4 Reasons Why Your Art Is Bad/Unsuccessful (& How To Fix It)

2024 ж. 29 Сәу.
98 396 Рет қаралды

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Julien Delagrange is an art historian, contemporary artist, and the founder and director of CAI. Delagrange studied Science of Arts at Ghent University, Belgium, and worked for the Centre for Fine Arts (BOZAR) in Brussels, the Jan Vercruysse Foundation, the Ghent University Library, and has contributed to the international contemporary art scene as an art critic, lecturer, curator, gallery director, consultant, advisor, and as an artist. As an artist, he is represented by Galerie Sabine Bayasli in Paris, France, and Gallery Space60 in Antwerp, Belgium.
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  • My criteria is strictly, "Would I like to have this in my house?" Sometimes in a museum, I see something so wonderful, that I go to the museum shop and look for a postcard of it. I don't have much money, but I have a lot of postcards. If I make something and I can't truly say I want to keep it, I don't imagine anybody else should want it. The world is full of "stuff". Be selective about your visual environment, and make your art accordingly.

    @argusfleibeit1165@argusfleibeit11655 ай бұрын
    • Be selective about your visual environment, and make your art accordingly And that's why my house has lots of paintings by me :) oops doesn't that sound like an ego trip lol. For me it's more like 'mommy thought it was good enough to go on the fridge' :)

      @nobrainsnoheadache2434@nobrainsnoheadache24342 ай бұрын
    • @argusfleibeit1165 No, sweetie. FINE artists should always make art that they feel in/to/from their spirit/soul and for no other reason/incentive. If you're a hobbyist or commercial artist than you make art that appeals to the general and/or that's commissioned for commercial purposes. This is especially true with artists who create works that speak to social, political, ethnic and/or cultural issues.

      @tiwantiwaabibiman2603@tiwantiwaabibiman2603Ай бұрын
    • @@tiwantiwaabibiman2603 I can go over to the University Art Dept. any time, and admire the hideous and meaningful '''fine art" those geniuses turn out. Then I can go back to my house and look at things around me that make me stop wanting to unalive myself and/or others in this rat-hole of reality. But you do you, honey-bun.

      @argusfleibeit1165@argusfleibeit1165Ай бұрын
  • “Artist is a person who paints what you can sell. A good artist is a person who sells what he paints.” - Picasso

    @user-vt6zy1ms3s@user-vt6zy1ms3s5 ай бұрын
    • Great quote! Thank you for tuning in

      @contemporaryartissue@contemporaryartissue5 ай бұрын
    • go and tell this to the many brilliant artists who died in absolute poverty and who were unable to sell anything while alive, Van Gogh for example ,to name one of many, and who their talent was recognized only many years after their death. Picasso was one of the very few lucky ones who had the opportunity to earn money and recognition during his lifetime but he is certainly not a better artist than many others who had a much more difficult life

      @liv0003@liv00035 ай бұрын
    • Van Gogh is the exception, not the rule. Most successful artists are famous during their lifetime as well. @@liv0003

      @contemporaryartissue@contemporaryartissue5 ай бұрын
    • @@contemporaryartissue no he wast "the exception", many painters went famous only after their death actually

      @liv0003@liv00035 ай бұрын
    • @@contemporaryartissue Johannes Vermeer, El Greco, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, Paul Cezanne ,Edouard Manet, Paul Gauguin, Alfred Sisley,Georges-Pierre Seurat . More or less the same fate as Van Gogh, just to name a few of the most famous ones but there are many others, not to mention women artists then an endless list should be written here😂

      @liv0003@liv00035 ай бұрын
  • You said it completely and nicely: it has to be good art that could have impact but it also has to be at the right place, with right context, seen by right people at the right time. Many good art suffers and never gets the recognition it deserves because of what you have mentioned here. Thanks.

    @Star2ice@Star2ice15 күн бұрын
  • I love peoples unique art. It bores the hell out of me to see perfect art. When i went to art college i hated it..there was this elderly lady in our drawing class maybe 60 she would draw amazing detailed art work portraits and because of her baad eyesight she would scew the perspective in mad ways that made really interesting undulations like it was all perfect but like you were looking through different focus lenses...it was beaautiful. The teacher kept rubbing out her stuff and doing it for her to correct it. I hated it. I hated the corrections ..the imperfections and ynique visions of people are beautiful. Unique.

    @Padraigp@Padraigp5 ай бұрын
    • Excellent

      @karlabritfeld7104@karlabritfeld71044 ай бұрын
    • That is such a great observation. It's why I can't stand most movies and TV programs. All the actors and actresses are too perfect looking. It's so boring, not to mention unbelievable. As for perfectly rendered art, what's the point? It was probably done using a photograph with a grid superimposed. Even AI can do better than that.

      @marycecile779@marycecile7793 ай бұрын
    • @@marycecile779 yes, people have no idea how much shit we had to make the process easier without even needing ai; taking exact visual reference, and cutting it into a grid, is even very AI-like because you aren't just going off of implicit memory, you are seeing an actual image and then using that to augment your art. That's what AI does as well.

      @DonnyKirkMusic@DonnyKirkMusic3 ай бұрын
    • I think that bad artists keep obsessing a lot over other things than what they actually want to paint or they are trying to be somebody else. Picasso tried to show people in his art that they do not own everything, that nobody is in control and he could not control his urges. His art was his desperate cry for help. Bad artists are obsessed with things like the next disease and so their paintings become bad because they do not give themselves time to organise them properly. Good artists ask themselves what the customer wants to see - and then proceed to paint this and put themselves into their subjects´shoes. Good artists ask the question what being the subject matter of the painting is like. Let´s say you are an artist who works at Black Rock and you want to paint something which happened in Ukraine. You can keep your personal feeling out of it and still make an excellent painting, or you can keep your feelings about what you are painting as part of it to make it more powerful and add extra drama. Good paintings execute a lot of drama, but bad painters are poor dramatists and their paintings feel bland and flat.

      @Yatukih_001@Yatukih_0016 күн бұрын
    • @@Yatukih_001 what a boring comment. Sounds like something a 15 yesr old writes in an exam in a hurry. Hopefully you are a child and thats why. Well kiddo let me tell you the world isnt split into good and bad artists paintings or people. In this universe all good has an element of bad within it and all bad has an element of good at its core. If you're studying english and do have exams coming up for gcses or some similar exams please get some grinds on writing. Good luck!

      @Padraigp@Padraigp5 күн бұрын
  • As a beginner artist, I think I have to experiment and explore styles & techniques, so when I finally strike something unique, I can build upon it.

    @Magasafayala@Magasafayala5 ай бұрын
    • You're absolutely right. Go for it!

      @contemporaryartissue@contemporaryartissue5 ай бұрын
    • I think that Good artists are polite and respectful and constantly check how others respond to their behaviour.

