Modern Art Obsession has a post from April 2009 (see below) about Steve Cohen exhibiting a collection of his art at Sotheby’s, (where he is the third largest owner). The exhibition ran exactly at the same time as Sotheby´s Spring Modern and Contemporary Auction. The Cohen art was not for sale.
Quote:
“So.. we guess there are other ways to dump an art collection skin a cat.
Hmmm… Maybe the page from the Billionaire Art Opportunist Collector playbook could be :
- Step 1.. Buy lots of Art, push prices way up, and tell everyone who’ll listenin the media you’re a wise long term buyer.
- (Photo #1, Richard Prince, “Graduate Nurse, 2002”,Ink jet print and acrylic on canvas,89 in x 52 in. FYI… A description from Sotheby’s.. “This work is one of the best paintings Prince ever made, particularly because of its monumental scale and the rich, painterly quality of the brushstrokes”)
- Step 2.. Buy an art auction house (or a Whopping controlling interest in one),
- Step 3.. Stage a show of the great works having auction house experts tout your collection..
- Step 4..Tell everyone these art works, on proud display, are not for sale
- Step 5… Wait for someone stupid enough to say.. I wish I could have a collection like the one by this well known art collector, which just happens to be on display in the auction house.
- Step 6.. To be determined…. Hmm.. possibly.. Cash out..??
Note: Cohen’s SAC Capital amassed its position in Sotheby’s in the 6 months upto March 31, 2009, and Sotheby’s shares doubled by June 2009 from a low in February.
Correction (January 7, 1020): Cohen sold his stake in June:
The fund acquired its Sotheby’s stake between September and April, a period in which the auction house’s stock was battered by the financial crisis and a shrinking art market. The share price was below $10 for much of that period, down from a high of $61.40 at the end of the boom. This spring, the stock rebounded somewhat – it was $14.48 a share on June 30, so SAC’s sale of its roughly four million shares was likely to have netted several million dollars