daniel3886
Junior Member
π¨οΈ 1,250
ππ» 995
October 2006
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Chiswick β’ Urban Art Auctions π¬π§, by daniel3886 on Mar 28, 2018 23:07:53 GMT 1, We had 3 Kaws Prints and 6 figures and 2 Faile originals and 2 Faile Prints all of which sold bar one. Maybe you missed them? Iβll take note of the os gem/insect and others
We had 3 Kaws Prints and 6 figures and 2 Faile originals and 2 Faile Prints all of which sold bar one. Maybe you missed them? Iβll take note of the os gem/insect and others
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Chiswick β’ Urban Art Auctions π¬π§, by Cookiemonster on Mar 28, 2018 23:15:41 GMT 1, We had 3 Kaws Prints and 6 figures and 2 Faile originals and 2 Faile Prints all of which sold bar one. Maybe you missed them? Iβll take note of the os gem/insect and others less prints more og's please
We had 3 Kaws Prints and 6 figures and 2 Faile originals and 2 Faile Prints all of which sold bar one. Maybe you missed them? Iβll take note of the os gem/insect and others less prints more og's please
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thepusher
New Member
π¨οΈ 49
ππ» 14
December 2014
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Chiswick β’ Urban Art Auctions π¬π§, by thepusher on Mar 29, 2018 23:02:17 GMT 1, 4.5K for a Meadow Ed25 seems a steal !
Isn't very close to a Ed100 price ?
4.5K for a Meadow Ed25 seems a steal ! Isn't very close to a Ed100 price ?
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Shrink
New Member
π¨οΈ 136
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August 2011
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Chiswick β’ Urban Art Auctions π¬π§, by Shrink on Mar 29, 2018 23:14:35 GMT 1, 4.5K + buyers premium and charges.
4.5K + buyers premium and charges.
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thepusher
New Member
π¨οΈ 49
ππ» 14
December 2014
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Chiswick β’ Urban Art Auctions π¬π§, by thepusher on Mar 29, 2018 23:22:52 GMT 1, Right
So we're talking 7K all included, still seems ok to me
Right
So we're talking 7K all included, still seems ok to me
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nighthawk
Junior Member
π¨οΈ 1,338
ππ» 1,219
February 2013
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Chiswick β’ Urban Art Auctions π¬π§, by nighthawk on Mar 30, 2018 2:23:39 GMT 1, Right So we're talking 7K all included, still seems ok to me It was 4.5K GBP right?
So that 7K (GBP) is 10K (USD)...which is easily a new record for a Pejac print. Actually 7K (USD) would probably have been a new record
Right So we're talking 7K all included, still seems ok to me It was 4.5K GBP right? So that 7K (GBP) is 10K (USD)...which is easily a new record for a Pejac print. Actually 7K (USD) would probably have been a new record
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Hubble Bubble
Junior Member
π¨οΈ 4,117
ππ» 3,567
December 2010
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Chiswick β’ Urban Art Auctions π¬π§, by Hubble Bubble on Mar 30, 2018 10:38:31 GMT 1, Srtiks had his day, unless its another charity release/auction Results at Christie's for Stik seemed pretty strong.
Srtiks had his day, unless its another charity release/auction Results at Christie's for Stik seemed pretty strong.
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Deleted
π¨οΈ 0
ππ»
January 1970
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Chiswick β’ Urban Art Auctions π¬π§, by Deleted on Mar 30, 2018 11:47:51 GMT 1, Srtiks had his day, unless its another charity release/auction Results at Christie's for Stik seemed pretty strong.
He had a one day dip, back on the rise now ;-)
Srtiks had his day, unless its another charity release/auction Results at Christie's for Stik seemed pretty strong. He had a one day dip, back on the rise now ;-)
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Hubble Bubble
Junior Member
π¨οΈ 4,117
ππ» 3,567
December 2010
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Chiswick β’ Urban Art Auctions π¬π§, by Hubble Bubble on Mar 30, 2018 15:20:22 GMT 1, Results at Christie's for Stik seemed pretty strong. He had a one day dip, back on the rise now ;-) *Sigh
With me it's the other way around. My highs are one day then I'm back on the dip...
