This is my third post about pricing in recent art society exhibitions. Today it's about the Royal Institute of Painters in Water Colours (RI) Annual Open Exhibition 2023 at the Mall Galleries in London in April 2023.
The exhibition is the biggest exhibition of watercolours in the UK. This is my review of the exhibition Royal Institute of Painters in Water Colours Annual Exhibition 2023 in which I indicated I'd be doing this exhibition metrics post after the exhibition had closed.- during the exhibition - to visitors
- online - before, during and after the exhibition in the Mall Galleries
Below you can find charts I've produced from a lot of careful counting of artworks hung in the exhibition and which ones sold.
Plus some fairly robust comments.....
Exhibition Metrics: Artwork Exhibited and Artworks Sold
The purpose of the post is to illustrate some points about pricing which I've been making for some time - which are again underlined by the results I got from my analysis
This post considers three aspects- the number of artworks exhibited and sold in each price range - analysed between member and non-member artworks
- observations on sales - in different price bands - for both members and non-members.
- pricing lessons for:
- the RI and Mall Galleries
- member artists
- artists selected via the open entry - when entering in 2024.
- which are the most popular price bands for sales.
- which price bands have the most unsold work!
There are a number of important points - about which I'll comment more below - which, in summary are:
- Price point hurdles are VERY important determinants of sale
- Affordable art sells well
- There's an effective ceiling limit at the Mall Galleries - above which few artworks will sell
- Excessive prices rarely generate sales for unknown artists - you need to be aware of the audience an exhibition attracts
- Expensive artworks are harder to sell during a period of economic uncertainty
All/any pricing ALWAYS needs to take economic context into account. This is particularly relevant to some members who normally sell and sold no work in this exhibition.
I'm uploading larger versions of my pricing/sales charts to a post about them on my Facebook Page.
Overall:
- 449 artworks were selected for hanging in the exhibition
- 68 artworks sold - represented 18% of the artwork hung
- open artists sold more artwork than RI members
- 40 by RI members (17% of artwork hung)
- 43 by artists selected from the Open Entry (20% of artwork hung)
- most sales were for less than £1,500 - which has been a really important hurdle price for a very long time.
What proportion of artwork sold - across different price ranges?
Two price ranges saw the most sales - and there were few sales after £1,500
RI Annual Exhibition 2023 Comparison of total numbers of artworks sold and exhibited |
- Under £500: 36% of artworks hung sold - and most of these relate to small/smaller artworks by open entrants
- £501-£750: 24% of artwork hung sold - again mostly in relation to smaller artworks
- the current cost of living crisis and
- concern around increases in interest rates - which has NOT abated (i.e. this applies to all upcoming exhibitions too)
- the first four price ranges have a similar number of artworks hung
- however the number of sales in the first four price ranges DIMINISH as the price rises
- after £1500 (a VERY important price hurdle observed by me in numerous FBA exhibitions)
- the numbers of artworks hung drop off dramatically
- the drop in sales is even more dramatic
- only 6 artworks sold above £1500
- nobody sold above £5,000
- how sales work relative to prices in these galleries - and
- how best to price in relation to price hurdles
- how best to price in a time of economic uncertainty
What are the price hurdles?
- based on perception and psychology
- have nothing to do with value and
- are unaffected by price inflation and currency (eg the same numbers apply within $ marketplaces).
- being spontaneous in your buying stops
- you have to choose not to do something else you had planned
- you need to think about other resources you can bring to bear on your buying decision (eg discounts / vouchers / payment plans)
- you have to think longer before you buy - including leaving the gallery - and accept the risk of not being able to buy. (I call it "research" when I do this!)
- £500
- £750
- £1,000
- £1,500
- £2,500 / £3,000 (this one wavers)
- £5,000
- £10,000 etc
TOP TIP: ALWAYS price just below a price hurdle, never ever just above it - unless you have lots of fans who love your work and buy it.
Who sells the most artwork in each price range?
- RI members sold 40 paintings / 17% of their artwork - mainly because it's currently much harder to sell more expensive artworks. If they had adjusted for context, I'm sure they'd have sold more.
- Open artists sold 43 paintings / 20% of their artwork
- AFFORDABLE ART continues to be very popular with those visiting the exhibition and the website.
- 60% of sales occurred AT OR BELOW £750.
- MORE EXPENSIVE ARTWORK (priced above £2,500) is NOT popular. This is due to the current context of economic uncertainty. I've watched price patterns in these galleries for the last 17 years and it happens every time uncertainty increases.
