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Masterpiece in the Subway, Trash in the Museum By Clint Watson |
While we're all sequestered in our homes, we're all facing the potential for lost or wasted time. So let's ask ourselves: How can we use this time to get better? How can we be of service and use? I know, without a doubt that great art is being created around the world at this very moment. Perhaps by you! Our entire team is focused 100% on whatever we can do to help you market and sell more art. With that in mind, we're focusing FineArtViews on sales and marketing ideas more than ever before. The following article was selected from our archives as it seems quite timely in the current situation and provides ideas we think you can use to improve your own art marketing.
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"Words matter. Artists love to trot out the tired line, 'My work speaks for itself,' but the truth is, our work doesn't speak for itself" - Austin Kleon
The Power of Context
In the book The Tipping Point by Malcom Gladwell, one of Gladwell's observations is humans act very differently toward the same inputs in different situations.
In other words, context matters. Here's a dramatic example of how context matters: A few years ago an experiment was staged with world-class violinist, Joshua Bell, who, fresh from a performance at the Library of Congress with the Boston Symphony, panhandled for free during the morning rush at a Washington Metro station. Of the thousand-odd passersby, only a few stopped, or even paused, to listen. Watch a video of Bell's fascinating performance: |
What happens when we take one of the world's finest musicians, who normally makes over $1,000 per minute and put him in the "wrong" context of a subway panhandler? The masses simply see him as a panhandler. They don't recognize the artistic gift for what it truly is. Because it's in the wrong context. The "right" or "wrong" context is just a type of story. And stories matter. Even the stories we tell ourselves about virtuosos and panhandlers.
The Power of Stories
Instead of a violinist, let's consider an art forger. Say we take a forged painting out of the garage and put it in the worlds finest museums and galleries, let the critics rave about it, what will the masses do? They'll see that forgery as "important" But, again, it's only because of the context. And the story implied by that context.
I recall a few years ago, someone found a bunch of suspected Jackson Pollock paintings in a garage and experts spent weeks subjecting the canvases to all kinds of scrutiny to determine if they were real. Were they painted by Pollock himself? Or were the some house painter's drop cloth?
The entire value of those paintings depended upon the story told by those experts: If they were authenticated Pollocks - they were worth millions. If they were not Pollocks - they were worthless trash . Consider the following excerpt from Austin Kleon's book Show Your Work:
Art forgery is a strange phenomenon. "You might think that the pleasure you get from a painting depends on its color and its shape and its pattern," says psychology professor Paul Bloom. "And if that's right, it shouldn't matter whether it's an original or a forgery." But our brains don't work that way. "When shown an object, or given a food, or shown a face, people's assessment of it - how much they like it, how valuable it is - is deeply affected by what you tell them about it."
Stories matter so much that, if you tell the right story, you can turn "trash", a browning banana duct-taped to a wall, into "art" that sells for $120,000 or more:
"An art piece of a banana duct-taped to a wall, which captured a lot of buzz in the past week, has reportedly been taken down at the Art Basel show in Miami Beach. The controversy-stirring artwork first sold for $120,000, and then was sold two more times for $120,000 to $150,000" reported The Times. |
In their book, Significant Objects, Joshua Glenn and Rob Walker actually test the power of stories that allowed that banana to sell for six figures.
Here is their hypothesis:
"Stories are such a powerful driver of emotional value that their effect on any given object's subjective value can actually be measured objectively." Here is how they tested it: First, they went out to thrift stores, flea markets, and yard sales and bought a bunch of "insignificant" objects for an average of $1.25 an object. Then, they hired a bunch of writers, both famous and not-so-famous, to invent a story "that attributed significance" to each object. Finally, they listed each object on eBay, using the invented stories as the object's description, and whatever they had originally paid for the object as the auction's starting price. By the end of the experiment, they had sold $128.74 worth of trinkets for $3,612.51. They made a profit of over 2,700% of their investment simply by crafting the right stories.
How You Can Use Context and Stories to Your Advantage First, if you can, in your own mind, move beyond context, you can learn to see reality as it is.
So next time you see a panhandler, listen carefully - picture him playing with a symphony. And next time you see the latest "masterpiece" in a museum - picture it hanging in your garage or even imagine that YOU had painted it. Ask yourself, would you be happy letting it out of your studio? Take it OUT of context for a moment and judge on the merits of the work itself. This is a great skill to develop for finding "diamonds in the rough."
Secondly, and more importantly from from a marketing perspective, think carefully about the stories you're telling the world about your own art.
Paraphrasing professor Bloom's observation: people's assessment of your art, how much they like it, how valuable they think it is - will be deeply affected by what you tell them about it. In what context are you presenting your work? What stories are you telling people about your art?
Think through those questions carefully. As you've seen, they're important.
For my latest thoughts on art marketing, art sales ideas, and insider announcements about new FASO features we are working on and releasing, you should Follow me on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram. That's where I publish ideas and opportunities in real time. Be the first to know.
Until next time, please remember that Fortune Favors the Bold Brush. |
Sincerely,
Clint Watson BoldBrush/FASO Founder & Art Fanatic
PS: Do you have any amazing stories highlighting the power of context? Please share them either via the Twitter link or in the comments of the blog post. |
Clint Watson is a former art gallery owner and founder of BoldBrush, known for FASO Artist Websites, the leading provider of professional artist websites, the $38,000 BoldBrush Painting Competition and the free daily art marketing newsletter, FineArtViews. As a self-proclaimed "art fanatic", Clint delights that BoldBrush's downtown San Antonio, Texas office is full of original art, as is his home office. You can connect with Clint on Twitter, Facebook or his personal blog at clintavo.com. |
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