1ate7
New Member
Posts โข 495
Likes โข 273
March 2012
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PRYCE LEE, by 1ate7 on Nov 16, 2015 13:07:14 GMT 1, Dear all,
I have two works from him for sale. a Fish tank and a propper mirror tondo work, of course with a bullet.
Priced to sell. Pls drop me your mail adress for pics.
Cheers, Nm
Dear all,
I have two works from him for sale. a Fish tank and a propper mirror tondo work, of course with a bullet.
Priced to sell. Pls drop me your mail adress for pics.
Cheers, Nm
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1ate7
New Member
Posts โข 495
Likes โข 273
March 2012
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PRYCE LEE, by 1ate7 on Nov 16, 2015 23:26:11 GMT 1, all messages answered! @ย biggie: need your mail. cheers, nm
all messages answered! @ย biggie: need your mail. cheers, nm
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1ate7
New Member
Posts โข 495
Likes โข 273
March 2012
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PRYCE LEE, by 1ate7 on Nov 23, 2015 23:48:50 GMT 1, FISH TANK waiting for payment. as for the tondo: for quick deal I would lower it very much for this week only.
FISH TANK waiting for payment. as for the tondo: for quick deal I would lower it very much for this week only.
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savannahsam
New Member
Posts โข 375
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June 2015
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PRYCE LEE, by savannahsam on Nov 24, 2015 0:02:43 GMT 1, Kaws Tondo?
Kaws Tondo?
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1ate7
New Member
Posts โข 495
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March 2012
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PRYCE LEE, by 1ate7 on Nov 24, 2015 12:20:13 GMT 1, no its about a PRYCE LEE tondo
no its about a PRYCE LEE tondo
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1ate7
New Member
Posts โข 495
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March 2012
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PRYCE LEE, by 1ate7 on Nov 28, 2015 19:47:33 GMT 1, Fish tank is payd and gone Good discussions on the tondo and actually more Pryce lee fans on this forum then I thought. But nothing confirmed yet. cheers, nm
Fish tank is payd and gone Good discussions on the tondo and actually more Pryce lee fans on this forum then I thought. But nothing confirmed yet. cheers, nm
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1ate7
New Member
Posts โข 495
Likes โข 273
March 2012
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PRYCE LEE
Nov 28, 2015 22:00:11 GMT 1
via mobile
PRYCE LEE, by 1ate7 on Nov 28, 2015 22:00:11 GMT 1, No doubt biggi. For pryce the only was is up...
No doubt biggi. For pryce the only was is up...
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AFR1KA
Junior Member
Posts โข 2,694
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December 2009
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PRYCE LEE, by AFR1KA on Nov 28, 2015 22:23:11 GMT 1, Those large tondos are very nice. Love Pryce...my view right now
Those large tondos are very nice. Love Pryce...my view right now
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1ate7
New Member
Posts โข 495
Likes โข 273
March 2012
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PRYCE LEE
Nov 28, 2015 22:40:18 GMT 1
via mobile
PRYCE LEE, by 1ate7 on Nov 28, 2015 22:40:18 GMT 1, Thumps up for that board
Thumps up for that board
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1ate7
New Member
Posts โข 495
Likes โข 273
March 2012
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PRYCE LEE, by 1ate7 on Nov 29, 2015 10:52:56 GMT 1, All messages answered!
All messages answered!
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RoboJ
Artist
Junior Member
Posts โข 1,201
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July 2015
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PRYCE LEE
Nov 29, 2015 11:02:58 GMT 1
via mobile
PRYCE LEE, by RoboJ on Nov 29, 2015 11:02:58 GMT 1, I met Prycee at his studio and he is a really nice chap. Explores really interesting corners and concepts.
I met Prycee at his studio and he is a really nice chap. Explores really interesting corners and concepts.
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met
Junior Member
Posts โข 2,688
Likes โข 6,320
June 2009
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PRYCE LEE, by met on Nov 30, 2015 14:37:43 GMT 1, There is nothing objectionable in Frank Cohen's advice on collecting โ bar the fact he's just spouting platitudes in this BBC article. And given the man's stature, that seems almost criminal. I expected a less disappointingly-dull read from him.
As for up-and-coming artists he has an eye on, Cohen citing a few names may actually dissuade many from following his banal recommendation of "Buy what you like."
What these types of lists achieve in practice is often the opposite. They can encourage people to continue being sheep, follow the herd, and collect with their ears rather than their eyes. That includes paying excessive, even obsessive, attention to what others are buying โ especially if those others happen to be multi-millionaire art collectors like Cohen.
Perhaps this is one reason why you occasionally get people saying they "want to like" a particular artist's work, or they feel they "should like" the work. What is the reason or motivation for such a mindset? I find it baffling and alienating.
