The Pictures Present introduced by the Affiliation of Worldwide Pictures Artwork Sellers (AIPAD) returned to New York’s Park Avenue Armory for the second consecutive 12 months this previous weekend (23-27 April), with 64 taking part exhibitors.
“I am unable to consider one other venue on the planet—besides possibly the Grand Palais—that’s such an iconic place to see artwork, and that it is anticipated that nice artwork will stay on this constructing when it is right here,” says AIPAD and the Pictures Present’s government director Lydia Melamed Johnson. “The foot site visitors, the excitement… we’ve simply discovered there’s an unimaginable response to our honest.”
When the Pictures Present returned to the Armory final 12 months after 5 editions in varied Midtown areas between 2017 and 2023, the honest broke its earlier attendance information. Throughout this 12 months’s preview, traces to get in have been across the block, and practically 15,000 guests have been recorded all through the week, setting a brand new honest report (the determine was most likely helped by having yet one more honest day than in earlier years).
“A few of that’s possibly going again to the re-emergence of New York and all of that post-pandemic, however I feel there’s an actual pleasure concerning the honest coming again to the Armory after a little bit of a pause,” Melamed Johnson stated earlier than the honest opened.
It’s a singular sense of optimism for a industrial artwork honest in a down second for the market. In keeping with the economist Clare McAndrew’s newest Artwork Market Report printed by Artwork Basel and UBS, worldwide gross sales fell by 12% final 12 months, the third-steepest contraction of the previous 15 years. The report’s findings additionally picked up on shifts available in the market: whereas general worth is down, buying and selling quantity grew by 3%, reflecting progress in works priced below $50,000.
“It was actually fascinating to see what they reported on by way of the center market and the way the extra accessible worth factors have been truly up within the quantity,” Melamed Johnson stated. “That’s actually what we noticed final 12 months—up to date images within the four-to-five-digit worth factors actually promoting nicely and being actually severely thought-about alongside the classic items that AIPAD is absolutely recognized for, that always attain into the excessive five- or six-, generally seven-figures.”
Melamed Johnson highlighted the variety of Indigenous ladies who confirmed this 12 months: Larger Photos from Brooklyn introduced Jessica Eaton’s snapshots of multicoloured cubes; Scheinbaum & Russek from Santa Fe confirmed Cara Romero’s shiny, futuristic photos with references to popular culture and Indigenous life; and Toronto’s Stephen Bulger Gallery had a solo stand devoted to Shelley Niro’s work, which focuses on Indigenous ladies and ladies.
“Within the present political scenario that we’re in, it’s a celebration to have ladies Indigenous artists within the photographic medium, the place they have been ignored previously,” Melamed Johnson says. “So typically, they’ve been the topic of images, so to have them behind the lens and displaying their very own illustration of Indigenous ladies is absolutely spectacular.”
In the identical method that extra approachable worth factors and a familiarity with different editioned work make prints interesting for youthful collectors, images appears to draw Gen Z and Millenials because of their familiarity with taking photos themselves, Melamed Johnson says (“it is the medium they perceive probably the most, as a result of they’re so accustomed to it technically’). She additionally factors to the tendency for images to carry their worth.
“The value factors of images do not shift or yo-yo in the best way that a lot up to date artwork does,” she says. “The value factors are very constant and regularly develop. The trajectories which can be typically stewarded by galleries appear to be a a lot softer curve.”
Melamed Johnson provides: “To me, it makes a whole lot of sense, and it appears logical in a method that the artwork market so typically does not.”








