With my gallery open each day, most
people come in to simply browse and look. It is like a museum
experience with free admission. But of course, someone has to buy
something because I am not a charitable institution and need to make a living. This
happens just enough that I can stay open, continue painting and entertaining everyone.
It is only a few people who can afford
good original art in their home. Thankfully, museums exist to bring
important art to everyone. Much of the art in museums comes from
collections donated by wealthy art lovers.
Artists need buyers. Unfortunately,
not many people can collect paintings and sculpture. Art is a luxury, so clients must
have disposable income to buy expensive belongings for their home.
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"Casweck Window," oil on canvas, 20 x 16 inches. Boone painting bought by a collector from Dallas, Texas |
During the renaissance, one powerful
family in Florence, Italy, the Medici's, commissioned and collected
some of the most fabulous art ever made. By doing so, great artists
such as Michelangelo, Botticelli, and more, flourished and produced
masterpieces. Now those same famous artworks are in museums.
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"The Birth Of Venus," by Sandro Botticelli. Created mid 1480's. |
Last week, two women were standing
outside my gallery discussing some of the art in the window. I
invited them inside. Within five minutes the two were comparing a
couple paintings side-by-side. They concurred on the one they liked
best, and one of the women said to me, “I will take that one!” It was two thousand five hundred
dollars and she said it would be going in a house she is building
north of Dallas, Texas. I was impressed with how quickly and
deliberately she made up her mind. And of course, grateful.
She is my “Medici.”
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"Pieta," (1498–1499), sculpture by Michelangelo Buonarroti, |
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