There is nothing objectionable in Frank Cohen's advice on collecting โ bar the fact he's just spouting platitudes in this BBC article. And given the man's stature, that seems almost criminal. I expected a less disappointingly-dull read from him. As for up-and-coming artists he has an eye on, Cohen citing a few names may actually dissuade many from following his banal recommendation of "Buy what you like." What these types of lists achieve in practice is often the opposite. They can encourage people to continue being sheep, follow the herd, and collect with their ears rather than their eyes. That includes paying excessive, even obsessive, attention to what others are buying โ especially if those others happen to be multi-millionaire art collectors like Cohen. Perhaps this is one reason why you occasionally get people saying they "want to like" a particular artist's work, or they feel they "should like" the work. What is the reason or motivation for such a mindset? I find it baffling and alienating.
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toshspice
New Member
Posts โข 675
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January 2006
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PRYCE LEE, by toshspice on Nov 30, 2015 16:42:19 GMT 1, There is nothing objectionable in Frank Cohen's advice on collecting โ bar the fact he's just spouting platitudes in this BBC article. And given the man's stature, that seems almost criminal. I expected a less disappointingly-dull read from him. As for up-and-coming artists he has an eye on, Cohen citing a few names may actually dissuade many from following his banal recommendation of "Buy what you like." What these types of lists achieve in practice is often the opposite. They can encourage people to continue being sheep, follow the herd, and collect with their ears rather than their eyes. That includes paying excessive, even obsessive, attention to what others are buying โ especially if those others happen to be multi-millionaire art collectors like Cohen. Perhaps this is one reason why you occasionally get people saying they "want to like" a particular artist's work, or they feel they "should like" the work. What is the reason or motivation for such a mindset? I find it baffling and alienating.
While the article may have been bordering on the banal, Frank's hair remains magnificent.
There is nothing objectionable in Frank Cohen's advice on collecting โ bar the fact he's just spouting platitudes in this BBC article. And given the man's stature, that seems almost criminal. I expected a less disappointingly-dull read from him. As for up-and-coming artists he has an eye on, Cohen citing a few names may actually dissuade many from following his banal recommendation of "Buy what you like." What these types of lists achieve in practice is often the opposite. They can encourage people to continue being sheep, follow the herd, and collect with their ears rather than their eyes. That includes paying excessive, even obsessive, attention to what others are buying โ especially if those others happen to be multi-millionaire art collectors like Cohen. Perhaps this is one reason why you occasionally get people saying they "want to like" a particular artist's work, or they feel they "should like" the work. What is the reason or motivation for such a mindset? I find it baffling and alienating. While the article may have been bordering on the banal, Frank's hair remains magnificent.
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PRYCE LEE
Nov 30, 2015 17:00:53 GMT 1
via mobile
PRYCE LEE, by Coach on Nov 30, 2015 17:00:53 GMT 1, There is nothing objectionable in Frank Cohen's advice on collecting โย bar the fact he's just spouting platitudes in this BBC article. And given the man's stature, that seems almost criminal. I expected a less disappointingly-dull read from him. As for up-and-coming artists he has an eye on, Cohen citing a few names may actually dissuade many from following his banal recommendation of "Buy what you like." What these types of lists achieve in practice is often the opposite. They can encourage people to continue being sheep, follow the herd, and collect with their ears rather than their eyes. That includes paying excessive, even obsessive, attention to what others are buying โ especially if those others happen to be multi-millionaire art collectors like Cohen. Perhaps this is one reason why you occasionally get people saying they "want to like" a particular artist's work, or they feel they "should like" the work. What is the reason or motivation for such a mindset? I find it baffling and alienating.
Why is it banal to recommend that people but what they like (unless the purpose of buying is as an investment, of course)?
There is nothing objectionable in Frank Cohen's advice on collecting โย bar the fact he's just spouting platitudes in this BBC article. And given the man's stature, that seems almost criminal. I expected a less disappointingly-dull read from him. As for up-and-coming artists he has an eye on, Cohen citing a few names may actually dissuade many from following his banal recommendation of "Buy what you like." What these types of lists achieve in practice is often the opposite. They can encourage people to continue being sheep, follow the herd, and collect with their ears rather than their eyes. That includes paying excessive, even obsessive, attention to what others are buying โ especially if those others happen to be multi-millionaire art collectors like Cohen. Perhaps this is one reason why you occasionally get people saying they "want to like" a particular artist's work, or they feel they "should like" the work. What is the reason or motivation for such a mindset? I find it baffling and alienating. Why is it banal to recommend that people but what they like (unless the purpose of buying is as an investment, of course)?
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met
Junior Member
Posts โข 2,688
Likes โข 6,320
June 2009
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PRYCE LEE, by met on Nov 30, 2015 17:25:54 GMT 1, There is nothing objectionable in Frank Cohen's advice on collecting โ bar the fact he's just spouting platitudes in this BBC article. And given the man's stature, that seems almost criminal. I expected a less disappointingly-dull read from him. As for up-and-coming artists he has an eye on, Cohen citing a few names may actually dissuade many from following his banal recommendation of "Buy what you like." What these types of lists achieve in practice is often the opposite. They can encourage people to continue being sheep, follow the herd, and collect with their ears rather than their eyes. That includes paying excessive, even obsessive, attention to what others are buying โ especially if those others happen to be multi-millionaire art collectors like Cohen. Perhaps this is one reason why you occasionally get people saying they "want to like" a particular artist's work, or they feel they "should like" the work. What is the reason or motivation for such a mindset? I find it baffling and alienating. Why is it banal to recommend that people but what they like (unless the purpose of buying is as an investment, of course)? Banal, not because it's a poor recommendation, but because this is the same standard advice budding collectors receive repeatedly โ from everyone (including fellow novice collectors) and everywhere.
