Create Art Collectors Want to Buy (Free Workshop)

Тәжірибелік нұсқаулар және стиль

Elli Milan is a professional artist with over 20 years of experience selling her paintings. Throughout her career, Elli has developed a system to create artwork that's authentic to the artist's voice but will still be desirable to art collectors. Elli shows in this free workshop practical tips and tricks to create beautiful artwork that any person will want on their walls.
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Пікірлер: 958

  • @lenjcnt170
    @lenjcnt1703 ай бұрын

    I don’t understand some comments here criticizing what she’s trying to educate us about her experience, exposure and learnings. It’s her personal experience and work. Can you actually invalidate it? I’m learning and grateful for it because aside from I love arts I really want to create arts that SELLS.

  • @JamieFHarbert

    @JamieFHarbert

    2 ай бұрын

    It's not good advice for non snobbish folks however, it's not bad advice for snobbish folks who want a stamp of approval from an "expert" . Just know your audience and how much money you can squeeze and or scam out of them. by the way Bob Ross would not approve of her message or video there are only happy little trees and plus she most likely dismiss most of Norman Rockwell's art as being too candy or tacky for high society, I highly doubt she would ever recommend Maxfield Parrish Daybreak because it's been over done and in too many houses, Standing out and being better than others is her under tone of her message about art you should have your home. Makes a true artist want to puke.

  • @anthonyjoiner4438

    @anthonyjoiner4438

    Ай бұрын

    I think the part of "her experiences, exposure and learnings" is a cop out here. You move away from personal experience when you say certain things "won't sell". I can definitely invalidate those things because she made a strong direct statement. It's also a dangerous statement because it invalidates cultural art, political art and a few other fields that are actually very important.

  • @ivandimitrov8260

    @ivandimitrov8260

    Ай бұрын

    I plain disagreed with some of her comparisons. The arguments made sense but my gut was saying fuck no the other is better what you talking about. My gut judges art not words. She makes my gut go brrrrr no.

  • @urbanchili
    @urbanchili25 күн бұрын

    When I wanted to go to art school my mom said; "you can't make a living out of making clay pots". Almost 40 years ago I started to paint painting that would sell. I could hardly keep up with the demand. I found myself thinking more about what people wanted than what I wanted to paint/create and it got really stress full. I packed my stuff up and stopped painting. Some year later when I got my son, I started doing digital painting but that also ended the same way; I was to focused on what would sell. When my son moved away from home I started to paint again and this time I do not (by choice) sell my paintings. I have now been painting again for 12 years and love and enjoy it more than I have ever done. It is now mixed media collage

  • @studioartdirect
    @studioartdirect6 ай бұрын

    As an art consultant selling 1000s of artworks to hotels,healthcare and corporate clients, I wish for artists to take your course. Elli, you really have invaluable information that is so inline with what I am looking for when I am curating. Uplifting, slightly abstracted, positive color, excellent skill, and a body of work . That is what I buy. Thank you for stepping out honestly. Many artist will stick their noses up. But, the secret is, listen to what you profess, AND do a different , avant garde line for galleries. It is called "silo" approach. Great job Elli, and thank you for sharing your knowledge. I have purchased Milan art. You get it.

  • @jamesfogel1104

    @jamesfogel1104

    6 ай бұрын

    Hi, as an upcoming artist. I’d love some feedback. I primarily work in black and white with charcoal or graphite. Do you curate any of this style? Or have suggestions for what you do see of this style selling. I really appreciate this video and its insights! I also appreciate you stating your own affiliations and experience in this space. However I do want to work within a style important to me and the beauty I see in the world. I would not want to simply create art for the masses that fits the videos guidelines to simply sell. I would love to incorporate these lessons to highlight my style. That said I’m still developing and finding my own style so any advice or guidance would be appreciated and find its way to influence work.

  • @ashleyj7996

    @ashleyj7996

    4 ай бұрын

    Hello. Another artist. How could I get noticed by art consultants or buyers?

  • @cherylschumaker1366

    @cherylschumaker1366

    4 ай бұрын

    How much is her art program?

  • @polar199

    @polar199

    3 ай бұрын

    Bitter

  • @jdos5643

    @jdos5643

    3 ай бұрын

    I thought it was about creating art the general public wants to buy? Why is a collector that much more emphasized? I’m asking as a beginner artist.

  • @lizzyshengshengzhou
    @lizzyshengshengzhou6 ай бұрын

    She is not just educating artists on what sells, but rather what appeals to people in a fundamental and functional way. In other words, she explains why most people are attracted to a certain image or color combination but not others. Thank you very much for that!

  • @hoperules8874

    @hoperules8874

    4 ай бұрын

    meh...sort of "most people" I'd have to say I disagree with 90% of art definitions generally, anyways. Orange doesn't make me hungry, etc. Tapping into something deeper than marketing is probably more what "collectors" look for. Making coordinating pieces is helpful for decorators. By all means, if you as a creator are happy and comfortable with this model of marketing driven art-do it! WC Fields wasn't poor! Ain't nothing wrong with that, either. Just isn't for me-or any of my friends.

  • @artorhen

    @artorhen

    4 ай бұрын

    @lizzyshengshengzhou depends, I would take her advice on a more abstract level. It is good to adapt to the clients and curators you encounter and learn and adjust based on real world feedback. There is no secret style or color that sells better and when everyone makes it, it becomes obsolete and cheap, but it is great advice to inform on what the market is and what types of currents sell as well. Depending on the place you live and the culture and set of clients, there can still be differences in what particularly sells.

  • @honeyrococo
    @honeyrococo6 ай бұрын

    This is so wild. I just woke up and randomly clicked on this recommended video. I knew John Milan in maybe 1986-87 when I lived in Jacksonville, Florida and then he came and briefly stayed with me after I moved to Miami Beach when he was doing something there, maybe selling art or making posters for music shows with my housemate James Stetler. I just asked Kristy Rowan what his last name was last year because I couldn’t remember and he had popped into my mind. He was ALWAYS drawing, he never stopped. Pictures just flowed out of him. I had a crazy t-shirt he drew on that I wore until if fell apart. It was in the style of those ones you showed but much more accomplished. All the rave kids back in the day loved it too. He was the sweetest person ever as well, a truly gentle soul. It’s amazing to see how successful you’ve all become. Tell him Joni Spigler says hello.

  • @AngelaKSellsHomes

    @AngelaKSellsHomes

    Ай бұрын

    That is so cool! I'm glad you commented.😊

  • @tombisesti5816
    @tombisesti58168 ай бұрын

    I left art school in 1969. We had absolutely no training on how to market yourself to be a successful artist. I wish your mastery class was available back then, I probably would have had a great career. At 73 I'm starting to paint again and want to do it right this time. Thanks so much for this video!

  • @milanartapp

    @milanartapp

    8 ай бұрын

    It’s never too late to start again Tom! We believe that you can have a massively successful career even starting at 73. There are actually a lot of students who begin in their 60s, 70s and even 80s! If you’d like to learn more about how the Mastery Program will help you start your career and our process you can check it out here: masteryprogram.com

  • @jhmstagg9104

    @jhmstagg9104

    8 ай бұрын

    Always good to get new ideas on what is selling, but really are you creating for what sells or what you need to paint? But Tom- I hear what you say.. and haha... I am here listening too. Good luck from a fellow 69 grad.

  • @gizellewinter8430

    @gizellewinter8430

    8 ай бұрын

    @@milanartappwhere is the waitlist?

  • @DirkSorensby

    @DirkSorensby

    7 ай бұрын

    I feel you, Tom. This year, I found out that I had a congenital aortic valve prob and had open heart surgery. Now, at 52, I'm trying a do-over with an art career I left unresolved. Hang in there Tom, never too late as long as you have today. Regardless of their art institute program, I appreciate the generosity and relevance of the content shared in this video.

