If you do have your heart set on a major artist, why not pick up an original print? You can buy these through non-profit foundations such as Aperture and the Whitechapel Gallery. There’s also Own Art UK – a collaboration between Arts Council England, Creative Scotland and Arts Council of Northern Ireland – which enables you to buy original artwork with interest-free loans. Since it launched in 2004, the scheme has been used by more than 50,000 people, amounting to purchases of contemporary art and craft valued in excess of £40m. Between £100 and £25,000 can be borrowed at any one time and paid back over the course of 10 or 20 months. Partner galleries include Tate, the ICA and the National Galleries of Scotland. Similar schemes exist around the world. The aim: to make art accessible to all, regardless of annual salary or postcode.
Speaking of postcodes, the most common answer to the question, “If you moved, what would you take with you?” is a work of art. That’s often because, as in the case of artist and designer Luke Edward Hall, your art collection is something you’ve been building up over the years. Fashion editor Holly Swayne agrees that the paintings and prints she and her boyfriend George have accumulated are the most precious items in their Stoke Newington flat. And for designer Małgorzata Bany, there’s no question: “Artworks. Friends’ works, Tycjan’s [my partners] work. They’re irreplaceable.”
When you do move, or acquire a new artwork, the best way to figure out how to display your budding collection is by hanging pieces in one place and, if they don’t look or feel quite right, moving them. Pretend you’re a curator, your house an ever-changing exhibition space. This doesn’t mean you have to treat your home like a gallery – though for Yvonna Demczynska, owner of Flow Gallery, doing so worked out rather well. “The gallery used to be a big, open white space and everything was displayed on big white plinths,” she says. “After doing that for 15 years I thought it was time for a change, so I decided to turn half of the gallery into a flat.”
Further reading
Hettie Judah’s ‘
Art London: A Guide to Places, Events and Artists is a good place to start when it comes to finding inspiration and figuring out what you like and dislike.
For something more focused on the dos and don’ts of collecting, opt for art dealer and market expert Michael Findlay’s ‘
The Value of Art: Money, Power, Beauty.
- 转载自:The Modern House
- 语言:English
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