The person who buys those types of things hopes that the novelty of it will eventually make it worth something; or the person will become famous for some odd reason. Of course, something like that might sell on the Internet as an impulse buy, or for somebody intending to give it as a joke. Two basic reasons: A fool and his money are soon parted. There’s a sucker born every minute.
Those paintings still might be sold to a company that makes “motivational posters” for big corporations. Corporations that don’t want their workers to start feeling too confident. And aside, to Sara R: ROFL!
Ida No over 9 years ago
Chicken artist: “No, no, I’m pretty confident about the whole thing.”
emptc12 over 9 years ago
The person who buys those types of things hopes that the novelty of it will eventually make it worth something; or the person will become famous for some odd reason. Of course, something like that might sell on the Internet as an impulse buy, or for somebody intending to give it as a joke. Two basic reasons: A fool and his money are soon parted. There’s a sucker born every minute.
Sara Rundle over 9 years ago
Andy Warhol?
Zen-of-Zinfandel over 9 years ago
“Half Empty”
John Falstaff over 9 years ago
Those paintings still might be sold to a company that makes “motivational posters” for big corporations. Corporations that don’t want their workers to start feeling too confident. And aside, to Sara R: ROFL!
pcolli over 9 years ago
My experience of art college is that it’s not what you produce, it’s how much cr*p you can talk about it to convince people it’s valid.
Ida No over 9 years ago
More appropriate comment: “Your work shows a lack of self-confidence”. But that takes too long to say.