Archive for November, 2011

The future of the art market? Why I now own a Damien Hirst

LSD by Damien Hirst

We now live in a digital era. While artists have always been at the forefront of new media, and incorporating contemporary ideas into their practices, the art world and more specifically art markets are slow to respond. Well new media artists are now receiving critical acclaim and digital works are increasingly making an impact in the art world (as they should!), but how about the actual art market itself? Enter the website s[edition], a revolutionary way to collect and trade art. While purchasing art online is nothing new, this website functions as an online market for purely digital art, and features limited edition works by acclaimed artists such as Damien Hirst, Shepard Fairey, Tracey Emin, and Bill Viola to name a few. These digital works are created by the artists specifically for sale in the s[edition] marketplace, with some pieces going for as little as $8 and some as much as $800. A revolutionary idea indeed! A work by Damien Hirst going for $12 can be owned by anyone, providing an unprecedented level of access to these artists that is usually the domain of the elite. Is this the future of the art market?

There seems to be many flaws with the idea, after all if the work is to remain purely digital then what is it that you are actually purchasing? This is where the idea becomes quite novel. Each work you purchase is added to your virtual vault, where you can download and upload to any digital device. Your artwork also comes with a digital certificate of authenticity signed by the artist and stating all of the details of your purchase including the edition. This becomes important later after the edition has sold out and you can then sell and trade for higher prices, all within the virtual trading market of the online platform. With virtual worlds and marketplaces becoming immensely popular, this is an idea that could easily take off.

At first I was skeptical, but even I have to admit the design and approach is well executed. The immediacy of the transaction and subsequent ownership of a piece of artwork by a renowned artist such as Bill Viola or Fairey, combined with the stylish and user-friendly approach makes buying a piece of digital art a rewarding experience. I now own three works, a Hirst, a Fairey and a Collishaw, all of which can be instantly accessed on my digital device and shared with friends.

The concept brings important questions to light, what qualifies as authentic and unique in the age of digital technology and does the lack of materiality affect your desire to collect and pay for art?

Photographer Spotlight: Alfred Eisenstaedt

As Dagmar rose to fame on Broadway Open House,...

Image via Wikipedia

While conducting an inventory of the AGO‘s Eisenstaedt prints the other day, I was reminded about how much I enjoy his photography and the influence he had in American popular culture through his iconic Life Magazine images. The first time I really began to appreciate Eisenstaedt’s body of work was at the AGO’s Ansel Adams/ Alfred Eisenstaedt show, held in 2006-2007. Although I was quite familiar with Adams’ images (really who isn’t?), I had only a passing knowledge of Eisenstaedt’s. The exhibition brought out some excellent prints such as his work in the Alpine retreat St. Moritz in the early 1930s, as well as other interesting examples of his inter-war photographs of life in Germany during the 1930s – a foreshadowed period of European history.

Alfred Eisenstaedt was born in Germany in 1898, and moved to Berlin with his family in 1906, and served in the military during WWI where he was injured. Shortly after he became a photojournalist and by 1929 he had enough success to become a full-time photographer. He captured key events in Germany during the early 1930s, including a meeting between Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini in Italy, 1933. By 1935, Germany had become a hostile place for the jewish photographer, and like many other in the arts communities of Germany, Eisenstaedt emigrated to the United States, settling in New York. He became part of an artistic community of immigrants from Eastern Europe that escaped from the growing hostility in Germany to the United States. From 1936 to 1972, Eisenstaedt worked as a photographer for Life magazine. His photos of news events and celebrities, such as Dagmar, Sophia Loren and Ernest Hemingway, appeared on 90 Life covers.

The Art Gallery of Ontario has an extensive collection of Eisenstaedt prints, spanning a broad section of his career. Here are some iconic images sourced from the incredible Google Life Archive that I still enjoy, even after seeing them so many times!

From the St. Moritz series in 1932:

In August, 1945, Eisenstaedt created his most famous photograph, what would become an iconic American image, an American sailor kissing a young woman in Times Square upon his return from the war. I found the frame sequence for this famous image at the Google Life Photo Archive, a great resource for American cultural history.

Three frames from photographer Alfred Eisenstaedt's famed set of the sailor kissing the nurse and other images of the Times Square VJ-Day celebrations.

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