Art Price Economics in the Netherlands during World War II

This paper analyses the boom on the Dutch art market during World War II. It relies on an original database covering all pictures - over 11,000 - sold at Mak van Waay, one of the two premier Dutch auction houses during the occupation. Hedonic regressions show that in real terms, the price of paintin...

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Main Authors: Jeroen Euwe, Kim Oosterlinck
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Forum Kunst und Markt 2017-02-01
Series:Journal for Art Market Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://fokum-jams.org/index.php/jams/article/view/6
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spelling doaj-7a6a98c6d3db47868a1059d3a964e8a42020-11-25T01:51:46ZengForum Kunst und MarktJournal for Art Market Studies2511-76022017-02-011110.23690/jams.v1i1.66Art Price Economics in the Netherlands during World War IIJeroen Euwe0Kim Oosterlinck1Erasmus UniversityUniversité Libre de BruxellesThis paper analyses the boom on the Dutch art market during World War II. It relies on an original database covering all pictures - over 11,000 - sold at Mak van Waay, one of the two premier Dutch auction houses during the occupation. Hedonic regressions show that in real terms, the price of paintings increased more than fivefold between 1940 and 1945. While there was significant demand for Old Masters by the German occupying forces, paintings from the Romantic period outperformed Old Master and Modern paintings. These prices prompted forgers to create fake artworks. Reputable auction houses such as Mak van Waay used their cataloguing of artworks to signal quality and authenticity. We take advantage of these data to create indicators for ‘forgery’ and ‘doubtful attribution’. Prices reflect this flagging, as suspected forgeries sold for significantly less, as did pictures with questionable attributions.https://fokum-jams.org/index.php/jams/article/view/6Netherlandsart marketMak van Waayoccupationpricesold masters19th century art20th century artattributioncataloguingforgeries
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jeroen Euwe
Kim Oosterlinck
spellingShingle Jeroen Euwe
Kim Oosterlinck
Art Price Economics in the Netherlands during World War II
Journal for Art Market Studies
Netherlands
art market
Mak van Waay
occupation
prices
old masters
19th century art
20th century art
attribution
cataloguing
forgeries
author_facet Jeroen Euwe
Kim Oosterlinck
author_sort Jeroen Euwe
title Art Price Economics in the Netherlands during World War II
title_short Art Price Economics in the Netherlands during World War II
title_full Art Price Economics in the Netherlands during World War II
title_fullStr Art Price Economics in the Netherlands during World War II
title_full_unstemmed Art Price Economics in the Netherlands during World War II
title_sort art price economics in the netherlands during world war ii
publisher Forum Kunst und Markt
series Journal for Art Market Studies
issn 2511-7602
publishDate 2017-02-01
description This paper analyses the boom on the Dutch art market during World War II. It relies on an original database covering all pictures - over 11,000 - sold at Mak van Waay, one of the two premier Dutch auction houses during the occupation. Hedonic regressions show that in real terms, the price of paintings increased more than fivefold between 1940 and 1945. While there was significant demand for Old Masters by the German occupying forces, paintings from the Romantic period outperformed Old Master and Modern paintings. These prices prompted forgers to create fake artworks. Reputable auction houses such as Mak van Waay used their cataloguing of artworks to signal quality and authenticity. We take advantage of these data to create indicators for ‘forgery’ and ‘doubtful attribution’. Prices reflect this flagging, as suspected forgeries sold for significantly less, as did pictures with questionable attributions.
topic Netherlands
art market
Mak van Waay
occupation
prices
old masters
19th century art
20th century art
attribution
cataloguing
forgeries
url https://fokum-jams.org/index.php/jams/article/view/6
work_keys_str_mv AT jeroeneuwe artpriceeconomicsinthenetherlandsduringworldwarii
AT kimoosterlinck artpriceeconomicsinthenetherlandsduringworldwarii
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