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Russians Turning To Art Market As Recession Looms

Sculpture in a gallery in Moscow
Enlarge Gregory Feifer/NPR

A sculpture in the home of Moscow gallery owner Marat Guelman.

Sculpture in a gallery in Moscow
Gregory Feifer/NPR

The Russian art market is characterized chiefly by its potential, says Marat Guelman, who owns a gallery in Moscow.

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October 22, 2008

As the global financial crisis pushes the world toward recession, one sector appears to have been unharmed so far: the international art market. One reason may be the appearance of new buyers from countries like Russia, which is seeing a boom in contemporary art.

Lehman Brothers may have filed for bankruptcy last month, but when British artist Damien Hirst held a Sotheby's auction the same day, he astounded the art world by raising almost $100 million. A third of the buyers — picking up items such as pickled animals and a diamond-encrusted filing cabinet — were believed to be from the former Soviet Union.

Sotheby's director in Moscow, Mikhail Kamenskii, says wealthy Russians used to shelling out for expensive cars and houses are now plunging into the art market.

"It's coming back as a new fashion, as a new tradition to buy luxury goods," Kamenskii says.

 
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