Close Menu
celebritymediamanagement.com
    What's Hot

    Kelly Rowland Has The Internet Gagging After Debuting New Look

    March 16, 2026

    Bye-bye to bogos: the rise and fall of ‘buy-one, give-one’ art sales – The Art Newspaper

    March 16, 2026

    Nicole Kidman is hilariously unhinged in post-divorce ‘Scarpetta’ interviews | Viral Press Tours (Video)

    March 16, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • Kelly Rowland Has The Internet Gagging After Debuting New Look
    • Bye-bye to bogos: the rise and fall of ‘buy-one, give-one’ art sales – The Art Newspaper
    • Nicole Kidman is hilariously unhinged in post-divorce ‘Scarpetta’ interviews | Viral Press Tours (Video)
    • Law Roach fuels Zendaya and Tom Holland marriage rumors again at Oscars 2026
    • How to Spot the Cheap Secrets of Overpriced Hotels
    • 2026 Oscars: Best Dressed Celebs (PHOTOS)
    • The rich can't sell their art, so they're borrowing against it
    • Shawn Mendes answers nature’s call in public while on walk with girlfriend Bruna Marquezine
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    celebritymediamanagement.com
    Monday, March 16
    • Home
    • Celebrity Events
    • Scandals & Confessions
    • Trending Celebrity News
    • Beauty Gone Wrong
    • Celebrity Marriages & Divorce
    • Luxury Celebrity Homes
    • More
      • Celebrity Cars & Collections
      • Priceless Art Collections
      • Hollywood Movie Rumors
      • Vacation Hotspots For The Rich
    celebritymediamanagement.com
    Home»Art Collections»Bye-bye to bogos: the rise and fall of ‘buy-one, give-one’ art sales – The Art Newspaper
    Art Collections

    Bye-bye to bogos: the rise and fall of ‘buy-one, give-one’ art sales – The Art Newspaper

    CelebrityMediaManagementBy CelebrityMediaManagementMarch 16, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read1 Views
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Telegram Tumblr Email
    Bye-bye to bogos: the rise and fall of ‘buy-one, give-one’ art sales – The Art Newspaper
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    If you wanted to purchase a painting by a red-hot contemporary artist a few years ago, you were probably told to get in line. Some galleries had dozens, even hundreds, of prospective buyers and only a handful of works available. But there was a reliable way to get to the front of the pack: a mechanism known in the art business as “buy one, give one”.

    Bogo, as the sales tactic has come to be known, is used by galleries to tamp down speculation while supporting their artists’ long-term prospects. To secure preferential access to an in-demand artist’s work, a collector agrees to buy two paintings (and they are almost always paintings, the most commercial of media) by that artist. The collector then donates one to a museum and keeps the other for themselves.

    Proponents see the arrangement as a win-win-win. The artist receives institutional imprimatur, the museum gets a desirable gift and the collector gets their hands on a work they desperately want. Meanwhile, the gallery can right-size demand by raising the bar to buy a painting and keep their star artists happy.

    During the market’s recent heyday, from 2021 to 2023, bogo deals became de rigueur. “It felt like there was always the bogo conversation,” says the collector and art adviser Adam Green, who estimates he has facilitated dozens of such deals on behalf of clients. Institutions as large as the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, as well as smaller ones like the Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami, and the Columbus Museum of Art in Ohio, have acquired work through bogo donations, sources say.

    As the market contracted over the past two years, the volume of these arrangements fell accordingly. “The economics aren’t what they used to be,” Green says. The shift away from bogo deals is a sign of the changing power dynamics among collectors, galleries and museums—and it may have a ripple effect on young artists’ careers. Whether those effects are positive or negative depends on whom you ask.

    Who benefits most from bogos?

    Bogo is not a post-pandemic invention. Over the past 15 years, its prevalence has risen and fallen with the tide of the ultra-contemporary art market. Michael Darling, the former chief curator of the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, recalls working with the city’s now-shuttered Shane Campbell Gallery on one such deal for a Mark Grotjahn painting back in 2010. “That’s when those were in the $300,000 to $400,000 range retail, but already there was a lot of demand and speculation,” he says. “The collector could have assumed it would be triple the price the next year.”

    Artist Mark Grotjahn is one in-demand contemporary artist whose works have been sold under bogo deals New York Times/Redux/eyevine

    Two factors contributed to the contraction of bogo, experts say. First, it is considerably less competitive to buy a work of contemporary art than it was three years ago. Bogo deals helped less established collectors—those who do not sit on a major museum board or have a private museum to their name—gain access to in-demand art. “Not all collectors had to do a bogo—just the ones deemed not good enough to buy a work outright by a given artist,” says the art adviser Benjamin Godsill. Today, “any collector is a good collector”.

