• Washington
  • Wall Street
  • A.I.
  • Hollywood
  • Media
  • Fashion
  • Sports
  • Art
  • Join Puck Newsletters What is puck? Authors Podcasts Gift Puck Careers Events
  • Join Puck

    Directly Supporting Authors

    A new economic model in which writers are also partners in the business.

    Personalized Subscriptions

    Customize your settings to receive the newsletters you want from the authors you follow.

    Stay in the Know

    Connect directly with Puck talent through email and exclusive events.

  • What is puck? Newsletters Authors Podcasts Events Gift Puck Careers
Jan. 28, 2025
Wall Power
Range
Rover Sport
Marion Maneker Marion Maneker
Welcome back to Wall Power and our Tuesday dispatch from the art world. I’m Marion Maneker. Tonight I’m returning to the subject of Giorgio Morandi—specifically, the extraordinary Magnani-Rocca Foundation collection of 50 works that David Zwirner has kindly brought to New York. The show is both an opportunity to look at Morandi’s market and a reminder that even some of the most influential and popular artists’ markets can still be accessible—at least relative to what trophy art costs. For my Morandi analysis, I turned once again to ARTDAI’s market data—a tool that I’ve found invaluable for understanding artists’ markets. For that reason, we’ve partnered with the firm to provide individuals access to their data. (ARTDAI focuses on institutional client relationships.) If you’re interested, inquire through this link. We may get a commission if you sign up.
A MESSAGE FROM OUR SPONSOR
Range
Rover Sport
Range
Rover Sport
PERFORMANCE UNLEASHED With a distinct sporting personality, the Range Rover Sport is a peerless performer. EXPLORE
More on Morandi, below. But first…
  • Nathan Drahi gets a promotion: Today, Sotheby’s C.E.O. Charles Stewart announced in an internal memo that Nathan Drahi, son of Sotheby’s owner Patrick Drahi, will assume the role of global head of business development on February 3. In that role, he will develop “holistic strategies for client management, with a particular focus on new client acquisition and growth, migrating toward a client-centric business model, and increasing accountability and coverage frameworks to support our existing client base.” So what does that actually mean in practice for the young executive, who spent five years as managing director of Asia for Sotheby’s? He’ll oversee the valuations department and regional offices.
  • Pace’s new space: Pace Gallery has announced that it will start sharing a space in Berlin this May, during the city’s gallery weekend. Together with Galerie Judin—with whom it also shares representation of artist Adrian Ghenie—Pace will occupy a museum space originally built as a gas station in 1954, amid Berlin’s postwar reconstruction. The location will be led by senior director Laura Attanasio, who’s been in Berlin for Pace since 2023, and has been, in the words of the press release, “supporting institutional projects for its artists and deepening connections with collectors and arts communities in German-speaking regions.” Pace plans to mount two public exhibitions a year in the new space, and Attanasio will relocate Pace’s Berlin office there in April.
  • 2024 auction house market share: Now that Sotheby’s has released its 2024 results, we can do a rough calculation on market share for the four main houses operating in the U.S., which together reported $14.4 billion in sales last year. Sotheby’s pulled 41.6 percent; Christie’s was just behind, at 39.5 percent; Heritage clocked in at 13 percent; with Phillips at 6 percent.I’m wary of providing market-share numbers for the auction business since, among other reasons, it’s hard to define what business we’re talking about. Sotheby’s and Christie’s are the dominant players—a duopoly, really—in fine art. But as we saw on Sunday, a large portion of Sotheby’s sales comes from non-art auctions. Indeed, no two houses have the same mix of property in their results. There’s also the issue of international sales. Heritage has offices abroad, but almost all of their sales are stateside. Phillips doesn’t break out their numbers by region. Christie’s doesn’t give us consolidated sales by region. The folks at Heritage asked me to give them some credit for their relative size in a business that somewhat ignores them because they’re based in Dallas and deal primarily in non-art objects. But as I’ve said repeatedly—and will keep on saying—there’s a lot of cultural property out there that’s becoming more and more valuable. Heritage’s $1.87 billion in sales last year is almost exactly half of Sotheby’s $3.72 billion in U.S. consolidated sales, which gives you a sense of how important the collectibles market has become.
Now, for the main event…
The Mystery of the Morandi Market

