jamesreeve5
Blank Rank
๐จ๏ธ 0
๐๐ป 0
September 2012
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Mr Brainwash 'ICONS REMIX' Show - May 9th, by jamesreeve5 on May 11, 2010 22:30:52 GMT 1, I wish I had bought MBW about a year ago, I would totally be cashing in now. I am surprised at how people are pushing these things into the broader art market so quickly, and I am surprised at how eager people with money are to be burned.
The business structure of these artists seems unsustainable in the long run (except for Banksy, and a couple of others). It is the desire to collect ANYTHING (not just specifically art) that fuels this entire movement. This scene is more akin to baseball cards, comic books, stamps, and coins than it is to art. Thats why so many of these artists pump out print after print, and so many buyers are ready to flip them in such short time. Very few collectors of urban art love their pieces intrinsically; it is about showing it off, having it increase in value, having others desire it. These needs are what's being pandered to when you buy a new print or log onto this forum.
Many people are reading this and probably thinking well he is talking about a lot of the people on the forum, but he's certainly not talking about me, I love the art for arts sake. If this were the case though, then you could solve it simply by buying an annual membership to your local museum. Purchasing art satisfies the need of ownership, not purely a love of art. People on this forum continually buy more "art" than their walls can hold. People build "collections" in less than a year! For a group of people who seem to be so "aware" of the evils of consumerism, capitalism, and marketing, we have certainly let ourselves get manipulated by it. These artists are profiting off of our collective greed, our need to consume, our need to be accepted. It allows us to label ourselves "art collectors" when we are, in fact, very far from it.
Over time, people will move on from this, and the excess detritus will fade away into peoples closets, attics, and garage sales. It will look dated, and something new will need consuming.
I wish I had bought MBW about a year ago, I would totally be cashing in now. I am surprised at how people are pushing these things into the broader art market so quickly, and I am surprised at how eager people with money are to be burned.
The business structure of these artists seems unsustainable in the long run (except for Banksy, and a couple of others). It is the desire to collect ANYTHING (not just specifically art) that fuels this entire movement. This scene is more akin to baseball cards, comic books, stamps, and coins than it is to art. Thats why so many of these artists pump out print after print, and so many buyers are ready to flip them in such short time. Very few collectors of urban art love their pieces intrinsically; it is about showing it off, having it increase in value, having others desire it. These needs are what's being pandered to when you buy a new print or log onto this forum.
Many people are reading this and probably thinking well he is talking about a lot of the people on the forum, but he's certainly not talking about me, I love the art for arts sake. If this were the case though, then you could solve it simply by buying an annual membership to your local museum. Purchasing art satisfies the need of ownership, not purely a love of art. People on this forum continually buy more "art" than their walls can hold. People build "collections" in less than a year! For a group of people who seem to be so "aware" of the evils of consumerism, capitalism, and marketing, we have certainly let ourselves get manipulated by it. These artists are profiting off of our collective greed, our need to consume, our need to be accepted. It allows us to label ourselves "art collectors" when we are, in fact, very far from it.
Over time, people will move on from this, and the excess detritus will fade away into peoples closets, attics, and garage sales. It will look dated, and something new will need consuming.
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Mr Brainwash 'ICONS REMIX' Show - May 9th, by samuraiwriter on May 11, 2010 22:44:13 GMT 1, Well said James.
Pride in ownership. I am proud of the diversity of the works in my collection, and proud of my support of these artists.
Could care less about resale. Not a salesman, but I am a collector. If that makes me evil, so be it. I ain't precious.
(oh... and I will never own Mr. Guetta's work. Not my taste)
Well said James.
Pride in ownership. I am proud of the diversity of the works in my collection, and proud of my support of these artists.
Could care less about resale. Not a salesman, but I am a collector. If that makes me evil, so be it. I ain't precious.
(oh... and I will never own Mr. Guetta's work. Not my taste)
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cadeallaw
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 687
๐๐ป 6
December 2008
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Mr Brainwash 'ICONS REMIX' Show - May 9th, by cadeallaw on May 11, 2010 22:45:23 GMT 1, I wish I had bought MBW about a year ago, I would totally be cashing in now. I am surprised at how people are pushing these things into the broader art market so quickly, and I am surprised at how eager people with money are to be burned. The business structure of these artists seems unsustainable in the long run (except for Banksy, and a couple of others). It is the desire to collect ANYTHING (not just specifically art) that fuels this entire movement. This scene is more akin to baseball cards, comic books, stamps, and coins than it is to art. Thats why so many of these artists pump out print after print, and so many buyers are ready to flip them in such short time. Very few collectors of urban art love their pieces intrinsically; it is about showing it off, having it increase in value, having others desire it. These needs are what's being pandered to when you buy a new print or log onto this forum. Many people are reading this and probably thinking well he is talking about a lot of the people on the forum, but he's certainly not talking about me, I love the art for arts sake. If this were the case though, then you could solve it simply by buying an annual membership to your local museum. Purchasing art satisfies the need of ownership, not purely a love of art. People on this forum continually buy more "art" than their walls can hold. People build "collections" in less than a year! For a group of people who seem to be so "aware" of the evils of consumerism, capitalism, and marketing, we have certainly let ourselves get manipulated by it. These artists are profiting off of our collective greed, our need to consume, our need to be accepted. It allows us to label ourselves "art collectors" when we are, in fact, very far from it. Over time, people will move on from this, and the excess detritus will fade away into peoples closets, attics, and garage sales. It will look dated, and something new will need consuming.
Sweet Blahg, ted danson!
I wish I had bought MBW about a year ago, I would totally be cashing in now. I am surprised at how people are pushing these things into the broader art market so quickly, and I am surprised at how eager people with money are to be burned. The business structure of these artists seems unsustainable in the long run (except for Banksy, and a couple of others). It is the desire to collect ANYTHING (not just specifically art) that fuels this entire movement. This scene is more akin to baseball cards, comic books, stamps, and coins than it is to art. Thats why so many of these artists pump out print after print, and so many buyers are ready to flip them in such short time. Very few collectors of urban art love their pieces intrinsically; it is about showing it off, having it increase in value, having others desire it. These needs are what's being pandered to when you buy a new print or log onto this forum. Many people are reading this and probably thinking well he is talking about a lot of the people on the forum, but he's certainly not talking about me, I love the art for arts sake. If this were the case though, then you could solve it simply by buying an annual membership to your local museum. Purchasing art satisfies the need of ownership, not purely a love of art. People on this forum continually buy more "art" than their walls can hold. People build "collections" in less than a year! For a group of people who seem to be so "aware" of the evils of consumerism, capitalism, and marketing, we have certainly let ourselves get manipulated by it. These artists are profiting off of our collective greed, our need to consume, our need to be accepted. It allows us to label ourselves "art collectors" when we are, in fact, very far from it. Over time, people will move on from this, and the excess detritus will fade away into peoples closets, attics, and garage sales. It will look dated, and something new will need consuming. Sweet Blahg, ted danson!