Results at Christie's for Stik seemed pretty strong. He had a one day dip, back on the rise now ;-) *Sigh With me it's the other way around. My highs are one day then I'm back on the dip...
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Poster Bob
Junior Member
π¨οΈ 5,900
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September 2013
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Chiswick β’ Urban Art Auctions π¬π§, by Poster Bob on Mar 30, 2018 20:48:07 GMT 1, So the same two players are still jacking up the price of this bullshit.
Srtiks had his day,Β unless its another charity release/auction Results at Christie's for Stik seemed pretty strong.
So the same two players are still jacking up the price of this bullshit. Srtiks had his day,Β unless its another charity release/auction Results at Christie's for Stik seemed pretty strong.
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daniel3886
Junior Member
π¨οΈ 1,250
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October 2006
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Chiswick β’ Urban Art Auctions π¬π§, by daniel3886 on Mar 31, 2018 1:58:08 GMT 1,
Vat on the BP and ARR are also applicable total payable by the buyer is Β£6030
Vat on the BP and ARR are also applicable total payable by the buyer is Β£6030
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sircoxson
New Member
π¨οΈ 746
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December 2010
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Chiswick β’ Urban Art Auctions π¬π§, by sircoxson on Mar 31, 2018 9:09:28 GMT 1, Vat on the BP and ARR are also applicable total payable by the buyer is Β£6030
what will the seller receive after fees?
Vat on the BP and ARR are also applicable total payable by the buyer is Β£6030 what will the seller receive after fees?
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daniel3886
Junior Member
π¨οΈ 1,250
ππ» 995
October 2006
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Chiswick β’ Urban Art Auctions π¬π§, by daniel3886 on Apr 1, 2018 7:36:18 GMT 1, Sellers fees are negotiable according to number and value of consignments.
Sellers fees are negotiable according to number and value of consignments.
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rebate
Junior Member
π¨οΈ 1,050
ππ» 961
January 2018
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Chiswick β’ Urban Art Auctions π¬π§, by rebate on Apr 1, 2018 9:59:31 GMT 1, So the same two players are still jacking up the price of this bullshit. Results at Christie's for Stik seemed pretty strong. Yeah, they have also forced Hackney council to let him put up a sculpture in one of their parks. They are amazingly powerful and control everything.
Or your a conspiracy theorist, hmm I wonder which it is.
So the same two players are still jacking up the price of this bullshit. Results at Christie's for Stik seemed pretty strong. Yeah, they have also forced Hackney council to let him put up a sculpture in one of their parks. They are amazingly powerful and control everything. Or your a conspiracy theorist, hmm I wonder which it is.
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moron
Junior Member
π¨οΈ 2,711
ππ» 1,051
September 2017
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Chiswick β’ Urban Art Auctions π¬π§, by moron on Apr 4, 2018 15:05:59 GMT 1, So the same two players are still jacking up the price of this bullshit. Yeah, they have also forced Hackney council to let him put up a sculpture in one of their parks. They are amazingly powerful and control everything. Or your a conspiracy theorist, hmm I wonder which it is. It's all about who you know regarding councils.
So the same two players are still jacking up the price of this bullshit. Yeah, they have also forced Hackney council to let him put up a sculpture in one of their parks. They are amazingly powerful and control everything. Or your a conspiracy theorist, hmm I wonder which it is. It's all about who you know regarding councils.
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moron
Junior Member
π¨οΈ 2,711
ππ» 1,051
September 2017
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Chiswick β’ Urban Art Auctions π¬π§, by moron on Apr 4, 2018 15:07:55 GMT 1, Not aimed at Chiswick auctions, just auction houses in general. The very high buyers fees looks like a racket to me and would put off a lot of buyers who buy at the lower end. A 100 Β£ item the buyer pays 30 quid on top and a thousand quid item 300 quid on top. Are auction houses meaning the big boys colluding regarding these buyers fees.
