Decorate Your Life (tm) is the unofficial weblog of ArtRev.com

Monday, August 25, 2008

Fine Art Affiliate Program

The ArtRev.com affiliate program is a unique advertising program offering a monetary incentive for website owners who drive traffic to the ArtRev.com website. Joining the ArtRev.com affiliate program is simple and implementation on your website is a breeze. It does not require any special skills or programming knowledge. We provide website owners with all the cutting-edge tools and comprehensive instructions needed to become a successful affiliate member. As an affiliate member, your task is very simple! We handle all the ordering, shipping, billing processes, and customer service. Best of all, the program is free to join and there are no membership fees before or after you join.


How simple is it to implement? On your website, you simply place your choice of links, banners, search boxes, and customizable product selection we make available to you, and you can begin earning sales commissions as soon as your application is accepted. When a visitor on your website clicks through to ArtRev.com and makes a purchase, you earn an outstanding 10% commission on the completed sale*.


Quick Program Summary:



  • Absolutely FREE Single Tier affiliate program with no hidden fees.
  • Earn an outstanding 10% sales commission with 30 return days on every completed purchase.
  • Reap the benefits of a multi-billion dollar market.
  • Offer your customers unlimited access to the most prestigious selection of fine art in the world.
  • Decorate your website with prestigious and attractive fine art by world renowned artists.
  • Highly customizable textual and graphical links that blend seamlessly with the look and feel of your website.
  • Ability to display certain products from a selected category, product search capabilities, or even the entire product catalog†.
  • We handle all the ordering, shipping, billing processes, and customer service.
  • Partner with a trusted brand name.
  • ArtRev.com average order size is about $325 (excluding shipping & taxes). This is far higher than most luxury brand websites.
  • ArtRev.com has a very high conversion rate for first time and return visitors.
  • Access to sales commission reports through your affiliate account.
  • Receive a FREE WORK OF ART with your first commission payment - a $100 value!

Official artist of the US Olympic team @ ArtRev.com

"The most important thing in the Olympic Games is not to win but to take part, just as the most important thing in life is not the triumph but the struggle. The essential thing is not to have conquered but to have fought well." - Olympic Creed


As we celebrate the spirit of Olympic sportsmanship, we would like to highlight the importance of David Schluss as one of the official artists of the US Olympic team for the 2008 Beijing Olympics.


As the official artist of the US Olympic team, David Schluss received the honor of creating a painting that captured the ideals of unity and world peace of the greatest celebration of earth. The result of this commission is his acclaimed painting, "We Are the Champions", which is garnering international attention. The original "We Are the Champions" will be donated to the Art Museum of the USA Olympic team.












We Are the Champions - David Schluss

 

We Are the Champions - David Schluss


"We Are the Champions" (13”H X 19”W) is available as a serigraph on:

Paper (Edition of 180)
Canvas (Edition of 180)
Masonite (Edition of 30)

Friday, May 16, 2008

Bring a smile to a special someone with an art e-card!

Now you can Decorate Your Life™ and the lives of others by sending e-cards of your favorite items on ArtRev.com! An E-Card is similar to a regular postcard or greeting card, with the primary difference being it is digitally created and sent via email!


Sending an E-Card is very simple and you do not have to lick a stamp! Browse the ArtRev.com collection, click on the image that you would like to send as an E-Card, click on “Send E-Card” button below the large product image, add a message to personalize, and send! You will find something for every occasion!


Fun and quirky images to bring a smile… just because you can! View recommended images by Paula McArdle, Berit Kruger Johnson and Sarah Jane Szikora.



Say “I love you” to that special someone in your life with a romantic image by Benfield, Pino, Hofmann and Treby… perfect for anniversaries, birthdays, Valentine’s Day, or just to say that you’re thinking of them!



Share a little sunshine with sweeping landscapes and colorful vistas by Duaiv and Park to celebrate Earth Day, Arbor Day and the onset of summer!



Say if with flowers… every day of the year! Brighten someone’s day with a bunch of flowers created lovingly by Avi Ben Simhon, Bracha Guy and Cecilia Garcia Amaro… just in time for Mother’s Day!



Every day is Mother’s Day when you send mom a Lucelle Raad E-Card… just to say thanks or I miss your cooking!



Don’t forget to celebrate Father’s day and those important sports events and achievements… and who better to say it than one of the world’s sporting legends



And to welcome a new baby into the world, ArtRev.com has a wonderful selection of animation works by Disney and Warner Brothers!



Have fun and share the joy of art!

Are You Lonely? Art could be the cure!

In today’s world, where everyone wants a happy home life and an exciting relationship, the phrase "I'm lonely" alienates you like the plague.


Fortunately, loneliness can be treated by examining the causes and finding solutions. A fundamental solution, whether your loneliness is absolute, caused by separation, or existential, is to keep yourself productively engaged in human interaction and interesting hobbies or activities when your loneliness is at its worst.