      @Yatukih_001@Yatukih_0016 күн бұрын
  • Hello, I have watched several of your videos and I find them so valuable. Also, I admire your patience with rude commenters! I have been drawing for a while but it was until late 2019 I realized I was very unhappy with what I was making. I'm self-taught but I got caught up on the surface of social media, KZhead and Pinterest. In 2019 I started reading more academic books on art, I began "paying attention to my attention" which was totally different to what I was learning, which was mostly your typical techniques. I was so confused as to how some people got representation from brick and mortar Art Galleries, and others were for online galleries. I didn't understand the difference between illustration and contemporary art, or fine art. So I spent so much time banging my head on the wall. In 2022 I finally started finding my visual vocabulary but still, being self-taught and a massive introvert, I couldn't quite grasp what I wanted to say. In this video you have perfectly summarized all the mistakes I had been making and though I'm still not quite sure I have what it takes to become a professional artist, at least I feel validated in what I've been feeling about my art and the art I see everywhere. Just with this video I started seeking some galleries on KZhead and my algorithm has completely changed from silly tutorials on "how to become a full time artist (by producing endless content)" to interviews with contemporary artists that are so interesting! I just discovered Park Seo-Bo and I'm in love! Thank you for these videos!

    @Bitcolorina@Bitcolorina5 ай бұрын
    • Your comment is awesome! If possible, please leave some recommendations for channels/videos with that theme of videos you mentioned.

      @marianadedeus8142@marianadedeus81425 ай бұрын
    • That’s awesome! I’m glad you were able to derive some real meaning from this video!

      @dezzyjones@dezzyjones2 ай бұрын
  • Very naive take on top galleries and how they function. As a top gallery one is supposed to assume that the art they represent is of value. This is not the case, as they represent the latest trends as dictated by art- publications and are primarily profit driven.I find this promotes superficiality and banaal "art" which is sold to an audience that knows the price of everything and the value of nothing.

    @FrancoisMouton-iu7jt@FrancoisMouton-iu7jt5 ай бұрын
  • He is giving the same Guinness book of world records definition of art that's been around since long before he was born. Making something out of "unique materials" is not going to make you into an artist. If you want to do something unique, try doing something with a pencil and paper that no one has done before. Draw in an entirely novel way, and good luck with it. You know why "Cezanne's apples" are distinctive? It's not like no one painted apples before. It's not even that Cezanne's portrayal of apples is better than or more beautiful than Courbet's or anyone else's, or that Cezanne was a better artist, it's just that they are incredibly idiosyncratic -- and not because Cezanne was trying desperately to invent some gimmick that no one had thought of before. On the contrary, he was simply being himself. Want to do something "unique"? Then learn the full range of visual skill, beginning with drawing, until you can draw anything easily, and just follow the aliveness of your own experience. Nature made you an individual. That's already accomplished. But can you express your own true individual nature? That is a real journey worth attempting.

    @aletha16@aletha165 ай бұрын
    • Starting with a personal formula of materials can be a great way to find your voice-e.g., Claire Tabouret, Marco Reichert, Bram Bogart, and so on. But drawing can also be a great way to discover a fresh visual language. They are not mutually exclusive-as stated in the video. Nevertheless, thank you for tuning in and wishing you a great day.

      @contemporaryartissue@contemporaryartissue5 ай бұрын
    • @@contemporaryartissue I wish you a great day as well, but nevertheless you're giving canned advice & you don't know what you're talking about. Who was Rembrandt's first "teacher"? Hint, not Pieter Lastman though that relationship is intriguing too. How to become an artist is not a question you know the answer to, not regarding a "real" artist, or even a hobbyist or whatever. You are repeating art history department ("majored in contemporary") platitudes. And platitudes are platitudes ....

      @aletha16@aletha165 ай бұрын
    • @@aletha16 You are free to judge or ignore my advice in any way you like; that is entirely up to you, and I respect that. The advice I formulate here is directly derived from in-field experience as a (modestly successful) artist, working in the gallery scene, working for institutions and foundations, and the experiences of numerous artists I have had the chance to engage with throughout the years. The advice has proven to work for me, other successful artists, and the artists I advise personally with my advisory services. Art world insiders have approved my articles on the unwritten rules of the art world as well. So, I stand behind every word I say, and I do it with good intentions only to help other artists.

      @contemporaryartissue@contemporaryartissue5 ай бұрын
    • @@contemporaryartissue Now you're talking about business, navigating the various status quo institutions? I thought the topic was "real" art. Shall I assume the reference to Rembrandt's first teacher is outside your scope? Congrats on your modestly successful outcomes. But these platitudes are no different from the realist artist giving advice about "the focal point" or "leading the spectator's eye through the picture." Those are platitudes too, just of a different sort. If fitting in with an imaginary beau monde is the goal, you're doing admirably. If the goal is to use art as a tool to understand actual life -- meh, maybe first let go of platitudes.

      @aletha16@aletha165 ай бұрын
    • This entire channel is about navigating the art world and providing industry-approved advice for artists for success in the highest realms of the art world. No need to be hostile. Enjoy "real art" however you want, but perhaps without decrying others and remaining respectful, as I have been throughout this discussion. That will be all for today. Wishing you all the best.@@aletha16

      @contemporaryartissue@contemporaryartissue5 ай бұрын
  • In a way, there's something sad about becoming a _professional artist._ That almost feels like an oxymoron. If you are subjected to market pressures and current trends, can your art truly be a form of self-expression? Admittedly, I'll always be a mere amateur: I paint for myself. I won't be trying to sell anything. I'm only interested in making art that speaks to me, and I think that's the best way to eventually touch someone else with my work.

    @princevesperal@princevesperal4 ай бұрын
    • Totally get what you are saying. Soulless art, made to please others or to be hip, trendy or experimental.

      @lianevoelker9845@lianevoelker98453 ай бұрын
    • Amateur. It's right there in the word: he who does something for love. Much of the so-called art world (the high end) is not even art. It is money laundering. Things are made as unregulated currency. But that's another topic.

      @aletha16@aletha163 ай бұрын
    • @@aletha16 Couldn't agree more!

      @princevesperal@princevesperal3 ай бұрын
    • I had the same thought the other day. “I’m a full time artist”.(spoken with pride) My response … “Oh , I’m sorry to hear that. You’ll get inspired again one day I hope”.

      @jaylucas8352@jaylucas83523 ай бұрын
    • Agree. This video is the worst. #cynicism

      @nikosantikythera2422@nikosantikythera24223 ай бұрын
  • It’s all about the flavor of the month! I am an artist that paints from my heart! I don’t care about what others say! If I worried about my art being good or bad I would not do Anything! The art world is just big business! It’s about what sells!

    @robingrant1965@robingrant19655 ай бұрын
    • The art world is about the business of having an educated eye.

