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Art News
Art NewsArt Deals Online, Art in Abu Dhabi, Art Deterrants, and moreby Eileen Jeng Art dealer and artist see eye to eye Selling art via jpegs A new trend is emerging amongst gallery owners� one which enables buyers to add to their personal collection of potential masterpieces from the comfort of their own home. Typically dealers and gallery owners rely primarily on word of mouth and walk-in clients for the bulk of their sales, a tradition that has remained in place throughout the e-commerce boom, until now. Increasingly, art dealers are selling work online, most recently through emailed images of artwork sent to specifically targeted clients. Before the opening of SAIC alumna Claire Sherman�s first solo exhibition this February, gallery owner Kavi Gupta emailed images of her paintings to collectors. As a direct result, her show was completely sold out before opening night. Since Sherman�s debut at Art Basel last year, �[W]e�ve been �selling her work based on digital images,� Gupta told The New York Times. At Art Basel, prominent Miami collector and real estate mogul Marty Margulies bought her work, providing a valuable boost to Sherman�s art world presence. Although a work�s subtleties may be lost in a digital image, a potential buyer can get a general sense of the work before deciding either to travel to see it or to buy it outright. Gupta admitted to The New York Times that in digital images of Sherman�s work, one can �not see the energy of the brushwork.� Still, he prefers this method of selling because he does not have to depend on walk-ins as much and can establish contacts with international collectors. Sherman agrees, telling F Newsmagazine that the large scale of her work lends itself well to online sales: �While digital images do not give you an idea of the surface of a work or the experience of scale, they allow your work to be seen more widely. They give people who live outside of Chicago an idea of what your work looks like without traveling or transporting the work. With my paintings, this is useful because of scale. It is very costly to ship larger paintings, and digital images can help someone get an idea of what you do. While they do not give a sense of the what it is like to actually experience the paintings and their surfaces, there are benefits to the speed and efficiency of using digital images.� But, Sherman �[does not] feel pressure[d] to make more work based on sales� and risk compromising her artistic process. Her first solo exhibition, Slow Pan, is at Kavi Gupta Gallery on 835 W. Washington until March 17. In eight of Sherman�s large scale canvases, one as large as 84� x 96�, she depicts different scenes from �expansive arctic vistas to close-ups of the forest floor� as seen from a �lingering deliberate� camera, as stated on kavigupta.com. An exportation or exploitation of culture? The Louvre and Guggenheim in the United Arab Emirates Abu Dhabi, the capital of the oil-rich United Arab Emirates, has called on the Louvre and the Guggenheim to help develop a cultural district on Saadiyat Island, 500 yards off the coast of the city. The two museums will lend their names, along with works from their collections to two new institutions, which will be accompanied by a maritime museum, a national museum, and a performing arts center. Using art to combat crime? Art gallery in Rio de Janeiro slum In Vila Cruzeiro, a favela in Rio de Janeiro, gun crimes and drug trafficking are part of the everyday life. The youth are armed; some carry grenades. Bullet holes cover the buildings. In a recent, well-known case, Brazilian journalist Tim Lopes was kidnapped and brutally murdered. And in February, an open-air art gallery was established, where residents paint murals on the outside of their homes. Always a Battle Money for the arts Getting more funding for the arts is an ongoing issue. Since 1992 and the �culture wars� surrounding debates over free speech and censorship, funding for the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) has been reduced significantly. President Bush�s Fiscal Year 2008 budget proposal recently put forth a small increase of $4 million, bringing the total to $128.4 million for the NEA, which is about $48 million less than the 1992 budget.
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