Each painting shows one thing we want, and sells for the price of the real item. So you can buy "A Slice of Pepperoni" for $3.00 or "Dinner at Nobu" for $152.00. When the painting sells, we use the money to go out and buy that thing.
This one's called "A Little Shopping in SoHo" and costs $2,500.00:

You can see the paintings they've already sold in their Flickr gallery.
Don't you wish you'd thought of this first? I do!
A lot of the paintings are for gambling. Obviously these artists aren't starving.
ReplyDelete-Tasha
Great idea! Too bad the paintings are so uninteresting, though. (Or to be less judgmental: they do not appeal to my own aesthetic preferences.)
ReplyDeleteVery, very clever, though. They should offer to do a pro bono painting of Jocelyne Voltaire's house that is facing foreclosure!
Ooh, what a neat idea!! Art is such an interesting thing - it's amazing what people will pay for it. There's a real psychology behind it, I think: the value is not always reflective of the aesthetics. These paintings have a concept to them that make them more commercial.
ReplyDeleteClever artists! I also like their idea of picking up NYC trash and selling it.
ReplyDeleteArt nerd that I am, I love this idea. I especially like the "Labbit", which reminds me a little of the much more expensive Yoshimoto Nara.
ReplyDeleteBrilliant idea! Love to hear how they do with this!
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