Artprice launches free and paid dashboards and indexes

Image courtesty of Stuart Miles/FreeDigitalPhotos.net
Art market information provider Artprice has launched free and paid dashboards and indexes to provide easy access to key figures about the performance of artists and their work in the art market.
A few years ago Artprice acquired Xylogic, a Swiss company created by leading scientists in 1987. Xylogic was the only company in the world producing indexes and econometric tools for an extremely powerful art market elite consisting of art experts, international auction firms, and major art collectors.
Until now, Artprice has given access to extremely sophisticated data developed by its econometrics and statistics department via its high-end subscriptions. Artprice mines and exploits a huge volume of market data to produce information based on the method of repeat sales. This method consists in meticulously tracing the ownership history of artworks in order to calculate their value through the years.
Today, the commercial success of mobile Internet is influencing the way Artprice works, with the mobile Internet is expected to account for 80% of Artprice consultations in the very near future.
A year ago Artprice decided to accelerate its disruption of the art market by asking its econometric department to develop a series of extremely simple applications specially designed for mobile Internet usability. These applications allow Artprice to respond to 70 million art consumers, amateurs, collectors and art market professionals, and not just to the aforementioned elite that used to control the market.
“Now, within seconds, a buyer or seller using a smartphone, phablet, tablet or pc can access graphic displays of an artist’s price index, the number of works sold per year, his/her annual auction turnover, his unsold rate, the geographic distribution of his sales per country, per price segment or per artistic medium, not to mention an array of more advanced options,” said Artprice in a release.
“In just three mouse-clicks, the non-initiate can compare the price curves of two artists and check the performance of an artist versus the Artprice Global Index (Artprice’s general Art Market Index that become an authoritative reference in the business over the last 18 years).
“At the same time, he can also compare the artist’s valuation to the major stock market indexes like the S&P 500, the DAX, the CAC40, the FTSE, the NIKKEI and the S&P Asia 50.”
Over the past 18 years the art market has seen exponential financialization. Most of the world’s major private banks and wealth management institutions are clients of Artprice.
“To create a shock wave and literally reshape the Art Market, we needed to condense the market’s macro- and micro-economic data so that non-initiates could get access to easily understandable and pertinent information about artists and thus be in a position to negotiate on equal terms with seasoned professionals,” said Artprice.
“In addition, to generate a truly disruptive and viral economy, a major proportion of these indices are free online, and these indices are today essential features of an artist’s online profile in freemium mode (the freemium model provides the basic data in free mode and the value-added data in pay mode) generating an irreversible shockwave to the traditional relationship between art buyers and art sellers. This principle will generate an impressive number of new Artprice members because to get access to this freemium mode information they will need to register with Artprice.”
Now, using their smartphones, tablets and PCs, buyers can rapidly obtain summarized and pertinent figures that sellers cannot ignore without risking being destabilized in negotiations.
“To avoid this, sellers will have to join Artprice to restore a symmetrical information relationship with their customers. For centuries asymmetrical information enabled a highly structured market to buy and sell art with margins that no longer have any economic justification in the 21st century.”
Since January 2014, Artprice has accelerated the injection of 80% of its data in online free mode and now provides freeware access to 630 million data covering the period 1700 to the present day (in the form of owner application licenses distributed free of charge but with certain user restrictions) via its agreements with Google (since 2003) and Baidu (China). The same approach has been activated in 2014 with Bing (Microsoft) which has a market share of 18.4% in the USA. So, as of Tuesday, September 2, 2014, the dashboards and indexes will immediately be directed to all these search engines.