The Mystery of the Morandi Market

A second extraordinary show of Giorgio Morandi’s art has opened in New York in the span of four months. Artists and collectors swoon over the Italian recluse’s muted masterpieces, but his auction market and prices have never followed suit. Will they now?
Marion Maneker Marion Maneker
“This is our gift to New York,” said David Leiber, a man not normally prone to grandiose statements, as Julie Davich and I toured the opening of Giorgio Morandi: Masterpieces From the Magnani-Rocca Foundation, which is on loan to David Zwirner’s gallery space on West 20th Street for a brief five weeks. Leiber was explaining why Zwirner had borrowed the Morandis from the private Italian foundation and chose to present them as he had. The gallery, Leiber noted, likes to show art with plenty of wall space around the individual work, which is quite different from the European salon style of exhibition. So the gift here was not merely the chance to behold these Morandis, but also to see them in a different context from how they were normally hung. It’s a gift to anyone, even if you’re not an artist or collector—indeed, I’d recommend going back more than once, since Morandi benefits from multiple viewings. The Magnani-Rocca Foundation’s unique collection of 50 Morandi works, which normally fills a villa in Parma, spans the range of his career and bears his personal efforts to shape his legacy, since Morandi helped select his own works for Luigi Magnani to collect. The latter was a musicologist, art critic, and collector born at the beginning of the 20th century to a mother with a noble lineage and a father who built a small fortune in the dairy industry. Magnani’s refined bourgeois life was a contrast to Morandi’s cloistered existence in Bologna. But, as Leiber explained, Morandi’s work was represented by a prominent gallery and well known to art collectors throughout his lifetime.
A MESSAGE FROM OUR SPONSOR
Range
Rover Sport
Range
Rover Sport
PERFORMANCE UNLEASHED With a distinct sporting personality, the Range Rover Sport is a peerless performer. EXPLORE
The result is a collection that offers a capsule retrospective of Morandi’s entire body of work. A printmaker, painter, and watercolorist, Morandi had three main subjects of his work: endless variations on tabletop still lifes, floral images, and landscapes. In the Magnani collection, you’ll see the delicate interplay between form and image. Its presence in New York is the product of at least two years of effort by Leiber, who has an affinity for Italian art, and noticed several years ago that the Magnani-Rocca foundation closed in the winter. So Leiber began the process of bringing Magnani’s Morandis to New York—no small feat, given that Morandi’s quiet, often gnostic work is jealously guarded by the Italian state, especially now that the defense of its cultural heritage has become a right-wing talking point for Giorgia Meloni’s nationalist government. Leiber was sweating export permits until the very last minute. But in the end, he got them, and New York got its second spectacular Morandi show in the short span of four months. As Wall Power readers know from our interview with Mattia De Luca about his pop-up of Morandi’s work last fall, the first show offered a very different take on the same subject. De Luca was captivated by the subtle differences and similarities, often decades apart, in the way Morandi treated his still lifes, landscapes, and floral paintings. De Luca gathered as much of Morandi’s work together as he could, to allow viewers to see the carefully calibrated use of light and color, and the artist’s exploration of the way forms could be presented to elicit emotions.
Giorgio Morandi, Autoritratto (Self-Portrait), 1925
In the Magnani collection, Morandi fans will see the artist’s extraordinary technical skill. At one extreme is the incredible depth that Morandi achieved by varying the cross-hatching in his etchings. At the other is the minimalist abstraction of his watercolor still lifes and landscapes. In between, we see a landscape painting with half the canvas dominated by a blank wall, prefiguring pop art images that would come later in the 1960s, and another image of bottles standing like sentries in a metaphysical landscape, not to mention an actual metaphysical work from the artist’s youth, and an enigmatic self-portrait. All of these works are presented in Morandi’s idiosyncratic palette of muted, unsaturated colors.

