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OK, it’s not yesterday’s SMH editorial, or today’s for that matter, indeed it’s a week old. But it’s worth a ponder. Exactly what is going on here?

The full editorial: Great art gets lost in a flood of dollars

Precis: The vast bulk of tourists who go to Paris to see the Mona Lisa don’t understand it and get nothing more from it than a tick on their “must see” list. And the Mona Lisa is so hyped that most people ignore other art works and queue instead to see the what could be a painting worth an “absurd” $700million or so. In contrast an Aussie painting by Nolan fetches a mere $5.4million, a local record. Now paintings, especially expensive ones by masters old and new, because they are hand-made by now-famous dead artists are difficult or impossible to reproduce in all of their intrinsic craftmanship. Thus is the price forced up. The point is also made that the price-hyping is circular, feeding itself in a loop. Adding to the out-of-kilter value “problem” is that other, arguably equally valuable artworks, like books or music, are readily reproducible and thus cheapened.

Whilst there is much that is valid here, I couldn’t help but wonder about the issues raised. Where I quote it’s from the SMH editorial found at the link above.

“It seems a ridiculous process. What does their (ie the tourist’s) experience mean? For many, probably very little. Another notch on the international tourist’s belt, like seeing the changing of the guard, or visiting Niagara Falls. Nor does it signify much about the painting they are seeing. It is beautiful, but a mystery. Its significance for many will probably be its value.”

Quite so, but what is the point here? We have built an international industry on “going and seeing”. Amped-up tourist destinations, holiday air travel and supporting infrastructure. Should we abandon that, or simply restrict tourists to natural monuments in order to bring “meaning” to art and reduce the pressure on art prices? 

“It is an absurd figure. How could one painting possibly be worth so much? Or what comparison could there be between an oblong of canvas and so many mere dollars? Beside those sums, the news this week that a Sidney Nolan painting, First-Class Marksman, from his Ned Kelly series sold for an $5.4 million may seem very small beer. But it is an enormous price nonetheless for a single work of art – an Australian record.”

Well yes, sure. It’s absurd to value a single painting at these sorts of prices. But that’s the market. Are CEOs overpaid? Are sports “stars” and celebrities of various types paid too much? Arguably, yes. A newsreader can easily out-earn the President of the United States. Whilst you can make a case for that, too – a country’s leader shouldn’t just be in it for the money – the sums paid to broadcasters for their voices and faces is, surely, ludicrous. And it’s real money, not an estimate – and ultimately our money, too. We pay for the outlandish paypackets of celebrities, sports stars and broadcasters via our singular, silly willingness to buy those products that advertise through their respective marketing channels. Absurd, I know. You got a better plan?

“Painting and money have a special relationship. Music is performed over and over again; novels are printed by the thousand. But there is only one of any painting for the dollars to chase. That is why the art market reaches its astronomical heights. In fact a painting is worth only what it is made up of: a canvas, some wood and some paint, plus the work undertaken by the artist who will often have sold it originally for a fraction of its present value.”

Why does painting have a special relationship with money? Yes, it has special physical properties that make it difficult to copy, properties that the written word or string of musical notes only have in rare circumstances – but this is by luck and circumstance, coupled with our desire to make it “special”. Many, many artists have reached – or at least approached – the same technical prowess and could in fact reproduce the styles (and paintings) of the old masters at similar skill levels. But we have chosen to freeze time and lock in our heroes. First one to do it – the inventor, shall we say – wins. Or rather the owner of the painting ultimately wins. Again, ludicrous. But we have built an unnatural artifice of artwork “religion” around the masters (our “gods”) and created this absurdity by our worship. With music and the written word with have made far less effort to glorify and sustain the original work. Rather we have allowed and even encouraged borrowings and repetition. Consider that we allow the conductor and soloist almost as much respect and admiration as the composer. And we have introduced increasingly cheaper and more pervasive methods of reproduction – despite record company whinging and litigation. We have rarely put equal effort into reproducing our painted and sculpted art, or allowed such efforts. Absurd? Our choice.     

All the rest is a cultural overlay we as a community place upon it. Without any other way to measure its artistic or cultural value for certain, we use the only readily comprehensible measure we know – money. It becomes a circular process: someone has paid $5 million for a painting because it is good; the painting is good, because someone has paid more than $5 million for it. The market, moreover, feeds on itself in familiar ways. A herd instinct takes over, pushing artistic fashions at the expense of others. Contemporary trends can price craftsmanship at a discount. Painting gets lost in all this.

