TOC: Exhibiting Art for Sale, Journal for Art Market Studies Vol.2, No. 1

Louise Lawler, Life After 1945 (Faces), 2006/2007, cibachrome mounted on museum box 40 x 33-1/4 inches (101.6 x 83.2 cm) Courtesy of the artist and Metro Pictures, New York. Based on a cover design by Amichai Green Grafik

The third issue of the Journal for Art Market Studies focuses on the role and development of the exhibition space in a commercial context, from the American barbershop to veritable art trade palaces built in Munich around 1900, as well as both forerunners of and alternatives to today’s commercial gallery spaces.

https://www.fokum-jams.org/index.php/jams/issue/view/5/showToc

ISSN: 2511-7602

 

Andrea Meyer,    Introduction
https://fokum-jams.org/index.php/jams/article/view/41

Alison Stagg, The American Dressing Academy: a venue for early American caricature prints
https://fokum-jams.org/index.php/jams/article/view/24

Meike Hopp, Art Trade Palaces – Galleries of art dealers as architectural task and their reception in Munich around 1900
https://fokum-jams.org/index.php/jams/article/view/35

Malcolm Gee, Modern Art Galleries in Paris and Berlin c.1890-1933: types, policies and modes of display
https://fokum-jams.org/index.php/jams/article/view/18

Anne Luther, Artist-run Galleries – Differentiating Three Models in Current Contemporary Art Markets
https://fokum-jams.org/index.php/jams/article/view/19

Interview with Sebastian Baden
https://fokum-jams.org/index.php/jams/article/view/27

Helene Bosecker/Susanne Meyer-Abich, Conference report “The Art Fair”
https://fokum-jams.org/index.php/jams/article/view/33

Reference: TOC: Exhibiting Art for Sale, Journal for Art Market Studies Vol.2, No. 1. In: ArtHist.net, Feb 1, 2018. <https://arthist.net/archive/17275>.