  • @journeyofaconfusedartist

    @journeyofaconfusedartist

    7 ай бұрын

    Born in 1969, so I loved art from that day

  • @warthogA10
    @warthogA107 ай бұрын

    There is commercial/business art, and residential art. And then there's collector art. This is how I view it.

  • @LittleTaiChiMermaid

    @LittleTaiChiMermaid

    3 ай бұрын

    This is for people who want to paint paintings for over a couch painting, with out any humanity or soul involved.

  • @lobstermash

    @lobstermash

    2 ай бұрын

    Don't forget investor art, which lives in free ports and bank vaults

  • @WhiteDragon689
    @WhiteDragon68925 күн бұрын

    There is a mighty divide between real art and commercial illustrators.

  • @EdiChiArt
    @EdiChiArt8 ай бұрын

    Informative video. You helped me realize that I don't sell my art because I can't accept parameters in creativity. Being a commercial artist is not for everyone.

  • @CONEHEADDK

    @CONEHEADDK

    8 ай бұрын

    Masterbation is fine, if it makes you happy.

  • @annerigby4400

    @annerigby4400

    6 ай бұрын

    I don't try very hard to sell my art because I prefer to paint/draw/sculpt/write than spending any time trying to figure out what and how to sell anything. I have had exhibitions and it was fun, but my goodness it takes up sooooooooooooooo much time! I must admit, however, that when a perfect stranger comes along and is willing to give that much money for something you made from a piece of canvas, squirts of paint and a whole lot of thinking, finding, deciding, changing, improving, and time, it does feel good! An artist doesn't have to be commercial to sell art, they just have to accept that they're not going to sell as much art as an artist who is intent on selling what they make and who tailors their work to some extent in order to sell it.

  • @elartistaenelsuenolucido

    @elartistaenelsuenolucido

    3 ай бұрын

    It's for everyone...but not everyone has the humility and capacity to look at their body of work or even, see if we have one, our language of creativity of it matches with the world and be compassionate but straight with our judgment towards us and others/the world, read into what is the current of the world for art at any given moment, why and that it doesn't have anything to do with us as artist, have the capacity to separate our talent of whether it's being valued or not and why.....or that and also don't have the actual interest and that second one it's ok, the first one of course would be problematic, not everyone can do that.

  • @true_plays_games

    @true_plays_games

    3 ай бұрын

    @@elartistaenelsuenolucidofantastic word salad

  • @elartistaenelsuenolucido

    @elartistaenelsuenolucido

    3 ай бұрын

    @@true_plays_games I don't think is that difficult to follow, but like I said, not everyone gets it and acknowledge as important, maybe read it again

  • @KarenParkerArtist
    @KarenParkerArtist9 ай бұрын

    You never discussed "price point". Which I assumed was: how to price your work. If it takes, let's say, 30 hours from sketch prep to wiring to hang and you are selling it for less than 300 dollars - as a beginning artist - then you might as well be working a minimum wage job. You'll make more money. This is without factoring in materials, supplies, proper lighting to work by, 'advertising , time spent on sales sites, contacting galleries (if that's what you are interested in) creating websites, maintaining a web presence. Creating well-made art is time-consuming. Now double that time for the sales and marketing aspects. Which bumps the painting up to 600.00 Unless you are willing to work for less than minimum wage. If you hope to then be represented by a brick and mortar gallery, they will take 50% of the sale. Which means if you need 600.00 out of it to break even, you'll have to sell it for 1200.00. And galleries don't like to be undersold by the artists they represent. So you can't advertise the art while it's in their store, nor can you charge your take of 600.00 on your website or sales site. These are the kinds of things real instructors in real schools will discuss with their students, contrary to the suggestion that instructors who live in "ivory towers" have very little of value to impart. And upside, we aren't shilling hopes and dreams that end up costing you a lot of money along with the irritation of having your email address harvested and sold to a third party.

  • @gigiartstudiowithartistvir3919

    @gigiartstudiowithartistvir3919

    8 ай бұрын

    I was pretty turned off by some of this video in particular when she talked about her daughter selling art. I couldn't help but feel like the only reason her daughter was selling art at such a young age is because she has privilege and parents who are well connected in the art world. I want to see art from people who don't have privilege. Her daughter's art looks generic. Everyone is doing that kind of art.

  • @christianmiller.MathTeacher

    @christianmiller.MathTeacher

    3 ай бұрын

    ​@@gigiartstudiowithartistvir3919not totally generic, and shes developing.

  • @jmdenison

    @jmdenison

    2 ай бұрын

    @@gigiartstudiowithartistvir3919 I love her daughter's art and it's very beautiful. I would buy it

  • @karahupp4589

    @karahupp4589

    2 ай бұрын

    This was an hour long free workshop. Do you think she had time here to get into every aspect of the business? This was a FREE chunk of her time giving you some valuable information. How about thank you.

  • @copywriter9

    @copywriter9

    Ай бұрын

    You are spot on with your comment! At $17/hr X 40 hrs = $680 every single week at a minimum wage job. To paint a picture, it would take many more hours and do all the work, marketing, dealing with obnoxious gallery owners, pounding the pavement, setting up art shows, dealing with egos etc etc etc.! If the work does not sell, you are out all your time, effort and money including what you shell out for a decent frame! Your comment was right on target and i'm glad you were truthful!!

  • @erzsebetsofro4097
    @erzsebetsofro40977 ай бұрын

    Thank you for infos..I think its very good think the everybody have own stile or voice and different people , different stiles likes, as everybodys path is different in life ,normaly ...So everybody have opportunity to discaver own self cross Art making,and have opportuntity to learn and sell his own Paintings.Its no matter wich stile.When some Art Work good made ,that mean ,when someone waching that Painting ,get some feeling in self ,what resonate with his soul,and Painters feeling going out cross his Art work to Person who waching it.Normaly basic knowlige one Artist: who Painter want to be,must learn:.Basic rules.And must put his energie and time to explore his own skills,as lot of work normaly give that too.Nobody say here ,the must copy her stile or sombodys stile to be selleble..That be look like Copys of Teachers work..This thing was misundestanding here lot of people who komments giving.Everybody can figure out this all ,of own too,just take to them more Year for it,so easyer to learn from others,NOT???My answer for negative komments.

  • @cherylmeyer9857
    @cherylmeyer9857Ай бұрын

    I don’t know where to start. I recall as a very small child sitting in our living room with my mother and us drawing together. From that memory I began to love art. Growing up I was always drawing horses. In high school I took a vocational class in fashion illustration. Then I began drawing women models, garments and folds, shadows, elongating the figure for illustrating fashion. My dream job, illustrating in an advertising dept. for a prominent department store. Then the camera took over putting many fine artist illustrators out of work, including myself. From that point I had no direction. I’ve always known that I have a God given talent to “see” and to use my imagination and transfer it to paper, or canvas. But Artist block has not been my friend. Your videos have inspired me, given me that spark that I lost a while ago. The “I know I can do it” feeling has come over me. I am so happy I found you. I subscribed to your channel. I can not tell you enough times how encouraging you are, I’ll be binge watching, 😊 thank you so much, you are powerful and beyond awesome and I look forward to learning about the Mastery program.

  • @norarae4427
    @norarae44277 ай бұрын

    Not everyone has the time or drive to appreciate fine art. Therefore, your advise is absolutely on point. As a fine artist myself, I know fine art is not for everyone, but decorating a room is.

  • @Tom-md7kz
    @Tom-md7kz7 ай бұрын

    I liked all the "bad ones"

  • @KarenParkerArtist
    @KarenParkerArtist9 ай бұрын

    At 19:00 you directly contradict the explanatory text: "Elli has developed a system to create artwork that's authentic to the artist's voice but will still be desirable to art collectors." What if a person authentic voice is subdued, quiet, moody, and sometimes harshly real? Lucian Freud for instance. Who was immensely successful. What you are effectively saying is: in order to find a certain kind (monetary) of artistic success, you must adopt a formulaic approach that is most pleasing to the collector and not your authentic voice.