Existential loneliness is something that we all feel at some time in our lives – the realization that no one can take away our fears, we have to face them. No one else can take risks for us, face our losses on our behalf, or give us self-esteem. No one can spare us from life's ups and downs. However, existential loneliness, the great burden of human consciousness, is also a great gift - if we give it the right treatment.


And that treatment is art!


In the face of great sorrow or joy, love or loss, many of histories greatest achievers learned to express themselves through different mediums: music, paint, clay, words, the movement of their bodies. They created works of art that were born from their suffering and loneliness. It helped them through a difficult time, and today, it serves as a reminder that we are not alone in feeling alone.


For example, Vincent van Gogh created most of his iconic works of art during the final two years of his life, which he spent in a mental asylum after his offer of friendship was rejected by Paul Gauguin. His feelings of loneliness and rejection were the catalyst for the creation of some of the greatest works of art in the history of the world.


Make your own artistic connections by appreciating the many forms of art or even creating it yourself. Read novels, listen to music, learn how to dance, visit museums, take an art class, watch documentaries: Seek art from every time and place, in any form, to connect with those who really move you. And try your hand at creation; put aside convention and embarrassment and do whatever it takes to convey your essential self. Use anything you can think of to understand and be understood, and you'll discover the creativity that connects you with others. You’ll soon find beauty and communication with other, like-minded individuals.


Instead of hiding your loneliness, bring it into the light. Honor it. Treat it. Heal it. You'll find that it returns the favor.

Proper lighting techniques for your artworks

Effective lighting can make or break the visual impact of your wall art and is crucial to art preservation and longevity.


What is art lighting?


For many artists, art and light go hand in hand. For instance, Rembrandt is considered the greatest master of Chiaroscuro (the contrast of light and dark) in history and his works are renowned for their luminosity.


Claude Monet, too, was a great master of light and famously spent hours in his garden in Giverny studying the play of light and painting his water lily pond in various stages of illumination.




Claude Monet, Nympheas a Giverny (1908)


While works by these masters look pretty good in any light, there are certain rules to adhere to in order to properly enhance and preserve your masterpiece. When lighting fine art, your choices are critical as even a slight difference in direction or type of light (fluorescent, incandescent, halogen, natural) can make all the difference.


What type of light should I use to light my artwork?


Natural light (sunlight) – Many people believe that sunlight is the best type of light for art – it makes sense since art looks best in natural light. But while the art looks great, some art will deteriorate in this light. Natural light is hard to control in general terms. It causes a big problem for art as the infrared and ultraviolet (UV) rays of natural sunlight are so harmful that they can, over time, fade works of art. Works on paper, especially pastels, prints, photographs, and watercolors, are most susceptible.


Fluorescent - Not recommended for art in most cases. Museums and galleries don't use fluorescent bulbs as a common practice because they give off a high amount of UV rays which are harmful. In addition, fluorescent lights do not emit light across the entire spectrum of colors.


• Incandescent – Incandescent lights bring out the warm colors within the color spectrum such as the red, brown, orange, and yellow tones, but the blues, greens, and violets within your works of art will be flattened out. In short, these lights are better than natural or fluorescent lights, but are not the entire solution to your lighting problem.


Halogen - The use of a halogen light at low wattage may prove best for most works of art. Although museum professionals have not "blessed" the halogen light because of the strong white light that it emits, halogens are among the best lighting solutions when installed properly. A low watt halogen-based bulb has been recently introduced which redirects damaging UV and infrared rays of light.


Some Do’s and Don’ts



  • DO rotate your artwork regularly. This will reduce the amount of light exposure during the works lifetime and will reduce the risk of fading.

  • DO invest in top-of-the line picture lighting. Museum-quality picture lights provide a generous, evenly distributed glow that will beautifully enhance your artwork - without the risk of fading.

  • DO shop around for the right lights for your décor. Choose between the clean, finished look of cordless picture lights, dimmable picture lights that you can adjust, or the ease of picture lights with remote controls.

  • DO use halogen art lights to display your artwork - making sure that they conform to museum standards for UV output.

  • DO angle your picture lights at a 30 degree angle to avoid a glare and to lend the most appealing effect.

  • DON’T hang your artwork in direct sunlight or near windows. The sun’s infrared and ultraviolet (UV) rays are so powerful they can fade works over time.

  • DON’T hang your art under fluorescent lighting. Apart from being unflattering, fluorescent lights emit extremely high levels of ultraviolet rays that can cause fading and overall deterioration of your artwork over time.

  • DON’T hang your artwork beneath or across from a spotlight. Even ordinary incandescent light bulbs, such as an un-shaded 100-watt lamp, can cause fading and dulling over time if placed less than 10 feet from a work of art.