      @diannelawrence8921@diannelawrence89215 ай бұрын
  • I really appreciate this video. As an artist, but even more as an art history and visual arts educator I think It matters tremendously to be able to understand why we know our art is not good when it isn’t. Your 4 reasons here are certainly hitting the mark on many levels, but for me, in my position as an educator your first advice is the most important. For all the benefits of online communities, I am completely in agreement with you that it is too easy to be taken and dazzled by creators versus artists. I witness this so often with my students..schtick art, trendy art, celebrity art…all through social media, designed to push you to make an instant judgement calls: like, don’t like, don’t care…has stifled so much creativity in people… so to repeat myself, I appreciate the way you articulate this.

    @Marceau.Verdiere.Atelier@Marceau.Verdiere.Atelier5 ай бұрын
  • For me it is important that painting gives pleasure. I am realist. I have a job and I'm putting my dreams of being a full-time artist aside. But these dreams are still alive. I don't want to become financially dependent on my art. After working hours, I create and maybe something will come of it in the future. I recommend this approach

    @radzirojas@radzirojas5 ай бұрын
  • This was way more constructive and concise than I had anticipated based on the title and I’m glad that I watched the video. I think this echoes some great advice you have given before: find your style and be consistent… but then deftly navigates the murky waters that I often find troublesome of inspiration and writing about/understanding/contextualizing your story… It is all good things to consider

    @mattpipes5106@mattpipes51065 ай бұрын
    • That's great to hear, thank you very much for your kind feedback. More to come, so feel free to stay tuned. Wishing you all the best!

      @contemporaryartissue@contemporaryartissue5 ай бұрын
  • Your explanations are spot on. So true about ways to make your artworks deeper and thought provoking.

    @Awoke9259@Awoke92595 ай бұрын
  • I’m nervous around the unique materials thing. Artists can end up being seen as a ‘one trick pony’ or curatorial demand for them to repeat themselves prevents them from progressing and developing. Some years ago I was working at a gallery that was a host for the British Art Show. We were allocated a prominent ‘YBA’. When she arrived it became very clear she was fed up with being asked to endlessly repeat work to the same format (she was an installation artist) feeling it has holding her back. Although she enjoyed quite a high profile she was still young, and we felt she was intimidated by the power ‘the system’ had over her work. However, she decided to make a minor change. The curator - an influential and overbearing national art critic with an inflated sense of his own importance - went crazy at the poor woman. Fortunately she survived the outburst and went on to better things!

    @chrislethbridge1759@chrislethbridge17595 ай бұрын
    • Hi Chris, I trust you are doing well. Yes, the system can be very demanding or push you towards being gimmicky. However, must often the ones that occassionaly break free from these expectations and surprise us every now and then are the ones that continue to grow. The unique materials thing is an imortant starting point, but of course the journey and your development should not end as soon as you have found your "formula." Thank you for sharing this anecdote here! Have a great day and stay in touch. All my best, Julien

      @contemporaryartissue@contemporaryartissue5 ай бұрын
    • @@contemporaryartissue A professor of mine (in the distant past) said that entering the artworld was like building your house. You didn't want to live in a one room shack, so you should build a big house, or one that could be easily added on to. I've known artists who were pigeon-holed early in their career, but with time and imagination they were able to "add on to their house." It required them gradually introducing new ideas and materials alongside the thing that was expected.

      @CharlesBrowning@CharlesBrowning5 ай бұрын
    • Tracy Emin

      @user-oy1gp7mo3u@user-oy1gp7mo3u4 ай бұрын
  • I am a full time artist in South Africa and this was definitely some of the best advice I've ever come across. Thank you

    @julietugwellart@julietugwellart5 ай бұрын
  • Good points all! Much appreciation. One starts at the start hopefully a good one. It’s a long arduous journey.

    @DanielLopes-kv4sp@DanielLopes-kv4sp5 ай бұрын
    • Go for it! All my best, Julien

      @contemporaryartissue@contemporaryartissue5 ай бұрын
  • Love your seriousness and true desire to help artists find their oeuvre. Evolution thrives with experience, attention, and an individual vision.

    @myskintour7179@myskintour71795 ай бұрын
  • This is helpful advice, even for artists who don't try to sell their art. For instance, writing about your art can help you think more clearly about your subject matter and how you plan to depict it. As your writing progresses, you may think of additional layers or methods to use in the artwork itself. If nothing else, you have a framework that helps you focus.

    @vermiliongamboge155@vermiliongamboge1555 ай бұрын
    • I think it's useful to write down a notice about each piece, exactly the way a museum would.

      @princevesperal@princevesperal4 ай бұрын
    • The problem that I've had with writing about my art has something to do with the act of writing itself. It's just my opinion, of course, but it seems to me that writing too much about one's art is a bit of a two-edged sword. Visual art is inherently a different language and so it speaks to us in a non-verbal way. So, in my opinion, when many artists write about their work, the writings are executed in an indirect, confusing, and non-linear style that directly contradicts the tenets of good writing: expressing something directly, succinctly and clearly. I mean, I'm a visual artist, but was an English major in college and when I read most contemporary art writings, I'm completely lost. It's purposefully enigmatic, convoluted, and, my I say, pretentious. Sorry if I sound like a bit of a dick, but if you have to do too much "splaining" about your work, then maybe you should be a writer if the ideas behind the work are that complex, esoteric, remote, and personal.

      @user-oy1gp7mo3u@user-oy1gp7mo3u4 ай бұрын
    • Every artist is part of a story of art history. The writings are more so a snippet of where the art lands in context to the overall story.

      @jaylucas8352@jaylucas83523 ай бұрын
  • I resist the idea that commercial success and acclaim are necessary indicators of a creation being “good” as those things tend to be determined by a mix of human psychology, market interests, and opportunity. One can calculate their work to appeal to all of those things in order to yield relative success. It’s business not necessarily art, let alone “good” art (though it can be all of the above.) For the artist, I think that “good art” is personal and should be defined as getting as close as possible to your personal definition of “good,” no more and no less. This would include refining your skill and learning from other people whose thoughts and execution of ideas inspires you. But to strive to be uniformly “good” is useless as there’s no necessary outward consequence to art being “bad” or “good”… other than making money which, again, is foremost a matter business.

    @thechildthatsgothisown1925@thechildthatsgothisown19254 ай бұрын
    • Your words nail it

      @cchemmes-seeseeart3948@cchemmes-seeseeart39484 ай бұрын
    • And when you need to eat, pay bills and rent, there is very much (and always) a business side to being a professional artist. Whether the business of art is defined as commercial is a matter of individual reality. It's always easy for people who art NOT professional artists to have an opinion about what professional artist should create or not to keep lights on and a roof over our heads while at the same time being arm-chair critics who don't buy/collect art. Our art is what we - artists see, say and want it to be. If someone doesn't like or "get" it, than it's not speaking to those people - NEXT... Keep it moving.