  • @MissDarlingArts

    @MissDarlingArts

    8 ай бұрын

    Oh gees, nothing ever sells unless it is pleasing to the buyer.

  • @KarenParkerArtist

    @KarenParkerArtist

    8 ай бұрын

    @@MissDarlingArts Where did I imply that was not the case? Read my OP again, and try thinking about it this time.

  • @michellepilck6792

    @michellepilck6792

    2 ай бұрын

    I guess if you already know what art collectos want then the only thing you could get out of this would be help finding a way to incorporate your artistic voice into art that wanted by art collectors and therefore sellable

  • @lobstermash

    @lobstermash

    2 ай бұрын

    Collectors don't want the same thing as people looking for decor items. The decor market is much bigger, especially with corporate offices. Nothing wrong with decor being gentle or "uplifting" - we don't really want Guernica over the dining table or over the bed.

  • @azmgbbb
    @azmgbbb7 ай бұрын

    For those of you who say you prefer the opposite of the ones that she said sells, I’m pretty sure she’s talking about what art sells the most. She’s not saying that everyone will like the one on the left. She is saying that the one on the left sells more often. If you prefer dark or garish, so be it. Create pieces that are the opposite of what she has found sells the best.

  • @omarra6781

    @omarra6781

    6 ай бұрын

    I'm glad someone clarified because I did like a lot of the ones she said wouldn't sell as well. Those vibrant rainbow ones were amazing.

  • @timeenoughforart
    @timeenoughforart8 ай бұрын

    Nothing wrong with decorative art. As a cabinet maker and a painter I appreciate good craftsmanship. Sometimes we can even come close to creating real art.

  • @patrhea6482

    @patrhea6482

    8 ай бұрын

    Great points of color and subject matter composition here. But as just starting in the market for selling my art, I am finding that there's as many different reasons people buy as there are stars in the sky. It is open for anything, every style and price. There's big money in big market and big cost to break into. In order to sell in those markets you have to pay 50% or more of your sell to the promoter, andthen theres your overhead. I'm finding most promotional offers are so overpriced, no way to clear a profit! Go figure who's making the money.😏

  • @rayerscarpensael2300

    @rayerscarpensael2300

    28 күн бұрын

    I don t see excellence here. That s what the difference is. If craftmanship is at mindblowing level it is automatically art. This is just average curtain design.

  • @timeenoughforart

    @timeenoughforart

    27 күн бұрын

    @@rayerscarpensael2300 As craftsman I tend to agree, but I just visited the art museum at my state capital. Contemporary art seems to hold that idea in contempt. I can sympathize. I've demolished too many wonderfully crafted kitchens and replaced with fashionable prefabs to place much social value on craftsmanship. Just the other day I was looking at a hand carved trunk that sold for $50.00. It was professional quality work. $50.00 is just what it would cost for me to have the lumber delivered to do that job.

  • @stephensenior3589
    @stephensenior35897 ай бұрын

    van Gogh is considered 1 of the greats yet died in poverty, David Hockney is one of the living greats and worth a fortune who was also told he would never make it but at 86 is still producing art on a grand scale. Art is subjective and in the right setting will sell, it's all down the right people seeing your work it only takes 1 in the right circles and things can take off. I admire any artist who has picked up a brush and gone with it. Any adivce / help esp free is worth it's weight in gold. Thanks for this video it's given me a lot to think about.

  • @drawyourimaginationbykhushbu

    @drawyourimaginationbykhushbu

    7 ай бұрын

    Nice

  • @AlLMyMaDArT-vf7ur

    @AlLMyMaDArT-vf7ur

    7 ай бұрын

    The true heart of Art is wonderful to see.. That spirit. Unyielding. A torrent of rebellion against the grain of all things this world demands you to be. I can see you !!! For you are me!!

  • @SeanMahoneyfitnessandart

    @SeanMahoneyfitnessandart

    7 ай бұрын

    Van Gogh only sold 1 painting during his lifetime... definitely one of my favorites tho..

  • @cutechiangels
    @cutechiangelsАй бұрын

    In this case, one should be prepared to tailor one's work/art into commercial objects. Losing true inner gut creativity. At least for the time one's into business art. It's not for everyone. Or if enough time, one can split up things. Make commercial art, and then one's own true art. But, often the lattest gets pushed back or lost, because commercial art hinders creativity. One needs to make choices.

  • @leighbrownsmith1446
    @leighbrownsmith14464 ай бұрын

    Art’s in the eye of the beholder. Everyone perceives paintings in their own way and should be allowed to do so. There’s no right or wrong where taste is concerned.

  • @elartistaenelsuenolucido

    @elartistaenelsuenolucido

    3 ай бұрын

    Think you didn't get the message at all...

  • @alvarobarcala

    @alvarobarcala

    3 ай бұрын

    Since the overflow of quotes in tumblr, there is a whole generation that repeats constantly those quotes like credos. This "beauty is in the eye of the beholder" is one of them. But not everything is relative, not at all, and definitely there is good art and terrible art, despite there is a massive amount of people without taste that love terrible art. Actually, although your intention was saying that art is not a mercantile product (and I agree that videos like this one are horrible in that sense), the relativism you preach is precisely one of the main tools of capitalism to reduce art into a mere product. I mean, relativism is good for market, because that way you can sell all types of art, good and horrible, since you'll always find people who like it and buy it. That's one of the reasons nowadays art is so terrible, because the market is encouraging the making of a massive amount of terrible art because there is a massive amount of people who like and buy terrible art. So, you see where all that "Art or Beauty is in the eye of the beholder" has taken art to.

  • @AliciaGX

    @AliciaGX

    2 ай бұрын

    This is true , yet artistic expression is a language of sorts and when we tell a story or speak , the listener or the audience has a better more informative experience, leading to a greater understanding, when using refined , descriptive language. There’s a way. An art to expressing oneself and be effective. And this is the same with painting. And this takes time, experience, work , learning, experimenting, failing, succeeding and eventually finding your balance. You know when someone is talking and you just know they know what they are talking about and you give them respect and appreciate this lesson… kinda like this one …. Lots of people talk and say stuff but some they catch your ear. A painting is not different. The experience, the refinement, it just resonates through between the lines. Good art that sells is like that. Anyone can talk and say whatever and it’s not that profound. But when it is , you know it is. It stands out from the rest. Tribulation,experience and passion definitely drives refinement. In a person spiritually and in art. Art is the expression of life and consciousness, of perception and awareness. That of oneself, the world around them and their experience. If consciousness is a spectrum on which one can vibrate lower or on higher levels, Meaning it can be an increased experience or a decreased experience of being conscious and aware, then so would be its manifestations, your manifestations, including ones Art. In other words, we are attracted to things that elevate us , make us feel smarter and sophisticated. Hence art work that is will sell more easily. Is I’m pretty sure she meant. But all expressions are valid , that is true . Just not everyone wants to see or hear it. That’s the difference

  • @psalmsurfer1

    @psalmsurfer1

    2 ай бұрын

    Based on the work ive sold this is definitely true😅

  • @psalmsurfer1

    @psalmsurfer1

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@elartistaenelsuenolucidoGive us the Cliff notes Rembrandt😅

  • @BunnyBraveheart
    @BunnyBraveheart7 ай бұрын

    OK... I get it! It's an infomercial!

  • @elartistaenelsuenolucido

    @elartistaenelsuenolucido

    3 ай бұрын

    No and yes...get it?

  • @miguelsuarez8010
    @miguelsuarez80108 ай бұрын

    I've been doing figurative paintings all my life in rich colors. Lived in Miami for 30 years and my work was always rejected. "You have to have a history of exhibitions and awards". They mostly said.

  • @MissDarlingArts

    @MissDarlingArts

    8 ай бұрын

    Figurative is never as popular as landscapes, for instance.