Not aimed at Chiswick auctions, just auction houses in general. The very high buyers fees looks like a racket to me and would put off a lot of buyers who buy at the lower end. A 100 Β£ item the buyer pays 30 quid on top and a thousand quid item 300 quid on top. Are auction houses meaning the big boys colluding regarding these buyers fees.
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Deleted
π¨οΈ 0
ππ»
January 1970
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Chiswick β’ Urban Art Auctions π¬π§, by Deleted on Apr 4, 2018 16:55:24 GMT 1, Not aimed at Chiswick auctions, just auction houses in general. The very high buyers fees looks like a racket to me and would put off a lot of buyers who buy at the lower end. A 100 Β£ item the buyer pays 30 quid on top and a thousand quid item 300 quid on top. Are auction houses meaning the big boys colluding regarding these buyers fees.
I don't think auction houses are that interested in Β£100 items
I would imagine that the guy doing it would have to email/phone/ see the seller, be the expert, work with the seller to ensure they know what happens and how it all works. check the items are all legit COAs etc. check condition and value item, then agree a min-m max estimate and negotiate buying in fee
Take a pic, do a description, catalogue it, store it, then market the auction, spend hours on emails to and fro with potential buyers, send condition reports followed by the viewings with tea coffee and biccies?
Then the actual auction.
Followed by invoice to buyer, check money, send emails, then arrange collection or shipping, again time
Then dependent on whether it's your auction or the auction houses auction there maybe a split, so you only get 15% less the Vat element
So that Β£30 buyers premium may translate back as say Β£10 to the guy doing the auction once splits and vat and printing and webs**t is done.
I may be talking out of my arse, but that's what I reckon
Not aimed at Chiswick auctions, just auction houses in general. The very high buyers fees looks like a racket to me and would put off a lot of buyers who buy at the lower end. A 100 Β£ item the buyer pays 30 quid on top and a thousand quid item 300 quid on top. Are auction houses meaning the big boys colluding regarding these buyers fees. I don't think auction houses are that interested in Β£100 items I would imagine that the guy doing it would have to email/phone/ see the seller, be the expert, work with the seller to ensure they know what happens and how it all works. check the items are all legit COAs etc. check condition and value item, then agree a min-m max estimate and negotiate buying in fee Take a pic, do a description, catalogue it, store it, then market the auction, spend hours on emails to and fro with potential buyers, send condition reports followed by the viewings with tea coffee and biccies? Then the actual auction. Followed by invoice to buyer, check money, send emails, then arrange collection or shipping, again time Then dependent on whether it's your auction or the auction houses auction there maybe a split, so you only get 15% less the Vat element So that Β£30 buyers premium may translate back as say Β£10 to the guy doing the auction once splits and vat and printing and webs**t is done. I may be talking out of my arse, but that's what I reckon
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moron
Junior Member
π¨οΈ 2,711
ππ» 1,051
September 2017
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Chiswick β’ Urban Art Auctions π¬π§, by moron on Apr 4, 2018 20:17:47 GMT 1, Not aimed at Chiswick auctions, just auction houses in general. The very high buyers fees looks like a racket to me and would put off a lot of buyers who buy at the lower end. A 100 Β£ item the buyer pays 30 quid on top and a thousand quid item 300 quid on top. Are auction houses meaning the big boys colluding regarding these buyers fees. I don't think auction houses are that interested in Β£100 items I would imagine that the guy doing it would have to email/phone/ see the seller, be the expert, work with the seller to ensure they know what happens and how it all works. check the items are all legit COAs etc. check condition and value item, then agree a min-m max estimate and negotiate buying in fee Take a pic, do a description, catalogue it, store it, then market the auction, spend hours on emails to and fro with potential buyers, send condition reports followed by the viewings with tea coffee and biccies? Then the actual auction. Followed by invoice to buyer, check money, send emails, then arrange collection or shipping, again time Then dependent on whether it's your auction or the auction houses auction there maybe a split, so you only get 15% less the Vat element So that Β£30 buyers premium may translate back as say Β£10 to the guy doing the auction once splits and vat and printing and webs**t is done. I may be talking out of my arse, but that's what I reckon I think without buyers fees, some auction houses would end up closing down. Auction houses that arrange shipping charge a lot extra for that service. Valuations by auction house staff is what the staff are paid for, if they have no expertise they shouldn't be working in a sale room. Sellers are charged extra for photos in catalogues. With the buyer and the seller fees, a saleroom can rake in 50% of the total selling price. I know that auction houses provide a service etc etc but it's the buyers who bring in the sellers of items.
