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abstract art

21 avril 2011

abstract art

No one can afford to overlook the internet, even the art world today is gradually embracing this powerful tool.

Mention integrating internet and art and Sotheby's costly failure during the dot-com era immediately comes to mind. Eager to replicate the success by dot-com companies, Sotheby's invested 25 million to build an online auction site Sothebys in 1999. Things rarely turned out as planned. Sothebys switched partnership twice - first with Amazon, then with eBay. Within three years, the site folded and Sotheby's refocused on live auctions.

Sothebys quick demise left many professionals sceptical about online art sales.
Today, has professionals in the art world changed their views?

Many remain wary against the internet. Worries of art being digitally downloaded and copied are embedded in them. They are also concerned when artist's contact is publicly available, giving collectors direct contact to artists. To them, internet is a double-edged sword that has to be balanced carefully.

Nevertheless, the art world is seen experimenting with internet, albeit slowly. The unparalleled advantage the internet offers is permanent accessibility to every user. "Art in museums and galleries have opening hours, but the internet is opened, all year round" says Jean Khan, a private collector.

Art


Art Basel Miami Beach, one the world's top art fair has launched a mobile application available for apple and blackberry users. Featuring interactive 3D-maps to navigate through exhibition halls, this handy application automatically creates access to global audiences who are unable to physically visit Miami. Users can also list artworks as favourites and share them easily with friends.

Art.sy, a start-up company based in New York is also involved in enabling discovery of new art with technology. Art.sy's proprietary search technology gives intelligent recommendations based on collectors' personal preference. Searching for art is made incredibly easy, without leaving the comforts of their homes. Art.sy raised $1.25 million from Google's CEO and other reputable investors late last year.

Apart from art fairs and start-ups, major art publications are also venturing into the virtual space after years of printing glossy hand-outs. However, having a website is hardly sufficient. Mobility is key now. C Arts Magazine recently rolled out a digital version for ipads which enables speedier loading time and easier browsing.

Younger generation are the collectors of tomorrow. Given their appetite for connectivity, art businesses must stay abreast of internet advancements in today's information age. Will consumers start to buy art online? Well, luxury goods are already being bought online. What's to stop us from buying art online?


No one can afford to overlook the internet, even the art world today is gradually embracing this powerful tool.

Mention integrating internet and art and Sotheby's costly failure during the dot-com era immediately comes to mind. Eager to replicate the success by dot-com companies, Sotheby's invested 25 million to build an online auction site Sothebys in 1999. Things rarely turned out as planned. Sothebys switched partnership twice - first with Amazon, then with eBay. Within three years, the site folded and Sotheby's refocused on live auctions.

Sothebys quick demise left many professionals sceptical about online art sales.
Today, has professionals in the art world changed their views?

Many remain wary against the internet. Worries of art being digitally downloaded and copied are embedded in them. They are also concerned when artist's contact is publicly available, giving collectors direct contact to artists. To them, internet is a double-edged sword that has to be balanced carefully.

Nevertheless, the art world is seen experimenting with internet, albeit slowly. The unparalleled advantage the internet offers is permanent accessibility to every user. "Art in museums and galleries have opening hours, but the internet is opened, all year round" says Jean Khan, a private collector.

Art Basel Miami Beach, one the world's top art fair has launched a mobile application available for apple and blackberry users. Featuring interactive 3D-maps to navigate through exhibition halls, this handy application automatically creates access to global audiences who are unable to physically visit Miami. Users can also list artworks as favourites and share them easily with friends.

Art.sy, a start-up company based in New York is also involved in enabling discovery of new art with technology. Art.sy's proprietary search technology gives intelligent recommendations based on collectors' personal preference. Searching for art is made incredibly easy, without leaving the comforts of their homes. Art.sy raised $1.25 million from Google's CEO and other reputable investors late last year.

Apart from art fairs and start-ups, major art publications are also venturing into the virtual space after years of printing glossy hand-outs. However, having a website is hardly sufficient. Mobility is key now. C Arts Magazine recently rolled out a digital version for ipads which enables speedier loading time and easier browsing.

Younger generation are the collectors of tomorrow. Given their appetite for connectivity, art businesses must stay abreast of internet advancements in today's information age. Will consumers start to buy art online? Well, luxury goods are already being bought online. What's to stop us from buying art online?

Nestled on the western shore of Otsego Lake – James Fenimore Cooper's "Glimmerglass Lake" – in historic Cooperstown NY, the Fenimore Art Museum presents a perspective on the heritage and history of America through art. The beauty of the museum setting and the museum's expansive galleries are matched by the quality of the collections it houses, including some of the nation's finest examples of folk art; landscape, history, portrait, and genre paintings by some of the best known American artists; more than 125,000 historical photographs; and the renowned Eugene and Clare Thaw Collection of Native American art.

The Fenimore Art Museum is that rare art museum where one can see diverse collections of American art in rich and eclectic exhibitions. William Sidney Mount, Thomas Cole, Gilbert Stuart, Benjamin West, E.L. Henry, Eastman Johnson, Thomas Waterman, John Wesley Jarvis, Grandma Moses and Ralph Fasanella are all represented in the museum's holdings.

Comprising nearly 850 art objects, the Native American art collection is widely recognized as one of the nation's premier collections of American Indian art. Representing a broad geographic range of North American Indian cultures, including Northwest Coast, Woodlands, Prairie, Plateau, Plains, Southwest, California, The Great Basin, Arctic and Subarctic, The New York Times described it as "a collection any museum in the world should envy."

