An auction catalog (US spelling) or auction catalogue (British spelling) is inventory of listing of items to be sold at an auction. It is made available some time before the auction date. Auction catalogs for rare and expensive items, such as art, books, jewelry, postage stamps, furniture, wine, cars, posters, published for sales around the world, can be of interest in themselves--they will can include detailed descriptions of the items, their provenance, historical significance, photographs, and even comparative analyses and descriptive essays by subject experts.[1]

An Auction Catalog
Auction Catalog of Imperial Auctions (An Indian Numismatic Auction House)

In some cases, auction catalogues are key documentation for rare objects that are in private collections, and make up an important part of the libraries for students of material culture, appraisers, museums, and dealers.[2]

Each entry typically includes a "lot number" identifying each item uniquely, a description of the item, and either an estimated price or a "reserve" price below which the item will not be sold. Photographs may appear with the entry, or grouped into a separate section of the catalog; for lower value items, the textual description may be considered sufficient.

As a combined information source and "sales brochure", an auction catalog must tread a fine line between accuracy and promotion. For instance, any damages or flaws must be described exactly, so that buyers cannot claim to have been deceived, but at the same time the description will typically include words playing down the bad points (as in "brownish spot that does not detract from appearance" or "faint crease, as is common"). Similarly, positive features are highlighted, such as "one of only four known examples of this type", or perhaps a photograph of an item of jewelry being worn by a famous person.

Auction catalogs may be sent to favored customers without charge, but catalogs may be charged for, sometimes as much or more than other kinds of book. Important historical catalogs may be sold by bookstores, or even appear as items in book auctions.

Some time after the auction is concluded, recipients of the auction catalogs may receive a "prices realized" document, a bare listing of the lot numbers and the prices for which each was sold. Prices may be posted online. Some collectors annotate their copies of the catalogs, to record prices brought and even buyers' identities.

The actual physical auction catalog is limited to print runs which started in 2005 when the major auction houses created their own app. Since 2020, it is rare that you can purchase the physical auction catalog. The auction is completely cataloged online.[3]: 4  Bidding is done online and the auction results can only be printed online. The auction houses allow users to look at past sales for getting estimates.

References

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  1. ^ Berberian, Laura. "Research Guides: Art Auction Catalogs: Introduction". guides.loc.gov. Retrieved 2024-11-07.
  2. ^ Robinson, Lee (1999). "Auction Catalogs and Indexes as Reference Tools". Art Documentation: Journal of the Art Libraries Society of North America. 18 (1): 24–28. ISSN 0730-7187.
  3. ^ Chen, Hector Yuyang (2024). The Great Mess of Auction Catalogues (MA thesis). Sotheby's Institute of Art. Retrieved November 7, 2024.

Further reading

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