      @tiwantiwaabibiman2603@tiwantiwaabibiman2603Ай бұрын
  • Thanks for this video, it is really helpful. I am sure I fallen in to some of these mistakes so now there is something to consider going forward with my art practice.

    @karolsartoasis4815@karolsartoasis48155 ай бұрын
  • I have had the fortune of great professional success in another area, but success as an artist seems so elusive. Your advice for standing out is appreciated, I will keep going.

    @thebuehlerinstitute6166@thebuehlerinstitute6166Ай бұрын
  • It feels like today on social media, the content creation part is more important than what you're actually creating as an artist (painter in my case) and that's sad but we have to play the game... Evolve or die 😭

    @rochi_mochi_co@rochi_mochi_co4 ай бұрын
    • It is indeed a worrying tendency, however, we don't have to abandon our principles just for the followers and likes. This weekend, I'll be presenting a video on how to use Instagram in the best way possible. Feel free to stay tuned!

      @contemporaryartissue@contemporaryartissue4 ай бұрын
  • Very thoughtfully put together video with a lot of ideas. I especially agree with and loved the suggestion, "Learn from the masters - visit galleries and museums." While visiting Louvre I was so happy to see so many school tours and school kids sitting and sketching and painting the masters. Looking forward to more videos!

    @PaintAndDrawTogether@PaintAndDrawTogether3 ай бұрын
  • Hello, Thank you for these videos, they shed light on different aspects that I didn't find much online. The fact that you are speaking from experience is also a good perspective to consider. I would like to ask if you can share your ideas for digital artists or video artists in creating their website or their approach to the art world. It seems to me that it's a little different from painters, sculptors, and other artists working with physical materials. It seems to me that they are also categorized as contemporary art if I'm not mistaken.

    @vivastrango8980@vivastrango89805 ай бұрын
  • Getting ideas and learning skills from paintings hung in galleries is just fine. The old saying just be you, works great while learning skills. The truth about great art is to communicate something to others. It came before writing as a simple way to communicate to others. The gimmicky art found in art shows today all over this world makes me a bit sad what artist and critics have stooped to. Art does not need to communicate a message as it did in it's first beginnings. Rather it needs to communicate emotions or anything others can connect to.

    @ltwig476@ltwig4764 ай бұрын
  • Thanks so much, amazing as all your videos, I believe strongly one artist just take steps to see all your videos and really listen to them and read your articles in website can have a great success!

    @parimahavani@parimahavani5 ай бұрын
  • Excellent content. Every point was well explained and absolutely necessary to take into consideration. Thanks for the share.

    @MrRushepoo@MrRushepoo4 ай бұрын
  • It took me a few days to realize the impact of this video, Julien. After watching, all those other shiny distracting things melted away as I came back down to Earth. You are an artist whisperer, and from the looks of comments many felt the same. Thanks for the gift!

    @aliceshapirostudio@aliceshapirostudio5 ай бұрын
  • I LOVE the work I create. I was educated in art, and I believe it to be good. But I struggle to get it taken seriously by gallery professionals or to make sales.

    @vjhreeves@vjhreeves5 ай бұрын
    • Feel free to browse through our videos and articles to find a solution. Wishing you all the best!

      @contemporaryartissue@contemporaryartissue5 ай бұрын
  • I follow your videos since a few months mow and they are really helpful and help me to do it in the art world. It is long path who requires a strong discipline but it really worth it. Whatt you said is true I don´t refer to social media concerning my art. I just use Instagram as an extension of my business card I don´t be an influencer but an artist and it is very important to notice this difference when it´s about social media. So thank you very much fort this videos

    @nicolasb.henry294@nicolasb.henry2944 ай бұрын
  • You brought up a key point regarding Instagram. The problem of being buried by art based on audience retention. The problem of gatekeepers vs the flood of art on the social platforms. It would be interesting to see a video that addresses this issue in depth.

    @caward7029@caward7029Ай бұрын
  • The information is excellent. I just got confused about the last point. What did he mean by “linear?” And the cliché about “figurative and abstract?” Does this mean not to incorporate the figurative and abstract in the same painting? Btw. Joining Patreon for sure. Thank you for your channel !!!

    @dr_shrinker@dr_shrinker5 ай бұрын
    • Thank you for tuning in and your kind response! Concerning the linear subject matter; beginner artists often try to produce a very confined, demarcated, and linear backstory in terms of the subject matter. Visual element A represents subject matter A and nothing else. A layered artwork has various visual elements referring to various layers and thus, a multitude of readings is offered. Don't have a singular or linear message. Have an artwork that is able to open up various messages-even messages or readings the artist was not aware of. Concerning figuration and abstraction; you can definitely incorporate both in the same painting. We have been doing this since the Salon des Réfusés in 1863, followed by Impressionism and the Modernist development towards abstraction. That is exactly why stating your art merges figuration and abstraction is a cliché or irrelevant analysis of the subject matter, statement, or bio. Monet did it, Picasso did it, de Kooning did it, and so on, up to this very day. Yet, so many beginner artists or hobby artists will discuss this when theorizing their work or writing an artist statement. Superbe that you're joining our CAI Patreon. I genuinely appreciate it! Stay in touch. All my best, Julien

      @contemporaryartissue@contemporaryartissue5 ай бұрын
    • People buy what’s beautiful. Most are too stuрid to appreciate any “layers” of meaning, since the IQ is around baboon level for the 95% of us!. Have ya met an average person?! 😂 Most people can’t even tie their shoes correctly, I’m serious.

      @ELENAOttawa@ELENAOttawa5 ай бұрын
    • ⁠@@contemporaryartissueYour explanations are always superb julien ,I can’t never thank you enough for what you’re doing!You are saving us from irrelevance!

      @gesudinazaret9259@gesudinazaret92595 ай бұрын
    • @@contemporaryartissuehey. Thank you for the clarification. Thank you for helping me understand better. I think you make the most valid points. I started the book you recommended. I’m half way through “Everything for art!” Great information. Especially when defining “Canon” artists. I recommend your channel to any serious artists.

      @dr_shrinker@dr_shrinker5 ай бұрын
  • Please can you make a video or write an article about how to use social media as an artist?

    @louiseperrone@louiseperrone5 ай бұрын
    • Dear Louise, absolutely! It is most certainly on our rather lengthy to-do list. Stay tuned!

      @contemporaryartissue@contemporaryartissue5 ай бұрын
    • Thank you so much@@contemporaryartissue

      @louiseperrone@louiseperrone5 ай бұрын
  • thank you so much. What a great video! your are definitly a great content creator ;)

    @acs3451@acs34515 ай бұрын
  • My art is amazing it’s just that most people have bad taste

    @song-signs@song-signs5 ай бұрын
    • Are you sure it's amazing or are you just egotistical?

