3 Famous Love Affairs Behind Some of History’s Most Intriguing Art
Love has been one of the most important subjects of the arts for centuries. Some of the most moving plays, songs and paintings have been about or been inspired by desire, attraction, passion, selflessness, loss and despair, all of which can be attributed to falling in love. Some of these works have lasted longer than the love that inspired them, as if an immortal reminder that while love may change or be denied, the ones that truly move will leave a trace to be felt by others. Below are some of the works of art that have stood the test of time and the great stories of passion behind them.
Le Rêve (Pablo Picasso)
“When I love a woman, that tears everything apart especially, my painting.” – Pablo Picasso
Le Reve or The Dream has recently been one of Picasso’s most talked about works. First, because it sold to Casino Mogul Steve Wynn for $122 million dollars, and second because not long after Wynn bought it, he accidentally tore a hole through the canvas with his elbow. However, the painting which Picasso allegedly painted in just one day, has been the subject of fascination for many years. This is because Le Reve is one of the most sensuous portrayals of Picasso’s true love and most enduring muse, Marie-Therese Walter.
While it hasn’t always been considered the most important period of Picasso’s career, the late 1920’s to late 30’s was witness to how Pablo Picasso’s work changed the day he met Marie-Therese Walter.

Le Rêve (“The Dream”) by Pablo Picasso, 1932
She was 17 and he was 45 when they met at a Paris department store. “You have an interesting face” the artist said to her, “I am Picasso.” To the young woman with a distinct profile and coy smile, this meant nothing as she did not know of the Artist at the time. However, Marie-Therese was still seduced by a charismatic Picasso who was then married to Russian ballerina Olga. Despite the artist’s marriage, a secret affair between Picasso and Marie-Therese began.
As the affair progressed Picasso started including clues of Marie-Therese in his work. First in codes so his rightfully jealous wife wouldn’t suspect anything, but soon he put her likeness in everything he created. “When I love a woman, that tears everything apart especially my painting.” He said.
The two would never marry but during the course of their relationship Marie-Therese bore a daughter, Maya. Two months after Maya’s birth, Picasso, infamous for his many women, took on another mistress. Marie-Therese and Picasso’s affair may have ended but the gentle, submissive Marie-Therese continued to love Picasso until her dying day and the artist continued to be inspired by her. His depiction of her nose, her eyes, her hair and purplish skin were often seen drawn or painted, or even sculpted into marble and wood for over 3 decades.
Picasso died in in 1973 and 4 years later Marie-Therese took her own life. She was 68 years old.
La Fornarina (Raphael)
La Fornarina has been shrouded in much controversy and clues about it continue to surface. Who was she? The sensual, beguiling, loving look of an intimately posed woman holding her left breast — is this a look directed at a lover, a friend or a potential husband?
Of the many stories surrounding this painting, one of them has the makings of a novella.
As a young man, Raphael was easy-going, possessed great looks and, according to 16th Century writer Giorgio Vassari, very much sought after by women in that period. He began a promising painting practice with the help of Cardinal Bernardo, one of his more influential patrons. It was said that Cardinal Bernardo wanted to marry off his niece, Maria Bibbiena to Raphael. This joining would be advantageous for the young painter. He’d have a position in court and a patron would continuously support his art. However, Raphael had already fallen in love with a young woman named Margherita Luti, often called the little baker (La Fornarina). It was believed that the two had a secret affair while Raphael was engaged to Maria Bibbiena, and so he delayed the date of their wedding several times.

La Fornarina, Raphael, 1518 – 1520
Maria Bibbiena never became Raphael’s wife as the painter died at the young age of 37. Margherita, the young woman depicted in the painting, resigned herself to a convent and not much was heard of her after that.
Now, this story could stand on its own and it has for a lot of analysts, but recent extensive x-ray analysis of the painting revealed that on the left ring finger of La Fornarina, is a square cut ruby and gold ring. Experts say that such a ring is unusual for a young single woman and this perhaps provides us with more information on the significance of the relationship between the two. One can also see a band on La Fornarina’s left arm bearing the artist’s name, leading to the possible conclusion that Raphael may have been engaged to two women at the same time.
The Kiss (Auguste Rodin)
Rodin picked a moment in the story where a deeply disturbing tragedy was about to occur.
This Valentine’s Day edition of the blog wouldn’t be complete without one of the most popular allusions to romance, Auguste Rodin’s The Kiss. Looking at this sculpture it is easy to think that this is about the pure love between two people, after all both seem to be completely enraptured with one another. However this sculpture is Rodin’s depiction of the story of Francesca and Paolo, the two adulterous characters in Dante’s Divine Comedy.
Francesca da Polenta and Paolo Malatesta were from two rival families in Italy. Francesca was married off to Paolo’s crippled brother Giovanni as a means to solidify a truce between the families, while Paolo was married to Countess Orabile Beatrice. Despite their own marital commitments Francesca and Paolo carried on a 10 year affair. The sculpture shows us the pair on the verge of a passionate tryst, their bodies in different stages of submission. A walk around the sculpture reveals Paolo’s hand holding a book.