The exhibition explores the extraordinarily diverse forms of visual expression in Native American heritage. Organized by geographic culture areas, the objects were chosen both for their high artistic quality and to provide insight into the complex cultural, aesthetic and spiritual meanings embedded in the art. The objects span 20 centuries dating from pre-history to today, and celebrate the continuing vitality of Native American art.

 

Fenimore's folk art collection is one of the nation's largest and finest. Begun with extensive gifts from Stephen C. Clark, the collection includes a variety of paintings, ship figureheads, quilts, weathervanes, trade signs, cigar-store figures, carvings, and decorated stoneware, all created by American folk artists. The oldest piece in the collection, a seven-foot-long panel on which Hudson River Valley painter John Heaton depicted the Martin Van Bergen farmstead in 1733, is considered to be the earliest scene of everyday life ever painted in this country.

The fine art collection contains some of the best examples of American landscape, history, and genre painting. The works of Hudson River School painters are well represented and include Thomas Cole's Last of the Mohicans and Asher B. Durand's Hudson River Looking Toward the Catskills. Historical portraits include Gilbert Stuart's Joseph Brant, Ralph Earl's Baron Von Steuben, and Benjamin West's Robert Fulton.

In addition to the permanent collections, the Fenimore Art Museum has won critical acclaim in recent years for its exhibitions showcasing American masters such as Winslow Homer, Frederic Remington, Grandma Moses, and John Singer Sargent. The museum's traveling exhibitions program has reached hundreds of thousands of people across the country.
Abstract art


Artwork for sale that is most sought by stores to serve as decoration to their shop is usually pop art paintings. Most of the subjects in this art pieces are used to match the kind of business in operation. These art pieces are not just set on the wall to serve as an ornate to theshop but anyone can easily identify its relation to the store.

Famous figures in the field of pop art wall paintings are Roy Lichteinstein, David Hockney, and Andy Warhol. These artworks for sale which represent the popular arts that people see on television can be caricatures or sketch of public figures- be it political or showbiz personalities. Advertisements that we see in magazines can be translated to pop arts, too. However, the most apt to decorate boy's room is popart wall paintings of comic strips. Usually, these are painted in bright colors where subjects are vivid and easily recognizable unlike cubism painting which objects are made up of geometric shapes or abstracts painting that are just brush strokes of usually different colors. Figures of pop art might not look deep in expression like that of other kinds of artwork for sale because viewing the art piece per se does not usually entail much interpretation. They are but merely copies of everyday objects and subjects we see around.

Artwork for sale like that of pop art is the most saleable among businesses. We see this kind of art pieces in dining restaurants. We see paintings hanging on the wall which are evenly scattered in the room to make the customers more excited to dine. An example of popart wall painting that is an exact copy from advertisement is Andy Warhol's Campbell's tomato juice box that is displayed in Museum of Modern Art in New York City. The object painted looks so real that if you would see it hanging on a wooden wall which is similar to the painted wood background of the frame, you might mistake it for a real Campbell's box misplaced on the wall. Another masterpiece of Andy Warhol is another Campbell's items which are the soup cans. They again look so real like the ones captured with Camera.

However, some can be extra simple like American flag wall painting created by Jasper Johns and other wall paintings that tell simply the viewer of what is normally seen every day. Artwork for sale of this kind is an alternative or better yet to say more artistic alternative to photo shoot where what iscaptured is not a product of imagination but real objects and subjects seen in the surrounding. The artist does not need to dream or fantasize to come up with a subject. He just has to paint whatever his eyes see.

Internet is making everyone exposed to just about anything and this includes artwork. Tons of websites feature art independently or unintentionally tackled over and over along travel niche. And some even allow one to buy art online. This made the subject popular to masses.

When before art is appreciated only by the minority who had proper educational background on art or by those who were deemed to have a better comprehension on what is going on with his surrounding to include events, popular figures, or anything in depth which could be current or rooted from the past, now you see growing numbers of art fanatics or if not potential art lovers. They even eye for artwork for sale after browsing gallery websites that are counterpart of physical museum outside the virtual world. The influx of articles in the web which feature various artwork from different countries subliminally entice people to appreciate art.

Travel niche as mentioned has contributed much awareness and appreciation to art even better. First-hand experienced traveler could not help but mention art pieces that are showcased in every destination. Flying to different places means exploration of other's culture. This is why art as one of the best and typical means to depict culture and tradition is inevitably or most of the time unconsciously mentioned. As to-date, travel is more popular and commonly read in different websites. Most of these are blogs of friends and people we network online.

Along with the popularity of the above niche is a good strategy for artists to come up with a website to feature art work of various artists from different countries. One of which is artyii which solely showcases Asian art pieces. Luring people to love the masterpieces of featured artists would be unfair if fans do not have the access tobuy art online. And this is understood by the site. This is why along with the gallery and head-up articles about Asian art is a field where one can purchase artwork.

Artwork for sale is now becoming more affordable which gives all art lovers an equal chance to collect more. Gone were the days that selling art was too upscale that it happened only through exhibits or a visit to a gallery itself. Thanks again to the internet where everything you need is in just a click of a mouse away. Via online network, a budding artist gets the chance to promote his talent and his work also. Artwork for sale that one sees online can be a masterpiece of an amateur or a pro. As this can be a challenge to an expert because critics can make the work of a newbie a point of comparison, the opportunity presented to a budding artist online is a motivation.

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