The bottom line? Professional, museum-quality lighting can draw attention to your artwork and enhance its colors and richness. Overexposure to sunlight and certain kinds of artificial light will cause it to dull or fade prematurely. So please choose your art lighting wisely!

Pimp Your Bathroom!

The bathroom is often one of the most overlooked rooms in the home. The focus is normally on the functional aspect of the room rather than creating an inviting and relaxing atmosphere. But why not have both? You have a captive audience! Provide some eye candy to enjoy during bath time!



Remember! The art in your bathroom should be carefully chosen to reflect your unique sense of style, humor and personality. But it must also be able to withstand temperature and steam fluctuations, so ensure that your art work is framed and sealed properly.


So where do you start? Most people that have already embraced the bathroom décor trend tend to favor romantic, more risqué, nudes or alternatively, quirky and fun art.



Quirky art with light humor injects a sense of fun into an otherwise staid room. A great recommendation for cheeky art that is sure to raise a smile is the work of Paula McArdle.


A bathroom is a place to relax, rejuvenate and melt your troubles away with a long soak in the tub! Create your own intimate boudoir with some scented candles and evocative art by Gary Benfield, Douglas Hofmann, Pino or Janet Treby.


Most importantly, add a splash of originality to an otherwise sterile and boring room. Create an atmosphere that promotes good health and leaves you feeling great! Browse the ArtRev.com collection and read our Exclusive Design, Decor and Home Improvement Articles for more inspiring ideas!

Douglas Hofmann Vs. Degas

Edgar Degas


Edgar Degas (July 19, 1834 - September 27, 1917) is widely considered a master of drawing the human figure in motion. His extraordinary draftsmanship, which stressed balance and clarity of outline, became a hallmark of his signature style.


Degas worked in many media, preferring pastel to all others. He is well known for his animated race horse paintings, but most of all, Degas is celebrated for his intimate renderings of nudes and ballerinas.


Fascinated with the movement of forms through space, Degas often sketched dancers from the theater wings, working spontaneously and capturing his subjects with an unrivaled poignancy and power, while emphasizing their status as professionals.


Degas is often classified as an Impressionist, which is not entirely accurate. Like the Impressionists, he favored spontaneity, off-center compositions and scenes from everyday Parisian life, but Degas was never an enthusiast of painting en plein air. Nonetheless, Degas' paintings greatly impacted the world of Impressionist art and he is inevitably linked with the genre. He strongly influenced many notable artists, such as Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec and Mary Cassatt.




Edgar Degas, Dancer with a Bouquet of Flowers (1878)



Edgar Degas, Dancer with a Bouquet of Flowers (1878)


 


Douglas Hofmann


Douglas Hofmann’s paintings are that rarest of things in the history of modern art in that they represent a style that is at once both classical and contemporary.


Inspired by Degas, Hofmann’s art is concerned with fleeting moments – portraying brief glimpses seized from the current stream of time. The viewer is made witness to a series of intimate but ephemeral exchanges: ballerinas waiting nervously in the wings, a ballerina adjusting her partner’s costume, or another smoothing back her partner’s hair.


There is magic in this device allowing the privileged observer to explore aspects of the world that normally pass so rapidly as to be all but invisible. Hofmann’s trained eye holds a magic looking glass up to the world and transient moments otherwise missed are reflected and preserved there to be observed at leisure.


A skilled oil painter and heralded as the modern-day Degas, Hofmann’s works have been documented in the New York Post and continue to fetch notable records. Browse the Douglas Hofmann collection.


Douglas Hofmann, Reflections Portfolio I



Douglas Hofmann, Reflections Portfolio I


 


Douglas Hofmann, Reflections Portfolio II



Douglas Hofmann, Reflections Portfolio II

Lovely art books for you coffee table!

“It is the eye of ignorance that assigns a fixed and unchangeable color to every object; beware of this stumbling block.” Paul Gauguin


One of our main goals when we developed ArtRev.com was to become a leading fine art retailer as well as an art educator. We have stayed on track with our plans and are now offering our registered website users many ways to learn about art and new ways to expand their knowledge and creativity.


Our Learning Center encompasses an extensive Art Terminology Dictionary, The Essential Guide to the World of Art, Art Video Lectures and Exclusive, Décor, Design and Home Improvement Articles.


The ArtRev.com blog is a dynamic platform that keeps you updated with the latest global art news and trends and provides an interactive stage for you to exchange your views and ideas with like minded individuals.


