Topic: Soldados de Plomo
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Bob Frassinetti, Art Collector & Antiques Dealer in Buenos Aires, Argentina | |
My name is Bob Frassinetti. And I sell art and all kinds of antiques from Buenos Aires, Argentina as well as Chile, Paraguay or Uruguay.
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On Thursday, the city bank of Buenos Aires, Banco Ciudad, which prides itself on being the country’s top bank in the auctions business, holds its third “super special” auction of the year - and is already bracing itself for a packed auditorium and telephone lines buzzing with bids, amid what it says is a “sustained growth in public interest in investing in art”.
In Argentina, where private estimates reckon inflation will end the year at 25 to 30 per cent (well above the discredited official data, which reports that prices have risen 6.7 per cent so far this year), buying art may be a new hedge.
It could also be a way for Argentines to maintain a sense of sophistication. Argentines gloried in their humble peso being equivalent to the mighty dollar during the 1990s - until the unsustainable currency peg spectacularly collapsed in 2001-02.
Whatever the reason, visitors to the auction section of Banco Ciudad’s website have doubled in the past month and there are 20 requests a day to receive auction catalogues online for bidders to browse the relative bargains on offer.
Reserve prices for Thursday’s auction of Argentine artists start as low as 1,500 pesos ($380) and the biggest ticket work is Vito Campanella’s oil on canvas, “La Payada” , which starts with what the bank calls the “very tempting” price tag of 15,000 pesos ($3,800).
The bank’s first two auctions this year raised more than 4.4m pesos ($1.1m) and artworks have gone under the hammer for more than 50 per cent more than their reserve prices.
This experience in Argentina illustrates a wider trend: the rise of art as a new emerging asset class. Forget bonds, stocks, forex or even copper and soya. Bric art is booming, as this article highlights.
Latin American art was the best performing regional art index in the past 25 years at the end of 2009, according to Beautiful Asset Advisors, whose founders Jianping Mei and Michael Moses track the performance of fine art sales against equity market returns via their MeiMoses fine art indices.
Latin American art’s performance has sloped off this year - the following graph shows how it lags the resurgence in demand for post-war and impressionist works - but it remains “very vibrant and viable, especially as wealth continues to accumulate”, according to Mr Moses.
Castlestone Management, a UK fund manager which last year launched the first retail art fund, offering institutional and individual investors the opportunity to diversify out of traditional asset classes, says that when the value of money falls, the value of art, like that of gold, rises.
As its CEO Angus Murray, puts it, art is “an irreplaceable, unleveraged real asset which responds well in a time when the possibility of inflation is on the horizon alongside the rapid decline of the real purchasing power of money.”
Soaring bid and sales volumes at New York and London auctions since late last year prove confidence in the art market is back. “People haven’t suddenly become cultured, it’s a hedge against inflation and shows art is becoming more and more a respected asset class,” says Constanze Kubern, Castlestone’s senior art adviser.
Though “blue chip” artists can prove costly investments - Pablo Picasso’s “Nude, Green Leaves and Bust” sold for $106.5m in New York in May, setting a new world record - art gets good returns, as the following chart from Castlestone shows:
And there is plenty of upside yet. Castlestone expects art prices to rise 40 per cent over the next couple of years as the market recovers from lows in 2009.
Emerging market and Latin American art was on the up before the 2009 economic downturn, and is now picking up steam again. Phillips de Pury, one of the other big auction house alongside Sotheby’s and Christie’s, held a Bric auction in London in April, and Latin American art was showcased in the Pinta art show in London in June, a expansion from Pinta’s roots in New York.
Bric and Latin art can be speculative and thus risky, and Castlestone doesn’t own any Latin American art yet - it focuses on the “golden middle” of post-war art where prices and returns are good. But Kubern said she had Colombian artist Fernando Botero on her shopping list.
