The Artnet Intelligence Report (Spring 2022)

Illustrator: Flatbush Brown.

Artnet News’ Spring 2022 edition of the Intelligence Report shares the biggest takeaways from the market’s performance last year—and insider tips on how to get ahead in 2022. Megan Fox Kelly contributes to the report’s ‘Marketplace: The Best Seller List (Photography and Impressionist & Modern)’ categories.

In the Photography category, Ansel Adams’ Moonrise, Hernandez, New Mexico (1941) fetched $930,000 at Christie’s, surpassing its healthy $700,000 high estimate. When the picture last sold, in 1996, it achieved $36,650, making the latest price “an extraordinary jump for Ansel Adams,” art advisor Megan Fox Kelly said. Years ago, Adams’ work was primarily the domain of photography specialists. But over time, and with the increased reach provided by online viewing and bidding, he’s begun to attract crossover interest. It doesn’t hurt, Fox Kelly noted, that this image is “particularly beautiful.”

In the Impressionist and Modern category, the Artnet News team reports that “Two top-flight collections made the often sleepy Imp-Mod category—defined as work made by artists born between 1821 and 1910—perhaps the hottest of the year […] all told, eight Imp-Mod paintings fetched more than $50 million each.”

The Getty Museum purchased Gustave Caillebotte’s Jeune homme à sa fenêtre (1876), the final lot of the Cox sale, and swiftly put it on public view. Expected to bring above $50 million, the rare and imposing painting of the artist’s brother sold for a premium-inclusive $53 million, shattering the artist’s $22 million record. Some experts said the canvas had notable condition problems, particularly in the black at the center. “There has never been anything like it on the auction market, making it not only a rare opportunity to get such a signature Impressionist painting but also making it one of those difficult-to-estimate lots,” said Megan Fox Kelly.

“People were concerned about how deep the highest end of the market was,” said Megan Fox Kelly. The results proved that demand was there.

Read the full Intelligence Report here.