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Art Addicts Prowl for Next Koons in Younger New York Galleries

Enlarge image Anselm Reyle Painting

Anselm Reyle Painting

Anselm Reyle Painting

Sotheby's via Bloomberg

Anselm Reyle, B. 1970, "Untitled." In less than two years, the colorful, stripe-rich paintings of Anselm Reyle have vaulted him from modest success to six-figure star. The metamorphosis says a lot about the contemporary-art market.

Anselm Reyle, B. 1970, "Untitled." In less than two years, the colorful, stripe-rich paintings of Anselm Reyle have vaulted him from modest success to six-figure star. The metamorphosis says a lot about the contemporary-art market. Source: Sotheby's via Bloomberg

Enlarge image "Fisherman Golfer"

"Fisherman Golfer"

"Fisherman Golfer"

Christie's via Bloomberg

"Fisherman Golfer" by Jeff Koons. Executed in 1986, this work is number three from an edition of three plus one artist's proof.

"Fisherman Golfer" by Jeff Koons. Executed in 1986, this work is number three from an edition of three plus one artist's proof. Source: Christie's via Bloomberg

Enlarge image Jeff Koons

Jeff Koons

Jeff Koons

Michael Crabtree/Bloomberg News.

American contemporary artist and sculptor Jeff Koons.

American contemporary artist and sculptor Jeff Koons. Photographer: Michael Crabtree/Bloomberg News.

Amir Shariat, chief executive officer of financing and advisory firm Auctor Capital Partners Ltd. in London, prowls for art much as he does for stock.

In 2005, the collector noticed a colorful stripe painting by little-known artist Anselm Reyle at the Art Basel fair in Switzerland. He liked the painter’s new take on pop art and bought the work for 10,000 euros ($12,170). In the following two years, the artist’s career took off, with another of his stripe paintings fetching $634,956 at Christie’s in London in 2007.

“To discover artists before they become famous, that’s the thrill for me,” Shariat, 38, says. “It’s like spotting a great stock that nobody else thought of.”

Today, collectors are flocking to small galleries in Berlin, London and New York to play the art market as Shariat does. Rather than paying a few million to $100 million for a Picasso painting, they’re buying the works of emerging artists for $1,000 to $20,000.

In New York, where galleries in Chelsea have dominated, new art outposts have been opening downtown on the Lower East Side and in the East Village.

Rental, a gallery on the Lower East Side that has mounted exhibitions of cutting-edge art from Cologne, London and Warsaw, is moving a few blocks to Orchard Street in September to triple its size to 2,800 square feet (260 square meters).

Another hot spot, Museum 52 in the East Village, sold out paintings from Julia Goldman’s debut solo show within a week last October at prices from $2,500 to $6,000.

“Collectors don’t have to rack their brains about whether they can afford pieces of emerging art,” says Augusto Arbizo, director of gallery Eleven Rivington on the Lower East Side. “They are already cheap.”

Key Is Research

Most artists will never transcend the lower rungs of the market. The key to finding a winner, Shariat says, is research. Visit as many art openings, fairs and museum exhibitions as you can. Talk to dealers, artists and collectors about the art, not about making money from it. Dealers frown on speculators and prefer to do business with buy-and-hold collectors.

And watch for signs of a rising star, such as artwork shown at the Whitney Biennial or the Art Basel fair. The website oneartworld.com, which tracks shows at more than 2,000 galleries by about 38,000 artists around the world, is a good place to start exploring.

“Like everything in life, you need to be dedicated to be successful,” says Shariat, whose collection includes several hundred pieces, mostly from artists who weren’t established at the time he bought their work. “Instead of going to play soccer in the park, I see five or six art shows during the weekend.”

Art That Challenges

Andrew Ong, an architectural designer based in New York, has discovered up-and-comers by seeking out art that challenges him. When he began collecting in the 1980s, he coveted sculpture by established minimalist artists Dan Flavin and Donald Judd that he couldn’t afford.

Instead, he bought one of four identical stainless-steel sculptures titled “Fisherman Golfer” by a relative unknown named Jeff Koons at a Los Angeles gallery for $15,000 in 1986. In May of this year, another of the sculptures, which ended up in the collection of the late best-selling author Michael Crichton, fetched $434,500 at Christie’s in New York.

“I bought that Koons because it was really interesting and new,” Ong, 54, says. “It was the art of my generation.”

Ong has bought early works by Richard Prince and Felix Gonzalez-Torres for a fraction of what they would cost now. Ong’s advice to new collectors: Follow your eyes and ignore what’s fashionable at the moment.

“To have a strong feeling about something -- loving or hating it -- that’s what I am looking for,” he says.

To contact the reporter of this story: Katya Kazakina in New York at kkazakina@bloomberg.net.

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