ArtRev.com also offers an extensive array of collectable fine art books on today’s popular global artists. As with art, surrounding yourself with books leaves you with a feeling of self-betterment, fulfillment, knowledge and satisfaction. Satisfy your thirst for knowledge and enrich your own collector’s library today with one or more of the following:




The Official Catalog of the Graphic Works of Salvador Dali


The Official Catalog of the Graphic Works of Salvador Dali



Duaiv (The Book) by Duaiv


Duaiv (The Book) by Duaiv



Sung Sam Park, New Impressionism


Sung Sam Park, New Impressionism



Sarah-Jane Szikora, Infatuation


Sarah-Jane Szikora, Infatuation



Douglas Hofmann, Light and Grace


Douglas Hofmann, Light and Grace



Douglas Hofmann, Light and Grace (Limited Edition)


Douglas Hofmann, Light and Grace (Collector’s Limited Edition w/ enclosed limited edition giclee)



Brimstone and Treacle by Govinder Nazran  <br />


Govinder Nazran, Brimstone & Treacle


Nicola Simbari, Simbari


Nicola Simbari, Simbari


 


See more fine art books on ArtRev.com

Saturday, April 26, 2008

Art for the rich!

1. JACKSON POLLOCK: "Number 5, 1948", 1948

$140 million

Private sale, 2006. Seller: David Geffen. Buyer: David Martínez (not confirmed)


Unconfirmed rumors now buzzing the art world place this 4” x 8” "drip" painting by Jackson Pollock as the most expensive painting ever sold, though the $140 million price tag has still not been confirmed (but also not denied). The sale price demonstrates not only the strength of the art market, but also the increasing interest for contemporary works of art.









Jackson Pollock, "Number 5" 1948.

2. WILLEM DE KOONING: "Woman III", 1952-53

$137.5 million

Private sale, 2006. Seller: David Geffen. Buyer: Steven Cohen


Pollock’s in first place, De Kooning in second. The immediate conclusion is that American abstract expressionism has replaced impressionism as the most sought-after art period. This painting is the only "Woman" by Willem de Kooning still in private hands.









Willem de Kooning "Woman III" 1952-53.

3. GUSTAV KLIMT: "Adele Bloch-Bauer I", 1907

$135 million

Private sale, 2006. Buyer: Ronald Lauder.


The acquisition of this iconic work by cosmetic magnate Ronald Lauder caused a shock in the art world, not only for the spectacular sum paid for it, but also for the way it was sold - far away from the noisy auction houses. The painting was part of a group of five canvases recently returned to the heirs of Ferdinand Bloch-Bauer following a court order by the Austrian government, ending a years-long dispute. His paintings were seized by the Nazis during World War II, and after the war, the canvases were placed in the National Gallery of Austria in 1948.









Adele Bloch-Bauer I, sold for a record $135 million in 2006. Neue Galerie, New York.

4. PABLO PICASSO: "Garçon a la pipe", 1904

$104.1 million

Sotheby's New York, May 4th 2004. Buyer: anonymous


The sale of this young smoker was a landmark in the auction world. First, it's still the most expensive painting ever sold at auction (the others were private sales). But it also broke the record that Vincent van Gogh held since 1990, and it was the first time that the $100 million barrier was broken. The record price was a bit of a surprise to art buyers, since it was painted in the style not usually associated with the pioneering Cubist artist. Although the name of the buyer was not revealed, some sources says that it could be Guido Barilla, the Italian pasta magnate.


Garçon à la Pipe was created during the artist's famous Rose Period, during which Picasso painted with a positive orange and pink palette. The oil on canvas painting, (slightly over 39 × 32 inches), depicts a Parisian boy holding a pipe in his left hand.









Picasso painted Garcon a la Pipe when he was 24!

5. PABLO PICASSO: "Dora Maar au chat", 1941

$95.2 million

Sotheby's New York, May 2006. Buyer: anonymous


Another big surprise followed in 2006, when this painting near doubled its presale estimate and fetched a record $95,200,000 at auction at Sotheby's on May 3, 2006.

Painted in 1941, Picasso's controversial portrait (one of his last) is sometimes described as an unbecoming depiction of his mistress, Dora Maar, who was an artist/photographer. Dora Maar (1907-1997) met Picasso in 1930, and their relationship lasted until 1946. Maar was one of Picasso's favorite models. This painting, measuring 130- 97cm, was recently rediscovered and authenticated by Picasso's daughter, Maya Widmaier Picasso.









Dora Maar au Chat by Pablo Picasso - is sometimes described as an unbecoming depiction of his mistress.

6. GUSTAV KLIMT: "Adele Bloch-bauer II ", 1912

$87.9 million

Christie's New York, November 2006. Buyer: unknown


Sold only a few months after Klimt's first version of Adele, this extremely appealing canvas was the star lot in a highly successful auction in which four works by Klimt -including this- totaled a spectacular $192 million.









Gustav Klimt, Adele Bloch-Bauer II, 1912. Oil on canvas.

