Tag Archive | "Artwork"

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Slideshow: See artwork from Anthony Papa, author of "15 to Life: How I Painted My Way to Freedom"



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Can Art Exchanges Ever Make Financial Sense?



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by Shane Ferro
Published: January 24, 2012

It’s been a while since ARTINFO took up the subject of the art exchange, where investors buy and sell shares of artworks on an open market. However, there is a new exchange in the works — an enterprise based in Luxembourg called SplitArt — which was featured in the Deloitte Luxembourg-ArtTactic 2011 art market report (previously discussed in relation to SWAG, the latest bundled cultural commodity). According to an interview with founder and general manager Dror Chevion, the new exchange is in the process of being approved by regulators and could be the world’s first regulated art exchange that securitizes artworks and sells shares to investors, lending it a certain legitimacy that other exchanges have yet to realize. But even if it gets approved by regulators, that doesn’t mean it’s a good investment idea.

Here’s how it works, according to Chevion: When the owner of an artwork decides to sell, he gets in touch with a bank and Splitart, which then go through the process of securitizing it. The bank values the work and agrees on a price range with the owner. There is a period of “blind bidding” for shares of the work. The lowest bidder sets the price for the shares — provided that price meets the minimum per share that the owner of the artwork initially set — and everyone who placed a bid pays that price for shares. Then trading begins, like any other financial exchange.

Why would anyone want to do this? As far as selling an artwork goes, it’s pretty simple — it’s just another way to get liquid value out of a piece of art that you own without taking it to auction. Theoretically, that could be less risky, since myriad smaller shares are sold to investors rather than waiting for one buyer to bid a price higher than the stated minimum at auction. However, that is not to say that many people bidding on share prices for a work are guaranteed to meet the seller’s minimum sale price. A work could go unsold on an exchange and get “burned,” just as well as it could get burned at auction.

But what about buying a work? In the interview Chevion told ArtTactic that “one of the most alluring aspects of using Art Certificates [what SplitArt is calling shares] as liquid, transparent financial instruments is that neither buyers nor sellers need to buy or sell a whole work of art.”

The downside of that, of course, is that you don’t actually own the work of art, so the aesthetic pleasure of owning a painting or sculpture — which offsets the risk inherent in buying art for many collectors — isn’t there. Buying a share in an art exchange has nothing to do with the art itself, but rather has to do with betting the work will grow in value — which is an extremely risky bet unless you are just speculating based on the “greater fool theory” that even if you overpaid, a greater fool will come along and pay a higher price. You can’t take the work home with you unless you buy 100 percent of the shares, and you can’t force shareholders to sell on the SplitArt system unless you are in possession of 80 percent of shares of a work.

This isn’t the first time that there has been a much-publicized launch of an art exchange in Europe. Last January there was much hoopla surrounding Art Exchange, a Paris-based exchange that promised to sell shares of work by Francesco Vezzoli and Sol LeWitt for as little as €10 ($13) per share. There has been little follow-up since it’s launch — shares are still listed at €10 and the Web site doesn’t appear to have been updated since March 2011. However, founder Pierre Naquin assured ARTINFO that Art Exchange is indeed up and running. “People can and are buying shares,” he said, adding, “We are in the process of signing distribution deals with financial institutions which will enlarge our client base.”

The problem with Art Exchange and other exchanges that currently securitize artworks (which are mostly based in China) is that they are not under the umbrella of any regulatory authority. Caroline Matthews, the operating manager of Art Exchange’s parent company, A&F Markets, told CNNInternational last year that “at present there is no official authority for this sort of trading. We are obviously regulated in the sense that we are subjected to property laws, especially those regarding artworks.”

But without regulation, shares can spike 1,700 percent (as they did in the Tianjin exchange in China last March) before anyone begins to think that the stated value of the outstanding shares is vastly more than the value of the underlying artwork and everyone starts to dump their shares, leading to panic. The Tianjin exchange had to halt trading to keep from a total market collapse.

If there is hope for SplitArt, it will be in the confidence given to investors by the backing of a regulatory authority. However, no announcements have been formally made about regulators, and SplitArt declined to comment to ARTINFO at this time. Is this exchange to be taken seriously? We will have to wait and see. 

by Shane Ferro,Market News

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Traffic Stopping Art (number 58)


I really like this newly painted box on Milton Road in Milton. The artwork is really bold and eyecatching – most people looking at them are in a car so the more bright and colourful the better. Also, the box is interesting from every angle. Two thumbs up from me! The artist is Frances Rowland Wregg and as you can see she has depicted John Milton for whom the suburb we are in is named.

Here’s the back:

You can look up any painted box in Brisbane on the Urban Smart Projects website. They also show information about painted boxes further afield now in other parts of Queensland, Victoria, Tasmania and even London.

