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VIPs line up in jets and limousines for Art Basel

Nina Larson/AFP
Nina Larson/AFP - [email protected]
VIPs line up in jets and limousines for Art Basel
Visitors view artwork by Adriana Vareniao at Art Basel. Photo: Fabrice Coffrini/AFP

With private jets filling the air and lines of luxury limousines on the ready, deep-pocketed collectors from around the world have flocked to Switzerland this week for Art Basel, the biggest contemporary art fair on the planet.

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The 44th edition of the show opened to the public on Thursday, but the doors were nudged open earlier on Tuesday for special VIPs wanting an advance peek at the wide range of artwork displayed across a whopping 31,000 square metres (334,000 square feet) of exhibition space.
   
On Wednesday, an estimated 110 private jets landed and took off from the Basel-Mulhouse airport, after 83 flew through there on Tuesday despite a strike that reduced the airport's capacity and forced some wealthy patrons of the arts to change their travel plans.
   
It was important to be among the first to squeeze through the doors, Annka 
Kultys, a Swiss art collector based in London, told AFP.
 
"The rule in Basel is that you cannot put (artwork) on hold before the art 
fair, so we need to be here the first day, and just run to the booths that we are interested in," she said.
 
"I know exactly where I want to go when I come here, which gallery I want 
to see, which artist," she added.
   
Some 65,000 visitors are expected to come to Art Basel this year to see exhibits by a lucky 304 galleries, picked from more than 1,000 that vied for a spot at the lucrative fair.

"There's been a buzz immediately," Tim Marlow, director of exhibitions at the London-based White Cube Gallery told AFP, just a few hours after the buying frenzy began.
   
"We've sold two Sergei Jensen paintings, a Tracey Emin, we sold this Mark 
Bradford work for $725,000," he said, pointing to the large abstract canvas behind him.
   
"And there is serious interest in the Damien Hirst pill cabinet, at four 
million pounds," he added with a broad smile, nodding to a large mirror wall lined with tightly spaced, narrow metal shelves covered with pills in different colours and shapes.
   
Art Basel's impact on a gallery's bottom line does not stop with what is 
sold at the fair, he said.
   
"It's about connections made and clients made, and museums.

"A lot of 
museums come . . . and then conversations are hatched, work is bought . . . exhibitions are planned."
 
The art world appears to have bucked the global economic crisis, with 
income from global auction sales more than doubling since it hit bottom in 2009, passing eight billion euros last year, according to French specialised website Artprice.com.
   
"I think the art market is actually in a very strong position," Art Basel 
director Marc Spiegler told AFP.
   
Case in point: a few hours after the opening 
Tuesday he said he was noticing "a lot of frustration among collectors because the things that they want to buy are already sold."

 'From five percent of world's rich to 40 percent' 

Amid all the stock market turmoil in recent years, the world's wealthy are increasingly turning to art as a good and safe investment, experts say.
 
"I reckon that in the next 10 years we'll see the market going from about 
five percent of the world's rich having art to around 40 percent," said Philip Hoffman, the head of the Fine Art Fund Group, which advises wealthy clients on what pieces to add to their collections.
   
But Art Basel is not only about investment; it is also about the enjoyment 
of seeing a wide range of work by the great artists of the 20th century, such as Picasso, Kandinsky and Warhol, mixed in with the cutting edge of today, Spiegler said.
 
For those more interested in looking than buying, a whole hall has been 
reserved for the "Unlimited" collection of large and sometimes astonishing works that are not for sale at the fair.
   
Unlike in the crowded section next door, there is plenty of space to stroll 
through the 11,500-square-metre exhibit, admiring works by Chinese dissident artist Ai Weiwei, British sculptor Antony Gormley, or Japanese Chiharu Shiota, who has covered chairs and a grand piano in a massive web of black string.
   
There are also less well-known artists on display, like Chinese He An.

   
"This is my first time here," he says through a translator, as he shields 
his eyes to gaze through his piece, "Hubble", a massive metal tube made from billboards with the powerful light usually used in advertising shooting out at the observer "as if from a cannon."
   
Swiss art collector Marco Stoffel, who has been coming to Art Basel for the 
past 20 years, says he likes starting in the Unlimited section before heading to the buying frenzy next door.
   
"I start here, where I can remain calm, and then, afterwards, it's off to 
the circus," he told AFP.

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