Charitable Contributions

More about IRS rules for donating works of art:

1. All individual works of art or like items valued at $5,000 and above must be appraised. Works of art valued at $20,000 and above must have a copy of the appraisal report attached to the tax return.

2. The work of art must be owned for a minimum of one year to receive a deduction of the Fair Market Value. Otherwise the deduction is at cost basis.

3. The donation must be related to the purpose of the institution receiving it in order to get a deduction of the Fair Market Value otherwise it is at cost basis. You cannot donate a Warhol print to an educational institution and receive a deduction based on its Fair Market Value. If you donate it to an art museum then you can.

4. Fractional giving is when you donate a percentage of an artwork to an institution over a period of time. The value of the contribution is based on the initial date of contribution regardless of whether the value goes up in subsequent years. If the artwork declines in value, however, then your deduction is based on its reduced value.

IRS requirements for Charitable Donation appraisals – additional Guidance

The IRS has strict requirements for appraisals for Charitable Donation and has issued additional guidance for donations of art $20,000 and above – donations which generally are subject to review by the IRS’s Art Advisory Board. This includes the requirement that a written appraisal be attached to the tax return and that 8″x10″ color photographs of individual items appraised at $20,000 and above be included. Also required is the acquisition cost of the donated item as well as the source and date of acquisition. Click on the link below to find out more.

http://www.appraisalcourseassociates.com/archive/newsletter/update12/20000.htm

Chinese Art Market Leads the Way in Art Market Recovery

Halfway through 2010 we can say that the art markets are in recovery. Leading the way has been the Chinese art market which is being driven by the ever-growing demand and sophistication of private Mainland Chinese buyers. Not surprisingly, the taste of Chinese art buyers is shifting what is being offered at first-tier auction house like Sotheby’s, Christie’s and Bonhams. Important sales are now featuring 18th century decorative arts such as blue-and-white porcelain, white jade, and objects made of rhinocerous horn. Porcelains, jades, ivories and other items believed to have been produced in imperial workshops and with excellent provenance are especially favored, with those from the Qianlong period (1736-95) bringing the highest prices. Hong Kong and auctions in Mainland China are now the center of the Chinese art market and where the record prices are being set. This MayChina’s Beijing Poly International Auction Co. set a record price for a Chinese work of art when a 15 meter long handscroll of calligraphy by Song master Huang Tingjian sold for RMB 436 million US$63.8 million.Chinese buyers are flocking to sales not only at auction houses in Hong Kong, New York, London and Paris but also to regional auction houses around the globe to chase artworks being sold from significant European collections. A recent example of this is a sale that took place at Woolley & Wallis in Great Britain where a pair of imperial jade elephants were sold for $1.23 million, 3-4 times estimate, and a white jade bell sold for $2.46 million. Eleven lots sold for over $100,000 and twenty-two lots for over $50,000.