Samantha French remembers the first time one of her paintings sold at the Minneapolis College of Art and Design auction.
"There was so much emotion in the room that I just stood there with my mouth open as the bidding went from $6,000 to almost double that amount," she said.
She again has donated one of her pieces for this year's event, which features works from about 50 emerging artists. The live auction on Friday also has another distinction: It will be hosted by Christie's.
The partnership with the world renowned auction house is the latest sign of a strengthening Twin Cities art scene, with bigger attendance and sales at local art crawls and multiple gallery openings in Minneapolis and St. Paul.
The MCAD auction has local art enthusiasts buzzing about what it's like to be at a Christie's auction and artists energized by the spotlight placed upon them. "It puts MCAD on a bigger stage, on par with the East Coast schools," French said. "The Midwest gets overlooked too often."
Some are hoping the auction will be a boost to the larger Twin Cities visual arts community. "The door is opened a crack, and we want the local market to regain the traction we lost in the early '90s," said Miles Fiterman, an MCAD trustee and co-chair of the art auction.
The Warehouse District in Minneapolis was home to a thriving arts market in the 1980s, but by 1992 most of the galleries were closed — or moved — and did not return. During the most recent recession, even more gallery owners quit the business.
"The Twin Cities gallery scene struggles," said Greg Hennes, an art consultant with 29 years of experience. "Too often the shows and open houses are an excuse to party, not to buy art."