The Kiss 1901-4 Auguste Rodin 1840-1917 Photo credits: www.tate.org.uk
Rodin picked a moment in the story where a deeply disturbing tragedy was about to occur. Francesca and Paolo are sitting together in her bedroom. He is reading to her the story of Sir Lancelot and Guinevere, when Francesca, deeply enamored by Paolo, decides to throw herself at him. In the midst of this sweeping passion, there is a loud knock at the door. It is Francesca’s husband Giovanni who is determined to interrupt their affair and face down the lovers. When Francesca opens the door Giovanni sees Paolo on the verge of escape. Giovanni, deep in anger, kills his brother first and his wife next.
In Dante’s novel we find Francesca and Paolo in the second circle of hell, the part of damnation reserved for the lustful. There they are destined to be forever trapped in an eternal sweeping whirlwind and storm as they allowed themselves to be completely swept up by their passions.
Art Talk: Stephanie Jung

New York VI
I am thrilled to have on this week’s Art Talk the photographs of Stephanie Jung. Stephanie hails from Schifferstadt, a small town in South-West Germany and has been creating art through her photographs since her days studying visual communications.
Stephanie’s strong individual perspective and unquestionable skills make this would-be photographer green with envy. Her photos capture the distinct character of various cities through the use of multiple exposure photography, a technique she’s been honing since her early years of experimentation. As a result her photos communicate vibration, manic movement, transience and slight shifts in perspective – all as if rendered in slow motion. These traits paint a picture of a fleeting contemporary urban life.
To a city-dweller, like myself, these scenes should feel “normal” as this is the world in which we are surrounded, however Stephanie’s work feels ethereal, transporting the viewer to dream-like versions of her chosen cities. She even breathes new life into cities that suffer from tourism overexposure such as Tokyo, Paris, or New York – cities we are used to viewing on postcards or fridge magnets displayed in many a camera-toting tourists’ home. Stephanie’s perspective on these cities is fresh, invigorating, and very much her own.
Tell us, Stephanie, what was it like in the earlier stages of exploring multiple exposure photography?
I realized that I like abstract photography during my internship, where I learned a lot from a professional photographer, she really inspires me with her work. I love how you can show movement with blur, I really love abstract photos and the mood they create.
The multiple-exposure shots was something I discovered when I was in Paris. I spent one day at the La Defense district, which is very busy most of the time. There was one moment when I wanted to increase this mood, so I started to experiment. Although I liked the results, I didn’t continue working on it until I visited Japan one year later. I was fascinated by this country, especially the big cities like Tokyo. That’s where I started to work on multiple exposures again, it was the perfect way for me to intensify the feeling of Japan.

Museumsinsel
Your photographs comment about the transient life in cities so eloquently. As a viewer and a city dweller, I think your work captures the ephemeral part of living in a big city. How easy or difficult was it to arrive at this way of presenting your narrative?
Well, this was a process which I didn’t enforce. I started to focus on abstract photography because I was fascinated about the possibilities you have in photography. Taking classic pictures was something I was bored with in the beginning. During my internship where I spent a lot of time with a photographer and later friend in Berlin, I asked myself why I’m taking those photographs and why I choose those motives and experimental styles. So I started to think about the things in life I’m dealing with, what I’m thinking about and what I was questioning in life. This combined with looking at my early photographs I found out it’s the movement in life which matters to me and which I want to show in my works. So this all happened without me pushing my photographs in a specific direction, it was just something I did automatically.