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fredflamme
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 71
๐๐ป 12
January 2010
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Mr Brainwash 'ICONS REMIX' Show - May 9th, by fredflamme on May 11, 2010 22:56:23 GMT 1, Look,you've got a point ,but just keep in mind that your definition of art is not mine or many others art lovers,if you hate or dislike something,just forget about it ,on the other hand let me known about the stuff who give you a buzz,teach me better . For me Mr Brainwash stuff is the most refreshing thing happening in the last decade ! But still i'm not going to bother telling everybody how much i like his Brain !anyway this is a friendly message from a guy into street art since 1980,and Mr Brainwash give me a real BUZZ .(sorry for my english,i'm doing my best,i'm a Frogg !)
Look,you've got a point ,but just keep in mind that your definition of art is not mine or many others art lovers,if you hate or dislike something,just forget about it ,on the other hand let me known about the stuff who give you a buzz,teach me better . For me Mr Brainwash stuff is the most refreshing thing happening in the last decade ! But still i'm not going to bother telling everybody how much i like his Brain !anyway this is a friendly message from a guy into street art since 1980,and Mr Brainwash give me a real BUZZ .(sorry for my english,i'm doing my best,i'm a Frogg !)
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stanley
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 1,006
๐๐ป 5
January 2010
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Mr Brainwash 'ICONS REMIX' Show - May 9th, by stanley on May 11, 2010 22:59:12 GMT 1, I wish I had bought MBW about a year ago, I would totally be cashing in now. I am surprised at how people are pushing these things into the broader art market so quickly, and I am surprised at how eager people with money are to be burned. The business structure of these artists seems unsustainable in the long run (except for Banksy, and a couple of others). It is the desire to collect ANYTHING (not just specifically art) that fuels this entire movement. This scene is more akin to baseball cards, comic books, stamps, and coins than it is to art. Thats why so many of these artists pump out print after print, and so many buyers are ready to flip them in such short time. Very few collectors of urban art love their pieces intrinsically; it is about showing it off, having it increase in value, having others desire it. These needs are what's being pandered to when you buy a new print or log onto this forum. Many people are reading this and probably thinking well he is talking about a lot of the people on the forum, but he's certainly not talking about me, I love the art for arts sake. If this were the case though, then you could solve it simply by buying an annual membership to your local museum. Purchasing art satisfies the need of ownership, not purely a love of art. People on this forum continually buy more "art" than their walls can hold. People build "collections" in less than a year! For a group of people who seem to be so "aware" of the evils of consumerism, capitalism, and marketing, we have certainly let ourselves get manipulated by it. These artists are profiting off of our collective greed, our need to consume, our need to be accepted. It allows us to label ourselves "art collectors" when we are, in fact, very far from it. Over time, people will move on from this, and the excess detritus will fade away into peoples closets, attics, and garage sales. It will look dated, and something new will need consuming.
I enjoyed reading that. Nice post.
Although this can be said about anything cars, houses, clothes, food. Graff has been around a while now but is still young. Prints are helping people acquire art which is original and which gives them a hobby, an individuality and some cases another income.
People may or may not already have membership to museums but they are more likely to look online, books or for the real experience exhibitions and galleries.
We will always collect whether it is baseball cards, teddybears, dvds, my neighbour collects every piece of scrap material possible, just incase. Its human nature. You get what you can and use it when you need to. Like collecting art to flip for your sustainable Banksy that will pay for your heating when you are old & frail.
I wish I had bought MBW about a year ago, I would totally be cashing in now. I am surprised at how people are pushing these things into the broader art market so quickly, and I am surprised at how eager people with money are to be burned. The business structure of these artists seems unsustainable in the long run (except for Banksy, and a couple of others). It is the desire to collect ANYTHING (not just specifically art) that fuels this entire movement. This scene is more akin to baseball cards, comic books, stamps, and coins than it is to art. Thats why so many of these artists pump out print after print, and so many buyers are ready to flip them in such short time. Very few collectors of urban art love their pieces intrinsically; it is about showing it off, having it increase in value, having others desire it. These needs are what's being pandered to when you buy a new print or log onto this forum. Many people are reading this and probably thinking well he is talking about a lot of the people on the forum, but he's certainly not talking about me, I love the art for arts sake. If this were the case though, then you could solve it simply by buying an annual membership to your local museum. Purchasing art satisfies the need of ownership, not purely a love of art. People on this forum continually buy more "art" than their walls can hold. People build "collections" in less than a year! For a group of people who seem to be so "aware" of the evils of consumerism, capitalism, and marketing, we have certainly let ourselves get manipulated by it. These artists are profiting off of our collective greed, our need to consume, our need to be accepted. It allows us to label ourselves "art collectors" when we are, in fact, very far from it. Over time, people will move on from this, and the excess detritus will fade away into peoples closets, attics, and garage sales. It will look dated, and something new will need consuming. I enjoyed reading that. Nice post. Although this can be said about anything cars, houses, clothes, food. Graff has been around a while now but is still young. Prints are helping people acquire art which is original and which gives them a hobby, an individuality and some cases another income. People may or may not already have membership to museums but they are more likely to look online, books or for the real experience exhibitions and galleries. We will always collect whether it is baseball cards, teddybears, dvds, my neighbour collects every piece of scrap material possible, just incase. Its human nature. You get what you can and use it when you need to. Like collecting art to flip for your sustainable Banksy that will pay for your heating when you are old & frail.
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jamesreeve5
Blank Rank
๐จ๏ธ 0
๐๐ป 0
September 2012
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Mr Brainwash 'ICONS REMIX' Show - May 9th, by jamesreeve5 on May 11, 2010 23:10:00 GMT 1, Look,you've got a point ,but just keep in mind that your definition of art is not mine or many others art lovers,if you hate or dislike something,just forget about it ,on the other hand let me known about the stuff who give you a buzz,teach me better . For me Mr Brainwash stuff is the most refreshing thing happening in the last decade ! But still i'm not going to bother telling everybody how much i like his Brain !anyway this is a friendly message from a guy into street art since 1980,and Mr Brainwash give me a real BUZZ .(sorry for my english,i'm doing my best,i'm a Frogg !)
fredflamme,
I was not trying to single out MBW, instead I was trying to explain how you end up with an artist like MBW gaining significant popularity. He is not at fault in my opinion, we as consumers are.