    The second factor in the bogo decline is the rise of primary market prices. In response to rampant speculation, many galleries have increased prices to more closely align with auction sales. This has diminished the bogo value proposition. Collectors can no longer buy two works from a gallery for less than it costs to buy one at auction. And since the fair market value of those works no longer outpaces their retail prices, collectors are unable to no longer get the benefit of a hefty tax deduction.

    Bogo deals have not disappeared entirely. Like the market for ultra-contemporary art, they have just become more selective. “Bogos are still happening, just for a smaller group of artists where there is a meaningful gap between primary and secondary market,” Green says. Sources say that galleries are still pursuing bogo deals for painters including Le Hei Di, Louis Fratino and Lucy Bull.

    In this new environment, it is also increasingly common for galleries to ask collectors to make a cash donation to support a museum’s acquisition of an in-demand artist’s work instead of donating it outright. This solution—call it “bogs” (buy one, give some)—is less expensive for the collector and gives the museum the flexibility to make a selection on its own terms.

    A balancing act for museums

    Some art-world figures are ambivalent about bogo. Kevin Tucker, the chief curator of the High Museum of Art in Atlanta, notes that these deals can create an “odd dynamic” for museums, who want to avoid alienating donors while being discerning about what they acquire. “We want to make sure we’re working with the artist and getting what we feel is the best representative example of the work they produce,” he says.

    Bogo deals also risk creating the perception that collectors are driving museums’ decision-making, while placing early-stage works in institutions before the artist has the chance to mature. “There will be a look-back period where it’s like, ‘these 40 artists ended up with the same 12 museums on their CV’,” says one dealer. “They didn’t have any proper exhibitions. It’s board members trying to increase the value of their collection.”

    Another complicating factor is that, as storage becomes more expensive, museums are increasingly recognising that “even if they are getting a work for free, it’s not free”, says Kibum Kim, a partner at the Los Angeles gallery Commonwealth and Council.

    The decline of the bogo deal is symbolic of today’s market moment, when museums and collectors hold more cards than the gallery—and, often, the artist. “Everyone,” Kim says, “is being more deliberate about what work they want.”

    Art bogos buyone Byebye Fall giveone Newspaper Rise Sales
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    CelebrityMediaManagement
    • Website

    Related Posts

    The rich can't sell their art, so they're borrowing against it

    March 16, 2026

    10 Best Art Museums in the U.S.

    March 15, 2026

    Inside Charles Butt’s American Modernist Collection • The Austin Chronicle

    March 15, 2026

    The Collector Powering Singapore’s Art Community

    March 14, 2026

    15 art exhibits to check out this spring

    March 14, 2026

    Why modern art museum Dib Bangkok is a must-visit destination in Thailand

    March 13, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Don't Miss

    Kelly Rowland Has The Internet Gagging After Debuting New Look

    March 16, 2026

    Sheeshhh, y’all… Kelly Rowland is reminding us why she’s always been a forever foineee queen.…

    Bye-bye to bogos: the rise and fall of ‘buy-one, give-one’ art sales – The Art Newspaper

    March 16, 2026

    Nicole Kidman is hilariously unhinged in post-divorce ‘Scarpetta’ interviews | Viral Press Tours (Video)

    March 16, 2026

    Law Roach fuels Zendaya and Tom Holland marriage rumors again at Oscars 2026

    March 16, 2026
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo
    Latest Reviews
    About Us

    Welcome to Celebrity Media Management — your ultimate backstage pass to the glamorous, scandalous, and jaw-dropping world of celebrity culture.

    From red carpet events and exclusive Hollywood parties to the juiciest confessions and outrageous plastic surgery rumors, we cover it all — raw, real, and unapologetically entertaining. Our team of pop culture enthusiasts, insiders, and trend-watchers work around the clock to bring you the most talked-about celebrity stories from around the globe.

    Our Picks

    Kelly Rowland Has The Internet Gagging After Debuting New Look

    March 16, 2026

    Bye-bye to bogos: the rise and fall of ‘buy-one, give-one’ art sales – The Art Newspaper

    March 16, 2026

    Nicole Kidman is hilariously unhinged in post-divorce ‘Scarpetta’ interviews | Viral Press Tours (Video)

    March 16, 2026
    OUR CATEGOIRES
    • Celebrity Events
    • Scandals & Confessions
    • Trending Celebrity News
    • Beauty Gone Wrong
    • Celebrity Marriages & Divorce
    • Celebrity Cars & Collections
    • Luxury Celebrity Homes
    • Priceless Art Collections
    • Hollywood Movie Rumors
    • Vacation Hotspots For The Rich
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Privacy Policy
    • Contact Us
    • About Us
    Copyright © 2025. CelebrityMediaManagement.All Right Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.