7. VINCENT VAN GOGH: "Portrait of Doctor Gachet", 1890

$82.5 million

Christie's New York, May 1990. Buyer: Ryoei Saito


This painting by the Dutch Impressionist master Vincent van Gogh suddenly became world-famous when Japanese businessman Ryoei Saito paid $82.5 million for it at auction in Christie's, New York during the “Japanese Art Boom” of the late 80’s and early 90’s. Saito was so attached to the painting that he wanted it to be cremated with him when he died. Saito died in 1996 ... but the painting was saved. The whereabouts of the painting are now unknown. Some sources places it in Europe, waiting for its return to the Art market.



Vincent van Gogh actually painted two versions of Dr Gachet's portrait. You can view the other version, with a slightly different color scheme, at the Musée d'Orsay in Paris.









Portrait of Dr. Gachet (1st version), 1890, Oil on canvas

67 × 56 cm, 23.4 × 22.0 in

8. JASPER JOHNS: "False Start", 1959

$80 million

Private sale, Autumn 2006. Buyer: Unknown


This iconic work by Johns, sold by David Geffen, is the third highest price ever paid for work by a contemporary artist.









False Start, 1959, Oil on canvas

9. PIERRE AUGUSTE RENOIR: "Le moulin de la Galette", 1876

$78.1 million

Sotheby's New York, May 17th 1990. Buyer: Ryoei Saito


Bal au moulin de la Galette, Montmartre was painted by French artist Pierre-Auguste Renoir in 1876. This masterpiece is the little sister of the version now in the Orsay. It was bought by Ryoei Saito for $78.1 million at Sotheby's in 1990, and sold in 1997 to a "European private collector" for $50 million.









Sold in 1997 to a "European private collector" for $50 million.

10. PETER PAUL RUBENS: "Massacre of the innocents", 1611/12

$76.7 million (£49.5 million)

Sotheby's London, July 2002. Buyer: Kenneth Thompson


This painting by Peter Paul Rubens, painted in 1611, is the only painting in this list which was not painted in the 19th or 20th century. The flamboyant and dramatic work by Rubens could also fight for the title of "most unexpected success": Christie's had estimated its price at a mere £5 million. It was sold to Kenneth Thomson, 2nd Baron Thomson of Fleet for $76,700,000 at a 2002 Sotheby's auction









Massacre of the Innocents, 1611

OTHER PRICES OVER $50 MILLION:


Mark Rothko: "White center (yellow, pink...)",1889- $72.8 million (2007)

Mark Rothko's fabulous "White center (yellow, pink and lavender on rose)" -once in the collection of David Rockefeller, was sold at Sotheby's New York for more than $72 million, making it the most expensive contemporary art work ever sold at auction.


Andy Warhol: "Green Car Crash (Green Burning Car)", 1963 - $71.7 million (2007)

Sold two days after the work above in a record $384 million sale of contemporary art, it thrashed the previous record for a Warhol ($17 million).


Vincent van Gogh: "Portrait of the artiste sans barbe", 1889- $71.5 million (1998)

Portrait de l'artiste sans barbe ("Self-portrait without beard") is one of many self-portraits by Dutch painter Vincent van Gogh. He painted this one in Saint-Rémy-de-Provence, France in September 1889. The painting is an oil painting on canvas (16" x 13").

This is an uncommon painting since his other self-portraits show him with a beard. The self-portrait became one of the most expensive paintings of all time when it was sold for $71.5 million in 1998 in New York, representing an extraordinary success -the auction house had estimated it at less than a half of its final price.


Titian: "Portrait of Alfonso d'Avalos", 1533 - $70 million (2004)

A sum never confirmed, but also never denied, by its buyer, the Getty Museum. The magnificent painting was exhibited for many years in the Louvre Museum.


Thomas Eakins: "The Gross clinic", 1875 - $68 million (2006)

The painting, previously in the Thomas Jefferson University, was purchased in November 2006 by the National Gallery of Washington, setting a record for a 19th-century American painting.


Willem de Kooning: "Police Gazette ", 1955 - $63 million (2006)

Bought by Steven Cohen, one of the leading collectors in today’s art market.


Paul Cezanne: "Rideau, crouchon et compotier", 1893/94 - $60.5 million (1999)

This painting by Paul Cézanne, painted in ca. 1893-1894, sold for $60,500,000 at Sotheby's New York on May 10, 1999 to "The Whitneys". Whitney, born into one of America's wealthiest families, was a venture capitalist, publisher, Broadway show and Hollywood film producer, and philanthropist.


Vincent van Gogh: "Wheat field with cypresses", 1889 - $57 million (1993)

The price is really spectacular if we consider that it was paid in 1993, in the middle of a recession. The philanthropic Walter Annenberg lent the work to the Metropolitan Museum shortly afterwards.


Pablo Picasso: "Femme aux bras croisés", 1904 - $55 million (2000)

This work, painted in 1901, was a part of Picasso's famous Blue Period, a dark, sad time in the artist's life. The beautiful & various tones of blue are typical. The painting depicts a woman with her arms crossed staring at the endless nothing. Femme aux Bras Croisés was sold for $55,000,000 November 8, 2000, at Christie's Rockefeller in New York City.


