Only Look at This When Drinking 2018. Acrylic on poplar board, 96 x 48"
There are just a few patrons of the arts in my little town. Damian is one of them. We have an understanding. I ask to be paid one silver dollar for each painting he desires, and he makes sure to stop at the pawn shop before arriving to the studio. He picks out a painting, pays me my silver dollar, and we sit out back and sip moonshine bourbon to seal the deal.
It took me a few years to convince him to play my game. I also had to convince him not to give me money for this 8 foot long painting he “commissioned” me to make for the front piece of the bar he was building for his party room.
Damian is an artist of life, a unique human being whom I shall elaborate on in a future post.
Meanwhile, please read about my silver dollar idea for getting paid:
Repeatedly, I suffer bouts of intense self-doubt that usually presage a light epiphany of sorts. I get a new idea or a reaffirmation of a past philosophy, and all is set back right with the world. Always temporary though. Another self-doubt monster will invade my psyche in due time. It never fails to torment again and again.
For some unknown reason, the life of my great grandfather sprang into my mind this morning. Henry Throop lived in the central New York area all his life. He was born in 1880, raised in Lebanon, N.Y., attended Colgate Academy prep school, went to Cornell to study civil engineering, married, and settled in Syracuse, where he worked as a railroad engineer, and then on his own as independent engineer/contractor until his death in 1956.
I use his life often in writing and conversation to juxtapose today’s culture to the one of a hundred years ago. Was it a better time? Who knows? I can say with certainty that Henry was a very mature twenty-something year old. He kept a journal—observations and day to day experience for the most part, and also a seperate expense account book, showing where every penny went. Every single penny! This morning’s idea was to use this account book to revolutionize the way I intend to sell my work
My Silver Dollar Campaign
I have had it with business and art. It doesn’t work. The moment the painting gets offered, haggled, denied, etc, on the market exchange, the entire culture of the thing created gets violated. I lose all semblance of its original innocence as soon as the money door opens. Only once have I made a painting thinking about money, or a sale. Here it is:
Acrylic on canvas, 12 x 12"
I was invited to a rock concert with some friends where there would be a section of the parking lot cordoned off for vendors. I painted this the night before, and had it sold before we finished putting up the tent.
It is stated in my great grandfather’s account book that on September 14, 1907, he purchased the following for one dollar:
2 loaves of bread
1 dozen cookies
toothpicks
paper
salt
chestnuts
peanuts
pound of butter
and a haircut...
A dollar in 1907 had the spending power of about $25 today, without the haircut (some small luxury to prove how contemporary economists always seem to get it wrong). So, about $40 today would buy these goods Henry bought in 1907 for a dollar.
One dollar.
I love the silver dollar because it has an ever changing value on the money market. For several years I have watched its value move between about $15 to $35. And it’s just a dollar! It also feels good in the hand, and I bet many of them in a small pouch attached to my belt (a lá Rimbaud), would feel even better.
Henry’s items listed are worth any one of my paintings. No one is buying the luxury items I have made available. So I have sweetened the pot in order to avoid the money exchange problem for the rest of my life.
I will amass silver coins!
From this day forward, any one of my paintings not hanging in a gallery can be bought for a silver dollar. Not what a silver dollar will buy, but exactly one, shiny silver dollar. I don’t want to barter anymore. I want to jingle coins in a pouch. I have set the value, and it is universal. Any size. Any painting not in a gallery. Of course, the buyer must pay for frame and also shipping on top of the silver dollar. I have some very big paintings. If they were purchased, I would have to charge a handling fee. (Quite a bit of work goes into hiring a tractor trailer to pick up at a residence). Frames, shipping and handling could be exchanged in paper currency, however, the painting itself—always just one silver dollar.
Please think about this, and spread the idea far and wide. There must be a painting of mine that someone likes for such a fair price. I am just so exhausted from these encounters with the self doubt monster. It’s time to kill the money.
Think of unique gifts for birthdays and holidays. I look forward to jingling real silver coins in a pouch.
Thanks for reading!
Ron
I know what you mean.
I decided many years ago to just sell my paintings in galleries where I don’t have to deal with the money part. I sell my 8 x 10 oil paintings for $1,000 each. The gallery gets 50% …. So I get $500. Then I have to pay the Government 50% Income tax… So I now have $250 …. When I subtract the cost for the Frame and paints I’m left with about $100 for my work.
I actually earn much more from sharing photos and videos of my paintings here on Blurt, Steemit, Dtube, YouTube etc ….
However, I also learned that I can donate my paintings to a Charity like Habitat fir Humanity. They sell my paintings in an Auction and some go for $5,000 .. I get a Charitable Donation Tax Receipt for $5,000 … they use the $5,000 to build houses for the homeless…. so If you donate most of your paintings to Charity you practically pay no Taxes.
Oh, if there was a gallery that would take me... I’d be on Easy Street.
I just finished an exhibition in December that donated half of sales to an elementary charter school. Two years ago, all sales at another went to a scholarship fund for high school seniors committing to a college art degree. Another show was going to do the same, however COVID came and spoiled the plans.
I cannot make money with art. It’s just not in the cards.
I am excited about Blurt and Ionomy. Thank you for that counsel. I’ll turn this money into silver dollars and feel good about the reward.
Your Galleries in New York are crazy for not taking all your work. If I had a Gallery here in Ontario I would sell all your paintings. The Gallery where I sold my work closed down. Building is for sale. But I’m glad I have more of my paintings to share on Blurt etc … since I earn more here.
I do a lot of Digital drawings these days …
This is our Teepee where we stay in the summer on Lake Superior ..
Great work.
Very cool teepee and trees!
I figure if I just keep painting, someone, maybe even my grandkids, will get the work out.
I keep painting to make videos of the process, and photos to share here on Blurt via Dtube. The actual paintings are on my walls or given to family as gifts…. Or Charitable Organizations.
This might be the way to go. My family has too many of my paintings already!
I’ll do a lot of paintovers:)
I power up 99 % of my Blurt since I earn much more $$$ with Curation (upvoting others) and sell only 1% on Ionomy to buy Bitcoin, Litecoin that can be used to buy Silver coins on SilverGoldBull.ca
You should also post your art on VYBrainium.com ProofofBrain.blog and Waivio.com via Hive.
You can get a Free Hive account with https://Ecency.com if you don’t already have one yet.
You earn VYB, POB, Cent, WAIV by just adding hashtags … #vyb #pob #waivio #cent you can sell all those Cryptos to buy Hive or Blurt. It all adds up.
This is so kind and helpful! I joke that blogging income can’t compete with my littoral can collecting/returning income. Fortune might change!
If you have good timing, you can trade a little Blurt, Hive, Steem, etc to Bitcoin or Dogecoin …. on Ionomy …. And buy a car….. that’s what I did last May.
That does not compute.
I’ll keep pushing:)
I power up 90 % of my Blurt, Hive, Steem, Dtube, etc … and send small amounts to Ionomy.com…
Ionomy: https://exchange.ionomy.com/en/aff/f7862c1aeae8e0399176a908fcecbcfe
On Ionomy I trade Blurt, Hive, Dtube, Steem for Bitcoin on the dips. I Convert the Bitcoin to Litecoin (lowest fees) … Then I send the Litecoin to Coinbase and cash out . It takes some time.
Coinbase: https://www.coinbase.com/join/borghe_y
Again, thank you. You’ve been my guru in this social blockchain world.
Ecency is not letting me post (not even likes or comments)—not enough “resource credits”.
So please know I appreciate the help very much.