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By Vivian L. Ebersman
Director, Fine Art Department AXA Art Insurance Corporation
Caring for Your Art, by AXA Art Insurance Corporation
You’ve
assembled a collection. How do you look after it? First of all,
this is an ongoing process extending from proper installation and
the right insurance coverage to planning for subsequent stewardship.
A conservator, appraiser, and attorney may all play a role.
Documenting
each work
A good first step is documenting and tracking relevant information.
Maintain a separate file for each work. Include the purchase invoice
with date and seller. Ask the gallery or auction house for available
photographs as well as exhibition and conservation histories. Take
color photographs of the back and front of a painting, and several
angles of a three-dimensional object. Record any information on
the back of a photograph as it will be hidden once the work is framed.
Train your eye to detect all nuances about the baseline condition
of each object: Is there an anomalous patch of paint? Do striations
appear in the patina of a bronze sculpture? Date all observations.
Finish by completing the checklist at the end of this article.
Your records can be paper, electronic or a mixture. With a simple
spreadsheet, Microsoft Access database or off-the-shelf collection
management software, you can create reports with ease. Plan to store
a copy of your data in a separate location.
Although you may prune works from your collection, keep the records.
They are a valuable part of your collection’s history.
Research
Learn all you can about the content or meaning of each work and
the times in which it was made. Research the artist’s biography.
Make it a goal to visit exhibitions of artists you collect. Clip
and save their reviews from newspapers, magazines and on-line. Follow
their stylistic development. Whose works are like theirs? What periods
within their work are considered most important? Challenge yourself
to grasp the details as well as the large picture.
Tracking
You will want to be aware of the market conditions for the areas
in which you collect. Are values climbing, falling or remaining
stable? This information will guide many decisions, from insurance
and gifting to security and estate planning. Auction catalogues
as well as on-line auction databases such as Artnet.com, artprice.com,
or AskART.com provide a useful range of pricing for paintings and
sculptures. Artfact.com follows furniture and decorative arts as
well.
For a more precise figure turn to a certified appraiser. Specify
whether you require fair market value (the basis – with adjustments
– for taxes, gifts, and donations) or replacement value (for
insurance). Fair Market Value is equivalent to the price likely
to be received at auction. Replacement value is usually higher,
and can be thought of as an object’s retail price. It is wise
to have a collection re-appraised every five years or so. As the
foregoing suggests, good collections management is the rational
side of collecting. Yet its rewards are also satisfying, and it
yields a fine result: a collection secured for the ages.
Checklist
Below is essential information to record about each item in your
collection. Find a similar checklist at www.axa-art.com>Collectors
World>Managing Your Collection.
•Artist/Maker
•
Dates of Artist/Maker
•
Title of Work
•
Description of Subject Matter or Type of Work
•
Date of Work
•
Materials
•
Dimensions
•
Condition: Describe the object’s surface, and carefully
note any changes during periodic re-examinations. If you send
a work for conservation, obtain the conservator’s report
and file it. Note in your record the date of the report and that
you have added it to the file.
•
Inscriptions and Markings: Examine the back as
well as the front of every two-dimensional work. Record earlier
labels, inventory numbers, artist signatures and all other writing.
•
Distinguishing Features
•
Location of Object: Especially important if you
have more than one residence.
•
Display: Who framed or mounted it? How was it secured?
•
Provenance: What is the collection history of the object?
To whom did it previously belong? Pay special attention to antiquities
and to any work created before 1946 thought to have been in Europe
after 1932.
•
Bibliography: Is your work cited in the catalogue raisonné
of the artist? This will definitely affect valuation, as authentication
frequently depends on a work’s inclusion in the accepted
catalogue raisonné. Are there other citations?
•
Exhibition History: If possible file a copy of
the catalogue of any show in which a work has appeared. Otherwise
make a copy of the complete reference including dates and location.
•
Purchase Price and Date
•
Appraisal History
•
Loan History: Record exhibition dates, venues and the
value placed on the work at the time of the loan. Make notes about
its condition before it leaves, and require a condition report
from each location.
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