So emerging market investors may want to grab their cheque books and rush to get seats at the October-November auction season in London and New York. And make sure they have enough cash left over for the ArtBasel fair in Miami Beach in December.
Related:
Nigeria’s art collectors: a nice new market, The Economist
The Rise of the Emerging Art Economy, Businessweek
Don Frassinetti, el Hombre que no tuvo infancia |
Don Frassinetti, el Hombre que no tuvo infancia. El Mayor coleccionista de Juguees Industra Nacional. Revista ventitres. 3/8/2006 Año 9 numero 421. Por Diego Rojas
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items are from 30 Aug 2010.
31/07/10 Si bien Buenos Aires es el principal destino de las inversiones, las constructoras tienen en la mira a Córdoba, Rosario y Mendoza.
PorAndrés Mazzeo, ESPECIAL PARA CLARIN
Atraídas por el buen momento que atraviesan algunas economías regionales, las desarrolladoras inmobiliarias pusieron el foco en varias provincias del interior del país. A la par que decae levemente el interés en la Capital Federal, gran parte de las inversiones en construcciones de alta gama previstas para este año estarán destinadas a Rosario, Córdoba y Mendoza, según indica un estudio realizado por la CEDU (Cámara Empresaria de Desarrolladores Urbanos), al que accedió iEco. El objetivo, dicen en el mercado, es capitalizar el ascenso del complejo sojero rosarino, el del sector automotriz cordobés y el boom de los vinos mendocinos.
De acuerdo con la CEDU, un 42% de las constructoras está desarrollando principalmente barrios privados, country clubs y condominios. Distintas fuentes interpretan que ese porcentaje, hoy, es tan alto porque fue favorecido por dos factores principales: la ausencia de crédito para la clase media y el aumento en el valor de las propiedades. De este modo, sólo los sectores de alto poder adquisitivo pueden volcar sus excedentes en el mercado inmobiliario.
Si bien la Capital Federal aún se mantiene como principal destino para invertir en ladrillos y construcciones premium (41%), el interior ya se posicionó como una buena alternativa. Danilo Antoniazzi, gerente institucional de la CEDU, dice: “No es un dato menor el crecimiento de la construcción en el interior con relación a la zona históricamente más elegida para invertir que es Buenos Aires, y que la diferencia sea sólo de 5 puntos”. Claudia Armesto, consultora de la Cámara, completa el cuadro desde el punto de vista de las constructoras: “La mano de obra más barata y un valor más bajo de los terrenos, que además gozan de buenas ubicaciones, son elementos que determinan una mayor rentabilidad en esas plazas”.
Del total de los nuevos emprendimientos, Córdoba capital concentra el 9%; Rosario, el 5%, y Mendoza, otro tanto. Pero por sí sola, la capital mediterránea y sus alrededores representó en marzo nada menos que el 26% de la superficie a edificar en todo el país. “Córdoba, en 2009, tuvo más metros cuadrados para construir que Buenos Aires, y viene teniendo una explosión de desarrollo muy grande”, resume Ariel Turkie, un alto ejecutivo de la desarrolladora TGLT.
Para este ejecutivo, la zona se destaca por la buena respuesta del agro postsequía, la recuperación de la actividad económica de los últimos años (particularmente la industria automotriz), más la explosión demográfica impulsada por las universidades, lo que “facilitó la canalización de parte de esos excedentes hacia la construcción residencial”.
Emprendimientos
Rosario, a su vez, también se posiciona como una de las ciudades más atractivas dentro del mercado de real estate argentino. Desde la desarrolladora TGLT, el arquitecto Francisco Jorge indica que ese distrito no estaba acostumbrado, como Buenos Aires, a generar grandes proyectos. “En un comienzo, se trataba de emprendimientos de un máximo de 4.000 m2. Hoy se habla de proyectos de 40.000 y hasta 60.000. De los 30 grandes proyectos que se estamos realizando, seis están en Rosario”.