It may well be so, but we have chosen to create the art market we have – long ago – and to retain it “as-is” ad infinitum. If we seriously wanted parity between the arts we could do it. It just takes motivation, organisation, agreement and action. (Easy!) But there is no such desire to change the market, especially within the art community. Until such time as technology affords us cheap, perfectly-formed reproductions indistinguishable from the original – not as impossible as it sounds – we are stuck with the art – and artifice – of our own making.

Filed under art, markets, Music, SMH, Writing by Rob.
OK, it’s not yesterday’s SMH editorial, or today’s for that matter, indeed it’s a week old. But it’s worth a ponder. Exactly what is going on here?

The full editorial: Great art gets lost in a flood of dollars

Precis: The vast bulk of tourists who go to Paris to see the Mona Lisa don’t understand it and get nothing more from it than a tick on their “must see” list. And the Mona Lisa is so hyped that most people ignore other art works and queue instead to see the what could be a painting worth an “absurd” $700million or so. In contrast an Aussie painting by Nolan fetches a mere $5.4million, a local record. Now paintings, especially expensive ones by masters old and new, because they are hand-made by now-famous dead artists are difficult or impossible to reproduce in all of their intrinsic craftmanship. Thus is the price forced up. The point is also made that the price-hyping is circular, feeding itself in a loop. Adding to the out-of-kilter value “problem” is that other, arguably equally valuable artworks, like books or music, are readily reproducible and thus cheapened.

Whilst there is much that is valid here, I couldn’t help but wonder about the issues raised. Where I quote it’s from the SMH editorial found at the link above.

“It seems a ridiculous process. What does their (ie the tourist’s) experience mean? For many, probably very little. Another notch on the international tourist’s belt, like seeing the changing of the guard, or visiting Niagara Falls. Nor does it signify much about the painting they are seeing. It is beautiful, but a mystery. Its significance for many will probably be its value.”

Quite so, but what is the point here? We have built an international industry on “going and seeing”. Amped-up tourist destinations, holiday air travel and supporting infrastructure. Should we abandon that, or simply restrict tourists to natural monuments in order to bring “meaning” to art and reduce the pressure on art prices? 

“It is an absurd figure. How could one painting possibly be worth so much? Or what comparison could there be between an oblong of canvas and so many mere dollars? Beside those sums, the news this week that a Sidney Nolan painting, First-Class Marksman, from his Ned Kelly series sold for an $5.4 million may seem very small beer. But it is an enormous price nonetheless for a single work of art – an Australian record.”

Well yes, sure. It’s absurd to value a single painting at these sorts of prices. But that’s the market. Are CEOs overpaid? Are sports “stars” and celebrities of various types paid too much? Arguably, yes. A newsreader can easily out-earn the President of the United States. Whilst you can make a case for that, too – a country’s leader shouldn’t just be in it for the money – the sums paid to broadcasters for their voices and faces is, surely, ludicrous. And it’s real money, not an estimate – and ultimately our money, too. We pay for the outlandish paypackets of celebrities, sports stars and broadcasters via our singular, silly willingness to buy those products that advertise through their respective marketing channels. Absurd, I know. You got a better plan?

“Painting and money have a special relationship. Music is performed over and over again; novels are printed by the thousand. But there is only one of any painting for the dollars to chase. That is why the art market reaches its astronomical heights. In fact a painting is worth only what it is made up of: a canvas, some wood and some paint, plus the work undertaken by the artist who will often have sold it originally for a fraction of its present value.”

Why does painting have a special relationship with money? Yes, it has special physical properties that make it difficult to copy, properties that the written word or string of musical notes only have in rare circumstances – but this is by luck and circumstance, coupled with our desire to make it “special”. Many, many artists have reached – or at least approached – the same technical prowess and could in fact reproduce the styles (and paintings) of the old masters at similar skill levels. But we have chosen to freeze time and lock in our heroes. First one to do it – the inventor, shall we say – wins. Or rather the owner of the painting ultimately wins. Again, ludicrous. But we have built an unnatural artifice of artwork “religion” around the masters (our “gods”) and created this absurdity by our worship. With music and the written word with have made far less effort to glorify and sustain the original work. Rather we have allowed and even encouraged borrowings and repetition. Consider that we allow the conductor and soloist almost as much respect and admiration as the composer. And we have introduced increasingly cheaper and more pervasive methods of reproduction – despite record company whinging and litigation. We have rarely put equal effort into reproducing our painted and sculpted art, or allowed such efforts. Absurd? Our choice.     

