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The outbreak of the First World War shattered the established European art market. Amidst fighting, looting, confiscations, expropriation fears and political and economic upheaval, an integrated marketplace shaped by upper-class patrons broke down entirely. In its place, Maddalena Alvi argues, can be found the origins of a recognisably modern market of nationalised spheres driven by capitalist investment and speculation, yet open to wider social strata. Delving into auction records, memoirs, newspaper articles, financial and legal documents in six languages, Alvi explores these cultural and socio-economic developments across the British, French, and German markets, as well as trade spheres such as Russia and Scandinavia. 1914 marked the end of the European art market and cemented the connection between art and finance.
Maddalena Alvi completed her Ph.D. in history at the University of Cambridge and has worked as a lecturer in Modern European History at the University of Manchester.
Introduction; 1. The European market before 1914; 2. The great conflagration (1914–1918); 3. 'Wartime cultural changes' (1914–1918); 4. Post-war markets (1918–1925); 5. 'The challenges of new markets'; 6. Cementing nationalisation (1918–1925); Conclusion: the end of the European art market.
'Maddalena Alvi gives us a riveting account of artistic privilege, power, and property, exposing the ways in which the European bourgeoise and upper classes were transformed by war, revolution, financial crises, and their appetite for exchanging art for money.' Joanna Bourke, Professor of History, Birkbeck, University of London
Aviel Roshwald, Richard Stites, Washington DC) Roshwald, Aviel (Professor of History, Georgetown University, Washington DC) Stites, Richard (Georgetown University