this I think @silky ? When you sell at auction the defacto position is that you pay the auction house 10% of the hammer (bid) price. So if a buyer bids ยฃ50k then you net ยฃ45k and the house gets ยฃ5k. ย In reality this is usually negotiable as has been discussed above. When you buy at auction you bid using the hammer price. ย So you bid ยฃ50k for a piece. ย There are add ons. These vary from house to house but are often broadly similar. ย On a piece of ยฃ50k there would be a 25% premium to pay (commission). ย So that's ยฃ12.5k. ย In addition to this there is VAT on the commission. ย That's 20% of 25% (so 5% of the hammer). ย Some online auctions charge 1% extra. ย Some artists in some territories attract ARR (Artist Resale Rights) where 4% on the first 50k (Euros) of the hammer price is paid to the artist... this then slides back to a lower scale as the price of the work climbs. ย So, any buyer needs to factor in the fact that what they are bidding for the work is only a part of what they will pay for it. Going back to the ยฃ50k bid. ย In the instance cited above, for an artist that attracts ARR, an extra 35% will be payable. ย 34% if the auction is in a saleroom. ย So, ยฃ50k x 35% = ยฃ17,500. ย This means the buyer will need to pay the auction house ยฃ67,500 to acquire the piece and the seller will receive ยฃ45,000. I'm sure someone will let me know if I've got the numbers wrong (notwithstanding the Euro to Sterling assumption of equality on the ARR bit). Wow....so the auction house screws everyone. With the ยฃ involved....why would they charge the seller an additional fee when they already make a large % on the buyers premium? because they can, because they are a business and they are in business to make money.
Not a minefield really and we should have a sticky thread on the forum for this I think @silky ? When you sell at auction the defacto position is that you pay the auction house 10% of the hammer (bid) price. So if a buyer bids ยฃ50k then you net ยฃ45k and the house gets ยฃ5k. ย In reality this is usually negotiable as has been discussed above. When you buy at auction you bid using the hammer price. ย So you bid ยฃ50k for a piece. ย There are add ons. These vary from house to house but are often broadly similar. ย On a piece of ยฃ50k there would be a 25% premium to pay (commission). ย So that's ยฃ12.5k. ย In addition to this there is VAT on the commission. ย That's 20% of 25% (so 5% of the hammer). ย Some online auctions charge 1% extra. ย Some artists in some territories attract ARR (Artist Resale Rights) where 4% on the first 50k (Euros) of the hammer price is paid to the artist... this then slides back to a lower scale as the price of the work climbs. ย So, any buyer needs to factor in the fact that what they are bidding for the work is only a part of what they will pay for it. Going back to the ยฃ50k bid. ย In the instance cited above, for an artist that attracts ARR, an extra 35% will be payable. ย 34% if the auction is in a saleroom. ย So, ยฃ50k x 35% = ยฃ17,500. ย This means the buyer will need to pay the auction house ยฃ67,500 to acquire the piece and the seller will receive ยฃ45,000. I'm sure someone will let me know if I've got the numbers wrong (notwithstanding the Euro to Sterling assumption of equality on the ARR bit). Wow....so the auction house screws everyone. With the ยฃ involved....why would they charge the seller an additional fee when they already make a large % on the buyers premium? because they can, because they are a business and they are in business to make money.
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robo
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 1,582
๐๐ป 1,007
November 2006
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Christie's Art Auctions , by robo on Apr 1, 2021 12:54:32 GMT 1, You seem to be the only one stressing today and yesterday. Hoping to put people off bidding so you can snap em up, eh? ๐ Is it working though? lots ended already seemingly .. I didn't see this - do you have a screengrab?
You seem to be the only one stressing today and yesterday. Hoping to put people off bidding so you can snap em up, eh? ๐ Is it working though? lots ended already seemingly .. I didn't see this - do you have a screengrab?
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u%hdjfka c
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 1,005
๐๐ป 1,132
January 2021
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Christie's Art Auctions , by u%hdjfka c on Apr 1, 2021 13:00:25 GMT 1, Is it working though? lots ended already seemingly .. I didn't see this - do you have a screengrab? All original 47 lots are still active.
Is it working though? lots ended already seemingly .. I didn't see this - do you have a screengrab? All original 47 lots are still active.
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marquis
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 67
๐๐ป 50
January 2020
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Christie's Art Auctions , by marquis on Apr 1, 2021 13:17:18 GMT 1, Some lots still looking like bargains - Pulp Fiction (unsigned), Barcode, Trolleys (colour), Jack and Jill (unsigned), Grin Reaper...
Some lots still looking like bargains - Pulp Fiction (unsigned), Barcode, Trolleys (colour), Jack and Jill (unsigned), Grin Reaper...
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u%hdjfka c
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 1,005
๐๐ป 1,132
January 2021
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Christie's Art Auctions , by u%hdjfka c on Apr 1, 2021 13:32:02 GMT 1, Unsigned GWB now has a bid. Hoorah.
Unsigned GWB now has a bid. Hoorah.