All the rest is a cultural overlay we as a community place upon it. Without any other way to measure its artistic or cultural value for certain, we use the only readily comprehensible measure we know – money. It becomes a circular process: someone has paid $5 million for a painting because it is good; the painting is good, because someone has paid more than $5 million for it. The market, moreover, feeds on itself in familiar ways. A herd instinct takes over, pushing artistic fashions at the expense of others. Contemporary trends can price craftsmanship at a discount. Painting gets lost in all this.

It may well be so, but we have chosen to create the art market we have – long ago – and to retain it “as-is” ad infinitum. If we seriously wanted parity between the arts we could do it. It just takes motivation, organisation, agreement and action. (Easy!) But there is no such desire to change the market, especially within the art community. Until such time as technology affords us cheap, perfectly-formed reproductions indistinguishable from the original – not as impossible as it sounds – we are stuck with the art – and artifice – of our own making.

Filed under art, markets, Music, SMH, Writing by Rob.

September 25, 2007

Just another image…


Originally an oil on canvas painting, then photographed and scanned and ‘shopped until…

Filed under art, Images, oils, Photoshop by Rob.


Originally an oil on canvas painting, then photographed and scanned and ‘shopped until…

Filed under art, Images, oils, Photoshop by Rob.

September 12, 2007

An index of sorts

You’ll find lots of images if you poke around on those sites – some are scanned from negatives or prints, or photographed digitally – and some will be ‘Photoshopped to death’. I offer no apologies for this, it’s merely an extension of the weird and wonderful world of darkroom developing and printing that I entered a long, long time ago!

Filed under airliners, art, cars, fauna, flora, Images, index, ink, oils, pencil by Rob.

You’ll find lots of images if you poke around on those sites – some are scanned from negatives or prints, or photographed digitally – and some will be ‘Photoshopped to death’. I offer no apologies for this, it’s merely an extension of the weird and wonderful world of darkroom developing and printing that I entered a long, long time ago!

Filed under airliners, art, cars, fauna, flora, Images, index, ink, oils, pencil by Rob.

February 21, 2007

Yet more images






OK, I like photography. It gives me the same artistic kick as painting or drawing except it’s so much quicker. I know, I know, it’s like fast-food art. We tend to value painting and drawing so much more because it’s a labour of love, but we should not forget that a good photo can also consume time and effort – not just in composition but either in the old-fashioned darkroom or the new fangled digital ‘darkroom’. So here are some of my latest efforts… some of these are actually acrylic paint on wood, photographed with the Nikon and then manipulated in Photoshop. Well I like ‘em anyway!

Filed under art, Australia, digital, Images by Rob.






OK, I like photography. It gives me the same artistic kick as painting or drawing except it’s so much quicker. I know, I know, it’s like fast-food art. We tend to value painting and drawing so much more because it’s a labour of love, but we should not forget that a good photo can also consume time and effort – not just in composition but either in the old-fashioned darkroom or the new fangled digital ‘darkroom’. So here are some of my latest efforts… some of these are actually acrylic paint on wood, photographed with the Nikon and then manipulated in Photoshop. Well I like ‘em anyway!

Filed under art, Australia, digital, Images by Rob.



In a moment of weakness I altered some images… like these… using Photoshop. Basically using the artistic filters to blur, resize, change aspect ratios and then alter the texture and colour with brushes and effects. Using the brushes effectively – to digitally repaint the picture takes time (I use a mouse, not a tablet or anything fancy). It can get bizarre, layering effect upon filter… but it can also result in interesting new images.

Filed under art, digital, faces, Images, orchids, painting, people by Rob.



In a moment of weakness I altered some images… like these… using Photoshop. Basically using the artistic filters to blur, resize, change aspect ratios and then alter the texture and colour with brushes and effects. Using the brushes effectively – to digitally repaint the picture takes time (I use a mouse, not a tablet or anything fancy). It can get bizarre, layering effect upon filter… but it can also result in interesting new images.

Filed under art, digital, faces, Images, orchids, painting, people by Rob.

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These posts represent my opinions only and may have little or no association with the "facts" as you or others see them. Look elsewhere, think, make up your own mind. If I quote someone else I attribute. If I link to a web site it's because I have visited it myself and wish to refer to it, however that linking doesn't denote, imply or suggest any ownership, agreement with or control over that content.

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GTVeloce blog by Robert Russell is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 2.5 Australia License.
Based on a work at gtveloce.com.