Dealing in Splendour - A History of the European Art Market at the Liechtenstein Palace

January 29 2026

Image of Dealing in Splendour - A History of the European Art Market at the Liechtenstein Palace

Picture: liechtensteincollections.at

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

The Liechtenstein Collections in Vienna are opening a new exhibition tomorrow dedicated to the History of the European Art Market. The show will be held at the Liechtenstein Garden Palace and entry is completely free.

According to their website:

With a history reaching back over four centuries, the Princely Collections are part of a long tradition of collecting that spans many generations. Essential to this at all times has been a policy of active collecting. In the past as in the present, new acquisitions shaped the appearance of the galleries. The art collection has thus been formed not only by the personal tastes of the various princes but also by the art market with its changing sales strategies, trend-setting individuals, and economic factors.

Against this background, the upcoming temporary exhibition mounted by the Princely Collections is to be devoted to the fascinating history of the European art market. Spotlights will be shone on structures, centres of innovation, influential personalities and marketing methods from antiquity to the nineteenth century, revealing that many of these methods have changed very little up to the present day. Auctions were held in ancient imperial Rome. In Antwerp, art trade fairs were already attracting an international clientele in the sixteenth century, and the first catalogues raisonnés of Old Masters were compiled by art dealers in the eighteenth century.

These and other enthralling insights into the history of the European art market await you from 30 January 2026 at the Liechtenstein Garden Palace in Vienna, with major works from the Princely Collections appearing alongside sensational loans in the largest annual temporary exhibition we have mounted to date. The extensive catalogue will boast essays by leading experts in the field of art market scholarship, bringing interdisciplinary approaches to bear in a volume that will provide a comprehensive overview of the subject.

The exhibition will run until 6th April 2026.

Notice to "Internet Explorer" Users

You are seeing this notice because you are using Internet Explorer 6.0 (or older version). IE6 is now a deprecated browser which this website no longer supports. To view the Art History News website, you can easily do so by downloading one of the following, freely available browsers:

Once you have upgraded your browser, you can return to this page using the new application, whereupon this notice will have been replaced by the full website and its content.