The UK’s vote to go away the European Union on 23 June 2016 was met with concern throughout the British artwork market. From anxiousness over the UK shedding its place because the “gateway to Europe”, to rising administration burden and restrictions on the free motion of products and other people, there have been unanswered questions, nonetheless one voted.
A decade on and the affect of Brexit, at all times a posh and polarising debate, has been difficult by broader geopolitical shocks, together with a worldwide pandemic, a number of wars within the Center East, the primary battle in Europe for the reason that Second World Battle, a few financial recessions and the introduction of punitive tariffs by US President Donald Trump.
“It’s not so simple as trigger and impact however while you have a look at the aggregation of immediately linked points and broader components, the affect [of Brexit] is amplified,” says Paul Hewitt, the director common of The Society of London Artwork Sellers (Slad).
On paper, the UK’s place within the world market has proved extra resilient than many anticipated. In response to the most recent Artwork Basel and UBS World Artwork Market Report, the UK has retained second place (behind the US) by way of world commerce by worth, at 18%, admittedly down from its 21% share in 2016.
“The drop within the UK’s commerce figures after the 2008 recession was extra dramatic than the decline we noticed following the announcement of Brexit,” says Clare McAndrew, the founding father of Arts Economics and creator of the Artwork Basel and UBS report, who’s making ready an up to date version of The British Artwork Market 2023 survey together with The British Artwork Market Federation (BAMF), due out later this yr to mark the affiliation’s thirtieth anniversary.
A stellar line up of auctions this June, together with the hotly anticipated Lewis Assortment at Sotheby’s—which at £200m holds the best ever estimate for an public sale in Europe—actually helps the concept confidence in London’s marketplace for high-end works stands. “London is, and stays, Sotheby’s second largest and most worldwide promoting centre after New York,” says Alex Branczik, the chairman of Fashionable and modern artwork at Sotheby’s London.
“At a time when market cycles are underneath scrutiny, London has additionally performed a number one function in restoring confidence,” Branczik provides. “The sale of Pauline Karpidas’ assortment final yr marked an vital inflection level, serving to to construct momentum that has since been carried via globally.”
At lower cost factors the affect is much less clear and reflections much less constructive. “As predicted, it has crippled the commerce on the decrease finish and burdened the highest finish with copious and costly paperwork,” says Thomas Woodham-Smith, the director of Treasure Home Truthful, and a former director and co-founder of Masterpiece London honest, which closed in 2023, citing to rising overheads and the problem of attracting worldwide exhibitors to the capital.
Genres have additionally fared otherwise—particularly, Previous Masters gross sales within the UK look like persevering with a trajectory of decline, from 2014 when the UK made up 52% of worldwide commerce within the European Previous Grasp market by worth, to 38% in 2025.
The lack of ‘elegant’ enterprise
The best affect, for sellers a minimum of, seems to be the lack of ease and adaptability.
“The extra hurdles positioned on the motion of artwork have proved burdensome—import and export controls, non permanent import, ATA carnet controls, import VAT—all have required advanced navigation by stakeholders, not seen pre-Brexit,” says Amanda Grey, a accomplice at Mischon de Reya legislation agency. “Gallerists and collectors have borne the brunt of the additional layers of administration leading to further price, uncertainty and delay.” Grays says that whereas Mischon de Reya has labored with its shoppers “to unravel lots of the direct and ancillary points that may come up, choices to mortgage or transact have notably been impacted.”
Information as early as 2023 signifies that this has had a marked impact on the size of imports into UK market, with Arts Economics reporting that UK imports of artwork and antiques fell sharply following Brexit, from $3.2bn in 2019 to $2.1bn in 2020 (though the Covid-19 pandemic additionally contributed to this decline). For a market closely depending on imported works quite than home provide, this marks a major adjustment.
A few of this paperwork displays wider regulatory choices, separate to Brexit, together with the fifth Anti-Cash Laundering Directive, which took impact in 2020. However the decreased flexibility provides to widespread feeling that the UK is handing different markets an edge.
France is but to considerably knock a portion of the UK’s world share however is extensively perceived as gaining traction, supported by Artwork Basel’s entry to the honest scene in 2022. Adjustments to different tax regimes, together with Italy’s newly lowered 5percentVAT fee on artwork gross sales, mixed with the UK’s will increase in inheritance, earnings and capital positive aspects tax are additionally stoking dialog round whether or not London can preserve its standing as a fascinating place to reside, work and commerce.
Stories of a broader exodus of wealth from the UK have adopted the abolition of the Non-Dom regime final yr, however till tax information from January 2027 emerges the extent of motion is unclear.
There are areas through which the UK has exercised its autonomy since Brexit, most notably within the subject of regulation. As an example, the UK artwork commerce avoided signing as much as the EU’s new cultural items import rules (EU 2019/880) following outcry from the commerce.
A brand new regular
Amidst the extra dramatic bulletins following the 2016 referendum, notably David Zwirner’s swift opening of a flagship gallery in Paris, there have been gradual, but nonetheless substantial, modifications to methods of doing enterprise.
Operational partnerships between London and EU galleries proceed, however the bodily presence of the latter within the UK’s capital has seemingly declined. In 2016, eight of the Society of London Artwork Supplier’s 140 members (6%) had been UK branches of European galleries; by 2026, these had all closed and resigned from Slad, regardless of whole membership rising.
“There are new methods of working coming via, alternative ways of approaching challenges,” says Alexander Bradford, the worldwide enterprise growth and sustainability supervisor of the high quality artwork logistics agency Gander & White. “We now have seen, for instance, a rise in the usage of bonded warehouses and our being requested to behave as authorised consigners [where we are able to bring trucks to our premises for customs clearance].”
Unprecedented digital advances are providing up new platforms to automate or maximise operational efficiencies in, what many hope, will alleviate the speedy rise in overheads.
Galleries are additionally experimenting with new enterprise fashions. “We closed our everlasting London house in Fitzrovia in June 2024, the economics of sustaining a hard and fast house in London merely grew to become untenable for a distinct segment gallery working on extraordinarily low margins,” says Rakeb Sile, the co-founder and chief government of Addis Wonderful Artwork, which has moved in direction of a project-based mannequin, collaborating with accomplice galleries and taking part in key festivals.
“I consider the galleries that may survive and thrive are those who discover new methods of working collaboratively, sharing assets, and monetising their experience past the standard gross sales mannequin,” Sile says. “The specialised information a gallery like ours holds has huge worth that is not at all times mirrored in our economics. That has to alter.”