“A Park Avenue-Type of Painting”

None of the works in the Zwirner show are for sale, obviously. But having two remarkable Morandi shows in New York in quick succession cannot but help generate more interest in, and demand for, the artist. There are only about 1,300 paintings. The etchings, for reasons I don’t really understand, trade at prices in the low five figures, sometimes falling below $10,000. Sales of Morandi’s work began to pick up around 2007, the first year his auction volume topped $10 million. Overall auction totals would wax and wane until 2018, when the volume topped $20 million. The next year, volume stayed just above that mark, but the trend was unsustainable and auction sales fell below $10 million again, rising from just above $7 million in 2020 and 2021, to $11.8 million in 2023. Last year, Morandi’s auction volume dropped again, to just over $5 million. But the falling auction volume is less an indicator of evaporating interest than it is an issue of supply, and whether to sell at auction at all. That said, the average price of a Morandi over the past decade has steadily risen, even accounting for the usual oscillations in the market. Put another way, the highs are getting higher, and the lows are also getting higher.
Range
Rover Sport
Range
Rover Sport
In 2007, a 1920 Morandi still life set an auction record for the artist of $2.7 million. In 2015, a 1939 still life was sold at auction for $3.9 million. Then, in 2018, David Rockefeller’s oval 1940 still life made an auction price of $4.3 million, defining the upper end of the Morandi market. Since then, a 1954 still life sold for $3.8 million in November 2021, and a 1959 still life made $3.5 million a year later. Meanwhile, another four works auctioned above the $2 million mark, even as the frequency of sales slowed, possibly reflecting the combined efforts of De Luca and Leiber to match buyers and sellers on the private market. When I asked De Luca about Morandi’s pricing, he cautioned that he was not a trophy artist. Important collectors like Rockefeller might own the works, but Morandi’s paintings and etchings are more quiet and contemplative than show-offy. Leiber added that the Italian government’s reluctance to see Morandis leave Italy adds uncertainty for potential bidders and mutes the auction market. Those are good explanations, but I decided to check in with a European collector who happens to be a real Morandi aficionado. He offered four reasons that Morandis don’t sell for big prices. First, “they’re intimate paintings,” he said, “not in-your-face, contrary to Fontana. It’s a bit like a smallish Ryman—you might pay $18 million for a large Ryman, or a large Fontana, but not for a small one.” Then there was the palette issue. The colors, he said, were “too subtle to please the current market.” And the muted tones read old money and conservative, “a Park Avenue-type of painting.” Also, although the Chinese began acquiring Morandi’s works more than a decade ago after the painter Zeng Fanzhi started buying and his collectors followed, it’s still a very Italian market. (Though this collector said that the export-license issue wasn’t that big a deal since most of the prewar works—the ones the government keeps a watchful eye on—are already in museums.) My informant’s final comment was startling, and encapsulated Morandi’s simultaneous blessing and curse. “Morandi is a connoisseur’s artist,” he wrote, “and connoisseurs don’t make a market these days.”
 