Look,you've got a point ,but just keep in mind that your definition of art is not mine or many others art lovers,if you hate or dislike something,just forget about it ,on the other hand let me known about the stuff who give you a buzz,teach me better . For me Mr Brainwash stuff is the most refreshing thing happening in the last decade ! But still i'm not going to bother telling everybody how much i like his Brain !anyway this is a friendly message from a guy into street art since 1980,and Mr Brainwash give me a real BUZZ .(sorry for my english,i'm doing my best,i'm a Frogg !) fredflamme, I was not trying to single out MBW, instead I was trying to explain how you end up with an artist like MBW gaining significant popularity. He is not at fault in my opinion, we as consumers are.
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Sundowner
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 4,227
๐๐ป 2,429
September 2008
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Mr Brainwash 'ICONS REMIX' Show - May 9th, by Sundowner on May 11, 2010 23:15:40 GMT 1, I wish I had bought MBW about a year ago, I would totally be cashing in now. I am surprised at how people are pushing these things into the broader art market so quickly, and I am surprised at how eager people with money are to be burned. The business structure of these artists seems unsustainable in the long run (except for Banksy, and a couple of others). It is the desire to collect ANYTHING (not just specifically art) that fuels this entire movement. This scene is more akin to baseball cards, comic books, stamps, and coins than it is to art. Thats why so many of these artists pump out print after print, and so many buyers are ready to flip them in such short time. Very few collectors of urban art love their pieces intrinsically; it is about showing it off, having it increase in value, having others desire it. These needs are what's being pandered to when you buy a new print or log onto this forum. Many people are reading this and probably thinking well he is talking about a lot of the people on the forum, but he's certainly not talking about me, I love the art for arts sake. If this were the case though, then you could solve it simply by buying an annual membership to your local museum. Purchasing art satisfies the need of ownership, not purely a love of art. People on this forum continually buy more "art" than their walls can hold. People build "collections" in less than a year! For a group of people who seem to be so "aware" of the evils of consumerism, capitalism, and marketing, we have certainly let ourselves get manipulated by it. These artists are profiting off of our collective greed, our need to consume, our need to be accepted. It allows us to label ourselves "art collectors" when we are, in fact, very far from it. Over time, people will move on from this, and the excess detritus will fade away into peoples closets, attics, and garage sales. It will look dated, and something new will need consuming.
Rather like jboy's unhealthy fascination with "sneakers".....
I wish I had bought MBW about a year ago, I would totally be cashing in now. I am surprised at how people are pushing these things into the broader art market so quickly, and I am surprised at how eager people with money are to be burned. The business structure of these artists seems unsustainable in the long run (except for Banksy, and a couple of others). It is the desire to collect ANYTHING (not just specifically art) that fuels this entire movement. This scene is more akin to baseball cards, comic books, stamps, and coins than it is to art. Thats why so many of these artists pump out print after print, and so many buyers are ready to flip them in such short time. Very few collectors of urban art love their pieces intrinsically; it is about showing it off, having it increase in value, having others desire it. These needs are what's being pandered to when you buy a new print or log onto this forum. Many people are reading this and probably thinking well he is talking about a lot of the people on the forum, but he's certainly not talking about me, I love the art for arts sake. If this were the case though, then you could solve it simply by buying an annual membership to your local museum. Purchasing art satisfies the need of ownership, not purely a love of art. People on this forum continually buy more "art" than their walls can hold. People build "collections" in less than a year! For a group of people who seem to be so "aware" of the evils of consumerism, capitalism, and marketing, we have certainly let ourselves get manipulated by it. These artists are profiting off of our collective greed, our need to consume, our need to be accepted. It allows us to label ourselves "art collectors" when we are, in fact, very far from it. Over time, people will move on from this, and the excess detritus will fade away into peoples closets, attics, and garage sales. It will look dated, and something new will need consuming. Rather like jboy's unhealthy fascination with "sneakers".....
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jamesreeve5
Blank Rank
๐จ๏ธ 0
๐๐ป 0
September 2012
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Mr Brainwash 'ICONS REMIX' Show - May 9th, by jamesreeve5 on May 11, 2010 23:19:21 GMT 1, sneakers, toys, coins, stamps, beanie babies... collecting becomes increasingly more about domain the more you own, and more about relationship the less you own
sneakers, toys, coins, stamps, beanie babies... collecting becomes increasingly more about domain the more you own, and more about relationship the less you own
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bullet
Blank Rank
๐จ๏ธ 0
๐๐ป 16
January 2013
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Mr Brainwash 'ICONS REMIX' Show - May 9th, by bullet on May 12, 2010 1:03:02 GMT 1, I wish I had bought MBW about a year ago, I would totally be cashing in now. I am surprised at how people are pushing these things into the broader art market so quickly, and I am surprised at how eager people with money are to be burned. The business structure of these artists seems unsustainable in the long run (except for Banksy, and a couple of others). It is the desire to collect ANYTHING (not just specifically art) that fuels this entire movement. This scene is more akin to baseball cards, comic books, stamps, and coins than it is to art. Thats why so many of these artists pump out print after print, and so many buyers are ready to flip them in such short time. Very few collectors of urban art love their pieces intrinsically; it is about showing it off, having it increase in value, having others desire it. These needs are what's being pandered to when you buy a new print or log onto this forum. Many people are reading this and probably thinking well he is talking about a lot of the people on the forum, but he's certainly not talking about me, I love the art for arts sake. If this were the case though, then you could solve it simply by buying an annual membership to your local museum. Purchasing art satisfies the need of ownership, not purely a love of art. People on this forum continually buy more "art" than their walls can hold. People build "collections" in less than a year! For a group of people who seem to be so "aware" of the evils of consumerism, capitalism, and marketing, we have certainly let ourselves get manipulated by it. These artists are profiting off of our collective greed, our need to consume, our need to be accepted. It allows us to label ourselves "art collectors" when we are, in fact, very far from it. Over time, people will move on from this, and the excess detritus will fade away into peoples closets, attics, and garage sales. It will look dated, and something new will need consuming. Rather like jboy's unhealthy fascination with "sneakers".....
always box fresh.
