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Art Pricing with Computer Graphic Techniques

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  • Lan Ju
  • Zhiyong Tu
  • Changyong Xue

Abstract

This paper makes the first attempt to introduce the tools from computer graphics into the art pricing research. We argue that the creation of a painting calls for a combination of conceptual effort and painting effort from the artist. However, as the important price determinants, both efforts are long missing in the traditional hedonic model because they are hard to measure. This paper draws on the digital pictures of auctioned paintings from various renowned artists, and applies the image recognition techniques to measure the variances of lines and colors of these paintings. We then use them as the proxies for the artist's painting effort, and include them in the hedonic regression to test their significance. Our results show that the variances of lines and colors of a painting can significantly positively explain the sales price in a general context. Our suggested measurements can better capture the content heterogeneity of paintings hence improving on the traditional art pricing methodology. Our approach also provides a quantitative perspective for both valuation and authentication of paintings.

Suggested Citation

  • Lan Ju & Zhiyong Tu & Changyong Xue, 2019. "Art Pricing with Computer Graphic Techniques," Papers 1910.03800, arXiv.org.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:1910.03800
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    Cited by:

    1. Maksim Borisov & Valeria Kolycheva & Alexander Semenov & Dmitry Grigoriev, 2022. "The influence of color on prices of abstract paintings," Papers 2206.04013, arXiv.org, revised Aug 2022.

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