Posted by admin on January 25th, 2008
If we actually love what we’re doing and we go and do what we love, and every day we get up because we’re really happy to get up and go and do what we do, you can’t actually do that without expression, and art forms part of that mix of expression that makes the whole package of life so enjoyable to be in
Posted by admin on January 25th, 2008
Nobody can give you advice after you’ve been collecting for a while. If you don’t enjoy making your own decisions, you’re never going to be much of a collector anyway.
Posted by admin on January 25th, 2008
I don’t have a romantic attachment to what could have been. If I had kept all the work I had ever bought it would feel like Kane sitting in Xanadu surrounded by his loot. It’s enough to know that I have owned and shown so many masterpieces of modern times.
Posted by admin on January 25th, 2008
Lots of ambitious work by young artists ends up in a dumpster after its warehouse debut. So an unknown artist’s big glass vitrine holding a rotting cow’s head covered by maggots and swarms of buzzing flies may be pretty unsellable. Until the artist becomes a star. Then he can sell anything he touches.
Posted by admin on January 25th, 2008
I liked working in advertising, but don’t believe my taste in art, such as it is, was entirely formed by TV commercials. And I don’t feel especially conflicted enjoying a Mantegna one day, a Carl Andre the next day and a brash student work the next.
Posted by admin on January 25th, 2008
There are no rules about investment. Sharks can be good. Artist’s dung can be good. Oil on canvas can be good.
Posted by admin on January 25th, 2008
I don’t buy art in order to leave a mark or to be remembered; clutching at immortality is of zero interest to anyone sane.
Posted by admin on January 25th, 2008
Collecting has always been in my blood.
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