Vincent van Gogh: "Irises", 1888 - $53.9 million (1991)

Vincent van Gogh painted this at Saint Paul-de-Mausole in Saint-Rémy-de-Provence, France in 1889, only one year before his death. In 1987, it became the most expensive painting sold at that time. It was sold for $ 54,000,000 to Alan Bond and later resold to the Getty Museum.


Francis Bacon: "Study for Innocent X", 1962 - $52.7 million (2007)

Sold at the same auction in which Mark Rothko's "White center (yellow, pink and lavender on rose)" went for $72.8 million.


Pablo Picasso: "Les noces de Pierrette", 1904 - $51.9 million (1989)

Picasso Car!

Have you ever wondered what a car designed by Picasso would look like? It may look something like this…





Andy Saunders, a 44-year-old mechanic from Poole, Dorset, spent six months turning an aged Citroen 2CV into a cubist work of art inspired by Picasso's Portrait of Dora Maar. Dora Maar was Picasso’s mistress and artistic companion in the late 1930’s and early 1940’s. Maar’s influence on the artist resulted in some of the most daring and most renowned portraits of his career.



"I decided to blur the line between car design and art by using Picasso as inspiration,” said Mr. Saunders. "I studied Picasso and noticed that he used mainly primary colors and I've stuck with that for the car.”


Mr Saunders is to launch his creation publicly at this weekend's Goodwood Festival of Speed. He says it is legally roadworthy for daytime use only, meaning it does not need traditional headlights or indicators because signals can be made with the hands.


He added: "I made all the new parts and have distorted the whole car so the more you look at it the more peculiar it becomes. It hasn't lost any of its speed - it can still reach 65mph. Eventually I hope to sell it and maybe it will be bought by the Tate Gallery or the Pompidou Centre in Paris. It's hard to put a value on it now, but as it's a work of art I reckon it might sell for about a million pounds. However, if museums or art collectors won't buy it, I think I might have to stick it in Auto Trader."

Jean Claude Picot Artwork - FREE!

What better way to introduce art enthusiasts to the wonderful world of art collecting and art appreciation than to give away FREE artwork. For a limited time only, ArtRev.com is giving away limited edition lithographs by world famous artist, Jean-Claude Picot. This special offer is valid for a very limited time, while supplies last. This exclusive offer is available through April 30th, 2008, while supplies last. Hurry and secure your FREE Picot artwork today.


All you have to do is add (1) one artwork to your shopping cart and proceed with the checkout process - it's that simple! The same artwork has been sold in Art Galleries, Frame Shops, and even Art Auctions for approx. $200, and it is your FREE, you just pay shipping.


Offer Terms & Conditions: Offer is valid while supplies last. Limited to one artwork per household. Certificate of Authenticity is included at no charge. Customer is responsible for all shipping and handling charges. Artwork is unframed & unmatted, unless framed by customer for an additional charge. This offer is valid until April 30th, 2008 - 11:59:59 PM.


Get Your Free Artwork NOW!

La Promenade by Jean-Claude Picot - Get it FREE NOW!

The World of Artists

What a better way to decorate you home or office with fine art by world renowned artists?!! Here is a list of artists that ArtRev.com carries.