I wish I had bought MBW about a year ago, I would totally be cashing in now. I am surprised at how people are pushing these things into the broader art market so quickly, and I am surprised at how eager people with money are to be burned. The business structure of these artists seems unsustainable in the long run (except for Banksy, and a couple of others). It is the desire to collect ANYTHING (not just specifically art) that fuels this entire movement. This scene is more akin to baseball cards, comic books, stamps, and coins than it is to art. Thats why so many of these artists pump out print after print, and so many buyers are ready to flip them in such short time. Very few collectors of urban art love their pieces intrinsically; it is about showing it off, having it increase in value, having others desire it. These needs are what's being pandered to when you buy a new print or log onto this forum. Many people are reading this and probably thinking well he is talking about a lot of the people on the forum, but he's certainly not talking about me, I love the art for arts sake. If this were the case though, then you could solve it simply by buying an annual membership to your local museum. Purchasing art satisfies the need of ownership, not purely a love of art. People on this forum continually buy more "art" than their walls can hold. People build "collections" in less than a year! For a group of people who seem to be so "aware" of the evils of consumerism, capitalism, and marketing, we have certainly let ourselves get manipulated by it. These artists are profiting off of our collective greed, our need to consume, our need to be accepted. It allows us to label ourselves "art collectors" when we are, in fact, very far from it. Over time, people will move on from this, and the excess detritus will fade away into peoples closets, attics, and garage sales. It will look dated, and something new will need consuming. Rather like jboy's unhealthy fascination with "sneakers"..... always box fresh.
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mattgold
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 362
๐๐ป 38
February 2010
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Mr Brainwash 'ICONS REMIX' Show - May 9th, by mattgold on May 12, 2010 5:14:38 GMT 1, I wish I had bought MBW about a year ago, I would totally be cashing in now. I am surprised at how people are pushing these things into the broader art market so quickly, and I am surprised at how eager people with money are to be burned. The business structure of these artists seems unsustainable in the long run (except for Banksy, and a couple of others). It is the desire to collect ANYTHING (not just specifically art) that fuels this entire movement. This scene is more akin to baseball cards, comic books, stamps, and coins than it is to art. Thats why so many of these artists pump out print after print, and so many buyers are ready to flip them in such short time. Very few collectors of urban art love their pieces intrinsically; it is about showing it off, having it increase in value, having others desire it. These needs are what's being pandered to when you buy a new print or log onto this forum. Many people are reading this and probably thinking well he is talking about a lot of the people on the forum, but he's certainly not talking about me, I love the art for arts sake. If this were the case though, then you could solve it simply by buying an annual membership to your local museum. Purchasing art satisfies the need of ownership, not purely a love of art. People on this forum continually buy more "art" than their walls can hold. People build "collections" in less than a year! For a group of people who seem to be so "aware" of the evils of consumerism, capitalism, and marketing, we have certainly let ourselves get manipulated by it. These artists are profiting off of our collective greed, our need to consume, our need to be accepted. It allows us to label ourselves "art collectors" when we are, in fact, very far from it. Over time, people will move on from this, and the excess detritus will fade away into peoples closets, attics, and garage sales. It will look dated, and something new will need consuming.
Although I agree with you on many points... Please direct me to the museum which has Banksy, Fairey, Parla, Jago, Dolk, , MBW, etc, etc in their permanent collection.
Loving art for arts sake is one thing... being able to admire what you truly like, not what's being fed to you, is a different ballgame.
For many people, even in big cities, exposure to this specific style of art (not even specific artists) in a gallery setting, let alone a museum setting is rare. For people outside major metropolitans? Forget it.
FWIW - I am a card carrying MOMA member. =)
I wish I had bought MBW about a year ago, I would totally be cashing in now. I am surprised at how people are pushing these things into the broader art market so quickly, and I am surprised at how eager people with money are to be burned. The business structure of these artists seems unsustainable in the long run (except for Banksy, and a couple of others). It is the desire to collect ANYTHING (not just specifically art) that fuels this entire movement. This scene is more akin to baseball cards, comic books, stamps, and coins than it is to art. Thats why so many of these artists pump out print after print, and so many buyers are ready to flip them in such short time. Very few collectors of urban art love their pieces intrinsically; it is about showing it off, having it increase in value, having others desire it. These needs are what's being pandered to when you buy a new print or log onto this forum. Many people are reading this and probably thinking well he is talking about a lot of the people on the forum, but he's certainly not talking about me, I love the art for arts sake. If this were the case though, then you could solve it simply by buying an annual membership to your local museum. Purchasing art satisfies the need of ownership, not purely a love of art. People on this forum continually buy more "art" than their walls can hold. People build "collections" in less than a year! For a group of people who seem to be so "aware" of the evils of consumerism, capitalism, and marketing, we have certainly let ourselves get manipulated by it. These artists are profiting off of our collective greed, our need to consume, our need to be accepted. It allows us to label ourselves "art collectors" when we are, in fact, very far from it. Over time, people will move on from this, and the excess detritus will fade away into peoples closets, attics, and garage sales. It will look dated, and something new will need consuming. Although I agree with you on many points... Please direct me to the museum which has Banksy, Fairey, Parla, Jago, Dolk, , MBW, etc, etc in their permanent collection. Loving art for arts sake is one thing... being able to admire what you truly like, not what's being fed to you, is a different ballgame. For many people, even in big cities, exposure to this specific style of art (not even specific artists) in a gallery setting, let alone a museum setting is rare. For people outside major metropolitans? Forget it. FWIW - I am a card carrying MOMA member. =)
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peggy
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 145
๐๐ป 8
March 2010
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Mr Brainwash 'ICONS REMIX' Show - May 9th, by peggy on May 12, 2010 10:53:15 GMT 1, AS AN ARTIST REMINDED PEGGY ONE DAY, THERE IS A HUGE TRUISM IN THE LINE FROM FIGHTCLUB THAT THE MORE POSSESSIONS YOU OWN, THE MORE POSSESSIONS BEGIN TO OWN YOU. PEGGY WAS REMINDED OF THIS AFTER SHE HAD TO LEAVE HER KENNEL, WITH ALL IT'S BALLS, BONES & BLANKETS LEFT BEHIND. SHE FOUND IT INCREDIBLY REFRESHING TO SET UP A NEW KENNEL WHERE YOU RE-ASSESS WHETHER SHE NEEDED LOTS OF BALLS, BONES & BLANKETS. IF THERE IS ANY ART TO BE FOUND IN MBW IT IS CONCEPTUAL COMMENT ON THE NEED TO FEEL ACCEPTED THROUGH OWNERSHIP. BUT PEGGY FEELS THAT THIS IS A POOR RE-HASH OF WARHOL 15 MINUTES OF FAME. PEGGY GETS A HEADACHE WHEN SHE TRIES TO THEORISE ABOUT ART TOO MUCH AND IS OFF TO ROLL IN THE PARK.