Berlin Collection
You’ve also depicted the pulsating, reverberating characters of cities like NY and Paris. You’ve shown quieter sides of Berlin and the calm side of Kyoto. And your Scotland photos exude whimsy. How do you ensure that you capture the variety of characteristics that different cities possess?
This is a very intuitive process. When I visit specific cities, I walk through the streets, see some famous sights but also unknown places which I randomly discover. Every person experiences a place very differently, not everyone likes all facets or a city in general, others do. With my work I’m showing my personal view of a place, how I am seeing it. To see and feel the varying characters of a city, you simply have to explore it.
It’s easier for me to capture a city, which I’ve never been to or which I don’t know that well. For example, I find it hard to portrait my hometown, which I know perfectly. Every time I try to take pictures of it, I’m not happy with the result. I know every corner of this place, this makes it hard to change my view of it and see new, interesting things which I find worth capturing. A friend and photographer once said to me, if you accomplish to photograph your hometown and be satisfied with the result, you’re a good photographer. I’m curious about the day I will manage that.

Himeji
How do you choose then which not-so-familiar cities to photograph?
On the one hand, I’m taking photographs during my private travels. Not every place is suitable for this kind of photography, although I’m always trying to achieve a good photo.
On the other hand there are cities which I’d love to visit and take pictures of to continue my series. These are mostly big cities like Hong Kong or again, New York. What I’m looking for is an unique, mostly modern, architecture with many structures and a unique cityscape.
My late friend and photographer Sabine Wenzel gave me the advice to not randomly take photographs, just because I’m passionate about it. It’s important to find a theme in photography which you’re always working on. To find something which is important to you and what you want to express through your art.
What’s the best piece of advice you’d given anyone about their art?
Of course that’s the best advice I have been given, as I think it’s so important for your art and changes a lot in your process. I would be silly if I wouldn’t share this valuable advice.

Gion

The Artist, Stephanie Jung
How do you see your work evolving? What’s next for you?
I’m currently exploring other fields of photography as well. Since 2014 I’m also focusing on people and portrait photography. It’s so different from my usual work, but I’m having a lot of fun, as I can work with people and it’s always a challenge for me to capture the character of someone. This is something I’ll keep doing as I enjoy the balance of client work and my personal art.
Also, one goal for 2016 is to combine my art with people photography. I started to work on it last year, but only randomly, so this is something I’d like to extend in future.
Interviewed by: Jing Palad
Art Pieces by Stephanie Jung
Alexanderplatz
Berlin 01
Berlin Collection
Citylife
Closing Time
Curiocity II
Curiocity III
Art Talk: Toni Silber-Delerive
Some of the most interesting and engaging art pieces are those that shift the perspective of the viewer. I find that this is true of Toni Silber-Delerive’s paintings. She often takes us to a different plane – quite literally – showing us aerial views of locations and exposing beauty not normally seen unless we consider her perspective.
Viewing her art, some of which could be seen here or her website led me to ask What is this place she’s showing me? Have I been to this place before? I then found myself dissecting carefully positioned elements and colors and then piecing them back together, stepping back, and again looking at the bigger picture. At this point there’s a certain feeling of awe towards the way in which she presents us with her vision.
In the following interview Toni gives us insight into her work. We learn about her process and the general direction towards which she chooses to take us and her art next.

Oil Fields
Your aerialscapes are so effective in how they encourage viewers to consider different perspectives. “Nottinghamshire Coal Mine“, “Oil Fields” and “Australia Industrial” for example surprise the viewer, as a mention of these places do not necessarily conjure beautiful imagery. However, your work positions them – particularly in the case of “Oil Fields” and “Australia Industrial” – in an intriguing, almost abstract manner. How did you start in this direction? Have you always had this perspective when you started painting?
Although I studied painting in college, in my career in graphic design I looked at the world and meanings of subjects through abstract shapes and colors. When I returned to painting full-time that experience as a designer influenced my work.
Beyond the composition I strive to interpret the world we live in and incite viewers to see it from a different perspective. I attempt to tell my narrative while retaining the character of the location, using a personal perspective to develop a graphic visual vocabulary. I want my paintings to be more than just a recording of the contemporary landscape and express my interpretation and vision.

