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2007-01-26 17:08:10 · 15 answers · asked by ? 1 in Arts & Humanities Visual Arts Painting

15 answers

GOOD art is expensive. Paintings by Knowledge are twelve for a dollar.

2007-01-26 17:18:00 · answer #1 · answered by Knowledge 3 · 1 0

First off, Mr.!!! I'll be striaght up with you.

Thousands of dollars are spend on a good art eduction & schooling! Have you ever looked at the cost of art supplies? Do you even know how much thought, pre-planing, research, and resourses goes into a single picture before its even painted or made? What about the amount of time spent producting it?

Does "one of a kind" mean anything to you!,.. in this age of mass production!?!

To even begin to actually "sell art", as in, people noticing your art as not being crappy!, takes years apon years of experience, built knowledge, and an expensive artistic vocabulary! Being an artist, may not seem like a physically demanding job, but I insure you, I have be under paid for years for the efforts I put into my art!

The art Galleries take a cut percentage from an artists profit. The charge the artist, for selling their art for them. sometime up to 30% or 50%!

2007-01-26 17:56:21 · answer #2 · answered by Stony 4 · 2 0

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2016-04-13 13:52:27 · answer #3 · answered by mikaela 3 · 0 0

I will try to answer your question as best I can, but there are really no straight answers. I'm answering this from the perspective as an active and working artist.

-The price has to cover the cost of materials. Art supplies are expensive (and way overpriced). Materials for making a sculpture are very expensive, such as metal, wax, and plaster. If you cast something in bronze, it's certainly not going to be cheap.
Even paper used a media such as printmaking can cost as much as almost $8.00 for one sheet of paper... ONE sheet! Printmakers also typically print their images in editions, which requires more paper. When I make prints, I usualy create editions of 10. I usually use paper that is $5.00 a sheet, so I have to shell out $50 just for one edition of prints... and that's just one edition.
Let's say you're a painter. Many of the pigments used in paints are mined from the earth, and there is only so much the earth provides. It's like the crude oil we need for fuel. Cadmium is one example. It's used in many oil paints, and a small 37mL tube of Cadmium Blue can cost $20 or more... for one tube of paint.
There's a reason why artists use these expensive materials and not a set of Crayola art supplies: quality. Artists have to worry about their materials being acid-free and archival (so work doesn't rot or turn yellow), and that costs money.

-Not all artists use brand new, pristine materials. Many artists use found objects in their work, sometimes just stuff they find laying around. So if they found all their materials for free, why does it cost so much? I can't speak for all artists, but when we create work, we put our passion into it. The visual arts is a very intellectual and philosophical area. Our work becomes a part of us, and we put much thought into the meaning behind it. Many artists convey a message in their work, whether it be personal, political, cultural, etc. I know it sounds cheezy and cliche, but our soul goes into what we create. How much is your passion or your soul worth?

-It's not like showing your work in a gallery is always free. Not only to you have to prove to the gallery that your work is good enough to exhibit there, but many galleries charge you just to use their space. In addition, if you sell any work, the gallery may take a percentage of the cost of the piece. The highest percentage I've encountered in my experience is 40%.

-There are artists that are self-trained and never went to school. On the other hand, many that have spent years in school becoming asethic and technical masters in their area of expertise. The terminal degree in visual arts is the Master of Fine Arts. If you have an MFA in painting, then that means you have intensely trained for years, honed your skills in painting, and know everything about art theory. It is your job to know and use your skills. You are a professional. At that point, you should paid like one, damn it. :)

-Fame affects the price of art. Alex Katz and I (not that I am worthy to compare myself to him) could create the same type of print, and you would have to break the bank to buy his version.

-Art is not something we can just judge in a solely objective manner. I believe many people feel that art (or rather, "good" art) is a nice, pretty picture; something is that rendered very meticulously and realistically. When art does not conform to these preconcieved standards, some people may view it as "bad" art. In this sense, it is understandable why people question why art is so expensive. However, contemporary art is not always nice and pretty. If anything else, it is more about idea. "Good" art is not necessarily a pretty landscape of trees with the "V" formation of geese flying above the horizon.

These are just some reasons that may explain the price of art. However, this is from the view of a contemporary artist. Priceless works in a museum (like a Picasso, for instance), have entirely different reasons.
I hope my long winded explanation has in some way answered your question.

2007-01-26 19:12:19 · answer #4 · answered by jenclaire3 1 · 3 0

Because it took time to do the works,buy materials and Art's Color Paints,etc.that so expensive for Art

2007-01-26 19:40:05 · answer #5 · answered by victor98_2001 4 · 1 0

Art is what that person is doing.
Think about your job. You get paid a salary or by the hour. Artists need to charge the same way, only they "work for themselves".
That, and people are strange about art, they pick the strangest things.

2007-01-26 17:15:09 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

Talking of contemporary, only hyped up stuff by the press !!!!! I am a competent full time artist www.janedunn.co.uk and I earn less than a daily cleaner and I never take a holiday or Sunday off!!!! What the b..... h...... are you talking about .!!!!!
Take all the pictures off your walls and see what a miserable place it is without !!!! Even cave men had something on their walls

2007-01-26 18:15:27 · answer #7 · answered by shetland 3 · 0 0

Because it is original, and the artist is putting a piece of his soul into every project... Thats worth alot to the artist... Also, the artists also have to eat sometimes.. if they dont sell things too often then the have to make enough money to support themselves until their next masterpiece is sold... etc. etc.

Hope that helps...

2007-01-26 17:19:09 · answer #8 · answered by KMart 2 · 2 0

I have come to see the idea of “talent” as one of the most brilliant marketing inventions of the past few centuries. The elitist idea that God, or happenstance, singles out and grants special abilities to a few individuals has been the basis behind exorbitant prices for art.

2007-01-26 17:14:54 · answer #9 · answered by itry007 4 · 0 2

Because good art is rare, and in demand. and that bids the prices up.

2007-01-26 17:36:40 · answer #10 · answered by AardVark 2 · 1 0

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