American Decades
The Art Boom
Money, Money.
The wealth and prosperity enjoyed by upper- and middle-class Americans during much of the 1980s brought about tremendous growth in the art market, particularly in New York City, as Americans rushed to invest in art. Between 1983 and 1985 more than one hundred galleries opened in New York, seventy-eight of them in the East Village. Gallery sales in 1984 alone exceeded $1 billion. That year 50 percent of all auction transactions were under $1,000; only four years later the average price paid for a work of art had risen to between $7,000 and $11,000. Top auction prices for single works, paid mostly by dealers, hovered at about $3 million early in the decade. By the end of the 1980s individual works were selling to private bidders for ten to twenty times that amount. Sales at each of the two biggest New York auction houses, Sotheby's and Christie's, surpassed $1 billion in 1987 and accounted for a third of the world's art...
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1980's The Arts
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- The Art Boom
- Art Stars
- Art Trends: Politics and Performance
- Culture Wars
- Hip-Hop Culture
- Hollywood: The Bottom Line
- Hollywood Under Reagan
- Literary Stars
- Music Video
- Pop-Music Stars
- Rock-Music Causes
- The Theater Boom
- Trends in Classical Music
- Trends in Country Music
- Trends in Jazz
- Trends in Underground Music
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Awards
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in the Arts, 1980–1989