This is from 1982.
AUCTION houses call the fee they charge to successful bidders the ''buyer's premium.'' This fee, which the two London-based auction giants -Sotheby Parke Bernet and Christie's - introduced in 1975 caused a dispute that raged for seven years. In the process, two British associations of dealers in art and antiques took legal action and the British Government opened an investigation to see whether there were grounds for charges of collusion between the two houses.
Since the agreement, Christie's has lowered the buyer's fee in its major London galleries to 8 percent (the 10 percent fee remains in New York). Sotheby's has decided not to reduce its buyer's fee, retaining the 10 percent charge in London and New York.
One reason the buyer's fee sparked such controversy was that the auction houses, by charging buyers a percentage of the selling price, could reduce what they charged the sellers. Formerly, sellers bore the total cost of 12 to 30 percent of the selling price, whatever the auction house considered necessary to make a profit. Now the fee to sellers ranges from 2 to 10 percent. With the seller's risk reduced, the auction route may seem more appealing to some owners than through the galleries of art and antiques dealers
www.nytimes.com/1982/09/03/arts/auctions-buyer-s-fees-end-of-a-battle.html
Rebuked by a federal judge for failing to show remorse, A. Alfred Taubman, the principal owner and former chairman of Sotheby's, was sentenced yesterday to a year and a day in prison and fined $7.5 million for leading a six-year price-fixing scheme with its rival Christie's that swindled auction house customers out of more than $100 million.
Yesterday's sentencing was the penultimate chapter in a dramatic five-year investigation into the rigging of commission fees by the two auction giants that has shaken their gilded $4 billion-a-year world. The scandal has led Sotheby's and Christie's to agree to settle class action suits with more than 100,000 customers for $512 million, forced an overhaul of auction house business practices and torn apart business relationships and careers built over decades.
www.nytimes.com/2002/04/23/nyregion/ex-chairman-of-sotheby-s-gets-jail-time.html
Not aimed at Chiswick auctions, just auction houses in general. The very high buyers fees looks like a racket to me and would put off a lot of buyers who buy at the lower end. A 100 Β£ item the buyer pays 30 quid on top and a thousand quid item 300 quid on top. Are auction houses meaning the big boys colluding regarding these buyers fees. I don't think auction houses are that interested in Β£100 items I would imagine that the guy doing it would have to email/phone/ see the seller, be the expert, work with the seller to ensure they know what happens and how it all works. check the items are all legit COAs etc. check condition and value item, then agree a min-m max estimate and negotiate buying in fee Take a pic, do a description, catalogue it, store it, then market the auction, spend hours on emails to and fro with potential buyers, send condition reports followed by the viewings with tea coffee and biccies? Then the actual auction. Followed by invoice to buyer, check money, send emails, then arrange collection or shipping, again time Then dependent on whether it's your auction or the auction houses auction there maybe a split, so you only get 15% less the Vat element So that Β£30 buyers premium may translate back as say Β£10 to the guy doing the auction once splits and vat and printing and webs**t is done. I may be talking out of my arse, but that's what I reckon I think without buyers fees, some auction houses would end up closing down. Auction houses that arrange shipping charge a lot extra for that service. Valuations by auction house staff is what the staff are paid for, if they have no expertise they shouldn't be working in a sale room. Sellers are charged extra for photos in catalogues. With the buyer and the seller fees, a saleroom can rake in 50% of the total