Palm Beach
16th American International Fine Art Fair
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Presse23.02.2012
The 16th American International Fine Art Fair Reports Strong Results by a Number of Exhibitors
Palm Beach, FL - February 22, 2012– American International Fine Art Fair (AIFAF) opened its 16th edition on February 3rd with early, substantial sales. A total of 28,000 collectors visited the fair throughout the 10-day event.
Introducing a dramatic new design this year, the Fair featured a sleeker more modern look with LED lit fascia and black and grey toned wall coverings. The revamp was well received with positive comments from attendees and press:
“It was clear - this wasn’t going to be your grandmother’s antique show,” commented ARTINFO.com journalist Janelle Zara in an article appearing the Monday following the fair opening. She continued, “a new hipness was palpable.”
ARTNET headlined its review “AIFAF Palm Beach - Super-Chic Design and More…”
Within the first two hours of opening night Holden Luntz Gallery of Palm Beach had sold the signature AIFAF Fair image, “Girls in the Window” by Ormond Gigli, for $30,000 dollars. Additional prints of the photograph were sold throughout the following days along with multiple other works.
Also with early sales - London gallery, Richard Green, reported several seven-figure sales to numerous collectors including a work by French impressionist Alfred Sisley priced at 2 million dollars, a painting by Le Sidaner priced at 1.2 million, a major Montague Dawson Battle of Trafalgar as well as four Grimshaw works from a special featured exhibition of the artist’s work.
Galerie Terminus of Munich sold an original Richter from 1986 for an undisclosed seven-figure sum, a major Tom Wesselman cut-out priced at $485,000 as well as additional works including an original Zhuang Hong Yi.
Waterhouse & Dodd of London sold an original work by American sculptor and artist Alexander Calder as well as a Picasso drawing and various other works.
Michael Goedhuis – long-time exhibitor specializing in Chinese and Asian contemporary art and antiques - reported numerous sales with mid six-figure range.
Mark Borghi Fine Art reported the sale of a Sam Francis acrylic painting, Untitled, 1994; a Jules Olitski pastel, Untitled; and a George Condo work on paper, Untitled, 1983.
Imperial Fine Books sold an extremely rare collection, Records of the Federated Convention, 1787, signed by the signers of the Constitution for 160,000 dollars.
Wick Antiques reported the sale of a French Dieppe ivory dagger from France and multiple other works.
Among other dealers reporting sales were Alexander Gallery, Arcature Fine Art, Art Link, Avant Gallery, Christopher Kaufmann, Faberge, Garrido Gallery, Gladwell & Company, Guarisco Gallery, Jewels by Viggi, KM Fine Arts, Mallett, Mark Helliar 20th Century Design, Peter Finer, Rehs Galleries, Richter’s, Rosenberg Diamonds, The Silver Fund, Stern Pissarro, Thomas Colville, and Yvel.
In addition to significant sales, AIFAF attracted a diverse group of attendees including prominent collectors, museum curators, and NY press.
The American International Fine Art Fair will return February 6 – 10, with a new more compact six-day format designed so that the fair can offer visitors a full week of day and evening activities including a larger fair, a new educational Symposia, a Gala Charity Vernissage on February 5th, two Culinary Arts evenings with prominent visiting celebrity chefs which will be held in the fair itself on the evenings of Wednesday, February 6th and Thursday, February 7th, and visitors and fair guests will have the opportunity to attend prominent Palm Beach charity balls at landmark locations on Friday, February 8th and Saturday February 9th.