  • @miguelsuarez8010

    @miguelsuarez8010

    8 ай бұрын

    @@MissDarlingArts half of what I do is landscapes.

  • @maeveofthelongbows9552
    @maeveofthelongbows95523 ай бұрын

    You gave an excellent informative lesson about marketing one’s artwork, especially the part about making yourself a “brand.” I was a Commercial and Advertising artist for a good number of years. Two examples of successful fine artists who completely understood this, were Andy Warhol and Keith Haring. Both of them accidentally became “the up and coming trending artist”, but because they both were TRAINED as Commercial Artists (Carnegie Mellon Univ. and Kutztown Univ. of Pennsylvania), they absolutely knew how to market their brand (themselves) to take advantage of the notoriety of their initial successes.

  • @mrretrovampire
    @mrretrovampire8 ай бұрын

    I have been doing art for 40+ years and it has been a struggle but if I had to follow your art advice I would completely stop today !

  • @MissDarlingArts

    @MissDarlingArts

    8 ай бұрын

    That’s why you have struggled and always will.

  • @CONEHEADDK

    @CONEHEADDK

    8 ай бұрын

    WATCH "The curse of creativety". Just do it.

  • @mai_8j888

    @mai_8j888

    7 ай бұрын

    Yep.

  • @ItsRyanStudios

    @ItsRyanStudios

    7 ай бұрын

    Yeh currently working as a scientist/ engineer and do art on the weekend. I'd love to do art full time, but if I have to cater to the market and paint what others want, it would really reduce the pleasure I get from art.

  • @wudgee

    @wudgee

    7 ай бұрын

    On your ‘open ended’, I much prefer the scene on the right with the detail, it’s so much more intriging and interesting. The left one is boring, just a horse, you look once and there’s nothing left to look at and discover.

  • @stefanschug5490
    @stefanschug54908 ай бұрын

    Great video, even though I dare to differ in a lot of your examples. To my eye many of your negative examples are calmer and more pleasing than your positive ones. I am more of a digital artist, working with color grading in Photoshop and other programs. I also have a photo studio and manipulate light quite a bit. The variability of people's taste for art is enormous and if your art fits into the mainstream you are likely to be more successful than others. Taste is obviously in the eye of the beholder and rules are there to be broken, in photography as well as in other art forms.

  • @synhegola

    @synhegola

    8 ай бұрын

    If you shine a capitalist's eye on it, you might consider the buyer, not the painter and especially not your own view.

  • @MissDarlingArts

    @MissDarlingArts

    8 ай бұрын

    As a former art consultant for 20 years, who sold thousands of images painted by other artists, I can tell you that the vast majority of buyers preferred impressionistic landscapes. Next in line were gardens and abstracts. Photography was low on the list.

  • @arsenioamador2370

    @arsenioamador2370

    5 ай бұрын

    Totally bogus. The big time "capitalists" buy art for investing. Someone who paints to please everyone will never succeed in the big leagues. This tutorial is basically directed at the mediocre merchant selling for volume not for significant profit.

  • @user-vx9me7em3t

    @user-vx9me7em3t

    4 ай бұрын

    She is being pretty specific that this is geared more toward interior design and most people do not generally decorate with graphic styles. There were a few examples where I agree with you that I personally liked the "negative" one more but the style of work that I believe you are eluding to is more successful in the digital market or for product design, which is a VERY different thing and lends itself better to transitioning into various products or looks great digitally vs print.

  • @elartistaenelsuenolucido

    @elartistaenelsuenolucido

    3 ай бұрын

    Yeah, but there are visual languages more prevalent than others and that is going to be even more strong in specific contexts and in this video she is giving the visual language that reads into this sphere...so even tho I liked many of the bad examples or both of them, I gave her the reason cause it's talking about a context not whether there's art that is right or wrong or debating if taste is fixed or in the eye of the beholder.

  • @deldelly9400
    @deldelly94008 ай бұрын

    Thank you for wll your advice, everything you said made sense to me. They say you shouldn't have regrets but i do whereas i should have gone to Art college.....ive always loved art and at 16 was deciding what to do....get a job or go to art college, i didn't go and i so regret that. I work full time in an office, i craft alot and sell a little but i always have this burning passion inside that needs to go on a canvas! It's hard to describe but needs to happen. Dimitra's art is amazing by the way, love her style.

  • @milanartapp

    @milanartapp

    8 ай бұрын

    We totally understand, but it’s never too late to start! And you don’t need a degree from art college, especially if you want to sell your art. You really should check out The Mastery Program. It’ll help you pursue your passion for art and turn it into a profitable business while creating art that you’ve always had inside you, but with the utmost excellence. Here’s a link to learn about the process: masteryprogram.com

  • @deanprescott1972

    @deanprescott1972

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@milanartapp777

  • @elizabethdavis2483

    @elizabethdavis2483

    8 ай бұрын

    I completely relate to you. Not alone. There’s always Hope!

  • @judithpeck5732

    @judithpeck5732

    8 ай бұрын

    @@milanartapp😮

  • @judithpeck5732

    @judithpeck5732

    8 ай бұрын

    I did go to art school, it didn’t lead to much😢success. Got lost 😂

  • @mrwebbofficial
    @mrwebbofficialАй бұрын

    This is how I know art is subjective. I pretty much liked all of the paintings that she said were bad. The eye of the beholder.

  • @HaloArtworks
    @HaloArtworks23 күн бұрын

    I just keep creating. I do well at shows and about to start my own website. I finally started a KZread channel. I think as long as you follow your heart and Gods blessings it all falls into place. Thanks for the video. ❤️🙌🖼️

  • @ironmountain7907
    @ironmountain79076 ай бұрын

    I have to keep reminding myself that this is about art that SELLS and enables artists to have a career… I’ve always been interested in darker painters like Goya. I think it’s cathartic and gives you an emotional response when you look at his work but I totally understand why someone wouldn’t want one of his pieces in a dental office or in their living room front and center haha! Thank you so much for sharing this information.

  • @ColinProcter
    @ColinProcter8 ай бұрын

    Watching this has made me realise that the art I create is aimed at museums and galleries, or at least, the kind of people who choose their furniture and decor so that it doesn’t distract from the art on their walls. In addition, people say that there is a kind of dark moodiness to much of my work.

  • @ThomasGray-sd9ed

    @ThomasGray-sd9ed

    8 ай бұрын

    i agree 100% my art is really dark and since ive been trying to sell art is hard to find the market for it. stay you colin and keep your art dark. deadman art studio is my art studio. check it out

  • @MissDarlingArts

    @MissDarlingArts

    8 ай бұрын

    Thought provoking work is not as popular as decorative work. Nothing wrong with that, just price it higher for the more discerning clients.

  • @mariewoodbridge251

    @mariewoodbridge251

    8 ай бұрын

    I am with you there. I stopped watching the video, when she said: "We don't want to paint war" or paint pain. I thought of the long lines of people in front of the Reina Sofia, waiting under the sun to be able to get a glance of the Guernica of Picasso.

  • @wayfarer1101

    @wayfarer1101

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@mariewoodbridge251But the same people who Gaze in awe at Guernica won't have a copy of it on their living room wall but go for a painting of a flower vase. EVERY artist paints for an audience. Decide WHO you want to paint for. Not hard.

  • @karahupp4589

    @karahupp4589

    2 ай бұрын

    @@mariewoodbridge251yet you reigned to hang around long enough to leave a comment. 😊

  • @Antovitko
    @AntovitkoАй бұрын

    Please listen to the beginning and note that Presenter is catering to the "Decorative Market" for the most part and has experience there. Made some really nice points and thank you so much for this information, this has a lot of food for thought.

  • @JoffreyKimbotay
    @JoffreyKimbotay22 күн бұрын

    I think I learned more about art and painting with this video than I have in 2 years I was in art school.

