Alan Edward Klein
Member
@Alan Edward Klein -- the study is a mapping of the relationship between artists, galleries, museums, and auction houses, to quantify the success of the artists in terms of the relationships they initially form and how those play out over time. So fame is only secondary to that and it really has nothing to do with anyone who became successful as an artist prior to any relationship with the studied institutions. Avadon was already famous and any association with a gallery at that point would have bolstered the gallery's ranking in the study (by association with a successful artist).
The study really doesn't have anything to do with artists that exist outside those institutions. And it doesn't claim it does. It's only talking about success as defined within that particular world.
Exactly the conclusion I made. The study is deficient in scope. It's like studying famous photographers who only do landscape photography and ignoring those who do street photography.