A Case Study in What Happens When the Courts Meet Stolen Art
September 24, 2007 by FineArtRegistry
Filed under Fine Art Registry, Legalities in Art
GEORGIA O’KEEFFE and the Purloined Paintings of Princeton
Georgia O’Keeffe’s images of the American West sparked a wave of “western” decorating style, and her larger-than-life flower images, at once abstract pop-art and highly erotic, continue to be popular icons on everything from posters to aprons. But aesthetic popularity did not render O’Keeffe immune to legal entanglements. In the mid 1970’s, Georgia O’Keeffe filed a lawsuit against the Princeton Gallery of Fine Art, claiming they were in possession of three of her paintings which she said had been stolen from her husband’s gallery decades earlier. Read more
Photography – “The Equivalent Of Painting”
September 9, 2007 by FineArtRegistry
Filed under Art Opinion, Fine Art Registry
Photography and Painting are Tied at the Hip
Open Letter To Artists (From An Art Critic) - Part 39
Spoken by a true pioneer of the fine art of photography, Alfred Stieglitz. He is portrayed in an OPEN LETTER TO ARTISTS #39 (From an art critic) by Joan Altebe, as being mentor to the famous photographer Ansel Adams. According to the article, Stieglitz was the first to promote this emerging field as a fine art. Read more
All You’d Ever Want to Know About Successfully Starting to Sell Your Art on the Web
September 7, 2007 by FineArtRegistry
Filed under Fine Art Registry, Market & Sell Art
An Internet Success Story – How to Market Your Art Via the Internet
Artist Marketing Series, Part IV
Have you ever wondered how to get started selling your art on the Internet? I think that the answer is a lot closer than you think. How to Survive Even Though You’re an Artist, Part 4 – An Internet Success Story – How to Market Your Art Via the Internet takes you step by step through the process. Beginning with methods of gaining a presence in cyberspace, and the many areas that one will be able to assert oneself into this formerly difficult field of marketing art. Read more