  • @adrianagomez8751
    @adrianagomez87515 ай бұрын

    This is beutifull. I love your Art. BLESS

  • @dianesmith7369
    @dianesmith73698 ай бұрын

    I appreciate your great information. I actually prefer some of the artwork that you mentioned as wrong. I think it's according to what pleases you; not because there's a standard you must follow. I realize that your teaching is what would appeal to the public for sale; I'm looking at what pleases me.

  • @Kythe42

    @Kythe42

    8 ай бұрын

    I agree, there were several examples where I preferred the "wrong" art over the "correct" art. Everyone has different tastes and I think there's really no right or wrong in art. If I'm going to create, I'm going to create things that I like and I'm sure there will be others out there who like them too.

  • @MissDarlingArts

    @MissDarlingArts

    8 ай бұрын

    She is talking about the masses and she was correct on everything. You then are more quirky in your taste. I was 20 years an art consultant and everything she said was on point. There are always a few exceptions.

  • @jonbeth44

    @jonbeth44

    8 ай бұрын

    Wrong

  • @brindaselvaraj6117
    @brindaselvaraj611726 күн бұрын

    I am from India and i have never seen such Arts. I love colors so much and this video totally changed my view on paintings, I am not good in paintings but when i sit and paint after finishing it gives a kind of different feel which i cannot explain, I just registered and added myself in waiting list. Thanks a lot for detailed explanation❣.

  • @RayNaso
    @RayNaso8 ай бұрын

    I've seen this video show up a few times and I just skipped over it. I've been doing this for a while and I was thinking, "ok, here's just another person trying to tap into some of the problems artists face and not really have anything promising to say." Well, I was wrong. This is a very informative video that hits on some major points that are very beneficial to know and understand. I've been to art college as well. I'd have to agree that they don't really teach you this stuff. Thank you for posting this video. Some of the suggestions that you mention, I have implemented and have been very successful. Although I've been successful in my art, these are some of the specifics that can really take you to the next level. Thank you for your advice. I will be implementing many of the suggestions that you have pointed out. Happy painting. 😃

  • @mariaali5605
    @mariaali56057 ай бұрын

    Million’s are not enough to buy this info. 🙏

  • @makeyourlifeaworkofart
    @makeyourlifeaworkofart9 ай бұрын

    I also went to SCAD and then transferred! And I agree - art school basically taught me that I could become an art professor and not actually make a living selling work! We have a similar story! I’ve been licensing my work for 15 years as a surface design artist and I’m glad to have found these amazing refreshers to keep me going! (I so wish I had the skill to teach like you do! I’ve been following for years, and had no idea you had a KZread channel until today! ❤)

  • @DirkSorensby

    @DirkSorensby

    7 ай бұрын

    So true, unless you're in Yale's art program, where 99% of NYC galleries and Museums draw from, the colleges prepare you for a teaching career (likely with the institution giving you your credentials).

  • @makeyourlifeaworkofart

    @makeyourlifeaworkofart

    7 ай бұрын

    I’ve had a lot of success with the way these topics are being taught on their channel. I absolutely hate teaching, but I need a refresher every now and then about the right way to market art in this modern world. Highly recommend this channel!

  • @cheriecollins3848

    @cheriecollins3848

    7 ай бұрын

    Do what you need to do,if you want to teach......good luck

  • @muc1scfv
    @muc1scfv27 күн бұрын

    Excellent presentation Elli, very encouraging and informative. Thanks

  • @clairandco
    @clairandco5 ай бұрын

    I’m a professional restorer and I’ve signed up. I’ve always wanted to improve my drawing and painting skills. This is perfect, thank you.

  • @artbyfaith
    @artbyfaith8 ай бұрын

    I beg to differ about three or four. You can put four items in the painting IF you place them correctly. I agree with a lot of what you say. Thank you for this helpful information. Congratulations to you and your family.❤

  • @MissDarlingArts

    @MissDarlingArts

    8 ай бұрын

    In most cases, odd numbers work best.

  • @Detechno77
    @Detechno773 ай бұрын

    The point is to enjoy the practice of a creative expression , the consideration of whether anyone likes it or even less so wants to give you money for it is essentially irrelevant.

  • @princevesperal
    @princevesperal5 ай бұрын

    This advice gives me the exact same vibe as home make-over shows, where the renovations of the house have to be as generic and consensual as possible in order to appeal to the larger possible pool of buyers. I don't want to live in an "open-floor concept" with neutral-coloured walls and contemporary flair. This video is great, but we have to keep in mind that it is not about making _good_ art, rather it is about churning out a marketable commercial product. I understand that in order to make a living, any professional artist has to compromise at least part of their integrity. Somehow, after watching this, I feel like more of a "real" artist for being an authentic amateur, than I would if I ever sold a piece that was created to appeal to the market. In a way, I have the luxury to paint only for myself, as a hobby and thus 100% as a form of unbridled personal expression. I'll paint whichever "side of my pain" I damn please, thank you! I want to make actual art, not decorations for the condo of a yuppy couple or a dentist waiting room. It must be disheartening to become a full-time artist, only to realise you are beholden to market forces! Again, still a very informative video, and some of the advice does lead to genuinely better art - but it needs to be watched critically.

  • @jasonn7192
    @jasonn71925 ай бұрын

    Thankyou Elli 🙏 I think we are guided to find information/our tribe and one of these ways are videos that randomly pop up on KZread. I am in England, I have a degree in landscape design. I went on a small art business course and built a Shopify website that I have suspended. I can feel that you are super-authentic and you present so well. I will decide on what to do next......I am subscribed at least to art social 🙏🖌💜

  • @karlaholden
    @karlaholden8 ай бұрын

    I watched this on the TV and had to come on my phone to leave a comment, and that was to say THANK YOU!!!! I had a scene of a lot of the things you were saying but to hear it in black and white to confirm a floating notion in my head was freshing more than needed. It was spiritual but not woowoo, practical but not soul destroying, and again hearing it simply put, people want to see the resolve is something I've been saying for a long time but not as on the noise. I've been advised to lean more into the grotesque trend but have always believed that art is more about the transformative powers of the artist and to return to beauty, but think that has always been too flowery for the powers that be's pallet. So thank you, was well worth the random click on an unknown channel to me 🥰

  • @PaintwithmusicSuperb
    @PaintwithmusicSuperb4 ай бұрын

    Graduated mny years ago from fine arts.Evrythng she said i agree with all deep in my hearth.Years passed and the life path she told exactly the sameThanks and lots of love to this beautiful lady.💙💙💙💙🙏

  • @rabrab3
    @rabrab38 ай бұрын

    You are sooooo inspirational. You actually make me believe I could do this. I have a degree in art and have been told everything you have. I am certainly interested. I have wasted so much time not making art and have settled on jobs just to pay the bills. Now I wonder if I'm too old to begin this endeavor. Fear is such a beast. Thank you again!!

  • @lazlodephlap2233

    @lazlodephlap2233

    8 ай бұрын

    Your never too old, we are eternal ✨ I think you should believe in yourself and magic will happen 🙂

  • @Akath_katha

    @Akath_katha

    8 ай бұрын

    You can do it at anytime, dear listen your inner voice!

  • @palnagok1720

    @palnagok1720

    8 ай бұрын

    Feel the fear and do it anyway. I got waylayed by the money demon over the years but I will be signing up for next November and next yr about the same time I turn 70...no excuses.

  • @janethunter8741

    @janethunter8741

    7 ай бұрын

    You don't have to make money from your work. I've been drawing and painting for 50 years, since I was 3. I have a collection of 15 pieces that I will leave to my children and my descendents will enjoy them. Buy some art supplies, look for inspiration and that will get you a started.

  • @Green1500dotcom

    @Green1500dotcom

    6 ай бұрын

    I'm in re-entry. You are not alone.