      @karlabritfeld7104@karlabritfeld71044 ай бұрын
    • @@karlabritfeld7104 It's not nearly as good as mine, that's why we don't put each others art on our walls :) we're all egotistical and insufferable. And we all have impeccable taste.

      @nobrainsnoheadache2434@nobrainsnoheadache24342 ай бұрын
  • Time makes great wine, over time the best art usually rises to the top. If you are a professional artist you will soon see what works out in the market place. I do miss the days when there were art movements.

    @paullynn473@paullynn4735 ай бұрын
    • Great art definetly takes time. For some artists, it takes 5 years to achieve a high-quality level, others 15. Thank you for tuning in!

      @contemporaryartissue@contemporaryartissue5 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for sharing, great video.

    @oliviaroseink@oliviaroseink4 ай бұрын
  • Thank you!

    @cynthiacairns9209@cynthiacairns92095 ай бұрын
  • Thank You!

    @carolmartin8781@carolmartin87815 ай бұрын
  • I work with large scale arches watercolor paper, i cant necessarily create my own paper, i mean i could but arches should be good for galleries right? Also, i tend to use less conventional mediums in my process as well

    @masker9885@masker98855 ай бұрын
    • Then you're all good! As I mentioned, it is perfectly fine to work in a more conventional manner as well, and if you already use less conventional mediums, than you shouldn't worry too much about your surface. Go for it!

      @contemporaryartissue@contemporaryartissue5 ай бұрын
    • I have used Arches exclusively for 50 years. Basically all weights and surfaces. It is a pre-eminent paper. since the Renaissance actually. I use it everyday. I have developed a personal method of painting and assembly of pieces that leaves out having to frame and glaze the surface. and it protects and enhances the works. Love Arches.. What a gift to the discerning artist , drawer or watercolorist.

      @stevenp.6062@stevenp.60625 ай бұрын
    • @@stevenp.6062 interesting, and I agree. Framing is problem for me since I’m relatively new to the gallery world. I’m working up to 60x60 so the framing world is a new problem I’ve encountered since usually I have a storage for my work. I’m trying to figure out some custom solutions and some places for the frames to be made since I can’t seem to find anywhere that sells that large for the type of frame I want.

      @masker9885@masker98855 ай бұрын
    • @@contemporaryartissue Thank you!

      @masker9885@masker98855 ай бұрын
  • Hello Julien and Perrier! Thank you for your art advice "qui a du chien"! 🎨 🐾

    @mariehamm@mariehamm5 ай бұрын
    • My pleasure! Greetings from us both 🐶😁

      @contemporaryartissue@contemporaryartissue5 ай бұрын
  • You are a gem. Many thanks!

    @yaelkamah9785@yaelkamah97855 ай бұрын
  • Who was the painter who painted on books? That first blue landscape painting you showed. Thanks

    @shaneharms1895@shaneharms18955 ай бұрын
  • Success does not depend on who you know, but who you blow. The quality of the work is normally irrelevant to acceptance or sales.

    @mosesinvests@mosesinvests5 ай бұрын
    • Yet, there are artists who never leave their studio that sell like crazy simply because their work is irresistible. Good always prevails.

      @contemporaryartissue@contemporaryartissue5 ай бұрын
    • @@contemporaryartissue Not always. I can think of many bluechip artists whom are terrible painters. I was at the Metropolitan Museum of Art last week. After the Manet/Degas show I visited the contemporary galleries. I was appalled at the level of poor quality, which was especially apparent after the superlative genius that Manet and Degas had set. The Metropolitan dropped their high standards in favor of inclusion. In galleries, utter drivel is celebrated.

      @davidhunternyc1@davidhunternyc15 ай бұрын
    • ​@@davidhunternyc1​​Maybe you just prefer more traditional art. Both Manet and Degas were ridiculed as bad inept painters by those who preferred the more traditional art of their own day.

      @tthomas184@tthomas1845 ай бұрын
    • @@tthomas184 Nope, this isn't the case. I prefer great art. For instance, I admire Francis Bacon, Neo Rauch, David Hammons, Jordan Wolfson, & Paul Pfeiffer, and many others. People fall back on this excuse, that either I'm too traditional in my "tastes" or that I'm anti-woke. Nope. I just want art to be great. There is very, very little great art. The 21st century work hanging at the Met, for the most part, was shite, both technically and in concept. Diversity comes at the expense of quality. Very little art will stand the test of time.

      @davidhunternyc1@davidhunternyc15 ай бұрын
    • @@davidhunternyc1 Who doesn't prefer great art? None of the artists you name or admire are necessarily great artists, whose work will stand the test of time. We don't know who people a hundred years from now will favor. I think it was Edward Hopper who said, 'Most artists are forgotten 15 minutes after they die'. And obviously art is subjective. Better to say you don't like something then to simply dismiss it as shitte.

      @tthomas184@tthomas1845 ай бұрын
  • thank you for creating this.

    @recreepy@recreepy5 ай бұрын
  • I'm not sold on there being this wiser group who gets to adjudicate "good" art. I'm reading a biography of Van Gogh, for example. Poor bloke sold only one canvas in his lifetime, was ridiculed by the establishment art world....if he'd listened to this video he may have given up! What a loss to the world that would have been. Another thought that springs to mind is a recent trend for what I would call political art. It's in all the great museums and galleries the moment for the messages rather than aesthetic appeal or other considerations. I find much of it tame, clichéd, iconographic (nothing wrong with that but I get the impression the artist is creating this style almost inadvertently). Hmm. I'm no expert but I do see over and over in life a feeling that someone up there or out there is better knowing and that all we should do is hit their expectations for a reward. Yet when I speak with real world artists their motivation wells from within, their work shines from their unique view on the world

    @Whappingthewhap@Whappingthewhap5 ай бұрын
  • What you are saying makes perfect sense. Thanks.

    @Pondapple@Pondapple4 ай бұрын
    • Thank you for tuning in!

      @contemporaryartissue@contemporaryartissue4 ай бұрын
  • My compliments ! Finaly , somebody understanding the needs of an Artist to not give a BS story about their inspiration, but just be honnest about it. i just create out of pain , and sadness no hurt ….no art! Just me))

    @CarolineVisArtGallery@CarolineVisArtGallery5 ай бұрын
  • Probably my favorite video so far!

    @pony3284@pony32843 ай бұрын
  • #4 How do you feel about the notion that explanation kills art, and so, one should not talk or write about their art?

    @almcdermid9669@almcdermid96695 ай бұрын
    • Overexplaining things can often kill art indeed. However, you should think about your art, write about it, and talk about it. If there is nothing to say, what is there to see?

