1 Introduction

Artworks by female artists represent only 3% to 5% of major permanent collections in the USA and Europe (National Museum of Women in the Arts 2017), and this fraction is reflected in a similar percentage of artworks by female artists sold at auction globally; according to auction sales data from artnet, this is less than 4%. Historically there were far fewer female artists; however, in more recent generations roughly 50% of all Master of Fine Arts (MFA) holders are female in the USA. It has been noted that their share drops to 30% in commercial US galleries (National Museum of Women in the Arts 2017) and to 25% at art fairs (McAndrew 2018).

In this large-scale empirical study, we analyze how the fraction of male and female artists selling at auction has evolved over time and estimate the size of any relative price differences between these two groups, after controlling for conventional artwork characteristics. Our curiosity in the pricing of artworks across different birth identities is to further our understanding of whether there are any differences in artistic characteristics of female produced artworks. As the share of female produced artworks has significantly increased over time, this will be reflected in the art market more broadly.

We use auction data representing nearly the whole population of auction transactions in the time period between 2000 and 2017. We also employ a smaller primary (gallery) market data set to investigate how the share differs between the primary and the secondary (auction) market for male and female artists. We find that female-produced artworks have a lower price than male-produced artworks when we do not control for artwork characteristics. However, after controlling for conventional artwork characteristics, female-produced artworks trade at a higher average price. This is suggestive that the difference in prices is reflective of differences in artistic characteristics of female-produced artworks.

2 Data

2.1 Sample

Our dataset comprises almost the full population of global art auction transactions between 2000 and 2017 from artnet AG, covering over 1800 auction houses.Footnote 1,Footnote 2 Auction sales characteristics include the auction house name, the sale date, the lot number, the auction house pre-sale estimate and the hammer price in US Dollars before transaction costs. We deflate all prices using the US consumer price index using 2017 as our base year.Footnote 3 With respect to the artists’ attributes, the database records name, date of birth, living status and nationality. At an artwork level, we have information on the title of the work, its size and object type. We categorize auction transactions into movements based on the birth year of the artist following the classification in the Tefaf (Pownall 2017) and the Art Basel and UBS Global Art Market Reports (McAndrew 2018), into Old Masters and Impressionists (1250--1874), Modern (1875--1910), Post War (after 1911 and deceased) and Contemporary (all living artists).Footnote 4

Our variable of interest is the artists’ birth sex. Since artnet’s price database does not indicate the birth sex of the artists, we identified female artists by matching them to a number of name lists, and use name as a proxy for birth-identified sex. We use a list provided by the Museum of Modern Art that lists name and birth sex of 70,000 major artists. We use a probabilistic approach to match the remaining artist names to their likely birth sex based on name lists.Footnote 5 In order to ensure accuracy and increase the homogeneity of the artists in our sample in terms of opportunities such as access to education, we focus on Western artists who are based in Europe and North America.Footnote 6,Footnote 7 We also drop observations where information on artwork size is missing.Footnote 8 Lastly, we exclude bought-in lots from our main analysis.Footnote 9 Our final sample consists of 2,677,190 auction transactions for 116,550 artists (Tables 1 and 2 ).

Table 1 Top 50 male artists by value of sales
Table 2 Top 50 female artists by value of sales

2.2 Descriptive statistics

Table 3 shows the summary statistics for auction prices for male and female artists, by artistic movement, object type, region and living status. The final column presents the difference between mean male and female prices. Overall, 96.1% (2,572,346) of all artworks sold at auction between 2000--2017 are attributed to male artists. Figure 1 shows that sales volumes have increased overall, with a larger relative increase for women. Over the sample period (Fig. 1a,c), sales of artworks by females increased by a multiple of 6.0, while sales of male artworks increased by a multiple of 2.8. Nevertheless, female artists remain a small fraction of the overall market in terms of both volume (4.2%) and value (5.0%). Over generations, sales numbers increased rapidly for artists born after 1875 (Fig. 1b,d). Again, this increase is more pronounced for female artists.

Table 3 Summary statistics for men and women
Fig. 1
figure 1

Evolution of sales by male and female artists. The year 2017 is omitted in Figures a and c as we only use the first four months of this year. Overall, there were 35,860 artworks by male and 1787 artworks by female artists in this year. The value of these artworks is $1,521,769,000 and $53,611,000, respectively. Due to missing data on the year of birth, not all artists could not be allocated to a generation. Figures b and d omit these artists. Overall, there are 89,888 artworks by male and 2199 artworks by female artists in this omitted category. The value of these artworks is $761,310,000 and $7,780,000, respectively.