Endnotes…

I’m still scratching my head over this column on crypto’s return to the art market that ran in the Financial Times last week. It raises an interesting issue with Sotheby’s eagerly courting crypto purchases in their upcoming Saudi Arabian sale, even though the $6.2 million sale of Maurizio Cattelan’s Comedian was arguably dampened by the fact that the buyer was a crypto zillionaire. (It obfuscated the market price for Cattelan that the traditional world of money might support.) It also addresses the question of whether the Trump administration’s embrace of crypto could pave the way for the return of the N.F.T. market. I’m skeptical: The N.F.T. boom was largely a function of the crypto rich needing a way to spend their gains. By trading through reputable auction houses that operate Know Your Customer protocols on their clients, N.F.T.s allowed people to convert their crypto into fiat currency in an above-board way that the authorities would accept. Isn’t Trump basically promising to make that unnecessary? Anyway, instead of focusing on all the ways that crypto’s resurgence has the potential to directly impact the art market, the FT oddly chooses to focus on second- or third- order effects, like diversity. “The profile of these previous buyers—mainly young men—had also not sat well with a market grappling with its own lack of diversity,” the paper wrote. Huh? Most of the crypto buyers the FT discusses are young Asian men. In a Western-dominated art market, this all seems beside the point. The FT then changed gears, making a meal of art market myths. “Art’s appeal—in a secretive market that can turn volatile, on-paper profits into transportable, tangible assets—makes it already attractive to money launderers,” the reporting claims, “with N.F.T.s as a potential new playground.” Actually, no. There’s zero evidence, despite years of publications repeating this canard, that art is a viable conduit for money laundering. The full explanation is too long for this space, but the short version is that the art trade has limited capacity, and there are too many ways for hopeful money launderers to get cheated, themselves. In other words, in the art market it is easy to get taken, whether you’re a naive collector or a naive money launderer. At any rate, it’s far too soon to perceive the impact that crypto’s rising value will have on the art market. More to the point, at this stage it looks like the new frontier is the auction houses accepting crypto as payment, not whether N.F.T.s will roar back into the public consciousness. The crypto rich will now have greater access to converting their cyber wealth into physical assets, and the auction houses will be tasked with obtaining K.Y.C. assurances for these customers. That’s actually a good anti–money laundering protocol. On that bright note, I’ll see you back here tomorrow for our next Wall Power Inner Circle exclusive. Upgrade here, if you haven’t already. M
Line Sheet
Line Sheet
The ultimate fashion industry bible, offering incisive reportage on all aspects of the business and its biggest players. Anchored by preeminent fashion journalist Lauren Sherman, Line Sheet also features veteran reporter Rachel Strugatz, who delivers unparalleled intel on what’s happening in the beauty industry, and Sarah Shapiro, a longtime retail strategist who writes about e-commerce, brick-and-mortar, D.T.C., and more.
Silence of the Dems

Silence of the Dems

PETER HAMBY
Phoebe or Not to Be, II

Phoebe or Not to Be, II

LAUREN SHERMAN
Bundle in the Jungle

Bundle in the Jungle

JOHN OURAND
Puck
Puck
Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn
Need help? Review our FAQ page or contact us for assistance. For brand partnerships, email ads@puck.news. You received this email because you signed up to receive emails from Puck, or as part of your Puck account associated with . To stop receiving this newsletter and/or manage all your email preferences, click here.
 
Puck is published by Heat Media LLC. 107 Greenwich St, New York, NY 10006

SEE THE ARCHIVES

SHARE
Try Puck for free

Sign up today to join the inside conversation at the nexus of Wall Street, Washington, A.I., Hollywood, and more.

Already a member? Log In


  • Daily articles and breaking news
  • Personal emails directly from our authors
  • Gift subscriber-only stories to friends & family
  • Unlimited access to archives

  • Exclusive bonus days of select newsletters
  • Exclusive access to Puck merch
  • Early bird access to new editorial and product features
  • Invitations to private conference calls with Puck authors

Exclusive to Inner Circle only



Latest Articles from Art

Sotheby's Klimt
Marion Maneker • January 29, 2025
The Hot 50: Our Semiannual Market Temp Check
An excavation of the art market’s robust performance in the second half of 2025, with the latest (and greatest) data from ARTDAI. As you’ll see, the market is healthier and more varied than ever.
White Cube Gallery New York
Marion Maneker • January 29, 2025
Dye Hard & Humeau’s Bat Cave
Fresh from their holiday hibernation, New York galleries are once again buzzing with crowded openings and legendary works from the likes of Humeau, Pousette-Dart, Eggleston, and Flavin.
Steve Ivy Heritage Auctions
Marion Maneker • January 29, 2025
Condition Report: Steve Ivy, C.E.O. of Heritage Auctions
An eye-opening conversation with the auction house founder (and lifelong numismatist) on the explosion of the collectibles market, Heritage’s $2 billion year, and his middle-school obsession with coins.