      @contemporaryartissue@contemporaryartissue5 ай бұрын
    • @@contemporaryartissue Having something to say doesn't necessarily require words. Can you not view art, understand art, without an accompanying explanation. If I have to explain it, why paint it?

      @almcdermid9669@almcdermid96695 ай бұрын
    • I love making my art. Hate talking about it.

      @karlabritfeld7104@karlabritfeld71044 ай бұрын
    • @@karlabritfeld7104 Right?! Even when I know what I'm trying to convey (it happens), I don't how to talk about it, don't want to, and don't see why I have to. And if this is what it takes to get into the high end art world, no thanks. As if that would happen anyway. 😆

      @almcdermid9669@almcdermid96694 ай бұрын
  • I'm a classical music composer, but still your figurative-art considerations do apply also to music, and I believe to all art in general. Congratulations for the analysis. And thanks for stating clearly that there is good and bad art. Indeed. I'm sick and tired of the postmodernist BS claiming there is no good or bad, that behind success there is only power, and that everything is relative. Only mediocre people can make these claims.

    @federicoaschieri@federicoaschieri5 ай бұрын
  • I'm an artist. I focus creat art, compose music for movies, commercials, television, and videos. I also write books. I'm also a photographer. I never create to be judged by anyone. I just create, because I love it. I see other people becoming famous for their work. I don't care about that fame. I see all art work as a beautiful creation. I can't find a favorite they are all amazing.

    @normapadro420@normapadro4204 ай бұрын
  • Very good information. Make what you want or make what sells. If you are very, very lucky that will be the same thing.

    @atelier27@atelier27Ай бұрын
  • thank you for your videos!!!!

    @barbaraluceroledesma7692@barbaraluceroledesma76924 ай бұрын
  • thanks!

    @gracielahug-parladorio7140@gracielahug-parladorio71405 ай бұрын
    • The pleasure is all mine!

      @contemporaryartissue@contemporaryartissue5 ай бұрын
  • Where are the best places to do an ma in fine art?

    @tinarieck322@tinarieck3225 ай бұрын
  • Art is not about bad or good. Art is art, expression of human feeling and gratitude...so every art is right. What matters is an art could be uniquely teresting or not interesting so it is not about good or bad.

    @tomasarista5055@tomasarista50555 ай бұрын
  • Thank you so much.

    @phoebe-annedwards8146@phoebe-annedwards81465 ай бұрын
  • Cannot say thank you enough for these videos.

    @michaelknesevitch1166@michaelknesevitch11665 ай бұрын
    • The pleasure is all mine! 🙌

      @contemporaryartissue@contemporaryartissue5 ай бұрын
  • Please define the concept of "natural demand" and what it implies for art appreciation?

    @arodvaz1955@arodvaz19554 ай бұрын
  • I think authenticity is more important than searching for some novelty gimmick materials in order to stand out. You should be able to produce decent artwork without having to resort to scouring the local waste skip for a used mattress or other novelty material upon which you can paint your next 'masterpiece'.

    @billyliar1614@billyliar16142 ай бұрын
  • THANKS FOR A GREAT job. please slow down a bit, some words are garbled and please use a clip on mic. It will catch your vocal CONSISTENTLY.

    @rosetzu_nagasawa@rosetzu_nagasawa5 ай бұрын
    • Thank you for watching and for your constructive feedback. I used to have a clip-on mic and upgraded to a RODE Videomic PRO (just out the shot). Have a great day!

      @contemporaryartissue@contemporaryartissue5 ай бұрын
  • Most modern art substitutes weird for quality, narrow isms for scope, and trendy for depth. It also refuses to change or even talk about progressive ideas in art like those that follow Too many treat art as a marketing scheme. Modern art has become a trendy clique and the art now is mostly over promoted footnotes to greater art that was done 100 years ago. But art is too important to be reduced to a trendy clique. Post-ism, is art for a new century, not a continuation of last century trends. 1 Mass Market Paintings like Prints. When any art form is mass marketed it enters a golden age. This has happened with books, records, and film. Let's add paintings. Most art is in storage in museum basements. Mass Marketing allows art to tour in copies and allows artists to make royalties on copies. Why do you think the world gets so excited about a new great book, record, or film; but no one cares about a new great painting? All are mass produced except the painting. 2. End a Century of Isms. Dump the genres and formulas and let all kinds of art be a part of the art world. 3. Shift Emphasis From Trendy to Quality. Shift emphasis from the latest trendy art, to quality art in any style. Just because art is weird does not mean it is great art. 4. Free the Art From Museums and Galleries. Get the art out of the ivory elitist museum and gallery towers and back into the world. Have city art centers open to all artists. Make art that is relevant and communicates with people. Start with the first generation of artists online. 5. Postism is Part of a Bigger Revolution. Postism is part of the bigger art and media revolution out of Dallas, that includes art, music, lit, film, media, and a lot more. 6. Postism online: Online artists are the new wave of art. We had all the isms of last century. Now we have a free for all, of all kinds of artists, that are not sanctioned by any museum or gallery, displaying their work. Out of that comes the next wave and revolution of artists. Last century the goal was to fit the ism. This century the goal is to do great art - no ism, no boundaries. Fractionalized art then, synchronized art now. Even calling something modern art is a type of ism that separates that art from the art of the past. The 20th century was a century of experimentation in art. Now in the 21st we can choose from all those styles and / or start one of our own. Then too if someone devises a way to charge and collect a penny per view on a webpage, that would allow any great artist to get money for their art and have a career without any middlemen. Duchamp broke ground 100 years ago - but now his clones are just shoveling dirt. Weird art is easy, you put a strip of raw bacon across an expensive violin, but it's not good art. Join the art revolution and pull the art world out of last century. Musea since 1992.

    @TomHendricksMusea@TomHendricksMusea5 ай бұрын
  • I've seen incredibly more inspiring art on social medias that I've seen in galeries. Do I have to believe the giant canva with the Monopoly guy is high art because it's curated ? And if we all get our inspiration from the same places, aren't we gonna make the same filtered art ?

    @thidrou4691@thidrou46915 ай бұрын
  • I hate to say this but so much of what I see in big gallery shows and top artists is painful to my eyes! Gaudy, horrible and simply reflecting the materialism and depravity of our times. What comes first? The culture or the art promoted by the elites? They may be more experts in degradation and mind control than in art.

    @themysteriousdomainmoviepalace@themysteriousdomainmoviepalace5 ай бұрын
    • You must only be looking at art by caucasian artists... Just sayin...

      @tiwantiwaabibiman2603@tiwantiwaabibiman2603Ай бұрын
  • Expression your artist expression comes from your soul imagination vision nobody can do or see it the way that you do. Unique as fingerptints.

    @keithharris1672@keithharris16725 ай бұрын
  • OK, you gave me some things to think about. I was fully expecting another "7 steps to selling art". I remember hearing a man talk about being a "financial" object in relation to women being a "sexual" object. I have struggled with not selling my art for years. When I retired I was able to refocus on simply improving, learning, and exploring. No longer an object, my objective has become the art, not my career.