Con las edificaciones de lujo que están proyectadas, algunos se ilusionan con la posibilidad de que Rosario tenga su propio Puerto Madero. El emblema de tal ilusión es el desarrollo de Puerto Norte, un desafío que contempla el reciclado de gran parte de silos y edificios del siglo XIX, más otros nuevos, que va transformando el antiguo puerto industrial en un barrio residencial, caracterizado por sus vistas al río y su cercanía al centro.
Según los especialistas, el boom rosarino se debe al sostenido crecimiento que viene registrando el complejo agroganadero regional en los últimos años. Esos “agrodólares” se vuelcan a la compra de construcciones premium, “un segmento que además tenía escasa oferta”, según resume la consultora Claudia Armesto.
Aporte estatal
En parte, las construcciones de lujo se expanden por impulso de la planificación estatal. En 2007, la Municipalidad rosarina creó un plan de desarrollo que permitió sentar las bases para un planeamiento a largo plazo. Desde TGLT, aseguran que este “master plan” fue el que permitió diseñar lo que hoy se denomina Forum Puerto Norte.
Pero hay otras áreas del país que atraen inversiones. En la Patagonia, por ejemplo, es el sector energético (sueldos altos más radicación de empresas extranjeras con sus ejecutivos) el que tracciona al mercado inmobiliario. “Vemos a la Patagonia con un altísimo potencial de desarrollo y hoy su crecimiento es exponencial debido al desarrollo energético”, indica Daniel Jesús Sáez, responsable de marketing de la desarrolladora ASPA.
“Neuquén es un lugar con un poder adquisitivo efectivo”, agrega Daniel Mintzer, socio director de la G&D Developers, otra de las constructoras muy activas en la región.
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MercadoLibre in all South America
Topic: Auction Mercado Libre from Toys to Art, from Arts to Antiques, no item is to small or BIG.
Work with me from eBay and all the way with Mercado Libre here in Argentina as well as other Countries in South America.
Interested in Mercado Libre here in Argentina, I can help you. Press this Link |
eBay link to Bob Frassinetti, art & antique dealer. Press this Link.
You can also Join my eBat Group: Welcome to Travel Argentina for Antiques and Art Location: La Lucila, Buenos Aires, Argentina
Buy on line on eBay’s affiliate here in Argentina and other South America countries, MercadoLibre….Bob Frassinetti Arts and Antiques Team Procedure & FeesWelcome! We buy items on MercadoLibre in all South America auction sites/online shops on your order. All you have to do is to tell us what you want, where it is and we will do all the work for you. Enjoy exploring for rare items in South America!Procedure: Please send us an email with the website link of the item (either on auction sites or on regular online shops) and the maximum price you are willing to pay for the item. We will try to get the item for you. If we get the item successfully, we will ask you to pay for the fees (commission, and cost of the item). As soon as we confirm your payment, we will contact the seller. We'll let you know the cost of the shipment (international either local mail, to Fed Express UPS or even direct Air Freight or Cargo) an aprox before purchasing the item. Pay for the shipment. And the item is on the way! Fees: Commission: go from as low as 5% to a 10%, 20, 30% of the item price and up, all depends what’s its cost, it’s not the same work to buy you a “trading card” to buying you a “Old Steam Engine” or a “Vintage Car or Motorcycle” or a condominium in “Buenos Aires, Punta del Este or Villa de Tulumba”. The actual cost: the item, plus domestic shipment (by whatever means available and recommended), and plus then international shipment (converted into US dollar or the Euro, using our specified exchange rate). More Information email us, Bob Frassinetti and the Buenos Aires Art and Antique Team: admin@frassinetti.com Interests: The first project: The Buenos Aires Toy Museum, I began to work on was the oy museum I found myself finding in flea markets, fairs and old toy shops beautiful and rare toys made in Argentina about which there was no information available. I looked everywhere until I found out that I couldn find it ause it didn exist. All the amazing Argentine made toys I collected were made during the 50s, 60s, 70s and 80s, and unlike other countries in the world who worry about their history and cultural legacy, we s a society- have let them in forget. So at the