The Price of Everything

    The Price of Everything
    2018

    Synopsis

    Featuring collectors, dealers, auctioneers and a rich range of artists, including market darlings George Condo, Jeff Koons, Gerhard Richter and Njideka Akunyili Crosby, this documentary examines the role of art and artistic passion in today’s money-driven, consumer-based society.

    Your Movie Library

    Cast

    • Oliver Barker
    • Ed Dolman
    • Larry Poons
    • Mary Boone
    • Stefan Edlis
    • Paula De Luccia Poons
    • Gavin Brown
    • Jeff KoonsSelf
    • Gerhard Richter
    • Connie Butler

    Recommendations

    • 91

      The A.V. Club

      The master stroke of The Price Of Everything is that it asks the viewer, in Cappellazzo’s words, to see the intricacies of the art world and the way those two seemingly oppositional forces — the financial side and the creative side — are inextricably intertwined.
    • 90

      Variety

      The Price of Everything exalts in the spirt of art over commerce, yet what’s thrilling about the film — and what echoes in your mind after it’s over — is that it captures all the ways those two forces can’t be separated.
    • 80

      Los Angeles Times

      Kahn is a quiet filmmaker, and he gently prods his sources to go beyond the typical art world hyperbole of “gorgeous” and “wonderful.” And in a cool, clear-eyed way, he reveals how the $400-million sausage is made, how capitalism has turned art from idea into inventory.
    • 75

      Movie Nation

      Nathaniel Kahn’s collected interviews with artists, hype-driven dealers, well-heeled collectors and art historians and visits to Sotheby’s and the Frieze Art Fair and elsewhere give us the scale of the business, the birth of competitive modern art collecting and a sense of the recent history of this winner-take-all playground of the richest of the rich.
    • 75

      Slant Magazine

      The film understands that money is a defining element of art-making, whether or not we wish to admit it.
    • 75

      Philadelphia Daily News

      Kahn surveys artists, dealers, auctioneers, and gallery operators to provide a synopsis of the New York art world, and is at its most interesting when profiling artists who represent differing attitudes toward the way money affects their work.
    • 70

      The Hollywood Reporter

      More conversational than journalistic in spirit, it avoids hard statistics (and the reasons those stats can be hard to come by) in favor of well-informed impressions and anecdotes. Though not the first doc to note the insanity surrounding this subject, it is easily accessible to non-insiders and holds interest even for those who follow art closely.
    • 70

      The New York Times

      While this colorful and inquisitive cinematic essay on the state of the art world is occasionally skeptical and consistently thoughtful, cynicism isn’t really on its agenda.

    Loved by

    • Jason Poon