WHAT’S YOUR PREFERENCE in art?
Do you shop for ma*s-produced art at a big box retailer?
Or are you the gallery type, purchasing one-of-a-kind fine art?
Maybe you shop flea markets, rummage sales or thrift stores for hand-crafted or vintage art.
Perhaps you’re artistic enough to create your own art to hang in your home or workplace.
If you know me as well as I expect you may from following Minnesota Prairie Roots, you would rightly guess that I prefer to find one-of-a-kind art at a bargain by shopping second-hand.Notice that I didn’t say bargain art.I said art at a bargain.There’s a difference.
My collection includes original paintings by hobbyist painters, prints by unknown artists, embroidered pieces by someone’s grandma I’ve purchased most at unbelievably low pricestry 50 cents or $3.
Through the years I’ve even acquired an original Jose Maria de Servin painting and a vintage print of South Dakota artist Harvey Dunn’s В «The Prairie is My Garden» at steal prices.Both times I had no idea what I was purchasing.I simply liked the art.
That’s the thing with me and art.I buy a piece of art not as an investment, but because I like it.
That said, I recently picked up a three-dimensional rendition of В «The Last Supper» at the Salvation Army Store in Faribault.I debated whether I should pay $14 for the made-in-Spain art.In fact, I set the 24 x 17-inch piece down twice before watching another woman pick up and admire it.At that precise moment I decided I really wanted the unique art.I had to restrain my urge to run over and snatch it up after she set it back on the shelf.I waited until she was well out of grabbing range.
Later, the woman stood behind me in the check-out line and told me how she wished she had «The Last Supper» I clenched in my hands.«Then I saw you pick it up,» she said.
I responded with a seemingly casual remark: «Yeah, if you see something you think you might buy, you shouldn’t set it down »
HOW ABOUT YOU? Where do you shop for art and what deals have you found?
В© Copyright 2011 Audrey Kletscher Helbling
Malice intensifies the pain