As they say, it is never late to start investing; the only thing that changes is your strategy. If you want to invest in art but you have no idea where to begin, we share a list of art investment trends to look for through the rest of 2022. Don’t miss your train!
Tag Archives: Art
Disguised or not, Jesus Christ has been a famous figure in art since the Roman Empire. Surprisingly enough, the Almighty was featured in some of the most influential and crucial artworks in art history. In this blog post, we will focus on the sacred art of Jesus Christ and take a look at some famous paintings featuring the Messiah.
Art in interior design is like Venus in “The Birth of Venus” by Sandro Botticelli – the center of attention. Let's take a look at why and how artworks are used in home décor nowadays.
Leonardo da Vinci is an iconic artist, but he is hardly the most prolific one when it comes to painting. Throughout his whole life, he created less than 20 paintings, with several of them being unfinished. Today, we want to focus on the unfinished paintings that were left incomplete by the famous polymath of the High Renaissance.
Having your own gallery where you are the one who decides whose works are going to be exhibited in it is a dream of many people. We want to shed light on how to start an art gallery nowadays, what steps are required, and what difficulties await would-be entrepreneurs ahead.
Allegory paintings, which were popular from the Renaissance period to the mid-19th century, embodied abstract concepts such as death or age.
In the mid-19th century, there was a man whose fascination with the real world was so deep and intense that romanticized art could hardly satisfy his tastes. Gustave Courbet, “proudest and most arrogant in France,” as he called himself, opposed the French Academy and became one of the founding fathers of Realism.
Painting now requires much less effort from the artist than several centuries ago. The difference between art materials became a decisive factor that affected the process of work creation. Van Eyck’s innovation in the 15th century and the new principle of paint storage, which appeared in the second part of the 19th century, changed the course of art history forever.