bmattock
Veteran
Thought you might find this article interesting. Don't worry, no FID, it's dolphin-safe and sanitized for your protection.
Here are some selected quotes - the rest by following the link below.
Best Regards,
Bill Mattocks
http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ent/3709969.html
Here are some selected quotes - the rest by following the link below.
Best Regards,
Bill Mattocks
http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ent/3709969.html
March 9, 2006, 9:40AM
FotoFest 2006
Big pictures feed a growing photography market
By BILL DAVENPORT
For the Chronicle
The exploding market for fine-art photography is delighting some of Houston's arts groups and dismaying others.
Last month, the Houston Center for Photography's annual print auction raised $80,000 — twice the amount expected. And Tuesday's FotoFest auction seems likely to set another record. Sponsored tables for the annual event, held in the DoubleTree Hotel Ballroom, sold out weeks in advance, and more than 400 people are expected to attend.
...
According to Clint Willour, past board president of the Houston Center for Photography and co-chairman of the photography accessions subcommittee at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, "The new thing in photography over the last few years has been make it bigger, make it brighter, face-mount it to Plexiglas or mount it on aluminum so it becomes an object. No longer is it something you can hold in your hand that was made by a camera that's intimate. It's big, it's probably computer-generated, it's heavy, and it's fragile."
Anne Tucker, curator of photography at the Houston museum, concurs. "It's the end of traditional photography. People ask me if I collect digital, and I reply, 'What choice do I have?' It's a nightmare for me, all these giant pictures. They're very heavy."
...
For gallery owners, that's mainly good news. Houston photo dealer John Cleary, owner of John Cleary Gallery, says, "I've been in business 18 years, and I just started making money a year and a half ago."
Even so, the soaring market is not without its downside. "I've been desperately trying to buy new material," says Cleary. "I went to every auction in New York and only bought two pieces. It's hard to buy them."
And now, he notes, it's even harder to resell photos in Houston for what they might fetch in New York: "Up there, it's the World Series. Down here, we're the minor leagues."