When artworks or collectables form part of a family law or property settlement matter, you need a valuation that is independent, clearly scoped and able to stand up to scrutiny.
Banziger Hulme Fine Art provide neutral art valuations for family division and property settlement matters, helping solicitors, mediators and private parties understand the current value of artworks and collections for negotiation, disclosure and formal settlement processes. Our independent valuations are especially important for family division matters, and we provide transparent, impartial advice grounded in research and art market knowledge.
Where emotions, competing views or legal pressures are involved, a casual opinion is not enough. You need a professional valuation process, a clearly defined basis of value, and a written report that helps all parties work from the same set of facts.
It is particularly useful where art forms part of the asset pool, and there is a need to establish value fairly, neutrally and with proper documentation.
In family law and property settlement matters, independence is critical.
Art can be emotionally charged, difficult to price, and easy to dispute. One party may rely on outdated assumptions, informal purchase figures or insurance schedules that are not suitable for settlement purposes. Another may overstate or understate value based on personal interests.
An independent and evidence-based valuation helps reduce that friction by providing both sides with a neutral, professionally researched assessment tailored to the relevant valuation purpose. Banziger Hulme can act as an independent art valuer and adviser, providing honest, transparent and impartial advice supported by research and art market knowledge.
A proper valuation can help:
One of the most important parts of any legal valuation is making the scope clear from the outset.
For family division and property settlement matters, the relevant basis is market value rather than replacement value. These are not the same.
Market value generally reflects what an artwork may reasonably be sold for in the current market in an arm’s length transaction. This is the applicable relevant basis when the question is what the asset is worth as part of a property pool or negotiated settlement.
Replacement value is used for insurance purposes and reflects the cost to replace an item in a retail or comparable replacement context. That figure can differ materially from market value.
If the wrong basis is used, the valuation can create confusion rather than clarity. That is why the valuation brief should clearly define the purpose of the report and the basis on which the artwork is being assessed.
What is included in a family division art valuation?
A family law or property settlement valuation is more than a price estimate. It is a structured assessment of the relevant artworks or objects, prepared with the valuation purpose in mind.
Depending on the collection and instructions, the service may include:
At Banziger Hulme, we provide transparent art valuations and detailed written reports, and this applies across private, corporate, and institutional contexts, with both Australian and international art.
In family law and property settlement matters, independence is critical.
Art can be emotionally charged, difficult to price, and easy to dispute. One party may rely on outdated assumptions, informal purchase figures or insurance schedules that are not suitable for settlement purposes. Another may overstate or understate value based on personal interests.
An independent and evidence-based valuation helps reduce that friction by providing both sides with a neutral, professionally researched assessment tailored to the relevant valuation purpose. Banziger Hulme can act as an independent art valuer and adviser, providing honest, transparent and impartial advice supported by research and art market knowledge.
A proper valuation can help:
One of the most important parts of any legal valuation is making the scope clear from the outset.
For family division and property settlement matters, the relevant basis is market value rather than replacement value. These are not the same.
Market value generally reflects what an artwork may reasonably be sold for in the current market in an arm’s length transaction. This is the applicable relevant basis when the question is what the asset is worth as part of a property pool or negotiated settlement.
Replacement value is used for insurance purposes and reflects the cost to replace an item in a retail or comparable replacement context. That figure can differ materially from market value.
If the wrong basis is used, the valuation can create confusion rather than clarity. That is why the valuation brief should clearly define the purpose of the report and the basis on which the artwork is being assessed.
A family law or property settlement valuation is more than a price estimate. It is a structured assessment of the relevant artworks or objects, prepared with the valuation purpose in mind.
Depending on the collection and instructions, the service may include:
At Banziger Hulme, we provide transparent art valuations and detailed written reports, and this applies across private, corporate, and institutional contexts, with both Australian and international art.
We begin with a confidential conversation about the artworks involved, the nature of the matter, the likely scope of work, and whether the valuation is needed for negotiation, mediation, legal advice or formal settlement purposes.
Before work begins, we confirm what is being valued, the purpose of the report, and the relevant basis of value. This step matters because different valuation contexts can require different approaches.
To begin efficiently, it helps to provide:
Depending on the matter, artworks may be inspected in person or assessed remotely from supplied photographs and details. Banziger Hulme are highly experienced in both remote desktop valuations and on-site valuations and assist clients right across Australia and overseas.
Each work is assessed using professional judgment, market knowledge, and relevant research, including the artist’s profile, medium, condition, provenance, and current market evidence where applicable.
You receive a formal written valuation report aligned with the agreed scope and valuation purpose, providing a clear foundation for next steps.
We begin with a confidential conversation about the artworks involved, the nature of the matter, the likely scope of work, and whether the valuation is needed for negotiation, mediation, legal advice or formal settlement purposes.
Before work begins, we confirm what is being valued, the purpose of the report, and the relevant basis of value. This step matters because different valuation contexts can require different approaches.
To begin efficiently, it helps to provide:
Depending on the matter, artworks may be inspected in person or assessed remotely from supplied photographs and details. Banziger Hulme are highly experienced in both remote desktop valuations and on-site valuations and assist clients right across Australia and overseas.
Each work is assessed using professional judgment, market knowledge, and relevant research, including the artist’s profile, medium, condition, provenance, and current market evidence where applicable.
You will receive a formal written valuation report aligned with the agreed scope and valuation purpose, providing a clear foundation for next steps.
For legal and settlement matters, the report needs to be evidence-based, clear and defensible.
The valuation report is typically prepared to:
The aim is not to inflame a dispute, but to bring clarity to it.
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Since 2003, we have provided independent art valuations backed by more than 40 years of combined industry experience.
We work across Australian and international art for private clients, companies, government bodies and public institutions.
Our credentials include membership with the Art Consulting Association of Australia, where David Hulme is a registered valuer, and David Hulme’s appointment as an approved valuer to the Australian Government’s Cultural Gifts Program.
For family law matters, David Hulme is regularly appointed as single expert witness in accordance with the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Family Law) Rules.
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For family division matters, that’s important because clients and advisers need a valuation provider with:
Family law and property settlement matters are often sensitive. Privacy, discretion and careful handling are essential.
Banziger Hulme work with private clients on sensitive valuation matters and position their service around independent, tailored advice. A confidential, clearly scoped process helps reduce unnecessary friction and keeps the focus on the valuation task at hand.
Banziger Hulme identify family division as one of the situations where an independent art valuation is especially important, and David Hulme is regularly engaged as a single expert witness in these matters.
That depends on the purpose of the valuation. For family law and property settlement matters, market value is often the relevant basis, while replacement value is more commonly associated with insurance. The scope will be confirmed before the valuation begins.
We at Banziger Hulme can often begin with photographs and artwork details supplied remotely, although some matters may require a site visit.
Banziger Hulme value both Australian and international art across a wide range of artists, and collections.
Banziger Hulme assist clients across Australia and offers both remote / desktop valuation and on-site / in-person appraisals depending on the art involved.
Book a confidential consultation to discuss the artworks involved, the likely scope, the valuation basis required, and the best format for the report.
Need a neutral valuation that stands up in negotiations or court?
Speak with Banziger Hulme about your matter confidentially and get a clear, independent valuation process from the outset.
Contact our art specialists now with your enquiry. We aim to reply within 48hrs.