Abram Fox’s research while affiliated with The J. Paul Getty Trust and other places

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Publications (1)


Figure 10. James Gillray, A Peep at Christie's;-or-Tally-ho, & his Nimeney-pimmeney taking the Morning Lounge, published 24 Sept. 1796, etching and aquatint, hand coloured, 35 x 25.7 cm. Collection of the British Museum, London (1868,0808.6552) Digital image courtesy of Trustees of the British Museum.
Figure 11.
The Temporal Dimensions of the London Art Auction, 1780–1835
  • Article
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November 2016

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26 Reads

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7 Citations

British Art Studies

Matthew Lincoln

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Abram Fox

The rush of activity among London's auction houses in the first few weeks of summer has long been a familiar occurrence that persists even today. However, this intense seasonal concentration of sales was not always so. This paper draws on quantitative methods to explore the gradual emergence of a tightly scheduled auction season in London at the turn of the nineteenth century, focusing on the sale of paintings. By analysing historical art auction catalogue data, the paper traces the ways in which this shift varied across different segments of the auction market, as well as between individual auction houses. As our study shows, the temporal clustering of painting auctions had specific business advantages, but it also played a key role in enhancing the social import of these auctions, demarcating an annual, weeks-long “event” looked to with anticipation and excitement by auctioneers and buyers alike.

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Citations (1)


... The Getty Research Institute has put online a database of annotated catalogues, mainly for the 18th century up to the 1820-1840s in Europe, and for the 1900-1945 period in Germany. This exceptional source has already made it possible to identify the major changes in London sales between 1780 and 1835 (Fox and Lincoln 2016). It should be noted, however, that the period 1840-1900 is absent from the Getty's dataset, which hinders any 2 "The dealers and critics, one marginal figures to the Academic system, became, with the impressionists, the core of the new system." ...

Reference:

Revisiting Harrison and Cynthia White’s Academic vs. Dealer-Critic System
The Temporal Dimensions of the London Art Auction, 1780–1835

British Art Studies