  • @highonart2204
    @highonart22046 ай бұрын

    Thank you so much for this talk. And I can't point one thing that I like more than the other in your video. I am an artist and I look at everything from that perspective. Love your hair, love the background and you look like a painting in this setting. Just love the vibe. and off course the whole talk is great value for me.

  • @all69anna
    @all69anna8 ай бұрын

    I have a very dear friend who is a gifted artist, but has never consistently made money from her work. I have a feeling you may provide the golden key, thank you! Shared with joy!

  • @UpperLevelFitness
    @UpperLevelFitness4 ай бұрын

    Create Art that sells== don't give up and create unique Artwork.. create from your own mind, your own style and put it out there. Don't get stuck in a box! You are not everyone else.

  • @JosephParkerPMP
    @JosephParkerPMP8 ай бұрын

    Excellent video!! I am an aspiring photographer. I was once told that if I want to be a great photographer I should follow a great painter. After watching your video I understand what that means. I appreciate the lessons from you video and will apply them in my photography.

  • @YenPeregrine
    @YenPeregrineАй бұрын

    It stops being art when you're trying to make a product. To whoever is reading this, just create because you love it. The only true failure of an artist is someone doing it for any reason other than they are driven to do so.

  • @zaveeramini9712
    @zaveeramini97126 ай бұрын

    Fine arts is a way of expressing yourself. Selling your art work requires you to learn the art of marketing.

  • @eliasmontanez
    @eliasmontanez9 ай бұрын

    While I get your point on painting “the other side of pain” and that there’s probably a bigger market for uplifting art. I would point out paintings like Guernica by Picasso, and artists like Francis Bacon that are popular because of their darkness

  • @ib6903

    @ib6903

    8 ай бұрын

    The difference which a lot of people are talking about and she seems to state clearly is that she is working in the decor market. Yes guernica or Picassos blue period. Bacon Goya Klimt Munch Freud basquiat even banksy all these deal in some way and may portray pain but they are not working in decor art market. If you have a museum level art piece it doesn’t matter if it matches your sofa it’s the strength and importance of the piece and there’s a whole separate market for investment pieces and plenty of people that love the uniqueness or breaking the mold that each of those artists bring to the table. As well as many people who know nothing and feel nothing but the status brought by ownership of the rare ultra pricey piece and it’s ability to move and almost control the market money through the insiders club of collectors. That’s a whole separate parallel topic to decor art. Many people love decorative art with colors and shapes and themes that are easier per say and don’t have to be groundbreaking but give them a feeling they enjoy and they want to match colors and not spend collectible art level money or may not have that money to spend. Even in her example of corporate art where sometimes the painting in a hall can’t draw your attention too much to stop you seems counterintuitive but without the art the rooms would feel bland. It’s just going for a different area of art where she claims money can be made for those that figure out how. It’s a parallel market. They both exist. Imagine a family restaurant with a bunch of Francis bacons on the wall. Unless it’s a steak house maybe jk. Not so appealing even though they are awesome paintings. She says clearly decor art.

  • @eliasmontanez

    @eliasmontanez

    8 ай бұрын

    @@ib6903 she says she USED to work in the decor market, and I believe in another video she mentioned that she didn’t really like it, and that she preferred making her own art. Which is why she doesn’t say she’s teaching us to create decorative art, but art.

  • @jerrylewis9699

    @jerrylewis9699

    8 ай бұрын

    Skills, style, gothic, trendy, you could go on n on, it's the eye of the beholder " I know I go to Art shows to see who's who, to me what reaches out and grabs you! 😉👍

  • @MissDarlingArts

    @MissDarlingArts

    8 ай бұрын

    Yes she does. As a 20 year art consultant I can say everything she said was correct. Most people love impressionistic landscapes, garden scenes and maybe some florals or seascapes. Figuratives with no faces or at least pretty faces would be residential art only. Best if it blends with the decor or makes a bold statement. Nothing odd, grotesque, weird, depressing, aggressive, violent. Hardly ever a Picasso. There are always those with strange taste, but most people prefer beautiful art that has no secretive agenda or message.

  • @patrhea6482

    @patrhea6482

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@ib6903❤THANK YOU and well said. I prefer happy painting and things that bring joy. Dark and depressing art is good for business down at the phyco ward. Just saying, and not being ugly. It's about how you feel when you look at the painting and the message you receive.

  • @pcstew3
    @pcstew38 ай бұрын

    I love dark, gothic, dark whimsical art. Tim Burton style is extremely famous for a reason, there's a market for darker design

  • @MissDarlingArts

    @MissDarlingArts

    8 ай бұрын

    Yes, it’s just way smaller, that’s all.

  • @firstlast2034
    @firstlast20343 ай бұрын

    I am still learning but when I started, even before I knew what value was, I set a high price on my work dealing in wildlife oils. Now I finally am building a studio at my home. No matter what happens, I feel I am a success.

  • @lindasteger7207
    @lindasteger72073 ай бұрын

    How generous of you!!! 🙏❣️

  • @Sushi33312
    @Sushi333128 ай бұрын

    Color has been my greatest struggle. I've taken theory, understand it intellectually, but when faced with a pallet I can't seem to get it right. I know what I like when I see certain combinations and "steal colors" from other artists sometimes just so I don't have to struggle and make the wrong choice. This video was the first that made practical sense.

  • @testoftimegaming5219

    @testoftimegaming5219

    8 ай бұрын

    Do it in photoshop to get better ... Lay out your colours on a colour picker and set your canvers to make everything black and white make your painting and turn your colour back on when your finshed This helped me massively as it made me understand i was focusing on the wrong aspects

  • @palnagok1720

    @palnagok1720

    8 ай бұрын

    ...it's simple , go out into nature and see its colour combos at any location. Spend a day there and take photos of the same object-subject on the hour til the light runs out.

  • @allenvoss7977
    @allenvoss79778 ай бұрын

    Incredible lesson. I took the time to memorize this lesson ! color theme and excellence … thank you so much everybody always talking about values and composition. I just added to my tool box !

  • @TheHovel
    @TheHovel2 ай бұрын

    The real money in art (for the majority) is in teaching, which is why this video exists.

  • @ThisisRubbishlo
    @ThisisRubbishlo5 ай бұрын

    This is advice for those that want to sell a lot of “decorators” pieces (this term doesn’t make it any lesser than a Van Gogh), this clearly works as they have sold 10000 works of art. You can do this and still create your own work. I’m going to see where I can take this. It’s good advice. You shouldn’t feel like your artist soul is weakened, this is about making art a business. There is some great advice in this

  • @donnagadde5152
    @donnagadde51528 ай бұрын

    Thank you. I have learned more from your video about the some of the characteristics of a good painting than from any other source. I have started painting and drawing again later in life after a long period of depression after I lost my late husband. I have regained my passion. Like many others, I was told by an art teacher many many years ago "not to give up my day job" and that my art would never amount to anything. He didn't like that I didn't paint and draw the subjects that he wanted nor did he like the way that I painted them. I was only 15 when I was told that so sadly, I listened to him. Some of those teachers have no idea how much damage they can do and negatively affect a young person's life..... Thanks again for inspiring content.

  • @MrSpar4
    @MrSpar48 ай бұрын

    I'm absolutely captivated by your video, which serves as a profound reminder of the transformative power of art. Your message resonates deeply

  • @saralicht
    @saralicht2 күн бұрын

    Fabulous video, SOOOO generous to share all of this info and your experience. I would expect to have to pay for this information in a class. Thank you so much!

  • @CALLofDUTYGAMER2312
    @CALLofDUTYGAMER23127 ай бұрын

    My art is unique it sells all over the world. I have recently gone back to painting souls and they are selling very well.