same time I collected vintage and antique toys I began to develop a research group who was in charge of finding all loose pieces available to complete the puzzle of the Argentinean toy industry history. The result has been so far not only encouraging but amazing, for besides of understanding the true nature of some of our most marvellous items, Ie had the pleasure of meeting and interviewing many of the most outstanding Argentinean industrials. The Museum has grown ever since I blended the objects with the information about them. And it has become to be the first virtual museum on Argentinean toys in the country and in Latin America. The feedback wee received throughout these incredible years of hard and hearted work have gave us strength and passion to keep on developing what so far is has come to be a brilliant idea. At the same time the Museum grew and I began to discover the richness in Argentina cultural and social history through means of one of its material productions: toys. A ticking question my toy oriented research unveiled was that every culture reflexes their vision of the world through their objects, and I found out that many American models that were been produced in Argentina were been adapted to the Latin American cultural public. So I began to wonder about how an immigrant built country objects would reflect this, and it has been quite a great surprise, the blend of the indigenous, colonial and immigrant cultures is superb down here and the objects these past generations have left us are outstanding. This is how ArtDealer,The Buenos Aires ArtDealer, as a cultural and collectibles project began. My initial knowledge of art and antiques, and my experience with cultural research at the Museum were the foundation for Art Dealer to begin to grow. At the same time, as I kept on travelling through the bewitching scenarios of the beautiful Argentina I began to understand a bit more about that eclectic and gorgeous culture that intrigued me so much about the objects of our forefathers. Precious treasures. Hidden under the everyday life chores. To me this has been a discovering experience that has filled me with joy, and keeps on surprising me every day as a young child who begins to open up to the world marvels. When Argentina, during the 2001 crisis, began to open up to travellers from all over the world, who were coming to discover this wonderful place, I thought I had to share my experience with those who cherished culture, travelling, and discovering as much as I did. I also thought that if I were to travel overseas I love to do it the way the saying says: When in Rome, you do what Romans doand nothing better than a Roman to show you how. To share my knowledge and discoveries, I design custom made tours, not only ause I like to work on a personal basis, but because I deeply believe each of us is unique and has different interests and passions and mass produced standard culture leaves out ome times- very important things. And for Buenos Aires, as every other metropolis has something to offer to each and every one of us, likewise Argentina. Seven years have gone by now since Ie began to picture this broad cultural project, and each and every one of the days Ie worked to develop my idea have been amazing, with its ups and downs, inputs and changes of direction. I very glad and grateful to be able to do what I love most and to be able to share it with others who, as myself find this lifetime experience unique and beautiful.
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Favorite Links All about Art and Antiques as well as travel information for Buenos Aires and Argentina The Buenos Aires Toy Museum, Argentina The Buenos Aires Art Dealer |
As well as Auction Tours here in Buenos Aires and all around Argentina.
"Idolos en carton". Trading Card's & Album's printed in Argentina from the 1900's till the 1980's. Cards and albumes only printed here in Argentina.
Check out LINK: Photo Gallery Idolos en CArton por Rafael Bitran and Francisco Chiappini
TODO COLOR de: 410 COLECCIONES DISTINTAS 215 TAPAS DE ALBUMES 164 SOBRES DE FIGURITAS 450 FIGURITAS DIFERENTES El libro consta de 128 páginas, es TODO COLOR y se ha realizado en papel ilustración de excelente calidad. En él entre otras tantas colecciones aparecen: BATMAN, HIJITUS, LOS BEATLES, TITANES EN EL RING, TARZAN, EL ZORRO, MARTE ATACA, LOS TRES CHIFLADOS, LA PANTERA ROSA, HE-MAN, MAZINGER, STAROSTA,
The Buenos Aires Toy Museum on Face Book.