    @timeenoughforart@timeenoughforart5 ай бұрын
    • Except of course the constant questioning and dialog. "I'm not good enough." "Nobody loves me." "I should have gotten a job as a greeter at Walmart!"

      @timeenoughforart@timeenoughforart5 ай бұрын
  • I want to add a different opinion on this take. Once you start creating art from a perspective of focusing on what other people think, or what they will this you are going to be lost. Create what you want hownyou want. There is a range of people who buy and collect art for a different reason. I dont have one atylemof making art , my euvre is varied . Each peice is different from the other. I am in South Africa and I am one one the most prestigious collections. The so called art world will have you believe that there is only one way of making a living from your art. Piccaso did not have one style of making art 😏 he just made art. Not evrything je made was a masterpiece. Just create. Art that is made with honesty and dadication is shows. It does not nees to be explained. All the galleries in yhe world cannot contain all the greateat art. History also shows that the artist that did not care about what art should look like and follow these rules, were the artist that made it. So juat create.

    @lwazihlophe8955@lwazihlophe89555 ай бұрын
  • Brilliant 👏👏👏👏

    @Wunderhof@Wunderhof5 ай бұрын
  • There is no such thing as bad art.

    @imasimpfordabixd8388@imasimpfordabixd83885 ай бұрын
    • There definitely is

      @maxa_mili@maxa_mili5 ай бұрын
    • The democrats are brainwashing you kids to believe lies. That good is bad and bad is good.

      @jnorth1000@jnorth10004 ай бұрын
  • I don't really appreciate this video. My inspiration is other artists I like, and I paint anything I like, including different styles. That doesn't make my art "bad". It just makes it my own. As for being unsuccessful, the blame is squarely with the audience. Most instagram viewers want EASY to the eye artworks that pop up during a fast scrolling. That's not art. That's just commercial cr# p. I don't care about such audience. I rather work at a restaurant to make ends meet, and then come home and do the art that I want to make.

    @EugeniaLoli@EugeniaLoli5 ай бұрын
  • thank you for your video, can you made English subtitle on video ?

    @user-ue4we8yi4f@user-ue4we8yi4f5 ай бұрын
  • Explains why so many critics bash Jeff Koons.

    @priscillawrites6685@priscillawrites6685Ай бұрын
  • Good perspectives here, but see how he glosses over contacts/ gatekeepers of the ( highly corrupt ) art world at the very beginning. Even unique style or incredible talent is no guarantee of success at all.

    @michaellakey3565@michaellakey3565Ай бұрын
  • Listening to the guy is both amazing and frustrating. It is like complicating something simple, in my view. I love creating art. But I do not claim to know anything about art. I just like doing them, and feel happy about the creation. Chances are, there will be people who will see the happiness and satisfaction in that artwork, that they will have the need to own it. Frustrating ,specially that part where one has to create a layer of description about your art. I have read some that it is so profound that it feels like only the artist understands what they wrote.. or maybe I am just too stupid to understand it. In the end, I stop reading the rest of the description and just look at the art itself. and then end up not understanding the art as well. I guess thats was the reason I opted to read the artist's description. For me, an art, that drives me into the image and feel, and relate, and want to stare more, without any other explanation is a successful art. It maybe not successful financially, but I am one hundred percent sure that any artist would want to see their art hanging at a random stranger's wall. worthy to be part of their lives.

    @MiguelCastroChannel@MiguelCastroChannel19 күн бұрын
  • “Stop looking for art liked in social media but looking for art liked by art world” I mean what’s the difference in essence???

    @heatheryuan5261@heatheryuan526110 күн бұрын
  • Alles richtig gesagt. 👍

    @vrejtamazian524@vrejtamazian5245 ай бұрын
    • Thank you 🙏🙌

      @contemporaryartissue@contemporaryartissue5 ай бұрын
  • What do you think of Clement Greenberg’s famous essay “Avant-Garde and Kitsch”?

    @qaq89@qaq893 ай бұрын
  • Your words match the Art Masters at Milan Art°*

    @evavaladezaka1rocksisonig521@evavaladezaka1rocksisonig5215 ай бұрын
  • There are no bad art but sky's the limit and I'm sure your advices could be very useful for many artists. Thanks for this video I took many thoughts from it)

    @tanyalitvak@tanyalitvak5 ай бұрын
  • Which contemporary artists are covering interesting subject matter? Is the cliché or frequent coverage of emotions redundant, or are there contemporary artists making progress here?

    @thisisanartaccount@thisisanartaccount3 ай бұрын
  • good art isn't a matter of taste. some people have a bad taste and therefore they like bad art.

    @elchiponr1@elchiponr14 ай бұрын
    • Bad art can sometimes be very good if it is the right kind of 'bad.' Are you still with me 😅 Thank you for tuning in!

      @contemporaryartissue@contemporaryartissue4 ай бұрын
    • maybe when its made by mentally challenged people, is that what youre getting at??@@contemporaryartissue

      @elchiponr1@elchiponr14 ай бұрын
  • That cover painting is a £30,000.00 modern masterpiece in London 😂

    @GarrettReynolds-nt4df@GarrettReynolds-nt4df5 ай бұрын
    • It's great in its own right! I saw it for the first time via the Museum of Bad Art. Thank you for tuning in btw!

      @contemporaryartissue@contemporaryartissue5 ай бұрын
  • Do you think it is possible to make good art with inexpensive materials?

    @helloalanframe@helloalanframe4 ай бұрын
  • 4 reasons why Art 1 Art is neither good or bad. 2. Common sense is not the way or the gauge of artistic qualities.3 If you paint for cash, go for it. 4 if you dont sell work, go for it. 5 Art has no rules, only guide lines for certain aesthetic outcomes.

    @TheFreemanuk@TheFreemanuk4 ай бұрын
    • That's like saying there are no rules to playing a guitar good or bad and that anyone can be a musician, whether good or bad. There are objective truths in this reality. But most people cannot understand truth.

      @jnorth1000@jnorth10004 ай бұрын
  • So many brilliant songwriters and musicians are not world famous yet Taylor Swift with her mediocre writing, even though hard working, is famous billionaire. Modern art took a lot of inspiration from kids’ art, folk and indigenous art, genius of African masks became famous only through Picasso and Modigliani; Art Brut then extended it to art of mentally ill and self taught outsiders, stating their works are created from solitude and from pure and authentic creative impulses - where the worries of competition, acclaim and social promotion do not interfere, and because of these very facts, their art is more precious than the productions of professions. I personally think we should have permanent galleries of kids’ art and huge Outsider Art/Art Brut galleries as well. The best quote I think about now is the one from famous art house director Werner Herzog, talking about the art of film: ‘Academia is the death of cinema. It is the very opposite of passion. Film is not the art of scholars, but of illiterates’.

