Tuesday 22 January 2013

Abstract Art Products Can't Be Cheap - Learn Why Prices Are Really High

By Cameron Ores, Rose Winslet, Lisa Robertson


The expensiveness of abstract art products is clearly justified by various reasons. People are almost certain that any art product, as the result of the artist's own imagination, must be non-expensive. Whenever people are looking for abstract art, they will certainly be very surprised. This happens as they assume abstractions to be less valuable than any other art products. They seek an explanation for this phenomenon, because truth be told, there are folks who believe that art products from the abstract genre should be one rung below the rest: and hence cheaper.

Although all art genres have great value in their products, artists who went on the abstract way believe that what they do has the value of any mainstream art or may even be a lot more valuable. The true value of abstract art can be understood by observing how no real abstract artist will be willing to lower product prices. But in a bid to answer the folks who nonetheless want to understand why some abstract products end up being extremely expensive, we can identify at least three issues.

The number one ground for abstract art product prices being high is how the production process can get really expensive. For example, we could look at art works which were produced on a canvass. If you give it a close look, you will notice that the canvasses used by these artists are of the highest quality, thus being the most expensive ones. If the works are paintings, the paint used is that of the highest quality which, again quite naturally, is also the costliest. Of course, all of this makes sense only if the brushes and auxiliary tools are top quality products as well, thus being high-priced as well. If you consider all of these, you realize that during materialization, a lot of money was needed. This is why the end price is a high one: the artist must earn a little amount of money when selling any of his or her works.

The second principle and fact resulting in abstract art products being high-priced is that 'time is money'. As you probably know, abstract products are made by hand, thus a lot of time and energy is invested in every single product. Abstract art works must be priced high to motivate the artist. This is needed because every artist spends a lot of time and energy on each piece.

The last grounding to justify costly abstract art products is the talent of the artist to create something artistically valuable. Getting your artistic work to the commercial market is a very hard thing to achieve. Only first-class artists have managed to get to that point. Abstract artists of the finest and of the greatest talent can manage to create and sell their products. This really explains why all of these works are so expensive!




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