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Slideshow: See artwork from Dutch painter Jacco Olivier


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Fashion Legends Put Stamp on Suites, Hotels


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 Each room of Le Notre Dame in Paris is decorated in an eclectic medieval-meets-modern fashion, with carpets that are meant to resemble paving stones, faux cowhide wallpaper, exposed beams and period artwork on the walls…

 

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Aboriginal Art .. On a Cake!


Novy Rich has been creating gorgeous Aboriginal art on cakes for over 20 years. Many of the designs are inspired by her husband, Mundara Koorang, renowned international Aboriginal artist, author, actor and Elder, and daughter Nganuwaay Koolyn’s artwork. From simplistic meeting places and dreaming trails to hand made iced figurines and stories from the Dreamtime, the range of Aboriginal cakes is extensive. She has created cakes for weddings, birthday’s, special events and conferences – each one a unique design. Cake flavours range from her own recipes Wickedly Chocolate cake, Vanilla and Macadamia, Red Velvet, Almond & Lily Pilly, White Chocolate Mud, Chocolate Mud and Aussie Fruit & Macadamia. Novy uses only the finest available ingredients and dot work is created with Royal Icing. Priced between $50 – $180. She can be contacted on 61 408 989 819 or email novy@mundara.com.au

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Kick Off 2012 with Project 365


If you were going to blog about one thing for an entire year, what would you choose?

Would you post photographs of your favorite place? Interview different people from your hometown? Create a new piece of art each day?

Here are eight unique blog projects (some are updated every single day) to inspire you to kick off 2012 with your own Project 365:

Blog Radstone

RichardRadstoneBlog.com

The goal, every day for the next year, approach one stranger, photograph them and promptly blog the experience. Rain or shine, hot or cold, healthy or ill, no days missed. I’ll do my best to create interesting photos, and for the sake of entertainment, work to get myself into a sticky situation from time to time. It’s a huge commitment. I’m sure there will be some hero photographs and some not so magnificent ones. Let’s see what happens!

The Creative Panic

TheCreativePanic.com

The project right at this moment is to illustrate something (anything!) as quickly as possible every day.

36ixty5

36ixty5.WordPress.com

Each day a new image will be uploaded with a small caption, phrase, quote, poem or whatever.

Everything Burger

EverythingBurger.WordPress.com

I created 365 pieces of burger artwork for a year from May 17, 2010 until May 16, 2011.

An Afternoon With

AnAfternoonWith.com

This is a project about people. It is a project about our space and the things we keep and the things we don’t throw away. It is a project about looking for and finding connections we all have. It is about seeing yourself in these spaces. Every picture is a portrait of the owner – be it a room, an object or a view. Every portrait in the end becomes a self-portrait. So in the end this is a project about me.

Footballists

Footballists.WordPress.com

I often walk around the city in my beloved Liverpool FC jersey. I never miss to notice every other person wearing a soccer shirt, no matter how big the crowd. I’ve decided to approach and meet them, and photograph. Here are my brief encounters, far away from the pitch.

A Drink with Chicago

ADrinkWithChicago.com

Since making Chicago our home, we have found that all it takes is one great conversation over one drink to create a long lasting friendship, change your outlook or learn something new. We have had so many of these experiences that we thought we’d start to share them as we continue getting to know the many fascinating people around our city. Join us as we sit down and have a drink with local entrepreneurs, chefs, celebrities, socialites, artists and athletes who all love Chicago as much as we do.

{365} Breakfasts

OneBreakfastADay.WordPress.com

Breakfast is the most important meal of the day. A blog to celebrate this is worth it.

So, do you have any ideas for your own Project 365?

For tips on choosing a topic, check out the Learn WordPress.com tutorial on Getting Focused. You can also find writing ideas, blogging tips, and photo challenges at The Daily Post.

Happy New Year from all of us at Automattic!

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Christmas Art


Still looking for that perfect gift? We are open until 7pm tomorrow night (Thursday) to give you extra time to pick up your last minute gifts. What could be better than artwork this Christmas. No fuss parking at the door, gift wrapping and gift vouchers available.


Christmas & New Year Trading

Wed 21 Dec 10am-5pm

Thur 22 Dec 10am-7pm

Fri 23 Dec 10am-5pm
Sat 24 Dec 8am-5pm
Closed 25 Dec to Tues 3 Jan 10am-5pm

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Our brains don’t like fakes


HUMAN brains respond differently to an artwork if told it is a fake rather than the original, scientists at the University of Oxford have shown.


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Australian art tour to create links with Poland


The Queensland College of Art (QCA) Griffith University will take more the 200 pieces of artwork to Poland in a bid to strengthen artistic ties between Australia and Central Europe.

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