AUSTRALIANS will gamble on two flies. crawling up a wall, they say.
Aussie
bookmaker Tom Waterhouse is currently betting on how much Edvard Munch’s
painting The Scream will fetch at a Southey’s auction this month.
Waterhouse
has previously wagered on the winners of reality shows such as Dancing with the Stars and The Voice to add a bit of zest to
mundane wagers on political elections and Academy Awards.
Waterhouse’s
mother is leading Australian racehorse trainer Gai and the bookie regularly reports
on Monday how punters cleaned him out on Saturday backing Mum’s horses such as
great mare More Joyous and unbeaten 2-year-old Pierro. It is always ``Mum’s
horse” though it is a surprise the trainer does not say, "When I am in a professional
capacity, it is Ms Waterhouse to you, sonny boy.”
Tom
Waterhouse needs to bet on an exotic event such as the Southeby’s auction to
recoup some of the damage Mum’s ponies have reeked on the bottom line. It does
not hurt that weird bets attract media attention, something London bookie
Ladbrokes worked out decades ago.
I do not know how much Tom
and Mum know about art but I would like to think it is a lot. It is comforting
to believe wealthy people might slip a few stray bucks the way of artists.
Here is Tom’s analysis of the
race to buy The Scream or Le Cri, in the land of the Oo-La-La.
``Sotheby's in New York is
auctioning one of four versions of The
Scream created by Edvard Munch and, as the only version owned privately, tomwaterhouse.com is betting $1.90 that it breaks the US$106.5 million
record set by Pablo Picasso's Nude, Green
Leaves and Bust two years ago.
"Of the four versions of The Scream, the one that's up for sale is the most colourful and the only one whose frame was hand-painted by Munch to include his poem detailing the work's inspiration.
"Of the four versions of The Scream, the one that's up for sale is the most colourful and the only one whose frame was hand-painted by Munch to include his poem detailing the work's inspiration.
"Sotheby's has listed
The Scream at $80 million, the highest pre-sale value that the auctioneer has
ever put on an artwork but even that figure looks somewhat conservative given
the level of interest in the famous painting.”
So here’s the market.
The Scream sale price
(including the buyer's premium)
$5 Less than US$80m
$10 US$80m to US$89,999,999
$9 US$90m to US$99,999,999
$4 US$100m to US$106.5m
$1.90 More than USD 106.5m
I am sure my gambling
anti-hero Steele Hill would have a wager after consultation with arty girlfriend
Natalie and polymath-bookie mentor, the Gooroo.
As a punter and an art
fancier, I think Tom and his crue have got the market way wrong.
Tom admits there are four
paintings of The Scream though he
fails to mention the brace of Munch lithographs. This contrasts with one
Picasso Nude, Green Leaves and Bust.
The prose-poem embedded in
the frame is Munch’s reflection on how he came to paint The Scream.
I am not sure how many
millions it is worth.
I was walking along a path
with two friends –
the sun was setting – suddenly the sky turned blood red –
I paused, feeling exhausted,
and leaned on the fence –
there was blood and tongues
of fire above the blue-black fjord and the city –
my friends walked on, and I
stood there trembling with anxiety –
and I sensed an infinite
scream passing through nature.
That is my versification, BTW. I am not sure how Munch does
it on the frame.
I reckon the best bet is the $5 shot, less than $80 million,
though I would make sure the bookie wrote the ticket as fewer than $80 million.
Check out this blog shortly to see who is right.
If you wish to smile about the place of quirky Australia in
the Universe buy my book 7 Shouts from
Google eBooks or Amazon.