Joan Semmel
Marion Maneker • January 29, 2025
Sex & The Single Artist
A career-spanning new exhibit of Joan Semmel captures an artist challenging conventional nudes, addressing women’s liberation, and making her own depictions of sexuality, aging, and herself.
National Gallery of Art
Marion Maneker • January 29, 2025
Washington’s Other Culture Wars
The Stars We Do Not See, a new show at the National Gallery, offers a reflection on the past and modernism that seems perfectly at home in the capital these days.
Money Painting
Marion Maneker • January 29, 2025
The Art-Backed Loan Crisis That Wasn’t
A recent column in the Financial Times tried to sound the alarm about an apparent crisis in the art loan business. But a close inspection of the data behind the story—and a survey of art loan business insiders—reveals a much more nuanced picture.


Sotheby's Art Auction
Marion Maneker • January 29, 2025
Is the Art Market Ready for a Bull Run?
With $5.4 billion in combined sales, 2025 was a pretty decent year for Sotheby’s, Phillips, and Christie’s, as well as the broader auction market. But a deeper analysis of sales across price ranges, average lot values, and the percentage of works sold below estimate may foretell what 2026 brings.


Get access to this story

Enter your email for a free preview of Puck’s full offering, including exclusive articles, private emails from authors, and more.

Verify your email and sign in by clicking the link we just sent.

Already a member? Log In


Start 14 Day Free Trial for Unlimited Access Instead →



Latest Articles from Art

Eduardo Costantini
Marion Maneker • January 29, 2025
A Match Made in Buenos Aires
How a family of Swiss industrialists helped deepen and redefine Argentina’s premier art museum, years after their deaths.
KAWS brian Donnelly
Marion Maneker • January 29, 2025
Kaws and Effect
After Covid zombified downtown San Francisco, SFMOMA director Christopher Bedford turned to an artist with a Warholian grasp of pop culture—and the ability to reengage both families and the tech set.
Reed Hastings
Mark Healy • January 29, 2025
Reed Hastings’ Mountainhead
Since stepping down as C.E.O. three years ago, Netflix co-founder and executive chairman Reed Hastings has largely devoted himself to philanthropy and Powder Mountain—his Utah ski resort that now includes an ambitious public art park and is changing the very notion of a mountain town.


Ken Goldin
Alex French • January 29, 2025
The Goldin Boy
The reigning king of collectibles is celebrating a third season of his Netflix show and a new stability in the collectibles and memorabilia market, which is better informed and more properly authenticated than ever. That doesn’t mean he’s above selling a Cheeto if there’s a market for it—especially if it makes for good TV.
Charles Stewart
Marion Maneker • January 29, 2025
Charlie’s Angels
It’s been a monumental year for Sotheby’s, which secured nearly $1 billion from the Emiratis, sold the Macklowe and Lauder collections, and made a new home on Madison Avenue. C.E.O. Charles Stewart sits down for a candid discussion about his auction house’s big year and the emerging Gulf market.
Helene Schjerfbeck Self-Portait with Black Background_1915
Marion Maneker • January 29, 2025
Helene of Finland
The new Helene Schjerfbeck show at the Met offers a rare opportunity to see the work of a truly important artist, whose significance was obscured only by the fact that she lived in a small country far from the center of culture.


Phillips Art Auction
Marion Maneker • January 29, 2025
Art’s $14B Goldilocks Year
In the space of a few short months, we’ve seen the public art market return not only to viability, but vibrancy—even if we’re only just returning to a baseline level of sales.
Get access to this story

Enter your email to get access to one article and free previews of our private emails from Puck authors and editors.

