«One can conclude that there is an investment purpose if there is regular activity of selling or
buying pieces of artwork,» he says.
The next time you get commissioned for a work, or the next time someone comes to
buy another piece of your artwork, instead of giving them an invoice or showing them the price, simply give them a blank invoice or receipt with the total number of hours you spent on it and itemized cost of every material you used (from paint brushes, to paint, to canvas, to whatever).
Not exact matches
The answer is that spending # 10 on targeted advertising to get your products in front
of people who will care enough to
buy them is much more effective than giving away a
piece of artwork worth # 20 to people who might never engage with you again.
For Wii U — I still haven't done arkham asylums riddler challenges (you know, the ones you unlock by picking up all the riddler trophies), I haven't 100 % synched AC3 yet, I haven't found all
of the 100 heroes yet (missing 25 guys) and not even normal difficulty has platinum medals on all missions, I haven't gotten all orbs in Trine 2, done all missions in the ZEN / SW tables I have, gotten all the
pieces in Toki Tori 2, didn't unlock all
artwork yet in chronicles
of mystara, didn't get far in Zombi U or Need for speed — still have to catch up on months
of DLC for monster hunter 3 Ultimate — still have to pick up the DLC for Injustice and haven't gotten around to
buying Spiderman yet...
Speaking
of which
buying a
piece of art is probably one
of the most common things you'll do throughout the game since a gallery is typically not very impressive without some actual
artwork hanging on its walls or sitting within its quiet halls.
When a client
buys a
piece, what they're really
buying is an experience,
of which the
artwork is a souvenir.
Your
artwork is very different from your cartoons and consequently has a massively augmented set
of criteria for appreciation: things that are deeply important to you and become important to anyone who wants to
buy a
piece for reasons beyond investment.
We have some beautiful
pieces of rustic reclaimed wood furniture that we've acquired here, along with classic Lee sofas & a few fun
pieces like a zebra cowhide rug and some awesome
artwork, which I've mostly
bought directly from the artist.
Desk: Filing Cabinet Bases — World Market Top — Two
pieces of plywood trimmed out — can't remember stain color Architectural
Artwork —
Bought at a store in SC years and years ago
When we
bought our house there was a mechanism that was essentially like a
piece of artwork on a roller shade (complete with remote) that concealed the tv and you could open and close it as you liked.