    @paneko1@paneko15 ай бұрын
  • I stretch my own canvases. Next stage is to mix pigments and have my own unique colour in oil.

    @mohammednadeemanwar2213@mohammednadeemanwar22135 ай бұрын
    • Sounds great, go for it!

      @contemporaryartissue@contemporaryartissue4 ай бұрын
  • I find it very brave for you to step up and decide what is good and what is not when it comes to art. It seems to me that it takes a certain arrogance to assume you are an art expert after all the critics hated Beethoven's symphony No. 9., Brahms Requiem, Picasso the Dream, Monet Sunrise, Van Gogh the red vineyard and I could go on listing Masterpieces rejected by art critics your opinions just as theirs are simply opinions. If your only basis for successful art is its position in a gallery or it's marketability it is my opinion, you are missing a lot of what is to appreciate and create art if that is your narrow view.

    @edowings2211@edowings22112 ай бұрын
  • Roger understand executing your order sir

    @CyganskiHaker@CyganskiHaker4 ай бұрын
  • I understand what you are takling about..…nevertheless words alone do not clarify the topic ..

    @ninanielsen3206@ninanielsen32064 ай бұрын
  • The only GOOD ART is original art. There really isn t very much original art happening today. Abstraction has descended into wall paper decoration for the most part and figurative is boring and repetitive for the most part.

    @albertinsinger7443@albertinsinger74434 ай бұрын
    • I do believe there is still a lot of good and original art out there. Originality or an element of surprise is indeed crucial for good art. Thank you for tuning in!

      @contemporaryartissue@contemporaryartissue4 ай бұрын
  • Interpreting the dogs expressions: 1:20 enough already .get to the point 2:55 I'd rather be outside 3:30 who is gonna believe that 10:10 when is this gonna end 10:13 next chance I run for it

    @thomcarr7021@thomcarr70214 ай бұрын
    • 😂

      @CristininhaC@CristininhaC4 ай бұрын
    • 😂😂😂

      @contemporaryartissue@contemporaryartissue4 ай бұрын
  • You should also make a video about how to make beats like Kanye, or how to cook like Ramsay.

    @tiadiad@tiadiad2 ай бұрын
  • your dog is adorable!

    @devonk298@devonk2985 ай бұрын
  • 10 reasons why bad artists make bad art - my perspective. 1. You still have not told Black Rock they do not own everything. 2. You keep obsessing over how awesome you think you are. 3. You are still too busy saving your neighbour from COVID and you think that tomorrow you are going to pass away from monkey pox. 4. You are more interested in knowing what disease X is going to be, instead of pondering the possibility that your family is starting to think that you could be a disease due to toxic behaviour (this has been a big problem in my life in the early 2000´s and I fixed it). 5. You hate horror movies. 6. You think Junji Ito is a name for a German car manufacturer. 7. You think EVERYBODY has been to the moon but that you do not qualify, because you know it. 8. Your favourite anime show consists of 38 titles nobody understands but you and its director. 9. You disregard good advise from family and friends. 10. You want to steal the space shuttle and fly it to Mars and the term ´improvement´is an alien word to you. This is how bad art becomes bad in 2024. Thanks for your video. Excellent advise and on point narration!! Best wishes to you from Reykjavik, Iceland.

    @Yatukih_001@Yatukih_0016 күн бұрын
  • Para nada de acuerdo con el punto 3. Buscar nuevos materiales. Eso es esencial? Renoir, Courbet, Delacroix, Degas… todos pintaban sobre lienzo, no es eso lo que los diferencia. Punto de vista muy superficial que se afirma como una ley. Hacer obras con tapas de Yogurt no lo convierte en algo relevante, ni pintar sobre espaldas de iguana. O si?

    @carmelocaatrad6691@carmelocaatrad66915 ай бұрын
  • "Subjective" is the word. All art is determined "good" or "bad" by a small group of people who usually have a vested interest, that is the truth of it. That small group of people pay huge amounts of money, persuaded to do so by other vested interests, as an investment when a great many of these "Masterpieces" would not be hung in the toilet by the vast majority of the populace and the answer to them is that they are 'Ignorant', which is oh so convenient. Their is a hierarchy in play which decides which artists will receive all the benefits thus leaving the remainder with very little to share between them. This same structure also applies to music, literature etc. with the "popularity" of any decided by the amount of money and, in music, airplay it is given. On top of all that there is the "old school " network to contend with when at the same time those "old schools" are churning out clone after clone with the promise of success; in a few cases it works but not for the majority. The absolute bottom line is, "Does your face fit?". If it does there may be an opportunity for advancement but if it doesn't the barriers are almost insurmountable. There are, in my humble opinion, only a few rules. 1. Forget about what you are being told and make the art you want to make. 2. Practice your art until you develop your own, unique style. 3. Practice some more, there is no alternative to practice. 4. Make an attempt to say something that others may understand or find interesting. 5. Expect nothing and you will never be disappointed. Of course every artist in all the arts wants to be recognised but very few will gain any status but there are many who have designed a product to tell you how and, of course, they make money. In the present time "Mediocrity Rules, OK" therefore the choice is to join the trend or be true to yourself. While you are contemplating your path let me tell you I am an artist and a collector of other people's work and the amount of 'art' I come across in charity shops is astounding in the fact their only value is in the stretcher frame. There are two reasons for this; either the artist found the practice too laborious or their work is merely one of a million others and are, therefore, boring. The worst thing, I believe, for any artist to be called is "Boring".

    @timcastle1844@timcastle18444 ай бұрын
  • i thing there is no bad artwork , example the scream painting is bad ? the painting sold with price $119.9 million, and kids painting or drawing always make their parent smile. So in my opinion its depend for what the artwork for, Game industries or movie? so its depend

    @ifanlioe@ifanlioe5 ай бұрын
    • The Scream by Edvard Munch is one of the greatest pieces of Modern Art and was ahead of its time. But you're absolutely right, it all depends on the context, industry, or realm of the art world. On this channel, we predominantly discuss career advice for artists who pursue success in the highest realms of the art world (gallery circuit, museums, etc.)

      @contemporaryartissue@contemporaryartissue5 ай бұрын
  • Why should anyone accept what you say? Professionals, who believe they are the authorities on Art, are a band of knuckleheads who, ultimately, direct the direction of what it means to be a successful artist.

    @stevenickerson829@stevenickerson8295 ай бұрын
    • An important quote in this video was: "Do whatever you enjoy the most. But be aware of this first premise for art world success." So you don't HAVE to do anything here. However, if you're not willing to immerse yourself in the art world, one cannot expect to understand it, let alone enter it.

      @contemporaryartissue@contemporaryartissue5 ай бұрын
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