Adriana Naveh

Alan Hayes

Alan Hunt

Alan Ingham

Alessandro Botticelli

Alex Pauker

Alex Perez

Alexander Archipenko

Alexander Astahov

Alexander Borewko

Alexander Calder

Alexander Chen

Alexander Ivanov

Alexander Millar

Alexandra Nechita

Alfred Alexander Gockel

Alicia Quaini

Allan Mardon

Allen Friedman

Alwen Harris

Amedeo Modigliani

Amy Lynn

Anatole Krasnyansky

Andrew Bone

Andrew Warden

Andy Craig

Andy Warhol

Anna Chromy

Anna Thornhill

Ari Gradus

Arshile Gorky

Arthur Seiden

Ashot

Avi Ben-Simhon

B.H. Brody

Barbara James

Berit Kruger-Johnsen

Bernard Oulie

Beryl Cook

Bill Mack

Bindi Harris

Bogdan Grom

Bracha Guy

Brian Jarvi

Bruce McKay

Calman Shemi

Camille Pissaro

Carlo Beninati

Carol Matyia-Ross

Caroline Schultz

Caroline Shotton

Cecil Rice

Cecil Smith

Cecilia Garcia Amaro

Chad Coleman

Chaim Goldberg

Chaim Gross

Charles Bragg

Charles Chamot

Charles Duback

Charles Fazzino

Charles Magistro

Charles Pabst

Chris Hill

Chris Parsons

Christian Daniel

Clarence Holbrook Carter

Claude Monet

Csaba Markus

Dani Bergson

Daniel Riberzani

Daphne Mumford

David Azuz

David Cain

David Dodsworth

David Freeman

David LaChapelle

David Schluss

Dean Kendrick

Debbie Gillingham

Deborah Crone

Debra Stroud

Dennis Paul Noyer

Dion Salvador Lloyd

Domenech

Dorit Levi

Doug London

Douglas Hofmann

Drew Darcy

Duaiv

Duane Bryers

Edgar Degas

Edouard Manet

Eduardo Faradje

Edvard Munch

Edward Hopper

Edward Plunkett

Elaine Jones

Elizabeth Lennard

Elke Sommer

Ellsworth Kelly

Eric Christensen

Ernest Walbourn

Erte

Everett Hibbard

Evgeni Chekrygin

Fabian Perez

Fanch Ledan

Felix Mas

Ferdie Pacheco

Ferjo

Fernand Leger

Fernando Botero

Fioravanti

Ford Smith

Francois Fressinier

Frane Mlinar

Frank Jenson

Fred Fieber

Frederic Remington

Gary Benfield

Gary Longordo

Ged Mitchell

George Braque

George Chemeche

Georges Seurat

Gholam Yunessi

Giancarlo Impiglia

Gina Lombardi

Gisela Isabella Fabian

Gloria Marojevic

Goli Mahallati

Gordon King

Govinder Nazran

Graciela Rodo Boulanger

Grant Wood

Gustav Klimt

Guy Begin

Hamada

Hamish Blakely

Hans Hofmann

Harry McCormick

Harry Schaare

Hazel Soan

Helen Covensky

Helen Hayse

Helen Rundell

Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec

Henri Matisse

Henri Rousseau

Henry Asencio

Henry Gorski

Henry Koehler

Hessam Abrishami

Holland Berkley

Howard Koslow

Hua Chen

Ibanez

Igor Kovalev

Igor Medvedev

Ion Plubeu

Isaac Abrams

Isaac Kahn

Isaac Maimon

Itzchak Tarkay

J. C. Leyendecker

Jack Brusca

Jack Hofflander

Jackson Pollock

Jacqueline Fogel

James Coleman

James Gill

Jan Vermeer

Jane Bazinet

Jane Wooster Scott

Janet Treby

Jasper Johns

Jean Claude Maas

Jean de Brunhoff

Jean-Claude Picot

Jeaneen Barnhart

Jeff Cornell

Jennine Parker

Jeremy Barlow

Jeremy Sanders

Jim Jonson

Joan Melnick

Joan Miro

Joan Somerville

Joel Thompson

John Alvin

John Bond

John Duillo

John Meyer

John Silver

John Steuart Curry

John Waterhouse

John Wilson

Jon Carsman

Jorge Tarallo

Joseph Vance

Joy Kirton-Smith

Juan Noel

Julia Ogden

Julian Askins

KAT

Kazimir Malevich

Kelly Jane

Kevin Dixon

Kevin Slingsby

Kim Donaldson

Knox Martin

Laura Bowman

Lauri Blank

Lawrence Coulson

Lenner Gogli

Leonardo da Vinci

Leroy Neiman

Leslie Lew

Levi Dorit

Leviels

Linda Bastian

Linda Jane Smith

Linda Le Kinff

Linda Ravenscroft

Lorenzo Quinn

Louis Robichaud

Lowell Nesbitt

Lucelle Raad

Lucien Pissarro

Luis Luque

Lynn Poland

Mackenzie Thorpe

Malcolm Farley

Mandie Haywood

Marc Chagall

Marcel Mouly

Marcus Bohne

Marion McClanahan

Marisol Escobar

Mark Godwin

Mark Holland-Hicken

Mark King

Mark Rothko

Mark Spain

Martin Barooshian

Martin Eichinger

Martin Roberts

Marvel Comics

Matthew Craven

Max Beckmann

Maxfield Parrish

Maxim Lipzer

Maya Eventov

Melissa Mailer-Yates

Mersad Berber

Michael and Inessa Garmash

Michael Flohr

Michael Jackson

Michelangelo Buonarroti

Miguel Avateneo

Miguel Perez

Mihail Chemiakin

Nadeem Chughtai

Nati Peralbo

Nel Whatmore

Nicholas Krushenick

Nick Andrew

Nicola Read

Nicola Simbari

Nina Paull

Nina Rose

Noel Daggett

Norman Rockwell

Oleg Zhivetin

Pablo Picasso

Paine Proffit

Patricia Govezensky

Paul Cézanne

Paul Gauguin

Paul Horton

Paul James

Paul Jansen

Paul Kavanagh

Paul Powis

Paula McArdle

Paulémile Pissarro

Peter Fellows

Peter Hildick

Peter Keating

Peter Max

Peter Nixon

Peter Smith

Philippe Noyer

Phillip Stuttard

Pierre Auguste Renoir

Pierre Bonnard

Pierre Clerk

Pietro Adamo

Pino

Rafael Leva

Rainer Gross

Rajinder

Rembrandt

Remo Farruggio

Rene Magritte

Reuben Colley

Richard Karwoski

Richard Nahmias

Rina Schiller

Rob Ford

Robert Anderson

Robert Beauchamp

Robert Deyber

Robert Heindel

