Wednesday, May 2, 2007

Celebrities and art

Celebrities have long been involved in the promotion of a wide range of products from fashion to jewelery to bottled water. If you have a product that you want to sell the best way to create demand is to have your product photographed with a celebrity wearing, holding or using your product. I have been seeing a similar sort of trend emerging in the art world with artists using celebrities to increase their profile and celebrities getting involved with artists. The most obvious example of this is Charles Saatchi who has become one of the most influential figures in the artworld with artists flocking to his website http://www.saatchi-gallery.co.uk to get in on the action. When Charles Saatchi was about his influence on the art market this is what he had so say:

Q: Your practice of buying emerging artists work has proved highly contagious and is arguably the single greatest influence on the current market because so many others, both veteran collectors and new investors, are following your lead, vying to snap up the work of young, relatively unknown, artists. Do you accept that you are responsible for much of the speculative nature of the contemporary art market?

CS:
I hope so. Artists need a lot of collectors, all kinds of collectors, buying their art.

Q:When you express interest in an artist, the art world takes immediate notice. The result is a rise in prices. Do you ever try to buy works anonymously to prevent this from happening?

CS:
No.

It is quite obvious that association with celebrities and column inches can have a significant effect on the value of an artists work but the biggest question is for how long? It is dangerous to get caught up in these fads and fashions that come up as a result of celebrity association of similar exposure.

Another celebrity who has made the move into fine art is David Bowie. Bowie has recently launched his own online gallery at http://www.bowieart.com to nurture emerging artists. Im sure it wont be long before we see more celebrities getting on the fine art bandwagon in an effort to present themselves as being cultured.

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