- Only two sales were priced in excess of £2,500
- only four sales were priced in excess of £2,000
- Only six sales were prices in excess of £1,500
- RI members outsold open entrants in 4 of the price ranges (£501-£750; £1001-£1500; £1500-£2000 and £2501-£5000)
- members and open entrants had the same sales in two categories (upto £500; £2000-£2500)
- open entrants sold more than RI members in the third most popular price range for sales (£751-£1000)
Comparison of numbers of artworks sold by RI members and open
entrants in each price range |
- there were more sales by members in 2023 - 40 compared to 33
- there were fewer sales by members in the under £1000 price ranges
- there were a LOT more sales by open entrants in in 2023 - 43 compared to 27. Maybe because they're much more focused on affordable art?
RI Annual Exhibition 2019
|
How did RI members do in 2023?
The chart below relates purely to the artworks hung by members and the sales they achieve.
RI Members' artwork in RI Annual Exhibition 2023 Comparison of price ranges for RI member sales and artwork exhibited |
In summary:
- there are two very popular price ranges £500-£750 and £1000-£1500. Otherwise pricing is a bit all over the place
- RI members did not take advantage of the fact that the most popular price range with buyers is under £500
- there may well be some overpricing within the £751-£1000 price range given sales drop off. Having said that, there was at least one RWS watercolour painter exhibiting at the RBA Exhibition who has sold in this price range for years - and always sells well. But her medium sized artwork is exquisite....
Cost of Living and Inflation
It's my belief more members would have sold more artwork with better information about pricing.What this chart does not tell you is that:
- some members did not sell any of their artwork. It rather undermines the artist, the society and the art gallery when this happens - and an explanation could usefully be sought for why this might be. This includes a number who have sold well in the past - but not cheaply.
- RI members who have previously sold large artworks did not sell well in this exhibition
- being more businesslike
- pricing artwork
- developing a following
- marketing artwork in advance of an exhibition.
How did artists selected via the Open Entry do?
|
- nobody who priced above £1,500 sold their artwork at this exhibition - except for one artist
- AFFORDABLE ART: 60% of artwork sold by those artists selected from the Open Entry was priced below £750
- EXPENSIVE ART: absolutely nobody sold above £2,500
- VERY IMPORTANT PRICE HURDLE: only one artist sold above the critically important price hurdle at the Mall Galleries of £1,500. This suggests there's a LOT of artists who are very uninformed about the prices of works which sell and/or pricing in general and/or overvaluing. Hence there are a significant number who are not pricing their work to sell.
The future
- when considering artists as candidates for members - questions need to be asked about whether that candidate has a good track record in sales.
- when considering exhibition sale records - questions need to be asked about whether better choices could have been made by those members who sold nothing about:
- the artwork they hung
- the prices they charged
- their member artists,
- their aspiring artist members,
- their Art Society and
- the Galleries in which they hold their exhibitions.
- won't be artists with sales and will need another source of income
- won't be holding exhibitions to both show and sell art
- might have to find another place to exhibit in order to cut costs
- etc etc etc
Other pricing posts & more information about pricing art
Pricing posts about the RI
Pricing Posts - other art societies and open exhibitions
- RBA Annual Exhibition 2023: Analysis of art sales metrics & Recommendations about pricing artwork
- RWS Open Exhibition 2023: Analysis of prices and sales of selected artwork
- Pricing a marine artwork & RSMA Annual Exhibition Metrics
- Pricing "Winners" - which provides some salutary lessons about size
- Review - Lynn Painter-Stainers Prize 2019 - and pricing issues
- RA Summer Exhibition - a curious exercise in pricing and sales
- Pricing prints for the Summer Exhibition
Pricing Posts - general
- How to price art
- Why art prices rise - inflation, status and market value
- Is there a guide for pricing art for competitions?
- Results of "How do you price your art?"
Advice about Pricing Art
Many readers will know this already - but for those who don't....It includes sections on:
- How important is price when buying art? - Find out how important prices is to those buying art
- Options for pricing art - How to avoid pricing art disasters + Check out different approaches to "how to price art" - including different formulas for pricing your art
- Terminology and formulas for pricing art - Learn the words used when pricing art. Review what influences different ways of pricing art e.g. identify costs that need to be recovered and learn about how place and venue influences prices
- Art experts on pricing art - Find out what art experts recommend as the best ways to price art
- How artists price their art - Find out how other artists price their art - and which are the most popular
- What's the price of affordable art? - find out why people attach importance to numbers + what are the big price hurdles and how they can vary between countries
Ignore "price hurdles" in relation to affordable art at your peril!
Take account of them and you will sell a LOT more art!
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