OR

Already a Member? Sign in



Latest Articles from Art

Jay Krehbiel
Marion Maneker • January 29, 2025
Condition Report: Jay Krehbiel, the Man in the Middle
Freeman’s, the ambitious Midwest auction house, is conquering the middle market between multimillion-dollar auctions and weekend estate sales. Herewith, executive chairman Jay Krehbiel opens up about his M&A pathway, the economics of undercutting the big houses, and the tension between operating locally and globally.
Faith Ringgold
Marion Maneker • January 29, 2025
History Is Written by the Gallerists
Three striking new gallery shows—Faith Ringgold, Richard Diebenkorn, and Julian Schnabel—show how gallerists work hard to steer perceptions and provide context to decades-old works. It’s harder than it looks.
Robert Rauschenberg
Marion Maneker • January 29, 2025
The Rauschenberg Chronicles
In celebration of the centennial of Robert Rauschenberg’s birth, two new museum shows in New York explore the work of an artist who always seemed both ubiquitous and somewhat forgotten.


Art advisors
Marion Maneker • January 29, 2025
The Art Advisor Justice League
Art advisors are a fairly recent phenomenon, and no one is showing how it’s done better than Patti Wong, Brett Gorvy, and Wentworth Beaumont. In this lively roundtable discussion, the three explain an advisor’s role in a murky market, how the back office operates, and why ambitious collectors need consultants now more than ever.
Francois Xavier Lalanne, Hippopotame Bar
Marion Maneker • January 29, 2025
Lalanne Jockeys
The latest offerings at Christie’s, Sotheby’s, and Phillips anticipate a still-strong design market, with a wide selection of works by Les Lalanne—including a multimillion-dollar hippo—leading the category alongside Tiffany, Giacometti, and the recently deceased Frank Gehry.
Design.Miami
Marion Maneker • January 29, 2025
50 Hours in Miami
A mid-December tour of Design.Miami, Art Basel, the New Art Dealers Alliance fair, and the ICA Miami opening revealed a steady flow of visitors, plenty of eager buyers, and an ostensible return to form for the city’s biggest annual art fair.


Sotheby's Art Auction
Marion Maneker • January 29, 2025
Two Weeks in November
A deep data-driven dive into the November sales and what they tell us about the art market’s “just right” moment.


  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Contact
  • FAQ
  • Careers
© 2026 Heat Media All rights reserved.
Create an account

Already a member? Log In

CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
OR YOUR EMAIL

OR

Use Email & Password Instead

USE EMAIL & PASSWORD
Password strength:

OR

Use Another Sign-Up Method

Become a member

All of the insider knowledge from our top tier authors, in your inbox.

Create an account

Already a member? Log In

Verify your email!

You should receive a link to log in at .

I DID NOT RECEIVE A LINK

Didn't get an email? Check your spam folder and confirm the spelling of your email, and try again. If you continue to have trouble, reach out to fritz@puck.news.

CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Apple
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Apple
OR USE EMAIL & PASSWORD
Password strength:

OR
Log In

Not a member yet? Sign up today

Log in with Google
Log in with Google
Log in with Apple
Log in with Apple
OR USE EMAIL & PASSWORD
Don't have a password or need to reset it?

OR
Verify Account

Verify your email!

You should receive a link to log in at .

I DID NOT RECEIVE A LINK

Didn't get an email? Check your spam folder and confirm the spelling of your email, and try again. If you continue to have trouble, reach out to fritz@puck.news.

YOUR EMAIL

Use a different sign in option instead

Member Exclusive

Get access to this story

Create a free account to preview Puck’s full offering, including exclusive articles, private emails from authors, and more.

Already a member? Sign in

Free article unlocked!

You are logged into a free account as unknown@example.com

ENJOY 1 FREE ARTICLE EACH MONTH

Subscribe today to join the inside conversation at the nexus of Wall Street, Washington, A.I., Hollywood, and more.

START 14-DAY FREE TRIAL

  • Daily articles and breaking news
  • Personal emails directly from our authors
  • Gift subscriber-only stories to friends & family
  • Unlimited access to archives
  • Bookmark articles to create a Reading List
  • Quarterly calls with industry experts from the power corners we cover