Bancroft Library
It’s also particularly interesting how depth is minimized in a lot of your work. What’s the reason behind this approach?
Wanting to depart from traditional landscape perspective, but still incorporate realism, the view from above allows me to combine elements of abstraction and representation, pattern and grid, surface and illusion, as well as observation, imagination, and memory. My work can be understood on many levels, from the simple interplay of shape and color to the narrative of the pictorial story.
I enjoyed looking at the composition of elements and the choice of colors in your paintings. Please take us through your process and how you select these opportune vantage points.
I start with a location that fits my narrative, then proceed to sketch my idea from one of my own photographs or stock material using the bird’s eye view. The next step is to block out the shapes, patterns and color working with Photoshop to further refine composition and color. Although the color is not realistic there are close similarities. Finally it is time to work at the easel.

Australia Industrial
There seems to be a move towards abstraction in some of your pieces. Is this a conscious decision or do you think this is a natural progression for the kind of art that you create?
It is my conscious decision to move towards abstraction while maintaining an aerial viewpoint. There is much more that I want to explore, there’s really no limits to creativity. The last series I did is called “Intersections Quartered”. if you didn’t know they were intersections you probably wouldn’t recognize them.
Apart from your aerialscapes, you paint other subjects such as food and people. Which of these subjects gives you most satisfaction and why?
The food paintings, are also derived from the same unconventional approach as my aerialscapes. While the colors and shapes are traditional, the oversized proportions painted from above display the subject in a way that is both original and recognizable.
My figurative work draws on a stylized impression of people. Just like my landscapes they are commentaries, only about people. The most basic of human needs, desires, dreams are timeless and universal. There’s an added layer of emotions to the portraying of my subjects. These paintings hint at stories about their subjects, but give viewers room to use their imagination.
In Atlantic City, two children pose on the sand, buckets in hand, unsure of their environment, not exactly frolicking and carefree. A reminder that childhood is filled with insecurities.

Frances and Dad

The Artist, Toni Silber-Delerive
And lastly, what does it mean for you to be an artist in our time?
Regardless of the time, I believe my raison d’être as an artist is to share my vision of the world. I want my aerialscapes to be a commentary on our lifestyles and environment, a collection of urban and suburban way of life as well as a representation of the natural and industrial worlds. I will be satisfied if my paintings encourage people to step back and see our world as affected by humanity in a different light.
Toni’s website is www.tonisart.com
Interviewed by: Jing Palad
Art Pieces by Toni Silber-Delerive
Bancroft Library
Blue Intersections, Quartered
Doncaster, England
Frances and Dad
Jamaica Resort
NJ Water Park
Open Field Cultivation
Art Talk: Haydee Torres
This week we continue our conversations with some of today’s most promising artists, turning our focus to Haydee Torres and her work. Haydee combines the strength and diaphaneity of her colors with the grit and gentleness found in the women in her portraits. This careful balance helps her work exude both fragile beauty and stability, and makes it hard for art lovers to resist.
I’d like to go into detail about your work but first, please tell us more about you.
Where are you from?
I was born in New York, but my family relocated to Puerto Rico very early on in my life.
Where are you currently living and working?
I am currently living in Fort Lauderdale, Florida; my studio is located in my home.
How did you get your start as an artist?
I first discovered my passion for art while completing a fashion design program at the Art Institute of Fort Lauderdale. While taking my required courses, I found a particular interest in fashion illustration and my instructors further encouraged me to develop my drawing skills. This was a very important and exciting time for me. These were the first encounters in which I had found those around me referring to me as an artist which was a huge moment of revelation for me. Later on, I began taking drawing classes at a local college. One of my professors told me that he believed I had reached a high enough skill level to justify selling my work, which was an idea that both intimidated and exhilarated me.

Ruffle and Pink
Please describe to us your process and your approach.
Before I begin a piece, I take time to formulate a kind of mental image of what I would like to translate onto the canvas. There has to be a certain sort of craving to use a specific medium, which is the part of the process that I find truly exciting. The rest of the process is planning and is oftentimes very calm and almost ritual, but it can also be an extremely fast and disorganized process. I prefer to be listening to music, mostly piano such as Phillip Glass. Most of the time I find myself wondering and having this mental discussion about almost everything. I always been a thinker and preoccupied with existence, purpose and the different experiences that a person goes thought during their lives. As the piece develops, I take many photos to fix mistakes and make sure that the composition works and the colors are well balanced.