  • @orionlleyessa1306

    @orionlleyessa1306

    3 ай бұрын

    😅

  • @mypointofview1111
    @mypointofview11118 ай бұрын

    Funny how art teachers & professors tell you you can't make a living from art but they managed it. I'm actually very glad I didn't go to art college. I thought about and decided I'd be better off if I just painted as often as i could and experimented with different materials. It was the best thing I did. I produced quite a bit of rubbish and also some gems. I read a lot and went to art galleries, exhibitions. I'm still learning because i don't know it all and feel i can always learn something new

  • @AmandaSummerlinPhotography

    @AmandaSummerlinPhotography

    4 ай бұрын

    They don't say that. She's intentionally misrepresenting art school to market her content. I went to the same art school a couple of years before her and not one of my painting instructors ever said that.

  • @fotogal54
    @fotogal548 ай бұрын

    😊 thank you for sharing your experiences and encouraging all artists. You definitely have a gift.

  • @charlottecolosia2562
    @charlottecolosia25626 ай бұрын

    Suggestions for paintings that sell was wonderful. As far as marketing/ it is sad when one does not have funds to start expensive websites etc.

  • @annabryant2056
    @annabryant20562 ай бұрын

    This was just tremendous. So informative... thank you!

  • @Yogelaine
    @Yogelaine7 ай бұрын

    I have been watching your videos for a few days and I have already learned so much - I have made about every single mistake in the book and thanks to you I am now setting up my materials, studio and myself up for success - finally. Knowledge is power. This information is Gold.

  • @DirkSorensby
    @DirkSorensby7 ай бұрын

    This is the most,t if not only, ACTUALLY informative and helpful art career-related video online. I've watched them all.

  • @cheriecollins3848
    @cheriecollins38487 ай бұрын

    Diminis art Unique ,sensitive and Beautiful

  • @ShawNshawN
    @ShawNshawN8 ай бұрын

    Finally a useful art video. There are so many videos that aren't helpful to get to the next level. Thanks!

  • @joinerly6637
    @joinerly66379 ай бұрын

    I came here with very high hopes and really considered buying the course but I just see too many red flags. As someone that sells art (though admittedly with less years of experience than the presenter) some of this content is great and a lot of it is dangerously inaccurate. There are literally popular paintings here being presented and “bad art” that “will not sell”. She admits on a couple of occasions “you see this everywhere“. Doesn’t that mean it’s purchased often? She’s also being very vague in the fact that she’s talking about 2 different art markets. There is a huge difference between creating home decor and collectible art. In one you’re hoping to sell a large quantity and in the other you’re aiming for a larger price. Some rules apply to both markets but to tell people that one is “bad art” or “won’t sell” or is “where the market is headed” is misleading to say the least.

  • @theartist4252

    @theartist4252

    9 ай бұрын

    Totally agree. Thomas Kinkade sold happy, uplifting "art" by the truckload to people who just want to decorate a room. An art collector doesn't give a damn if it matches the new sofa.

  • @MissDarlingArts

    @MissDarlingArts

    8 ай бұрын

    You see this everywhere referred to seeing imagery painted by many different artists in other words not distinctly unique. She mentioned discussing the commercial market, or collectors, so everything she said was correct. I was a corporate art consultant for 20 years in so calif. Transitional landscapes were no 1 most popular. Figurative art was definitely residential. She was not talking about collectors, however her daughters originals were more collector pieces due to price points. My hesitation is more that the art she said student sold well were all figurative symbolic style, and she showed no one being successful who was abstract nor landscape nor seascape nor floral they were similar to her daughters. That is not a good sign to me.

  • @CharityS-Minnesota

    @CharityS-Minnesota

    8 ай бұрын

    Totally agree! If you want to follow an artist that has been building a community of artists that started on KZread and has blossomed in to an artist community online through their own website. Check out Rafi was here KZread channel, and he talks about these kind of artist “courses” or whatever this lady is doing, and to be wary of them, and to be careful. I have been following him for years, and I am a member of his community that he calls rogue, artist community. And it is flipping amazing! For so many reasons.

  • @wendygalloway7685

    @wendygalloway7685

    8 ай бұрын

    Interesting!

  • @patrhea6482

    @patrhea6482

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@MissDarlingArts, I found this to be a sales pitch for the daughter.

  • @charlottevisser2720
    @charlottevisser27206 ай бұрын

    Very inspirational. I also paint but do not have guts to market it. Just keep everything. Maybe I must just start believing in myself. Thank you for this info..

  • @carmenmg6438
    @carmenmg64387 ай бұрын

    Title is art that sells. I agree with her. Most people that buy an art want to decorate, except collectors. But taste is taste. Pple are different.

  • @JBFLYCATCHER
    @JBFLYCATCHER7 ай бұрын

    Even though I’m not a painter, it was good to get your views on colour, theme and excellence. I saw that in the context of mosaics and decor tiles that I make. Thanks for sharing your knowledge in this video.

  • @vanessahudson9788
    @vanessahudson97888 ай бұрын

    Thank you so very much for this amazingly informative video! All what you say, makes so much sense but to have it explained in such a cohesive way and also why some art works and others are less successful gives greater clarity. I've been creative since the age of 4 and my passion has never waned but for quite a number of years, I concentrated on craft. I know my identity with craft but now at 67 have decided I want to go back to creating art and learning new skills. I know my craft identity will carry through into my art, so I know it's is a plus and of great benefit but your advice is invaluable in helping me to realise and to put it all into practice. I remember too, having a career advisor tell me at school, without any idea of my capability, that I would never make it in the art world because you had to have exceptional talent. This lead me to studying subjects of which had no interest for me, so inevitably my time was and has been wasted. I often see the question of, 'What advice would you give your younger self?' Mine would be, to follow your own path and not the path others wish you to follow. Thanks again!

  • @amicamiabella
    @amicamiabella4 ай бұрын

    In a few hundred years from now this video will be shown at a conference called "Being an artist in the dark ages." People will shake their heads, take a deep breath and feeling relieved, knowing that these days are over... ✨

  • @orionlleyessa1306

    @orionlleyessa1306

    3 ай бұрын

    This is not about being an 'Artiste', shuddering at the sound of their own inspiration. It's about commercial art and what sells and why. There is value in understanding what she is teaching. You wouldn't use all of the advice, but at least some of it will prove useful and enable any artist to improve their work.

  • @citigirlqueens6242
    @citigirlqueens62423 ай бұрын

    ….comments in the third part…are very good , meaning they can help people outside the “Decor” market…. Presentation is also very very important, your comments on this are terrific. Your comments in the beginning work for the “Decor” market but I don’t agree that your comments work for everyone buying art.

  • @tmsouth1
    @tmsouth17 ай бұрын

    Thank you for all your information. This video and all you said is so well thought out and practical and encouraging for even someone at my age of 63. Maybe I can get to the point of selling something. I am working towards it and putting time into it. You are such an encouragement to everyone. Thanks!!

  • @lidiadale-mesaros3668
    @lidiadale-mesaros36688 ай бұрын

    So generous of you to share your knowledge, thank you ❤

  • @ellengriffith6649
    @ellengriffith6649Ай бұрын

    Thank you very much for the incredibly useful information! 🥰 You put it in a way my artistic mind can understand! It's a great presentation with very specific visual examples that puts everything in the perspective.

  • @jonathanbassett3816
    @jonathanbassett3816Ай бұрын

    Ive always been a decent artist, i just started getting good at oils, i dont have much time to grind. But i love it

  • @karena.buckley1190
    @karena.buckley11908 ай бұрын

    Wow...a lot to take in...and very informative...I appreciate the explanations as I intuitively knew things but did not have words to describe what was wrong/right or what worked/didn't work, etc...I think it will take me awhile to pick up this language and way of explaining things...as opposed to just "knowing" that something would work/not work, sell/not sell...Absolutely fascinating...You guys are awesome...Thank you so much...

  • @grabbagcrafting6004
    @grabbagcrafting60048 ай бұрын

    This was fascinating because I loved many of the paintings you said were not good, especially those beautiful explosive rainbow colors. Some of the advice you give may be according to certain cultural taste.

