

Hisashi Tenmyouya
Bloomberg: Art Boom? What Art Boom? Collectors Head to Japan for Bargains
Here is the scorecard for the recent contemporary art auctions around the world: New York, $240 million; London, $229 million; Hong Kong, $67 million; Tokyo, $1.1 million. How can this be? Japan, the world's second-biggest economy, enjoying its longest expansion in six decades, has been left out of the current art market boom. For collectors, the message is: Buy now. Tokyo's overlooked galleries are attracting a new generation of young, wealthy Japanese in their 30s and 40s, unfazed by the asset slump of the 1990s and encouraged by skyrocketing overseas prices for established artists like Takashi Murakami, Yoshitomo Nara and Yayoi Kusama. "Japan is one of the last places where you have a long history of art, some of it quite good, with depressed prices," said Edwin Merner...Sueo Mizuma, owner of Mizuma Gallery [said] "Recently, a collector bought a Tenmyouya piece from me for 1.5 million yen and sold it three months later at an auction in New York for 6 million yen -- amazing"...more...