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New UK-Based Art And Collectibles Advisory Firm Takes Wing
Tom Burroughes
30 April 2013
Seeking to tap continued interest in art and collectibles as
investment sectors, financial industry professional Ravina Mather has launched London-based Art & Finance International, describing the firm as a “business development
broker”. Art & Finance International will put people working in
the international art, music, collectibles and design market in touch with
providers of art-related legal, accounting and financial advice. Mather started the firm after a career that has seen her
work in firms including Smith & Williamson, the investment management and
accounting business, where she worked in public relations and business
development. Other business roles include PR, marketing and development
experience at Citigroup Asset Management and Morgan Stanley International, as
well as law firms Fasken Martineau, Hogan & Hartson , Kirkland & Ellis and Morgan Lewis. “We work internationally with private banks and their art
banking services, accountancy firms, investment managers, family offices,
insurance companies and law firms which specialise in giving arts-related and
intellectual property advice to manage wealth for art, collectibles, music and
design custodians, owners and producers,” according to Art Finance
International’s website. "We engage in client education to high net worth individuals,
philanthropists, entrepreneurs, SMEs, charities and museums, landed
estates, universities, the equestrian and bloodstock industry and
multinationals and also within the wider financial and professional
services communities themselves of art, music and design as asset
classes in tailored specialist integrated wealth solutions for
investment needs," it says. The launch of the business comes at a time when – despite some
corrections – interest around the world has grown in art and related areas as
investments, in part due to rising spending power from the expanding emerging
market middle class, and partly due to these assets’ status as “safe havens”
amid concerns about inflation.