  • @SeanMahoneyfitnessandart

    @SeanMahoneyfitnessandart

    7 ай бұрын

    Ya.. I prefered more of the "bad" ones than the good... this is pretty questionable... remember she sells to a Very specific audience- home decorators.... who don't necessarily recognize or appreciate fine art... they are interested in aestic design and comfort... they don't want good art... they want art that fits their purpose.

  • @annerigby4400

    @annerigby4400

    6 ай бұрын

    @@SeanMahoneyfitnessandart I have not met many people who "appreciate fine art" apart from fellow artists. It used to be a joke in our little circle of painters that we, and only we the artists, had a true appreciation of what we created. We all sold at exhibitions, but realised that most people bought something that would 'look good' on their living room wall, not something they considered to be unique or well-executed. Also, for some people buying a painting from an exhibition is something they can tell their friends about and are more likely to buy if there is a little blurb about the artist having been a student at a renowned academy (such as the koninklijke kunstacademie antwerpen (where Van Gogh went)) so there can be an element of snobbism about art with regards to the buyers' motivation. As an artist with paintings in an exhibition, I really did not mind what the buyer's motivation was but an appreciation of fine art was not something I encountered very much. So, as an artist, I think it is interesting to watch videos such as this one and take from it what is useful for oneself and discard the rest. This is exactly what we students did at the art academy in Antwerp, after the first year. Teachers, no matter how great they are as artists, do not know everything (and don't pretend to). A teacher's role is to help a student develop their own style by sharing with them what they have learned. Every buyer of art wants art that fits their purpose: a living room wall, impress friends, invest in artwork, add to their collection, sell for more to someone else, have something they enjoy looking at, show off to their friends, prove how cultured they are, etc. Someone once told Matisse (I think) that his work was purely decorative. He responded "show me art that is not decorative". Or something to that effect. I'm terrible with quotes. But it was someone famous and that was the gist of it, hahahahhahaah!

  • @supertrucker99

    @supertrucker99

    4 ай бұрын

    Agree art is personal preference I paint what I feel 😮

  • @socialcreature8518
    @socialcreature85187 ай бұрын

    *Wealth of information* ℹ️ In Art scene, Nothing remain constant, however you talk through your experience and I 💯 agreed with it.

  • @knightdweller9541
    @knightdweller95416 ай бұрын

    38:44 I’ve went to several prestigious art galleries in chealsea piers in New York and found multiple hair fragments and “paint boogers” so I really dont think that’s a make or break. It’s just really craftsmanship and having a delicate eye for it. I notice it because I like looking at detail up close and would see it like a needle in the hay. I a lot of times you won’t even notice til the very end.

  • @honeyrococo

    @honeyrococo

    6 ай бұрын

    Jackson Pollocks have hair, coins, bugs, cigarette butts, anything that fell on the floor, lol. But probably not best to see that stuff in the painting hanging above your hotel room bed 😂

  • @jacqulynhilyard1561
    @jacqulynhilyard15617 ай бұрын

    Thank you for everything you`ve said about this subject. Art is communication and we need to excel at reaching people. I learned a lot.

  • @Cheesyenchilady
    @Cheesyenchilady9 ай бұрын

    We just bought a home with all of our savings, but once we’re stacked back up, I’m signing up for the masterclass! And if you make a competent artist out of me, I will sing your praises everywhere lol… I make collages, cut and paste, and I have SO MANY IDEAS that involve me needing to know how to draw and paint. For now, I appreciate the free content you post on KZread. Bless you. ❤

  • @milanartapp

    @milanartapp

    9 ай бұрын

    That is so exciting, congratulations on buying your new home!!! We can’t wait for you to take the Mastery Program. In the meantime you should come to our next free workshop this upcoming week on Thursday here: masteryprogram.com/how-to-create-an-abstract-landscape-step-by-step

  • @ZadenZane
    @ZadenZane4 ай бұрын

    It's funny what you say about colours at the beginning. I started off painting acrylics with a set of 12 big bottles, so from them you can mix pretty much any colour you want (but not every colour: hot pink was impossible to mix!!) I also use acrylic as an alternative to gouache for colouring in black ink drawings (book illustrations where just splashes of colour are needed) and for these I found a set of 48 ready-mixed colours so much handier. Yes I could have mixed every shade I needed from those 12 big bottles but it wastes so much paint. Instead of trying to blend colours I just let them dry and overpaint, so for green grass I might use 6 or 7 tubes of green then I paint on streaks of yellow and turquoise here and there. It really makes my green grass "pop"! To be honest I thought I was doing something wrong by throwing in as much colour as possible. It's nice to hear I was doing something right!🖌️🎨👨‍🎨🤪

  • @deannelambert9347
    @deannelambert93478 ай бұрын

    You will ABSOLUTELY LOVE THIS HACK! I Learned this trick from another artist on you tube and it WORKS. It's AMAZING. For old gunky or even cheap paint. Go figure the simple things in life sometimes work the best. Try corn mixing in CORN STARCH into your paint. A little goes a long way but again, it works. You'll thank me for it by sharing with others...

  • @viktoriapeterson489
    @viktoriapeterson4898 ай бұрын

    Elli you are a star in many ways! I would have liked to be a part of your Milan Art Institute, but that will be in another life (I'm 80). Your information and desire to help others is so right on. Thank you for being and giving of yourself.

  • @melodyjordan6052

    @melodyjordan6052

    6 ай бұрын

    @viktoriapeterson489. Never forget Grandma Moses, you are never to old to fill you basket of dreams.

  • @morganmccomseypallas
    @morganmccomseypallas8 ай бұрын

    I never considered using a "color story"... I've just gone into each piece with an idea of the colors i want to use. I think for my next painting it makes sense to do a rainbow palette with neutrals? Ill explore this. Thanks for the food for thought!

  • @ryanperrault8174
    @ryanperrault81748 ай бұрын

    Thanks for making this video, I finally bought some paints and made like 5 of them about 2-3 years ago....and then didn't do it anymore and regret it. I need to start again, It was really enjoyable even if I was bad at it. One of the few times I could actually focus.

  • @lawrencefoster5608
    @lawrencefoster560811 күн бұрын

    Blue green, good.

  • @janetfowler7977
    @janetfowler79778 ай бұрын

    Thank u so much. Great info. Color is a vibe.

  • @milanartapp

    @milanartapp

    8 ай бұрын

    You are so welcome!!

  • @acs3451
    @acs34519 ай бұрын

    I would actually buy more of the "painful" paintings then the uplifting.. hehe and I actually think it is actually more dificult to paint an uplifting painting without being cheesy

  • @WestVirginia1959

    @WestVirginia1959

    8 ай бұрын

    I can't see any one of them in my house.

  • @life_motived_corey

    @life_motived_corey

    8 ай бұрын

    Guess it depends on person. Pain does sell though

  • @mai_8j888

    @mai_8j888

    7 ай бұрын

    Agree, and who wants cheesy? Also, art is not designed to appeal to everyone. Are you like everyone else? You are unique. And special.

  • @akankshakhandekar3496

    @akankshakhandekar3496

    6 ай бұрын

    I make dark art.. 😔 nobody likes dark art in my country.. n I'm totally crappy in any other art.. 🙄 hell save me .. 😜

  • @life_motived_corey

    @life_motived_corey

    6 ай бұрын

    @akankshakhandekar3496 see your focus is your country. Art is meant to be worldwide. You can reach more people by at least speaking highly of what you produce.

  • @sherion80
    @sherion806 ай бұрын

    Some shown examples are totally interchangeable, which proves that you cannot please all tastes. Paint boogers may be voluntary put there building a juicy texture. Impressionistic works are full of those boogers and nobody complains.

  • @epiceriefine8539
    @epiceriefine85396 ай бұрын

    Even if I wasn’t here for the course, I would still be watching and listening for the really awesome positive vibe 🌱

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