Should sci-artists reduce the price of their rare art works and degrade themselves and their work? - SCI-ART LAB2024-03-28T16:21:51Zhttps://kkartlab.in/forum/topics/should-sci-artists-reduce-the-price-of-their-rare-art-works-and-d?commentId=2816864%3AComment%3A120881&feed=yes&xn_auth=nohttp://artprintissues.com/201…tag:kkartlab.in,2014-10-06:2816864:Comment:1208812014-10-06T03:12:47.070ZDr. Krishna Kumari Challahttps://kkartlab.in/profile/DrKrishnaKumariChalla
<p><a href="http://artprintissues.com/2014/10/psychology-pricing-art-revisited/" target="_blank">http://artprintissues.com/2014/10/psychology-pricing-art-revisited/</a></p>
<p>36</p>
<p><a href="http://artprintissues.com/2014/10/psychology-pricing-art-revisited/" target="_blank">http://artprintissues.com/2014/10/psychology-pricing-art-revisited/</a></p>
<p>36</p> Thanks for the reply. It is i…tag:kkartlab.in,2014-10-05:2816864:Comment:1207862014-10-05T01:26:48.132ZDr. Krishna Kumari Challahttps://kkartlab.in/profile/DrKrishnaKumariChalla
<p>Thanks for the reply. It is important to know how various sci-artists deal with the problem.</p>
<p>Please add the details of your shows to the events section on Sci-Art Lab.</p>
<p>Thanks for the reply. It is important to know how various sci-artists deal with the problem.</p>
<p>Please add the details of your shows to the events section on Sci-Art Lab.</p> This is the age old dilemma.…tag:kkartlab.in,2014-10-04:2816864:Comment:1209722014-10-04T05:56:42.313ZSimon Kregarhttps://kkartlab.in/profile/SimonKregar
<p>This is the age old dilemma. The art world dictates that the value of your work is based on what people place on it. In the old gallery system that was the art critics and curators. Now it is public demand. </p>
<p>I can only speak for myself. The works that I find are shared quite a bit (a over million shares for one) I will not budge on the price of. It devalues my entire work. Now on the other hand I want to promote science and make a living at this, so ioffer the less popular pieces at…</p>
<p>This is the age old dilemma. The art world dictates that the value of your work is based on what people place on it. In the old gallery system that was the art critics and curators. Now it is public demand. </p>
<p>I can only speak for myself. The works that I find are shared quite a bit (a over million shares for one) I will not budge on the price of. It devalues my entire work. Now on the other hand I want to promote science and make a living at this, so ioffer the less popular pieces at a discount, I let the market decide what the pricing should be based on the demand. </p>
<p>Science art, astronomical art, space art, unfortunately is not often regarded highly by the art community at large. The way to change this is to remove the art community (galleries and critics ) from the equation and cater directly to the public though popular media and the internet. I gave up on the old gallery system years ago. </p>
<p>I say just do it, just put yourself out there to the public. Yes you will fail sometimes, but just keep pushing. Here in Tucson Az USA where I live we "Science" artists have formed a guild and promote each other. In a few short months we are booked solid with shows and world class workshops. </p>
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<p><a href="http://www.lpl.arizona.edu/art/" target="_blank">http://www.lpl.arizona.edu/art/</a> </p>
<p><a href="http://simonkregar.com/workshop/" target="_blank">http://simonkregar.com/workshop/</a> </p>
<p><a href="http://spaceandlightart.com/" target="_blank">http://spaceandlightart.com/</a></p>
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<p>My advice, keep pushing, your audience is there and waiting, you just need to connect with them. </p>
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