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fusion0001
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 146
๐๐ป 415
November 2019
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Christie's Art Auctions , by fusion0001 on Apr 1, 2021 13:33:46 GMT 1, Quick summary of improvements in hammer prices since last "closing" of the auction
Laugh Now(Signed): 100000 -> 110000 (+10000) Bomb Hugger(Signed): 80000 -> 85000 (+5000) Pulp Fiction(AP): 95000 -> 100000 (+5000) Heavy Weaponry(Canvas): 200000 -> 220000 (+20000) Queen Vic(Signed): 40000 -> 42000 (+2000) Nola (White Rain)(Signed): 110000 -> 120000 (+10000) Sale Ends (V2)(Signed): 40000 -> 42000 (+2000) Barcode(Unsigned): 40000 -> 42000 (+2000) Bomb Hugger(Unsigned): 32000 -> 35000 (+3000) Jack and Jill(Unsigned): 30000 -> 32000 (+2000) HMV Dog(Unsigned): 30000 -> 32000 (+2000) Monkey Queen(Unsigned): 26000 -> 28000 (+2000) I Fought the Law(Unsigned): 26000 -> 28000 (+2000)
Quick summary of improvements in hammer prices since last "closing" of the auction
Laugh Now(Signed): 100000 -> 110000 (+10000) Bomb Hugger(Signed): 80000 -> 85000 (+5000) Pulp Fiction(AP): 95000 -> 100000 (+5000) Heavy Weaponry(Canvas): 200000 -> 220000 (+20000) Queen Vic(Signed): 40000 -> 42000 (+2000) Nola (White Rain)(Signed): 110000 -> 120000 (+10000) Sale Ends (V2)(Signed): 40000 -> 42000 (+2000) Barcode(Unsigned): 40000 -> 42000 (+2000) Bomb Hugger(Unsigned): 32000 -> 35000 (+3000) Jack and Jill(Unsigned): 30000 -> 32000 (+2000) HMV Dog(Unsigned): 30000 -> 32000 (+2000) Monkey Queen(Unsigned): 26000 -> 28000 (+2000) I Fought the Law(Unsigned): 26000 -> 28000 (+2000)
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lv90210
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 2,030
๐๐ป 1,926
January 2018
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Christie's Art Auctions , by lv90210 on Apr 1, 2021 13:38:47 GMT 1, I know people that are trying to bid now that canโt.
This is comical.
I know people that are trying to bid now that canโt.
This is comical.
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u%hdjfka c
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 1,005
๐๐ป 1,132
January 2021
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Christie's Art Auctions , by u%hdjfka c on Apr 1, 2021 13:40:28 GMT 1, Quick summary of improvements in hammer prices since last "closing" of the auction Laugh Now(Signed): 100000 -> 110000 (+10000) Bomb Hugger(Signed): 80000 -> 85000 (+5000) Pulp Fiction(AP): 95000 -> 100000 (+5000) Heavy Weaponry(Canvas): 200000 -> 220000 (+20000) Queen Vic(Signed): 40000 -> 42000 (+2000) Nola (White Rain)(Signed): 110000 -> 120000 (+10000) Sale Ends (V2)(Signed): 40000 -> 42000 (+2000) Barcode(Unsigned): 40000 -> 42000 (+2000) Bomb Hugger(Unsigned): 32000 -> 35000 (+3000) Jack and Jill(Unsigned): 30000 -> 32000 (+2000) HMV Dog(Unsigned): 30000 -> 32000 (+2000) Monkey Queen(Unsigned): 26000 -> 28000 (+2000) I Fought the Law(Unsigned): 26000 -> 28000 (+2000) Unsigned Girl with balloon ยฃ0 > ยฃ140000 (+140000)
Quick summary of improvements in hammer prices since last "closing" of the auction Laugh Now(Signed): 100000 -> 110000 (+10000) Bomb Hugger(Signed): 80000 -> 85000 (+5000) Pulp Fiction(AP): 95000 -> 100000 (+5000) Heavy Weaponry(Canvas): 200000 -> 220000 (+20000) Queen Vic(Signed): 40000 -> 42000 (+2000) Nola (White Rain)(Signed): 110000 -> 120000 (+10000) Sale Ends (V2)(Signed): 40000 -> 42000 (+2000) Barcode(Unsigned): 40000 -> 42000 (+2000) Bomb Hugger(Unsigned): 32000 -> 35000 (+3000) Jack and Jill(Unsigned): 30000 -> 32000 (+2000) HMV Dog(Unsigned): 30000 -> 32000 (+2000) Monkey Queen(Unsigned): 26000 -> 28000 (+2000) I Fought the Law(Unsigned): 26000 -> 28000 (+2000) Unsigned Girl with balloon ยฃ0 > ยฃ140000 (+140000)
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Reader
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 1,272
๐๐ป 2,833
June 2016
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Christie's Art Auctions , by Reader on Apr 1, 2021 13:40:45 GMT 1, I know people that are trying to bid now that canโt. This is comical. It's working fine
I know people that are trying to bid now that canโt. This is comical. It's working fine
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will1am
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 15
๐๐ป 5
August 2020
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Christie's Art Auctions , by will1am on Apr 1, 2021 13:44:47 GMT 1, I know people that are trying to bid now that canโt. This is comical. Maybe Christies should of asked eBay for a hand...
I know people that are trying to bid now that canโt. This is comical. Maybe Christies should of asked eBay for a hand...
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Pattycakes
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 1,379
๐๐ป 423
June 2007
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Christie's Art Auctions , by Pattycakes on Apr 1, 2021 13:45:00 GMT 1, I see they fixed the clock timer which was not synched properly.
I see they fixed the clock timer which was not synched properly.
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