Myth-busting: why the prints market is widely misunderstood
One of the panel’s central themes was that the prints market is often misunderstood precisely because it looks transparent.
Prints are commonly described as liquid, democratic and data-rich. Those statements can be true, but they are frequently taken to mean that the market is safe, simple, or predictable. Jean described the art market as an “inefficient” market, and prints are a clear example of why. In an efficient market, identical assets would trade at similar prices under similar conditions. In prints, identical-looking works can trade at different prices at the same time.
That pricing divergence is not a flaw. It is a feature of how value forms in this segment. Condition, edition type, proof status, provenance, timing, and sale context can materially shift pricing and liquidity. The more repeatable the asset, the more those differentiators matter.
As our Market Editor, Sheena Carrington, put it: confidence is often assumed where it should be assessed. Visibility does not equal certainty. The market rewards literacy.