With respect to the number of artists, men dominate the auction market representing 95.2% of the artists sold at auction. While there are 110,938 male artists, there are only 5612 female artists. The proportion of female artists is highest for Contemporary art (9.3% are from female artists) and smallest for the Old Masters period (2.9%). Figure 2 shows the evolution of the number of distinct male and female artists over the sample period as well as over the generations (Fig. 2).Footnote 10 Whilst we observe an increasing trend in the number of recorded artists selling at auction between 2000 and 2017 for both male and female artists, the trend is much greater for the number of female artists; this is highlighted in Fig. 3, which graphs the ratio of the number of female artists to the number of male artists over the period under study (Fig. 3).

We find that while the average prices of female artworks are significantly below the average price for male artworks ($39,065 versus $45,614)Footnote 11, the median price of $3931 is higher for women than for men ($3649). This is also reflected in Fig. 4 which shows how these numbers have evolved over time and over generations of artists. In Fig. 4a we observe that mean artwork prices tend to be higher for men, whereas median prices (Fig. 4c) appear to be higher for women after 2002 with a widening gap after 2011. The hedonic price indices based on the respective year dummies in Fig. 5 in the Appendix show that sales prices of female artists have overall outperformed sales prices of male artists (Fig. 5a).

Fig. 2
figure 2

Evolution of number of male and female artists. The year 2017 is omitted in Figures a and c as we only use the first four months of this year. Overall, there were 6171 male and 167 female artists in 2017. Due to missing data on the year of birth, not all artists could not be allocated to a generation. Figures b and d omit these artists. Overall, 21,748 male and 1113 female artists could not be allocated to a generation

Fig. 3
figure 3

Evolution female-to-male ratio

Fig. 4
figure 4

Evolution of mean and median artwork prices for men and women. The year 2017 is omitted in Figures a and c as we only use the first four months of this year. Overall, the mean (median) value is $42,436 ($3681) for artworks by male and $30,001 ($4306) for artworks by female artists in this year. Due to missing data on the year of birth not all artists could not be allocated to a generation. Figures b and d omit these artists. Overall, the mean (median) value is $8968 ($1992) for artworks by male and $3542 ($1182) for artworks by female artists in this omitted category

3 Empirical analysis

To examine whether artworks by men sell at the same price as women—all other things equal—and thus observe if the patterns in our summary statistics hold after controlling for characteristics, we analyze our data with the following basic model specification:

$$\begin{aligned} \log P_{it} = \alpha + \psi W_{i} +\beta X_{i} + \eta H_{i} + \tau _{t+}\epsilon _{it}, \quad i=1,\ldots ,N;\quad \quad t=1,\ldots ,T;\quad \end{aligned}$$
(1)

In this equation, \(\log P_{it}\) indicates the log of the real price of an artwork, i, which is sold at a given time t.Footnote 12\(N=2,677,190\) artworks in our sample over \(T=72\) seasons (Winter, Spring, Summer, and Autumn) between 2000 and 2017 (18 years). \(W_i\) denotes the birth-identified sex coefficient which is a dummy variable, denoted female, taking a value of 1 whenever the respective artist of a given artwork, i, is a woman. This regression specification estimates the differences between the actual sales price for an artwork of a female artist and the value of an artwork by a male artist with the same characteristics. All artwork characteristics are captured in \(X_i\), a \(1 \times 276\) vector that includes the object type (the base category is paintings), the auction house where it was sold and the size of the artwork.Footnote 13\(H_i\) is a \(1 \times 5\) vector that denotes the artist characteristics of a given artwork, i, including region of the artist’s nationality (the base category is North America)Footnote 14 and a dummy for the living status of the artist at the time of the transaction (the base category is ‘deceased’).Footnote 15\(\tau \) represents time fixed-effects for the years 2000 until 2017. \(\psi \), \(\beta \) and \(\eta \) are time-independent parameters. \(\alpha \) is a constant term. Lastly, \(\epsilon _{it}\) denotes the error term.

