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For the fifth consecutive year, Christie’s has beaten the annual art sales record, clocking up £5.1 billion ($8.4 billion dollars) of sales during 2014, which is up 12 percent on 2013. The figure includes private (as opposed to public) sales of £916 million, and online only sales of £21.4 million. But the majority was for good old-fashioned public auction sales (up 10 per cent to £4.2 billion).

Of the many categories of sale Christie’s holds, the largest by far is for post-war and contemporary art, the driving engine of the auction market. Sales in this category at Christie’s rose by 33 per cent last year to £1.7 billion ($2.8 billion), accounting for an extraordinary 40.5 per cent of public auction sales.

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Amsterdam’s Van Gogh Museum is selling a limited number of replicas of the artist’s sketchbooks for the first time ever. While only four of Vincent van Gogh’s (1853-1890) sketchbooks exist today, together they offer a rare insight into the artist’s life and artistic process.

Executed in pencil and black charcoal as well as ink and chalk, the entries include scribblings, quickly drawn notes, copies of poems, and a number of thought-out studies for later paintings including The Sower (1888). The publication marks the first time that all four sketchbooks will be replicated. A limited number of 1,000 editions are currently on sale at the museum’s shop and online sales are slated to start next week. A box set containing the four sketchbooks and a short commentary is retailing for $850.

Three of the four original sketchbooks are currently part of the Van Gogh Museum’s exhibition Van Gogh at Work. The show, which inaugurated the museum’s newly renovated space, coincides with the 160th anniversary of the artist’s birth and offers an extensive overview of van Gogh’s oeuvre.

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The first VIP art fair, in January 2011,  was – as you probably know – a thorough disaster from the kickoff – not only because almost no one bought, but because for much of it, no one could buy, thanks to dozens of tech glitches that undermined the entire affair.

Undaunted, organizers set forth to create VIP Artfair 2.0 (would someone please tell me what is wrong with the simple number “two,” and why decimal points have become de rigeur in the naming and marketing of things other than computer programs and operating systems?)  which ran last week, presumably strengthened in this edition by $1 million in backing from Australian art collector Philip Keir and the Brazilian investor Selmo Nissenbaum.  Predictably, it, too, failed – though what actually surprises me is that this failure actually came as a surprise to others.

An art fair, boys and girls, is not a department store.  The notion that viewing art online can replace the experience of attending a real art fair is like believing that watching the Super Bowl in your pajamas is the same as running quarterback yourself. People go to art fairs to see the art they don’t get to see in their own backyards, works they are only otherwise able to see virtually on gallery web sites and the apps of various collections.  They go to art fairs for the buzz, which is as tangible as impasto  as collectors roam aisles, encounter friends, stay out too late at parties, stumble into one another over hotel breakfasts, visit and revisit paintings they can actually touch and witness in real light, at all angles, the glistening of oil paint and flat saturation of acrylic into canvas a feast of visual wealth.

That’s what an art fair is.

Granted, as the New York Times described it, the creators of the VIP Art Fair did what they could: “Individual works,” they reported, “have ‘scale’ buttons under them that you can click to produce a little gray doppelganger of a real-world fairgoer (in silhouette with arms crossed, as if contemplating the work) to get an idea of its size.”  But anyone who really thinks that this suffices has no real sense of what art is – and only of, well, what “shopping” is, like the way department store web sites allow you to “try on” an item of clothing. (Noted ArtInfo.com, “Like Starbucks, VIP has its own lingo when it comes to the different sizes, though here instead of ‘Grande’ and ‘Tall,’ one selected among ‘Premier Large,’ ‘Premier Medium,’ ‘Premier Small,’ and ‘Emerging’ galleries, as well as sections for ‘Focus’ solo shows and ‘Multiples & Editions’ being sold by museums and institutions.” The cutesy-ness would be nauseating if it weren’t, in principle alone, so thoroughly offensive to begin with.)

In the recent world of art speculation, the ‘scale button’ concept might suffice for some – but even speculators, on the whole, want the real thing.  If nothing else, they need to check condition, never mind the desire to assess a work’s presence in a room, its proportionality, the way it reflects shadow and light.  After all, if a picture of a picture really were enough, who would ever visit the museums?

Many years ago, in fact, I drove with my then-boyfriend from Basel down to Florence, where we parked the car – quite coincidentally – along the side of the Santa Maria Novella – a church I had studied in delicious detail in college art history classes.  Seeing it rising there in front of me, I burst into tears: There it was.  Right there. In front of me.  To see, to touch, to surround myself in.  That is what art is.

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