Why did I love this book?
I began my career in finance at a firm headed by a Museum of Modern Art trustee. The firm championed art as a legitimate investment category. I learned the objective, quantitative methods for valuing stocks and bonds, but art valuation appeared subjective.
Had this book been available then, it would have shown me that rigorous methodology can be applied to art valuation. The authors fascinatingly describe how the values of Renoirs vary depending on the size of the canvas, their orientation (landscape or portrait), where they are auctioned, and whether they include a nude figure.
As a bonus, relevant even to readers who do not contemplate investing in art, they document fundamental flaws in certain standard valuation tools employed in more conventional asset classes.
1 author picked The Worth of Art as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.
The market for art can be as eye-catching as artworks themselves. Works by artists from da Vinci and Rembrandt to Picasso and Modigliani have sold for hundreds of millions of dollars. The world's ultrawealthy increasingly treat art as part of their portfolios. Since artworks are often valuable assets, how should financial professionals analyze them?
Arturo Cifuentes and Ventura Charlin provide an expert guide to the methods, risks, and rewards of investing in art. They detail how to apply the financial and statistical tools and techniques used to evaluate more traditional investments such as stocks, bonds, and real estate to art…