In the course of the VIP preview for The European Wonderful Artwork Honest (Tefaf) in New York, collectors dodged oyster shuckers and glasses of champagne all through the Gilded Age areas of the Park Avenue Armory, desperate to ask sellers which works had been accessible and for the way a lot, seemingly extra keen to talk about purchases than patrons at different latest festivals.
This 12 months’s truthful options 91 galleries underneath the venue’s wrought-iron arches and its historic rooms, and regardless of a busy spring artwork season in New York, the variety of folks attending the invitee-only preview on Thursday (11 Could) recommended that Tefaf is a must-see for a lot of within the artwork world—stars seen perusing stands in the course of the preview included Anderson Cooper, the broadcaster and collector. In contrast to Tefaf Maastricht, the truthful’s authentic Dutch version that centres Outdated Masters and antiquities, sellers at Tefaf New York are likely to put extra of an emphasis on Trendy and up to date artwork and design.
New York-based Gladstone gallery offered out its solo stand devoted to Robert Rauschenberg’s Thai drawings from 1983, priced at $90,000 every. Lisson offered Sean Scully’s Wall Darkish Blue (2022) to a personal assortment in Asia for an undisclosed worth. Nathalie Obadia, a Paris gallery participating in Tefaf for the primary time, offered a number of works on paper by Shirley Jafffe for between $35,000 and $50,000, and Wang Keping sculptures priced between €55,000 and €120,000. Di Donna offered a piece by Surrealist Méret Oppenheim to a museum, and Hazlitt Holland-Hibbert offered 4 works by Bridget Riley.
London gallery Richard Inexperienced offered Household Group (1949), a sculpture by Henry Extra, and Branksome Dene (1916), a portray by Winston Churchill. Peter Freeman offered Blah, Blah, Blah (2008), an ink-on-paper work by Mel Bochner with an asking worth of $20,000. The gallery additionally offered three latest sculptures by Charles Ledray, with asking costs between $7,000 and $10,000.

A view of Di Donna’s stand, displaying work by Méret Oppenheim, at Tefaf New York 2023. Courtesy Di Donna
Whereas financial jitters have made rich collectors extra selective in terms of artwork purchases, Tefaf govt committee president Hidde Van Seggelen says the truthful occupies a sector of the market that has been comparatively resilient.
“It could be silly to disclaim that due to the unrest we’ve on the earth, however you continue to see actual will increase in high-value gadgets,” Van Seggelen says. In line with the most recent Artwork Market report from Artwork Basel and UBS, launched final month, sellers with the best annual turnovers—greater than $10m—had been those who skilled the most important improve in common gross sales values final 12 months, at 19%.
Van Seggelen says he’s seen extra work by ladies on the market at this Tefaf than in earlier years, although the truthful hasn’t tracked what number of sellers are promoting works by ladies or how the determine might have grown. Sellers stated extra collectors have expressed curiosity in shopping for work by ladies at this 12 months’s truthful, with one noting it could be partially resulting from museum curators focusing extra on long-overlooked feminine artists, which might jumpstart the marketplace for an artist’s work. (Extra museum representatives are visiting the truthful this 12 months than previous editions, Van Seggelen provides).
Emmanuel Di Donna from Di Donna, a New York gallery specialising in Surrealism, says he’s seen renewed curiosity in works by ladies who had been a part of the motion, together with Leonora Carrington and Dorothea Tanning. Di Donna’s Tefaf stand is a presentation of labor by Oppenheim, the German-Swiss Surrealist who labored alongside artists like Man Ray, Max Ernst and Marcel Duchamp. The works are priced from $33,000 to only over $1m. Whereas Di Donna refers to Oppenheim as “the good feminine Surrealist”, he provides that it was a title she would have disliked. She championed the concept of inventive androgyny, influenced by psychoanalyst Carl Jung, as was explored within the travelling retrospective that was on view on the Museum of Trendy Artwork till early March.
“For Oppenheim, there was no distinction between a male or a feminine artist. She had very robust views about feminism,” Di Donna says. “She refused to be in reveals the place solely feminine artists had been proven.”

Bridget Riley’s Untitled [1 July Bassacs] (2004) Courtesy the artist and Hazlitt Holland-Hibbert
London gallery Hazlitt Holland-Hibbert has a solo stand devoted to Riley, the revered British Op artist who lately turned 92 and stays very lively—she lately accomplished a big ceiling portray on the British Faculty at Rome. The work on sale at Tefaf is from a vibrant collection Riley labored on within the 2000s, with costs starting from $200,000 to $2.8m. (A travelling exhibition of Riley’s works on paper will probably be on view on the Morgan Library & Museum in New York from 23 June till 8 October).
“Bridget has by no means referred to herself as a girl artist. So far as she’s involved, gender just isn’t the vital problem in terms of creating artworks,” says James Holland-Hibbert, who has labored intently with Riley for years. “Nevertheless, I feel it is vital that girls artists are extra uncovered to the market extra [and] collected extra.”
Gallery Hyundai from Seoul placed on a solo stand for Korean artist Minjung Kim, whose work on Hanji paper (created from mulberries) is knowledgeable by each conventional Korean artwork and European influences she absorbed whereas learning in Milan. Her work on the stand ranges in worth from $44,000 to $152,000.
Pauline Chiche, senior director of the Paris-based Nathalie Obadia gallery, says the supplier’s option to convey work by Jaffe to Tefaf wasn’t due to the artist’s gender. Jaffe’s works on paper vary from $35,000 to $50,000, whereas work value between $250,000 and $300,000.
“It is true that on this group of artists we current there’s many ladies artists, nevertheless it’s not a standards,” Chiche says, including that the gallery started representing the Jaffe property years in the past. “Many collectors are actually specializing in ladies Summary Expressionists. And he or she’s in it, however we have already been working together with her for an extended, very long time.”

Untitled (347) (1973) by Verena Loewensberg Courtesy The Mayor Gallery
The Mayor Gallery in London unveiled a solo stand for twentieth century Swiss artist Verena Lowensberg, a recent of Zürich creatives like Max Invoice, Richard Paul Lohse and Camille Graeser. Her vibrant, minimal work are on supply for $180,000 every. John Austin, a director on the gallery, says they wished to highlight Lowensberg, who died in 1986.
“Her profession was positively held again to being a girl. She had two kids, she was divorced. She needed to earn her personal dwelling,” Austin says. “It was an actual, actual battle. She continued to color on a regular basis all by means of her life. She was by no means deterred by that.”
- Tefaf New York, till 16 Could, Park Avenue Armory, New York