selling price. I know that auction houses provide a service etc etc but it's the buyers who bring in the sellers of items. This is from 1982. AUCTION houses call the fee they charge to successful bidders the ''buyer's premium.'' This fee, which the two London-based auction giants -Sotheby Parke Bernet and Christie's - introduced in 1975 caused a dispute that raged for seven years. In the process, two British associations of dealers in art and antiques took legal action and the British Government opened an investigation to see whether there were grounds for charges of collusion between the two houses. Since the agreement, Christie's has lowered the buyer's fee in its major London galleries to 8 percent (the 10 percent fee remains in New York). Sotheby's has decided not to reduce its buyer's fee, retaining the 10 percent charge in London and New York. One reason the buyer's fee sparked such controversy was that the auction houses, by charging buyers a percentage of the selling price, could reduce what they charged the sellers. Formerly, sellers bore the total cost of 12 to 30 percent of the selling price, whatever the auction house considered necessary to make a profit. Now the fee to sellers ranges from 2 to 10 percent. With the seller's risk reduced, the auction route may seem more appealing to some owners than through the galleries of art and antiques dealers www.nytimes.com/1982/09/03/arts/auctions-buyer-s-fees-end-of-a-battle.htmlRebuked by a federal judge for failing to show remorse, A. Alfred Taubman, the principal owner and former chairman of Sotheby's, was sentenced yesterday to a year and a day in prison and fined $7.5 million for leading a six-year price-fixing scheme with its rival Christie's that swindled auction house customers out of more than $100 million. Yesterday's sentencing was the penultimate chapter in a dramatic five-year investigation into the rigging of commission fees by the two auction giants that has shaken their gilded $4 billion-a-year world. The scandal has led Sotheby's and Christie's to agree to settle class action suits with more than 100,000 customers for $512 million, forced an overhaul of auction house business practices and torn apart business relationships and careers built over decades. www.nytimes.com/2002/04/23/nyregion/ex-chairman-of-sotheby-s-gets-jail-time.html
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Bansky
New Member
π¨οΈ 98
ππ» 75
February 2013
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Chiswick β’ Urban Art Auctions π¬π§, by Bansky on Apr 5, 2018 17:18:17 GMT 1, Did anyone see the hammer price for the framed Small town tale with a global punch?
Did anyone see the hammer price for the framed Small town tale with a global punch?
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bradk
New Member
π¨οΈ 271
ππ» 236
July 2017
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Chiswick β’ Urban Art Auctions π¬π§, by bradk on Apr 10, 2018 1:24:28 GMT 1, I spoke to Danny pre auction and thought you were superb mate - great help and assistance, literally couldn't of been more helpful and knowledgeable!
I spoke to Danny pre auction and thought you were superb mate - great help and assistance, literally couldn't of been more helpful and knowledgeable!
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racket
Junior Member
π¨οΈ 1,167
ππ» 678
September 2017
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Chiswick β’ Urban Art Auctions π¬π§, by racket on Apr 10, 2018 9:37:17 GMT 1, How much was the Neate?
How much was the Neate?
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daniel3886
Junior Member
π¨οΈ 1,250
ππ» 995
October 2006
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Chiswick β’ Urban Art Auctions π¬π§, by daniel3886 on Apr 10, 2018 10:38:07 GMT 1, Did anyone see the hammer price for the framed Small town tale with a global punch?
Β£1500 was the hammer.
Did anyone see the hammer price for the framed Small town tale with a global punch? Β£1500 was the hammer.