A Moment in Time
Women figure prominently in your work. What is the reason behind this? and what are some of the characters of the women on these portraits?
My work is very selfish because it is about me. Not physically but about the female in me. My women are representing a modern woman that has a real battle to get where she stands. That is why they are beautiful, tall hair like a crown and strong. I work from photos most of the time but sometimes my daughter will pose for me.
Because of your approach to color it would be easy to connect your work to fauvism. How do you feel about this association?
I can understand the connection. My approach to color is very spontaneous. I also associate my usage of color with expressionism, but I most definitely find that connection to be an extremely valid one. I like to leave a sense of mystery to my pieces so that the viewer can interpret them in their own unique way, so I really do think my work can be connected with several different styles.

Orange in Red
Who or what has been the biggest influence on your thinking?
When I started painting my may influence was fashion. As I evolve I have became more interested in contemporary figurative work and expressionist art.
What fascinates you most about the work that you do?
The process. Because I don’t have formal painting education I have a very unorthodox way of painting.Also acrylics are quite challenging when it come to the figure ,I have to figure it out as I go.
In your statement, you mention that your work encourages the viewer to develop their own narrative. What has been the most interesting interpretation of your work that you’ve come across?
I will say that a lot of my female customers they connect with the painting in a personal level and they can see themselves as the figure in the canvas. When I had have the opportunity of meeting my customers in person they have this curiosity about the feelings of the woman in the painting.And that is when the narrative begins. For some people it is about just questioning for other they explain to me what is going on, so it is wonderful how everybody has a different narrative.
Interviewed by: Jing Palad
Art Pieces by Haydee Torres
A Moment in Time
Morning Tea
Nicole
Art Talk: Melody Lynn Madden
For this inaugural edition of Art Talk, we focus on Canadian artist Melody Lynn Madden‘s work. Melody’s dreamy landscapes and emotive cloudscapes take us to a place of lightness and calm. The openness of the skies and pristine lands of Muskoka, Ontario figure prominently in her work which transports us to the place she calls home. A welcome virtual trip for this city dweller!
Learn more about Melody Lynn, her approach to art and her diverse sources of inspiration. Here’s a tip: She’s fond of the Justins.

I Dreamt in Colour
I would like to talk about these serene, beautiful paintings, but first, I would like to talk about you. How did you get your start as an artist?
Growing up my grandmother instilled in me the value of working with my hands… a creativity that may have never manifested itself if not for her. She was an embroiderer and to watch her fingers move the needle effortlessly through the fabric when she sewed …as if through water .. silent and smooth was simply beautiful. I worked in textiles for fifteen years because of her influence and then moved to paint five years ago.
My grandfather loved film. He took me to my first movie when I was 5 years old. Mary Poppins. The memory of that scene in the park with Burt .. Jumping into the paintings.. I feel like I paint places I would like to jump in to.
Those two pivotal moments in my life, my grandmother teaching me the value of working with my hands and my grandfather showing me the magic of places I could create – places I could jump into … Places of comfort. It’s taken me all this time to see how those early exposures to art in two different forms planted a seed in me creatively.
Please describe to us what your process is like. Do you work mainly outdoors or primarily in the studio?
I am a studio painter. Mine is surrounded by large windows which overlook 3 acres of the Muskoka landscape. I walk the property every day and in the winter I cross country ski on the pond. This inspires me and fuels the ideas for new work. Lately I’ve been waking at 5 a.m. and heading into the studio, picking up a paintbrush, watching the sun come up and just feeling so damn grateful to do the work. I use a lot of glazing in my art as I am quite taken with the luminosity and depth I can achieve with that process. I never draw anything on canvas/panel before I begin because I feel it limits what may present itself. I just go with what I feel and trust that will be enough. I also never premix my colours, preferring to do it on the canvas/panel.
There is always music on in the studio…I don’t remember a time when I painted without it .. Everything from Imagine Dragons, Etta James, Guns n Roses, Drake, Moby (big love for Moby) Van Morrison and the Justin’s (timberlake/beiber).
Strangely enough another part of my process is choosing the title of a piece before the art begins. It’s triggered by something I’ve experienced in my own life, a feeling, an unanswered question or something I’ve read or seen that has a profound emotional impact on me. I write it down and it influences the work right from the very beginning.
I love words … the lyrical way they are strung together … like paper hearts.
The sound and flow of the spoken word … words that can soothe a broken heart, comfort a weary soul, inspire those in need of inspiration and give us hope when we need it most ..
I love the space they hold..
Words connect us, through our struggles, our joys, the never ending challenge of trying to find our place in the world.
The words, the landscape and the art … it’s a full circle experience for me.
The place where you live and work (Muskoka, ON) seems to be the persistent character in your work. What for you are the characteristics of this region that figure in your work?
I was born and raised in Toronto but moved north seventeen years ago. I still love the city and am there often but the connection I experience here in Muskoka, it creates an emotional response that shapes the work. The lakes, the trees, sunrise and sunset … Oh, and I am so emotional about the sky. To me, the sky holds untold stories.
How do you feel about working in different cities and exploring different landscapes?
That idea is the future vision I have for myself and my work. Travelling and experiencing life in different cities, exploring new landscapes? It would open the door to a new level of creativity that would enhance my paintings and allow me the possibility to explore new forms of inspiration. I have a big love for Northern California, the sky, the beach and those gorgeous redwoods. It would be a dream to paint and teach there.
I’ve recently begun teaching at The Orillia Museum of Art and History .. A drop in art group for youth. I have found it to be incredibly rewarding in ways I had never fully anticipated. The opportunity to collaborate with young people, share ideas, talk art and learn … I always want to be open to new experiences. If I ever decide I don’t want to continue to learn, it’s time to pack up my paints and go home. So I imagine if you asked me what I could see myself doing a few years from now I would say “paint, travel and teach”

