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Art Storage & Shipping Legal & Insurance

2026年6月1日

Insuring art on the move: what your inventory record needs before the broker calls

Loss in transit drives most fine-art claims. What to store on each work — values, custody history, condition photos, and loan context — so insurance packets match what shippers and lenders actually move.

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Fine art insurance claims fail in predictable ways. The declared value on the policy disagrees with the invoice the gallery issued last month. Condition photos live on someone's phone, not on the object timeline. A museum loan return shows damage, but custody events between departure and arrival were overwritten with a single "storage" location. None of these are mysteries for insurers. They are inventory gaps that surface when work moves.

Transit is the leading cause of loss for insured collections. Preparation starts in the catalogue, not the morning the crate leaves. This post lists what brokers, lenders, and registrars expect on the record before a work ships to a fair, crosses a border on loan, or travels to a collector's door.

Declared values that match your list discipline

Insurance and customs valuations should reflect documented list price, agreed fair value, or appraised amount — not hopeful rounding. Store the value on the work with currency and the date it was set. When list price changes after a fair premium or strategic adjustment, append history rather than overwriting silently.

Underdeclaration is not a shipping strategy. Overdeclaration inflates premiums all year. The audit trail matters when a claim arrives: what was the declared value when the crate left, and who approved it?

Condition baseline before movement

Photograph install condition and any pre-existing wear before crating. Attach entries to the object timeline with dated notes, not to a fair folder that disappears after vernissage. Condition reports generated from inventory should include the same dimensions, medium description, and edition position the customs invoice uses.

When damage occurs in transit, insurers compare departure documentation to arrival inspection. Missing baseline photos turn disputes into memory contests.

Custody events, not overwritten locations

Each leg of a journey should be dated: gallery to packer, packer to airport, fair booth, return to storage. Overwriting "location" with the latest city erases the audit trail adjusters expect. Loan periods need start and end dates tied to the agreement, with return condition recorded the day crates arrive.

For editioned work, track which copy moved. Shipping 2/5 without recording the specific item creates provenance holes that outlive any single claim.

Loan and exhibition context on the object

Lenders ask which exhibition, which institution, and under what agreement a work travelled. Link loans and shows on the work timeline so an export packet assembles without retyping titles from a PDF someone saved in 2019.

Export approval for consigned work belongs on file before international movement. Junior staff should never release a work without authority attached to the consignment or shipment record.

What the insurance packet should pull automatically

A lender-ready export should include artist, title, year, medium, dimensions (framed and unframed), edition position, primary image, declared value with currency, condition summary, and custody history for the relevant window. Hand-building that from email attachments the night before pickup is how values drift.

Art.industries keeps insurance values, condition entries, and custody history on the object graph exports read from. Generate the schedule from a locked fair checklist or loan selection, and update locations when crates land. Insurance stops being a parallel project and becomes the downstream consequence of accurate inventory.

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