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Fake
Artist
Junior Member
π¨οΈ 2,376
ππ» 2,144
July 2008
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moron
Junior Member
π¨οΈ 2,711
ππ» 1,051
September 2017
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Chiswick β’ Urban Art Auctions π¬π§, by moron on Apr 26, 2018 14:49:16 GMT 1, Not aimed at Chiswick auctions, just auction houses in general. The very high buyers fees looks like a racket to me and would put off a lot of buyers who buy at the lower end. A 100 Β£ item the buyer pays 30 quid on top and a thousand quid item 300 quid on top. Are auction houses meaning the big boys colluding regarding these buyers fees. I don't think auction houses are that interested in Β£100 items I would imagine that the guy doing it would have to email/phone/ see the seller, be the expert, work with the seller to ensure they know what happens and how it all works. check the items are all legit COAs etc. check condition and value item, then agree a min-m max estimate and negotiate buying in fee Take a pic, do a description, catalogue it, store it, then market the auction, spend hours on emails to and fro with potential buyers, send condition reports followed by the viewings with tea coffee and biccies? Then the actual auction. Followed by invoice to buyer, check money, send emails, then arrange collection or shipping, again time Then dependent on whether it's your auction or the auction houses auction there maybe a split, so you only get 15% less the Vat element So that Β£30 buyers premium may translate back as say Β£10 to the guy doing the auction once splits and vat and printing and webs**t is done. I may be talking out of my arse, but that's what I reckon Do you think a 30% buyers fee on a 1K sell which comes to 300 and a 30% fee on a 100K sell which comes to 30,000 means that the auction house company puts a 100 toes more effort into selling and cataloguin the 100K item compared to the 1K item?
Not aimed at Chiswick auctions, just auction houses in general. The very high buyers fees looks like a racket to me and would put off a lot of buyers who buy at the lower end. A 100 Β£ item the buyer pays 30 quid on top and a thousand quid item 300 quid on top. Are auction houses meaning the big boys colluding regarding these buyers fees. I don't think auction houses are that interested in Β£100 items I would imagine that the guy doing it would have to email/phone/ see the seller, be the expert, work with the seller to ensure they know what happens and how it all works. check the items are all legit COAs etc. check condition and value item, then agree a min-m max estimate and negotiate buying in fee Take a pic, do a description, catalogue it, store it, then market the auction, spend hours on emails to and fro with potential buyers, send condition reports followed by the viewings with tea coffee and biccies? Then the actual auction. Followed by invoice to buyer, check money, send emails, then arrange collection or shipping, again time Then dependent on whether it's your auction or the auction houses auction there maybe a split, so you only get 15% less the Vat element So that Β£30 buyers premium may translate back as say Β£10 to the guy doing the auction once splits and vat and printing and webs**t is done. I may be talking out of my arse, but that's what I reckon Do you think a 30% buyers fee on a 1K sell which comes to 300 and a 30% fee on a 100K sell which comes to 30,000 means that the auction house company puts a 100 toes more effort into selling and cataloguin the 100K item compared to the 1K item?
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Deleted
π¨οΈ 0
ππ»
January 1970
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Chiswick β’ Urban Art Auctions π¬π§, by Deleted on Apr 26, 2018 16:32:13 GMT 1, I don't think auction houses are that interested in Β£100 items I would imagine that the guy doing it would have to email/phone/ see the seller, be the expert, work with the seller to ensure they know what happens and how it all works. check the items are all legit COAs etc. check condition and value item, then agree a min-m max estimate and negotiate buying in fee Take a pic, do a description, catalogue it, store it, then market the auction, spend hours on emails to and fro with potential buyers, send condition reports followed by the viewings with tea coffee and biccies? Then the actual auction. Followed by invoice to buyer, check money, send emails, then arrange collection or shipping, again time Then dependent on whether it's your auction or the auction houses auction there maybe a split, so you only get 15% less the Vat element So that Β£30 buyers premium may translate back as say Β£10 to the guy doing the auction once splits and vat and printing and webs**t is done. I may be talking out of my arse, but that's what I reckon Do you think a 30% buyers fee on a 1K sell which comes to 300 and a 30% fee on a 100K sell which comes to 30,000 means that the auction house company puts a 100 toes more effort into selling and cataloguin the 100K item compared to the 1K item?