AS AN ARTIST REMINDED PEGGY ONE DAY, THERE IS A HUGE TRUISM IN THE LINE FROM FIGHTCLUB THAT THE MORE POSSESSIONS YOU OWN, THE MORE POSSESSIONS BEGIN TO OWN YOU. PEGGY WAS REMINDED OF THIS AFTER SHE HAD TO LEAVE HER KENNEL, WITH ALL IT'S BALLS, BONES & BLANKETS LEFT BEHIND. SHE FOUND IT INCREDIBLY REFRESHING TO SET UP A NEW KENNEL WHERE YOU RE-ASSESS WHETHER SHE NEEDED LOTS OF BALLS, BONES & BLANKETS. IF THERE IS ANY ART TO BE FOUND IN MBW IT IS CONCEPTUAL COMMENT ON THE NEED TO FEEL ACCEPTED THROUGH OWNERSHIP. BUT PEGGY FEELS THAT THIS IS A POOR RE-HASH OF WARHOL 15 MINUTES OF FAME. PEGGY GETS A HEADACHE WHEN SHE TRIES TO THEORISE ABOUT ART TOO MUCH AND IS OFF TO ROLL IN THE PARK.
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schnulli
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 735
๐๐ป 13
February 2010
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Mr Brainwash 'ICONS REMIX' Show - May 9th, by schnulli on May 12, 2010 11:28:55 GMT 1, I wish I had bought MBW about a year ago, I would totally be cashing in now. I am surprised at how people are pushing these things into the broader art market so quickly, and I am surprised at how eager people with money are to be burned. The business structure of these artists seems unsustainable in the long run (except for Banksy, and a couple of others). It is the desire to collect ANYTHING (not just specifically art) that fuels this entire movement. This scene is more akin to baseball cards, comic books, stamps, and coins than it is to art. Thats why so many of these artists pump out print after print, and so many buyers are ready to flip them in such short time. Very few collectors of urban art love their pieces intrinsically; it is about showing it off, having it increase in value, having others desire it. These needs are what's being pandered to when you buy a new print or log onto this forum. Many people are reading this and probably thinking well he is talking about a lot of the people on the forum, but he's certainly not talking about me, I love the art for arts sake. If this were the case though, then you could solve it simply by buying an annual membership to your local museum. Purchasing art satisfies the need of ownership, not purely a love of art. People on this forum continually buy more "art" than their walls can hold. People build "collections" in less than a year! For a group of people who seem to be so "aware" of the evils of consumerism, capitalism, and marketing, we have certainly let ourselves get manipulated by it. These artists are profiting off of our collective greed, our need to consume, our need to be accepted. It allows us to label ourselves "art collectors" when we are, in fact, very far from it. Over time, people will move on from this, and the excess detritus will fade away into peoples closets, attics, and garage sales. It will look dated, and something new will need consuming.
Surely this kind of art snobbery is more suited to somewhere other than an urban art forum??? I don't understand why there's no middle ground here....it's either chin-stroking at the museum and immersing yourself in the mind of the tortured artist daaahling, or it's soulless eBay flipping to cash in on a recent print? Yes we may all own more works than the walls will hold - bearing in mind most prints actually are cheaper than the frames - but that's part of the appeal. It's an accessible hobby. Sometimes you get lucky and buy a piece you like that also turns out to be worth something, like Handiedan. Other times you pass on a load of rubbish that also turns out to be worth something, like MBW. I'm sure even Banksys aren't going to turn up in a 2050 Antiques Roadshow episode...let's face it none of us are going to have the equivalent of a Picasso lurking in the basement.
I wish I had bought MBW about a year ago, I would totally be cashing in now. I am surprised at how people are pushing these things into the broader art market so quickly, and I am surprised at how eager people with money are to be burned. The business structure of these artists seems unsustainable in the long run (except for Banksy, and a couple of others). It is the desire to collect ANYTHING (not just specifically art) that fuels this entire movement. This scene is more akin to baseball cards, comic books, stamps, and coins than it is to art. Thats why so many of these artists pump out print after print, and so many buyers are ready to flip them in such short time. Very few collectors of urban art love their pieces intrinsically; it is about showing it off, having it increase in value, having others desire it. These needs are what's being pandered to when you buy a new print or log onto this forum. Many people are reading this and probably thinking well he is talking about a lot of the people on the forum, but he's certainly not talking about me, I love the art for arts sake. If this were the case though, then you could solve it simply by buying an annual membership to your local museum. Purchasing art satisfies the need of ownership, not purely a love of art. People on this forum continually buy more "art" than their walls can hold. People build "collections" in less than a year! For a group of people who seem to be so "aware" of the evils of consumerism, capitalism, and marketing, we have certainly let ourselves get manipulated by it. These artists are profiting off of our collective greed, our need to consume, our need to be accepted. It allows us to label ourselves "art collectors" when we are, in fact, very far from it. Over time, people will move on from this, and the excess detritus will fade away into peoples closets, attics, and garage sales. It will look dated, and something new will need consuming. Surely this kind of art snobbery is more suited to somewhere other than an urban art forum??? I don't understand why there's no middle ground here....it's either chin-stroking at the museum and immersing yourself in the mind of the tortured artist daaahling, or it's soulless eBay flipping to cash in on a recent print? Yes we may all own more works than the walls will hold - bearing in mind most prints actually are cheaper than the frames - but that's part of the appeal. It's an accessible hobby. Sometimes you get lucky and buy a piece you like that also turns out to be worth something, like Handiedan. Other times you pass on a load of rubbish that also turns out to be worth something, like MBW. I'm sure even Banksys aren't going to turn up in a 2050 Antiques Roadshow episode...let's face it none of us are going to have the equivalent of a Picasso lurking in the basement.
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bullet
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January 2013
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Mr Brainwash 'ICONS REMIX' Show - May 9th, by bullet on May 12, 2010 12:58:24 GMT 1, paaahahaha.
paaahahaha.
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John
New Member
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March 2007
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Mr Brainwash 'ICONS REMIX' Show - May 9th, by John on May 12, 2010 17:25:16 GMT 1, lol after watching ETTGS i'd be embarrassed to own a MBW.
The blokes a joker.
lol after watching ETTGS i'd be embarrassed to own a MBW.
The blokes a joker.
