Collecting Art - Do you have the bottle
The headline reads "Undiscovered master piece sells for millions
at Auction". The family was overjoyed to discover that a picture
that had hung on their grandfather's wall for years attracted a
six figure price at auction. Grandson and heir said "The whole
family knew he collected odds and ends but we never envisaged it
would amount to anything."
Ok the above is fiction, but it's what's at the back of the
majority of collector's minds, especially those who collect art.
Buy it cheap and sell it for squillions. Just don't rely on it
as your retirement fund. In many respects it is a lottery, your
betting your collection decision against that fickle beast,
public opinion. The beauty of the art collecting lottery is you
can hang the ticket on your wall. A win, win situation, your
wall decorations are working for you and all your friends can
admire your taste.
Now that can be scary, you're opening yourself up to ridicule
because 90 out of 100 people know damn all about art. If it
isn't chocolate box pretty it isn't art, right. Wrong, have a
look at the masters of art in your local museum or better still
here on the internet and see how many pretty pictures you can
find. Look at Picasso, Gauguin, Pollock, Matisse, Cezanne or Van
Gogh to mention a few.
It's Ok, I'll wait.
Not much prettiness there. What is there is life, both the
depiction of it and in the picture itself. There is an energy
that radiates from art and if you allow it that energy will take
you places you have never been before. But be prepared, it will
confront you, it will challenge you, it is opinionated and isn't
afraid to speak its mind, it is prepared to stand up and be
counted, it is art.
As such it is in the vanguard of human experience, it is raw, it
is fresh and new. It isn't the tried and true of recipes of
yesterday rehashed, it is pushing the boundaries. In the 21st
Century it is computer generated art in all of its many and
varied forms. Be it fractal art, manipulated photography or
cartoon cells, the collectable artists of today are using a
keyboard and a mouse. If Michelangelo were to paint the Sistine
Chapel today you can bet London to a brick he wouldn't be using
intonaco. Now as then he would be using that latest technology
available to him.
For the collector this just adds another level of complexity.
Because computer art is so easily reproduced, what does one
actually collect? As in the past, collect signatures, preferably
from a limited edition. Obviously, the shorter the edition the
better. If an open edition with a signature is all you can
afford, go for it, it is better than a poster with or with out a
digital signature. If your print isn't signed by the fair hand
of the artist, as a collectable, it is worthless and that
includes digital signatures. It is a $29.99 commodity and barely
worth the paper it's printed on. Although the frame may attract
a bid or two.
If you consequently come across your print on the cover of Vogue
or in a TV commercial for whatever, chances are you're on a
winner. That is the paperback of your signed first edition.
Assuming of course your print has staying power, for so much of
the mass media is based on ephemera. It is the quick hit that
attracts attention and while this can be true of art there is a
deeper relationship just waiting for your attention in works
that can stand the test of time.
For anyone seriously considering collecting art, the pieces to
acquire are those you can live with. If you like it from the
start that is a bonus though not essential because if you have
chosen wisely you will, over time and many conversations, come
to love your new found friend. Works of art do become trusted
friends and when it comes time to dispose of them it is a gut
wrenching experience. This I know for I have been there and done
that. When I had to dispose of my collection a few months ago my
main concern was that they were going to good home rather than
the financial return they could afford me. Consequently the ROI
was less than if I had been less sentimental.
Though if ROI is your motivation and you can be hard nosed at
the end of the day you will have many hours of enjoyment from
your friends upon your walls along the way.