No
I don't think auction houses are that interested in Β£100 items I would imagine that the guy doing it would have to email/phone/ see the seller, be the expert, work with the seller to ensure they know what happens and how it all works. check the items are all legit COAs etc. check condition and value item, then agree a min-m max estimate and negotiate buying in fee Take a pic, do a description, catalogue it, store it, then market the auction, spend hours on emails to and fro with potential buyers, send condition reports followed by the viewings with tea coffee and biccies? Then the actual auction. Followed by invoice to buyer, check money, send emails, then arrange collection or shipping, again time Then dependent on whether it's your auction or the auction houses auction there maybe a split, so you only get 15% less the Vat element So that Β£30 buyers premium may translate back as say Β£10 to the guy doing the auction once splits and vat and printing and webs**t is done. I may be talking out of my arse, but that's what I reckon Do you think a 30% buyers fee on a 1K sell which comes to 300 and a 30% fee on a 100K sell which comes to 30,000 means that the auction house company puts a 100 toes more effort into selling and cataloguin the 100K item compared to the 1K item? No
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daniel3886
Junior Member
π¨οΈ 1,250
ππ» 995
October 2006
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Chiswick β’ Urban Art Auctions π¬π§, by daniel3886 on May 1, 2018 18:16:53 GMT 1, Chiswick will be holding their next Contemporary and Urban sales on the 20st of June. The consignment deadline is Monday 14th. To discuss consignments please contact me danny@chiswickauctions.co.uk
To reiterate our aims we look to present the best possible selection of work in each sale. We work with consigners to offer realistic estimates that provide sellers with the protection they want and buyers an accurate view of what they should expect to pay. I would rather return work than give it away. The past results speak for themselves we achieved strong results and I expect the same this time.
As always Iβll help anyone with questions/condition report requests. I will not be responding to any comments made by people creating new accounts, if youβre not brave enough to say something under your own username then you wonβt get a reply. Suggestions are welcome I want this to be the go to house to sell work and I respect the knowledge and experience of the community.
Chiswick will be holding their next Contemporary and Urban sales on the 20st of June. The consignment deadline is Monday 14th. To discuss consignments please contact me danny@chiswickauctions.co.uk
To reiterate our aims we look to present the best possible selection of work in each sale. We work with consigners to offer realistic estimates that provide sellers with the protection they want and buyers an accurate view of what they should expect to pay. I would rather return work than give it away. The past results speak for themselves we achieved strong results and I expect the same this time.
As always Iβll help anyone with questions/condition report requests. I will not be responding to any comments made by people creating new accounts, if youβre not brave enough to say something under your own username then you wonβt get a reply. Suggestions are welcome I want this to be the go to house to sell work and I respect the knowledge and experience of the community.
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dotdot
Junior Member
π¨οΈ 3,661
ππ» 1,030
December 2006
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Chiswick β’ Urban Art Auctions π¬π§, by dotdot on May 1, 2018 19:53:12 GMT 1, good luck !
good luck !
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Sundowner
Junior Member
π¨οΈ 4,229
ππ» 2,429
September 2008
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Chiswick β’ Urban Art Auctions π¬π§, by Sundowner on May 1, 2018 20:01:12 GMT 1, Some good results achieved in the last auction - best of luck Danny
Some good results achieved in the last auction - best of luck Danny
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Catman 74
Junior Member
π¨οΈ 1,227
ππ» 842
Location: London
November 2014
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Chiswick β’ Urban Art Auctions π¬π§, by Catman 74 on May 2, 2018 6:01:28 GMT 1, Excellent stuff Danny!
Excellent stuff Danny!
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