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Ottomatik
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 4,233
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March 2009
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Mr Brainwash 'ICONS REMIX' Show - May 9th, by Ottomatik on May 12, 2010 17:51:55 GMT 1, AS AN ARTIST REMINDED PEGGY ONE DAY, THERE IS A HUGE TRUISM IN THE LINE FROM FIGHTCLUB THAT THE MORE POSSESSIONS YOU OWN, THE MORE POSSESSIONS BEGIN TO OWN YOU. PEGGY WAS REMINDED OF THIS AFTER SHE HAD TO LEAVE HER KENNEL, WITH ALL IT'S BALLS, BONES & BLANKETS LEFT BEHIND. SHE FOUND IT INCREDIBLY REFRESHING TO SET UP A NEW KENNEL WHERE YOU RE-ASSESS WHETHER SHE NEEDED LOTS OF BALLS, BONES & BLANKETS. IF THERE IS ANY ART TO BE FOUND IN MBW IT IS CONCEPTUAL COMMENT ON THE NEED TO FEEL ACCEPTED THROUGH OWNERSHIP. BUT PEGGY FEELS THAT THIS IS A POOR RE-HASH OF WARHOL 15 MINUTES OF FAME. PEGGY GETS A HEADACHE WHEN SHE TRIES TO THEORISE ABOUT ART TOO MUCH AND IS OFF TO ROLL IN THE PARK.
peggy, i can't say i respect your opinion. i can say your post give me a headache. silky has made it clear that posting your anti-love for mbw on his threads is disrespectful and uncalled for. like what you like buy what you like but don't judge me on what i like and buy. to each their own. i think that your post are a bit childish and annoying. i do not like some of the artist that have threads about their work on this forum, but i do not feel the need to be disrespectful and post negativity in the threads. maybe you should take your dog to the park for a walk, i think some fresh air would do you good. seeing as you are also an artist, you should know better than to post such comments. i'm sure you would welcome your 15 minutes with open arms.
AS AN ARTIST REMINDED PEGGY ONE DAY, THERE IS A HUGE TRUISM IN THE LINE FROM FIGHTCLUB THAT THE MORE POSSESSIONS YOU OWN, THE MORE POSSESSIONS BEGIN TO OWN YOU. PEGGY WAS REMINDED OF THIS AFTER SHE HAD TO LEAVE HER KENNEL, WITH ALL IT'S BALLS, BONES & BLANKETS LEFT BEHIND. SHE FOUND IT INCREDIBLY REFRESHING TO SET UP A NEW KENNEL WHERE YOU RE-ASSESS WHETHER SHE NEEDED LOTS OF BALLS, BONES & BLANKETS. IF THERE IS ANY ART TO BE FOUND IN MBW IT IS CONCEPTUAL COMMENT ON THE NEED TO FEEL ACCEPTED THROUGH OWNERSHIP. BUT PEGGY FEELS THAT THIS IS A POOR RE-HASH OF WARHOL 15 MINUTES OF FAME. PEGGY GETS A HEADACHE WHEN SHE TRIES TO THEORISE ABOUT ART TOO MUCH AND IS OFF TO ROLL IN THE PARK. peggy, i can't say i respect your opinion. i can say your post give me a headache. silky has made it clear that posting your anti-love for mbw on his threads is disrespectful and uncalled for. like what you like buy what you like but don't judge me on what i like and buy. to each their own. i think that your post are a bit childish and annoying. i do not like some of the artist that have threads about their work on this forum, but i do not feel the need to be disrespectful and post negativity in the threads. maybe you should take your dog to the park for a walk, i think some fresh air would do you good. seeing as you are also an artist, you should know better than to post such comments. i'm sure you would welcome your 15 minutes with open arms.
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Mr Brainwash 'ICONS REMIX' Show - May 9th, by Gentle Mental on May 12, 2010 17:54:20 GMT 1, it's cave people huntin' and collectin' and showin' other cave people what you got
it's primal, it's in your dna,
it's not your fault you're easily manipulated
it's cave people huntin' and collectin' and showin' other cave people what you got
it's primal, it's in your dna,
it's not your fault you're easily manipulated
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acidburn
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 47
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April 2010
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Mr Brainwash 'ICONS REMIX' Show - May 9th, by acidburn on May 12, 2010 18:45:12 GMT 1, lol after watching ETTGS i'd be embarrassed to own a MBW. The blokes a joker.
its funny because after the movie a lot of us liked him even more.
lol after watching ETTGS i'd be embarrassed to own a MBW. The blokes a joker. its funny because after the movie a lot of us liked him even more.
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jamesreeve5
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September 2012
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Mr Brainwash 'ICONS REMIX' Show - May 9th, by jamesreeve5 on May 12, 2010 18:46:01 GMT 1, Although I agree with you on many points... Please direct me to the museum which has Banksy, Fairey, Parla, Jago, Dolk, , MBW, etc, etc in their permanent collection. Loving art for arts sake is one thing... being able to admire what you truly like, not what's being fed to you, is a different ballgame. For many people, even in big cities, exposure to this specific style of art (not even specific artists) in a gallery setting, let alone a museum setting is rare. For people outside major metropolitans? Forget it. FWIW - I am a card carrying MOMA member. =)
Do you truly like the art you collect because you like it, or do you like the art you collect because you can afford it? If someone were to offer you either a Warhol original or a Dolk original, but the stipulation was that you couldn't show it to anybody, you couldn't sell it and you had to give it back once you died, which one would you take?
Surely this kind of art snobbery is more suited to somewhere other than an urban art forum??? I don't understand why there's no middle ground here....it's either chin-stroking at the museum and immersing yourself in the mind of the tortured artist daaahling, or it's soulless eBay flipping to cash in on a recent print? Yes we may all own more works than the walls will hold - bearing in mind most prints actually are cheaper than the frames - but that's part of the appeal. It's an accessible hobby. Sometimes you get lucky and buy a piece you like that also turns out to be worth something, like Handiedan. Other times you pass on a load of rubbish that also turns out to be worth something, like MBW. I'm sure even Banksys aren't going to turn up in a 2050 Antiques Roadshow episode...let's face it none of us are going to have the equivalent of a Picasso lurking in the basement.
Schnulli, a halfway serious discussion comes up and you accuse it of art snobbery? What's wrong with a little debate? Not all threads have to be blatant hype and advertisements for artists, although you snuck a plug for Handiedan in your post quite nicely.
And although you seem to have a rather healthy, aware view of collecting, a lot of people in the world of urban art do not. They believe that urban art will be regarded as the most important movement of the beginning of the new century, and they are buying their retirements right now with that in mind.