3.1 Performance at auction

Table 4 reports the results of our baseline regression. The coefficient on the female dummy shows that, controlling for artwork characteristics, artworks by female artists are on average 4.4% more expensive than the artworks of male artists. All other coefficients are in line with expectations. Sculptures are the most expensive objects, while prints and multiples are least expensive relative to paintings. Artworks of artists from Southern Europe sell at higher prices.Footnote 16 Lastly, artworks of living artists sell for less (negative coefficient on the ‘Alive’ dummy variable). The R-squared of the regression is 0.42 which is within the usual range for hedonic models in the art market literature (Ashenfelter and Graddy 2002). We also run regressions for different types of art categories (Columns 2 to 6, Table 4). With the exception of two categories—1) Design and 2) Prints and Multiples—every object type has a positive coefficient associated with the female dummy. Paintings produced by female artists, the most prevalent type of object, are 15.5% more expensive than paintings with comparable characteristics that are controlled for in our regressions, produced by male artists.

Table 4 Artwork level OLS regression results

We re-estimate the model for each artistic movement separately. Table 5 shows that the coefficient on the female dummy is positive and statistically significant for each movement with the exception of Contemporary art, where we observe a negative coefficient. The price difference on lots by Contemporary female artists, where we encounter a relatively larger proportion of women (9.3%), is −8.3%.Footnote 17 The post-war era yields the largest positive price difference (+14.9%) for artworks by female artists. This movement is associated with a number of highly recognized female artists (i.e., Agnes Martin, Helen Frankenthaler and Joan Mitchell).

Table 5 Artwork level OLS regression results—by movement

Lastly, we investigate the persistence of the difference in performance found in our baseline regression for the period since the Millennium. We split our data into four different time periods for which we run separate regressions (Table 6). For all four periods, a positive price difference for female lots persists ranging from +1.9% to +7.4%. This effect is robust across different object types and over time.

Table 6 Artwork level OLS regression results—by time period

3.2 The top end

Table 7 shows that after the 99.97th quantile, which represents the top 40 artists in terms of total sales value, there are no women. This quantile corresponds to a market share of 40% in terms of value. To more closely analyze differences in the prices for male and female artists at the top end of the market, we create a sub-sample for artworks selling for more than $1 million at auction (denoted as mega transactions).Footnote 18 We perform a separate analysis for the full sample (columns 1 and 2) and the contemporary sub-sample (columns 3 and 4). Controlling for artwork characteristics, the regression results in Table 8 show that within the price category of $1 million and above, artworks created by men sell at prices, on average 18.4% higher, than the works of women. The price difference is 17.9% higher when we consider the sub-sample of contemporary artists.

Table 7 Quantiles by total sales value for men and women
Table 8 Artwork level OLS regression results—mega transactions

3.3 Auction participation

So far, we have only considered the (secondary) auction market which represents the market for established artists. To investigate potential sources of the observed differences in prices paid for male and female generated artworks, we look at the (primary) gallery market, which impacts an artist’s chance to be represented at auction. A gallery provides the artists with access to its network of buyers and promotes them. We use artnet’s gallery database covering representation for 4754 contemporary artists. Table 9 shows that out of 4180 male artists, 96.9% (4050 artists) can also be found in the auction market sample. However, only 93% (534 artists) out of the 574 female artists made this transition.Footnote 19 We analyze the likelihood of women to move from the primary into the secondary market in a multivariate setting using a Probit model on the primary market sample. The binary dependent variable indicates whether an artist from the gallery sample is traded at auction. We include the female dummy and control for artist’s nationality, birth year and a dummy for every gallery an artist is represented by. The coefficient on the female dummy indicates that female artists are 2.2% less likely to participate at auction compared to their male counterparts (Table 10).Footnote 20

Table 9 Summary statistics for men and women: primary market sample
Table 10 Auction participation—artist-level regression results (primary market)

4 Concluding remarks

Our study shows that females comprise less than 4% of art auction sales, as identified by their birth sex. Furthermore, we show that artworks by females are, on average, sold for 4.4% more than artworks by males, after controlling for artwork and artist characteristics. These findings are consistent with a recent study by Cameron et al. (2017) who find a premium for female artworks traded at auction within a small sample of Yale graduates. At the same time, we provide evidence of average lower prices for the artworks of contemporary female artists as well as for artworks selling at the top-end of the market. Overall this analysis highlights how the share of females, as observed by birth-identified sex, is gaining in market share as the market evolves, and subsequently that price differences observed between male and female artworks are reflected in a difference in artistic characteristics of female produced artworks. Our results call for further investigation into the supply and demand factors that prevail in the market that might explain observed differences in prices paid for male and female produced artworks.