Whispered Rumors
Your art often exudes calm, openness and a sense of freedom, how important is it for your disposition to be the same when you’re painting?
I’m emotional every time I pick up a paintbrush … It’s like this flow of everything I’ve experienced in my life to this point … Pouring out onto canvas or panel ….
I believe there are pivotal moments in your life that change you … shape you .. push you to strip away the layers to discover who you are and what your really made of … My work is an exploration of that. At times that may translate to a calm, still sky or as of late, something much more dark, stormy and powerful… There is an incredible beauty to both.
You have your own website through which you sell some of your work. For a lot of artists this has been an increasingly popular way of selling art. However there are still those who feel that selling online is impersonal, especially those who are intrigued by the new owners of their work. By selling your work online is that sensation all lost? Especially that part of interfacing with people who share your vision?
I have found selling online a great way to connect with new buyers as well as previous collectors who currently own my work. I can totally understand the hesitation of that initial purchase though. Buying online from an artist you’ve never met or spoken with can be daunting but I do my best to make it a good experience and to be open, honest, engaging and communicate well. Many buyers have sent me a photograph of my work hanging in their home … I’m am so honored by that gesture.
I do love galleries. I’m talking to a few right now and would love to be represented as well as represent myself … I believe as artists we can do both. I currently sell with two online galleries, Zatista and Saatchi.

The Artist, Melody Lynn Madden
Do you remember what it felt like to be called an artist for the first time? And what does it feel like to be called an artist now?
Honestly, the first time it made me uncomfortable probably because I couldn’t claim it. I did a group show with much more seasoned artists than myself, artists whose work I was in awe of. Maybe I thought I didn’t deserve it, I hadn’t quite earned it yet. Today I fully own it and stand proudly in that space. I believe we are all artists, each of us uniquely creating, through our daily lives, a way to express who we truly are.