I think gentalmental has it right here...
it's cave people huntin' and collectin' and showin' other cave people what you got it's primal, it's in your dna, it's not your fault you're easily manipulated
I just wish the artists in this genre exercised a little bit of control over the amount of works they release into the markets. A bit of restraint now might keep them around longer.
Although I agree with you on many points... Please direct me to the museum which has Banksy, Fairey, Parla, Jago, Dolk, , MBW, etc, etc in their permanent collection. Loving art for arts sake is one thing... being able to admire what you truly like, not what's being fed to you, is a different ballgame. For many people, even in big cities, exposure to this specific style of art (not even specific artists) in a gallery setting, let alone a museum setting is rare. For people outside major metropolitans? Forget it. FWIW - I am a card carrying MOMA member. =) Do you truly like the art you collect because you like it, or do you like the art you collect because you can afford it? If someone were to offer you either a Warhol original or a Dolk original, but the stipulation was that you couldn't show it to anybody, you couldn't sell it and you had to give it back once you died, which one would you take? Surely this kind of art snobbery is more suited to somewhere other than an urban art forum??? I don't understand why there's no middle ground here....it's either chin-stroking at the museum and immersing yourself in the mind of the tortured artist daaahling, or it's soulless eBay flipping to cash in on a recent print? Yes we may all own more works than the walls will hold - bearing in mind most prints actually are cheaper than the frames - but that's part of the appeal. It's an accessible hobby. Sometimes you get lucky and buy a piece you like that also turns out to be worth something, like Handiedan. Other times you pass on a load of rubbish that also turns out to be worth something, like MBW. I'm sure even Banksys aren't going to turn up in a 2050 Antiques Roadshow episode...let's face it none of us are going to have the equivalent of a Picasso lurking in the basement. Schnulli, a halfway serious discussion comes up and you accuse it of art snobbery? What's wrong with a little debate? Not all threads have to be blatant hype and advertisements for artists, although you snuck a plug for Handiedan in your post quite nicely. And although you seem to have a rather healthy, aware view of collecting, a lot of people in the world of urban art do not. They believe that urban art will be regarded as the most important movement of the beginning of the new century, and they are buying their retirements right now with that in mind. I think gentalmental has it right here... it's cave people huntin' and collectin' and showin' other cave people what you got it's primal, it's in your dna, it's not your fault you're easily manipulated I just wish the artists in this genre exercised a little bit of control over the amount of works they release into the markets. A bit of restraint now might keep them around longer.
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Run Pig Run
Junior Member
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January 2006
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Mr Brainwash 'ICONS REMIX' Show - May 9th, by Run Pig Run on May 12, 2010 20:23:01 GMT 1, I thought banksy showed this bloke up as a complete idiot fraud?...are people still buying into this shit?
I thought banksy showed this bloke up as a complete idiot fraud?...are people still buying into this shit?
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Ottomatik
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 4,233
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March 2009
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Mr Brainwash 'ICONS REMIX' Show - May 9th, by Ottomatik on May 12, 2010 20:41:35 GMT 1, I thought banksy showed this bloke up as a complete idiot fraud?...are people still buying into this s**t?
this shite is getting older than my granny, and she's dead.
I thought banksy showed this bloke up as a complete idiot fraud?...are people still buying into this s**t? this shite is getting older than my granny, and she's dead.
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Mr Brainwash 'ICONS REMIX' Show - May 9th, by wilfsboy on May 12, 2010 20:41:56 GMT 1, I thought banksy showed this bloke up as a complete idiot fraud?...are people still buying into this s**t?
I think freerange might be ;D
I thought banksy showed this bloke up as a complete idiot fraud?...are people still buying into this s**t? I think freerange might be ;D
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Ottomatik
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 4,233
๐๐ป 2,471
March 2009
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Mr Brainwash 'ICONS REMIX' Show - May 9th, by Ottomatik on May 12, 2010 21:56:37 GMT 1, I love how every single MBW post turns into the same 5 pages. They all are almost identical I don't. It's quite annoying, and pointless. Unless you live in my house, your opinion of the art I purchase has no effect on me. This is old, and shame on you Silky for letting it continue...for the thousandth time. Grown men should not act as such.
I love how every single MBW post turns into the same 5 pages. They all are almost identical I don't. It's quite annoying, and pointless. Unless you live in my house, your opinion of the art I purchase has no effect on me. This is old, and shame on you Silky for letting it continue...for the thousandth time. Grown men should not act as such.
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origo
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 1,973
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April 2008
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Mr Brainwash 'ICONS REMIX' Show - May 9th, by origo on May 12, 2010 22:16:20 GMT 1, Actually it makes perfect sense, itยดs a synergy.
This is the natural balance to the neverending hype around MBW, somehow it creates balance.
Actually it makes perfect sense, itยดs a synergy. This is the natural balance to the neverending hype around MBW, somehow it creates balance.
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Ottomatik
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 4,233
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March 2009
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Mr Brainwash 'ICONS REMIX' Show - May 9th, by Ottomatik on May 12, 2010 22:33:06 GMT 1, Actually it makes perfect sense, itยดs a synergy. This is the natural balance to the neverending hype around MBW, somehow it creates balance. you know we both have a common interest in an artist. we both own some of his work. if there was a numerous threads on that artist and members constantly bashed said artist, you would not feel the same as you do concerning this matter.
Actually it makes perfect sense, itยดs a synergy. This is the natural balance to the neverending hype around MBW, somehow it creates balance. you know we both have a common interest in an artist. we both own some of his work. if there was a numerous threads on that artist and members constantly bashed said artist, you would not feel the same as you do concerning this matter.
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schnulli
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 735
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February 2010
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Mr Brainwash 'ICONS REMIX' Show - May 9th, by schnulli on May 12, 2010 23:03:53 GMT 1, Schnulli, a halfway serious discussion comes up and you accuse it of art snobbery? What's wrong with a little debate? Not all threads have to be blatant hype and advertisements for artists, although you snuck a plug for Handiedan in your post quite nicely. And although you seem to have a rather healthy, aware view of collecting, a lot of people in the world of urban art do not. They believe that urban art will be regarded as the most important movement of the beginning of the new century, and they are buying their retirements right now with that in mind. Thanks James, I would say though if it looks like a duck, and quacks like a duck, then it most probably is a duck. This smacked of snobbery, and maybe it was a means to an end to generate a discussion...if that's the case, I'm happy to wade into the water with you. I wasn't trying to use the post to big up Han or shoot down MBW; there's plenty of that going around anyway - deservedly so. I just took exception to the implication that this forum, and this stream of art, is all about $$$. There'd be no doubting that everyone on here with a portfolio knows the intrinsic value of it - it's value is affirmation of our taste and judgement. But that's just a (nice) byproduct. The real value is how you feel every time you see it on the wall. I've also no doubt there's a number of flippers on this forum, but for anyone regularly trying to flip a print on eBay at best is just making a bit of pocket money. No one's going to make a living on it, and inevitably they'll get burned - like trying to flip Obey prints now, you'd be wasting your time. It's annoying to have to pay over the odds for something, but that's when you have to ask yourself, do I want this print now or can I wait a year? These guys move like moths to a flame...last year it's Obey, now it's MBW.
