Friday, January 23, 2009
How Do You Stop an Art Collector From Charging?
Say GOOD BYE to plastic money @ art auctions!
Read below!
By: Erica Orden
New York Magazine
Sotheby's is having an auction of Old Masters Drawings on January 28, but don't expect to put that Hans Bock the Elder on your charge card. Until the end of 2008, Sotheby's accepted plastic for auction purchases (Eli Broad famously charged his $2.47 million purchase of Roy Lichtenstein's painting I ... I'm Sorry with his American Express card in 1995), but now they're taking only checks, wire transfers, and cash. Sotheby's never announced the change publicly, and instead has been noting it in a discreet sign perched on its lobby desk. Putting an auction item on a card "was not widely utilized," explained a Sotheby's spokesperson, who also confirmed that the Sotheby's-branded MasterCard, which offered "privileged access to Sotheby's experiences and distinctive services, benefits and rewards," has been discontinued. But, for those who can't stop charging, Christie's, on the other hand, started taking credit cards last fall at its New York auctions for purchases of up to $100,000.
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Erica Orden,
New York Magazine
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2 comments:
Credit cards are "not widely utilized?" At the day sales, I bet they were. I haven't carried a checkbook in years. Stores don't take them, and most of us pay our bills electronically.
I'm just imagining the 'cash back rewards' on a $2.47 million purchase and what kind of card has a limit like that. Very interesting.
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