My expectation was that a man in Cohen's position would have more interesting and less familiar insights on collecting. In fairness, perhaps he did. This may have been a case of the reporter consciously wanting to keep the article as basic and accessible as possible.
There is nothing objectionable in Frank Cohen's advice on collecting โ bar the fact he's just spouting platitudes in this BBC article. And given the man's stature, that seems almost criminal. I expected a less disappointingly-dull read from him. As for up-and-coming artists he has an eye on, Cohen citing a few names may actually dissuade many from following his banal recommendation of "Buy what you like." What these types of lists achieve in practice is often the opposite. They can encourage people to continue being sheep, follow the herd, and collect with their ears rather than their eyes. That includes paying excessive, even obsessive, attention to what others are buying โ especially if those others happen to be multi-millionaire art collectors like Cohen. Perhaps this is one reason why you occasionally get people saying they "want to like" a particular artist's work, or they feel they "should like" the work. What is the reason or motivation for such a mindset? I find it baffling and alienating. Why is it banal to recommend that people but what they like (unless the purpose of buying is as an investment, of course)? Banal, not because it's a poor recommendation, but because this is the same standard advice budding collectors receive repeatedly โ from everyone (including fellow novice collectors) and everywhere. My expectation was that a man in Cohen's position would have more interesting and less familiar insights on collecting. In fairness, perhaps he did. This may have been a case of the reporter consciously wanting to keep the article as basic and accessible as possible.
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toshspice
New Member
Posts โข 675
Likes โข 875
January 2006
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PRYCE LEE, by toshspice on Nov 30, 2015 17:29:21 GMT 1, There is nothing objectionable in Frank Cohen's advice on collecting โ bar the fact he's just spouting platitudes in this BBC article. And given the man's stature, that seems almost criminal. I expected a less disappointingly-dull read from him. As for up-and-coming artists he has an eye on, Cohen citing a few names may actually dissuade many from following his banal recommendation of "Buy what you like." What these types of lists achieve in practice is often the opposite. They can encourage people to continue being sheep, follow the herd, and collect with their ears rather than their eyes. That includes paying excessive, even obsessive, attention to what others are buying โ especially if those others happen to be multi-millionaire art collectors like Cohen. Perhaps this is one reason why you occasionally get people saying they "want to like" a particular artist's work, or they feel they "should like" the work. What is the reason or motivation for such a mindset? I find it baffling and alienating. Why is it banal to recommend that people but what they like (unless the purpose of buying is as an investment, of course)?
I think the banality comes from the interviewer, not the interviewee. It's the journo's job to make the piece interesting. Perhaps they should let Frank's hairdresser interview him next time.
There is nothing objectionable in Frank Cohen's advice on collecting โ bar the fact he's just spouting platitudes in this BBC article. And given the man's stature, that seems almost criminal. I expected a less disappointingly-dull read from him. As for up-and-coming artists he has an eye on, Cohen citing a few names may actually dissuade many from following his banal recommendation of "Buy what you like." What these types of lists achieve in practice is often the opposite. They can encourage people to continue being sheep, follow the herd, and collect with their ears rather than their eyes. That includes paying excessive, even obsessive, attention to what others are buying โ especially if those others happen to be multi-millionaire art collectors like Cohen. Perhaps this is one reason why you occasionally get people saying they "want to like" a particular artist's work, or they feel they "should like" the work. What is the reason or motivation for such a mindset? I find it baffling and alienating. Why is it banal to recommend that people but what they like (unless the purpose of buying is as an investment, of course)? I think the banality comes from the interviewer, not the interviewee. It's the journo's job to make the piece interesting. Perhaps they should let Frank's hairdresser interview him next time.
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PRYCE LEE
Nov 30, 2015 18:15:27 GMT 1
via mobile
PRYCE LEE, by Coach on Nov 30, 2015 18:15:27 GMT 1, Why is it banal to recommend that people but what they like (unless the purpose of buying is as an investment, of course)? Banal, not because it's a poor recommendation, but because this is the same standard advice budding collectors receive, repeatedly โ from everyone (including fellow novice collectors) and everywhere. My expectation was that a man in Cohen's position would have more interesting and less familiar insights on collecting. In fairness, perhaps he did. This may have been a case of the reporter consciously wanting to keep the article as basic and accessible as possible.
I see.
Why is it banal to recommend that people but what they like (unless the purpose of buying is as an investment, of course)? Banal, not because it's a poor recommendation, but because this is the same standard advice budding collectors receive, repeatedly โ from everyone (including fellow novice collectors) and everywhere. My expectation was that a man in Cohen's position would have more interesting and less familiar insights on collecting. In fairness, perhaps he did. This may have been a case of the reporter consciously wanting to keep the article as basic and accessible as possible. I see.
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