Schnulli, a halfway serious discussion comes up and you accuse it of art snobbery? What's wrong with a little debate? Not all threads have to be blatant hype and advertisements for artists, although you snuck a plug for Handiedan in your post quite nicely. And although you seem to have a rather healthy, aware view of collecting, a lot of people in the world of urban art do not. They believe that urban art will be regarded as the most important movement of the beginning of the new century, and they are buying their retirements right now with that in mind. Thanks James, I would say though if it looks like a duck, and quacks like a duck, then it most probably is a duck. This smacked of snobbery, and maybe it was a means to an end to generate a discussion...if that's the case, I'm happy to wade into the water with you. I wasn't trying to use the post to big up Han or shoot down MBW; there's plenty of that going around anyway - deservedly so. I just took exception to the implication that this forum, and this stream of art, is all about $$$. There'd be no doubting that everyone on here with a portfolio knows the intrinsic value of it - it's value is affirmation of our taste and judgement. But that's just a (nice) byproduct. The real value is how you feel every time you see it on the wall. I've also no doubt there's a number of flippers on this forum, but for anyone regularly trying to flip a print on eBay at best is just making a bit of pocket money. No one's going to make a living on it, and inevitably they'll get burned - like trying to flip Obey prints now, you'd be wasting your time. It's annoying to have to pay over the odds for something, but that's when you have to ask yourself, do I want this print now or can I wait a year? These guys move like moths to a flame...last year it's Obey, now it's MBW.
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Sohoria
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 964
๐๐ป 305
August 2009
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Mr Brainwash 'ICONS REMIX' Show - May 9th, by Sohoria on May 12, 2010 23:27:22 GMT 1, strange but with MBW i like reading comments from both sides so happy silky lets run... opinion of person viewing the art... i actually liked the madonna art piece given to first person in the queue... surprised going for 20k though! think we all know art can be like red hot housing market.... goes well everyone wants... time to sell no one wants lol.... if purchased MBW because you liked commend .... wont say miss the boat just didnt like some of his art pieces ... 6k boxer on his site i liked no idea what that goes for now but live and learn...
all can say is there is no one way have success in art... i see amazing artists with beautiful art pieces struggle and sell art pieces affordable to me... then see other artists think wow so sudden that out of price range but as so many wise people have said on here... buy art because you like not from what profit you can make...think those words heard so many times on this forum will stand the test of time when some artists might not.... (no dig at MBW)... s
strange but with MBW i like reading comments from both sides so happy silky lets run... opinion of person viewing the art... i actually liked the madonna art piece given to first person in the queue... surprised going for 20k though! think we all know art can be like red hot housing market.... goes well everyone wants... time to sell no one wants lol.... if purchased MBW because you liked commend .... wont say miss the boat just didnt like some of his art pieces ... 6k boxer on his site i liked no idea what that goes for now but live and learn...
all can say is there is no one way have success in art... i see amazing artists with beautiful art pieces struggle and sell art pieces affordable to me... then see other artists think wow so sudden that out of price range but as so many wise people have said on here... buy art because you like not from what profit you can make...think those words heard so many times on this forum will stand the test of time when some artists might not.... (no dig at MBW)... s
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Mr Brainwash 'ICONS REMIX' Show - May 9th, by bigwilly on May 13, 2010 6:50:07 GMT 1,
the paper its printed on is real nice and thick! not bad for free
the paper its printed on is real nice and thick! not bad for free
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Deleted
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January 1970
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Mr Brainwash 'ICONS REMIX' Show - May 9th, by Deleted on May 13, 2010 7:47:30 GMT 1, OH DEAR, NOT VERY PLAYFUL IS IT ALL I WANT TO DO IS PLAY A LITTLE GAME AND CAN'T SEEM TO GET YOU TO JOIN IN. I THOUGHT THAT SUCH AN EDUCATED ART CRITIC WOULD HAVE HAPPILY OPENED UP TO THE FIRST PIECE YOU BOUGHT & WHEN, BUT MAYBE I'M WRONG. SURELY THIS CAN ONLY UNDERPIN QUITE HOW BROAD YOUR DEPTH OF ART APPRECIATION IS. BUT AS ALWAYS I'M JUST A SILLY LITTLE STAFFY WOOF WOOF WOOF Enough with the cap letters....stop screaming. You're not a dog, stop dropping acid. mbw=some cool pieces, some sh1t pieces.
come on, she reminds me of Bongo.. bringing something back from better days!
OH DEAR, NOT VERY PLAYFUL IS IT ALL I WANT TO DO IS PLAY A LITTLE GAME AND CAN'T SEEM TO GET YOU TO JOIN IN. I THOUGHT THAT SUCH AN EDUCATED ART CRITIC WOULD HAVE HAPPILY OPENED UP TO THE FIRST PIECE YOU BOUGHT & WHEN, BUT MAYBE I'M WRONG. SURELY THIS CAN ONLY UNDERPIN QUITE HOW BROAD YOUR DEPTH OF ART APPRECIATION IS. BUT AS ALWAYS I'M JUST A SILLY LITTLE STAFFY WOOF WOOF WOOF Enough with the cap letters....stop screaming. You're not a dog, stop dropping acid. mbw=some cool pieces, some sh1t pieces. come on, she reminds me of Bongo.. bringing something back from better days!
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jusdeep
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 2,797
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October 2007
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Mr Brainwash 'ICONS REMIX' Show - May 9th, by jusdeep on May 13, 2010 8:46:59 GMT 1, The difference being when Bongo did post, which was infrequently what he did say was a pearl of wisdom instead from Peggy we get a polished turd.
The difference being when Bongo did post, which was infrequently what he did say was a pearl of wisdom instead from Peggy we get a polished turd.
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Deleted
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January 1970
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Mr Brainwash 'ICONS REMIX' Show - May 9th, by Deleted on May 13, 2010 8:59:17 GMT 1, unfortunatly true..
unfortunatly true..
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