The Fine a Thread Of Connection a That Winds Around My Heart
And finally, what are you working on these days?
“The Fine Thread of Connection That Winds Around My Heart” which is an acrylic/ oil piece.
I’m finding the revealing of layers has begun to show itself in my work and I’m quite enjoying the transition between reality based skies and a more abstract landscape. The process of scratching away the surface on a painting to reveal what’s underneath is deeply satisfying to me as I find it symbolic for life.
While working, I keep a passage from one of my favorite books on my work table … for me it keeps it real.
Fill your bowl to the brim
and it will spill.
Keep sharpening your knife
and it will blunt
Chase after money and security
and your heart will never unclench
Care about people’s approval
and you will be their prisoner
Do your work and then step back
The only path to serenity
(Tao Te Ching, translation by Stephen Mitchell)
You can visit her website: melodylynnmadden.com
Interviewed by: Jing Palad
Give the Gift of Art for Under $250
For the fan of the classics
Ah, we love them. The classical art aficionado is probably the easiest to buy for as their favorite artists or subjects are well known and the art is easy to find. A taste for the classics is something that a great number of artists and collectors alike seem to share. Still life, figurative works like portraits, landscape works, etc. make great gifts.
Antique Bottle with Garlic
For the contemporary connoisseur
You can spot them easily, and if you’re friends with one, consider yourself lucky. They are the people who are either on trend or better yet, setting the trend. They know their way around art and design so well you had once dreamed about them decorating your apartment or overhauling your closet. However, this can also be the most difficult group to buy art for, especially on a limited budget. But don’t worry, they’re also typically adventurous and are “taken” with a great piece of art regardless of the modest cost.
For those who like a little bit of edge
If your friend or loved one enjoys the aesthetic of industrial places – think steel + hardwood floor + distressed leather– chances are they would enjoy pieces with a bit more funk. The strong expressionist brush strokes of certain abstract pieces, darker moods and subjects definitely match this style preference.
“Best Friend” Original Modern Blue and Red Modern on SALE
For the whimsical one
Lightness, fantasy, and playful are just some of the words associated to art that projects whimsy. If someone you care about is into soft tones and magical themes, Christmas is the best time to give them this kind of art. After all, isn’t it this particular season that brings out the lightness in all of us?
16×24 in. Alex Kain Louis
Anaranjado 2
Joyous Life Of Hippopotamus
Didn’t find what you’re looking for? See more at Amazon Art
High Priced Art, Low Priced Art
3 Money-saving tips for buying art on limited budget
One of the first things I learned when I was working for an Art consultancy company was to always ask a prospective client “What budget are we working with?” This question is at the top of the list as it gives us an idea about the project’s scope — what is affordable vs. what is out of reach, how many art pieces are we limited to, etc. While it’s often music to an art consultant’s ears to hear the words “Money is not an issue” or “I don’t have a set budget, as long as I like what I see” this comes as often as a unicorn sighting in the middle of a busy intersection (at least when you are sober). What is not unusual, however, is coming across a client so informed and interested in art that their taste tends to tip the scale of their budget.
Everybody goes through penny-pinching at some point when it comes to acquiring art, not just the consultants, so here are some techniques I’ve learned on how to avoid going over your budget but still get the desired experience.
Pick out the qualities you like most about the high-priced art you’d been eyeing and scout for similar approaches in less established or less renowned but talented artists.
The best art consultants you will ever meet have the deepest bench of alternative suggestions for every client’s artistic preference. Part of this is because one has to be ready for options should a work of art for so many reasons – budget especially – don’t work out as planned. So, here’s my suggestion to you: If you find that you like a certain high- end artwork, say a Yayoi Kusama painting (which has fetched up to US$1.1M), ask yourself what it is about a her work you like. Is it her contemporary take on pointillism that excites you? Is it her approach on color? Is it her voluptuous sculptures? Then do some research and exploration.
Dig through a host of less established artists who are influenced by her, or are doing something similar. For most of us passionate about collecting, this is the most fun part of the process. I live for art school graduate exhibitions, gallery openings and art collective exhibitions. This is where I see what is out there, and before I know it, I suddenly have several options when I only had one when I started.
If you must absolutely have a piece by the artist, would other versions of the piece suffice?
Takashi Murakami and Jeff Koons are just two of the blue chip artists who create limited editions of some of their iconic pieces. The enterprising Murakami, through his company, Kaikai Kiki creates limited prints out of his canvas paintings (Some of which can be purchased through our website). Jeff Koons has produced miniatures of his record breaking art Balloon Dog. Fans of these high-selling artists are fortunate as they have an option to buy more affordable versions of the works.
However, as the artists chose to reproduce the original, albeit in a limited number, these editions are less rare and will be significantly less when it comes to valuation. That said, if the intent is to include work from these artists in your collection and you’re working with a limited budget, these editioned works are another avenue to consider.
Be adventurous. Explore works early in an artist’s career.
In the 60’s Roy Lichtenstein’s paintings would sell for as low as $300+. Christopher Wool’s works in the 80’s to the 90’s could often be purchased for less than US$10,000, but nowadays his works would easily command millions of dollars. There is a certain gamble in buying works by emerging artists, as not all artists go on to become famous, so do prioritize buying what you like. I would however, always suggest keeping your ears tuned into the best art or design schools in your cities and attend their graduate shows. This is one of the best places to spot young talented artists whose works are still very affordable. Galleries know this and frequent these venues looking for upcoming talent.
Written by Jing Palad