Roberta Peck

Roberto Carbone

Rochelle Steiner

Rockwell Smith

Rolf Harris

Romero Britto

Ron Lim

Ronnie Wood

Roy Fairchild

Roy Lichtenstein

Roy Tonkin

Royo

Sabina Teichman

Sam Shendi

Sami Zilkha

Sarah Jane Szikora

Scott Jacobs

Sebastia Boada

Sebastian Kruger

Sergey Ignatenko

Sergey Kovrigo

Sergio Mooro

Sergon

Sheryl Finnegan

Sidney Randolph Maurer

Simbari

Simon Claridge

Sir Winston Churchill

Stephen Holland

Steve Barton

Steve Burgess

Steve Johnston

Steve Winterburn

Stuart Davis

Sue Guthrie

Sung Sam Park

Sveta Esser

Tamara Lempicka

Terri Hallman

Terry Donnelly

Thomas Hart Benton

Thomas Kinkade

Tomar Levine

Tomasz Rut

Toni Goffe

Tony Bechara

Tony Forrest

Tony Smith

Trudy Good

Tzvi Ben-Aritz

Unknown Artist (NA)

Vic Herman

Vicente Dopico-Lerner

Victor Ostrovsky

Victor Shvaiko

Victor Vasarely

Vincent van Gogh

Vladimir Volegov

W. Eddie

Walt Disney

Warner Brothers

Wassily Kandinsky

Wayne Ensrud

Wendy Corbett

Willem de Kooning

William Taggart

Willy Pogany

Wong

Wu Ching-Ju

Wyland

Yaacov Agam

Yuri Shiller

Yuroz

Zamy Steynovitz

Zerner

Zheng Li

Digital art - a medium on the rise!

Digital Art is rapidly becoming a very popular medium due to advances in technology and the availability and popularity of drawing, painting, and pixel manipulation software. Digital Art is simply art created on a computer device in digital or electronic format and has become an accepted medium on the world's art scene. Digital Art can be purely computer-generated, such as geometric shapes, or taken from another source, such as a photograph, or an image drawn using vector graphics software using a mouse or drawing tablet. Digital Art is like any other art form. The artist utilizes both artistic and advanced computer skills to generate fine art and artistic expression. Digital Art can be static or interactive. It can incorporate motion, sound, and other media. The output of digital art is not constricted to a canvas or paper, it can be a digital display or it can be mixed with other media. In the world of digital art, the word artist and designer usually mean the creator of the art work.


Digital Art can be categorized into three basic categories: digital painting, digital photography, and drawing. There are several subcategories and the artist can combine any and all to create their own unique vision.


Digital Painting: The artist creates two or three-dimentional images totally in the computer virtual environment with the use of painting tools that emulate natural media styles. Atmospheric perspective can be easily used to create the illusion of depth or distance. Painting programs such as Corel Painter™ are highly sophisticated painting software that require both advanced computer skill and artistic talent. Such programs are widely used by professional artists, photographers, and commercial designers. Digital Collages is most commonly achieved by the use of layering techniques in image editing and paint software. The artist may also use unique images to produce images that the human eye does not normally see, which expands the realm of perception.









Example: Corel Painter™


Digital Photograph: The artist uses a digital or conventional camera. The photographs are then digitized and transferred to a computer environment where the artist uses image editing and special effects software such as Adobe Photoshop™ to perform darkroom type manipulations. Painting software can also be used to go beyond dark room techniques and create hand-painted works of art from photographs.









Example: Adobe Photoshop™


Digital Drawing: The artist uses vector drawing software such as Adobe Illustrator™ and creates the image totally in the virtual environment. This makes use of shapes which are outlined and can be filled with various colors and patterns. This tends to produce a harder edged or graphic look. Vector graphics are considered scalable graphics and do not lose quality when scaled up or down. Notable for their small file sizes and scalability, vector graphics are defined by sets of mathematical points.









Example: Adobe Illustrator ™


Mixed-Media: This is the "mixed media" of the digital art world. Artists combine any number of the techniques to achieve unique results. The digital environment is much less restricted than conventional media in this type of integration and manipulation.


Digital Art creations destined for screen or print display are made of tiny digital dots called pixels. A Pixel is short for Picture Element, which is the smallest unit (point) of an image displayed on screen. The quality of an image depends on the number of pixels per inch (DPI - Dots Per Inch) that make up the image.









72 Vs. 300 DPI Illustration

Top museums you must visit

1- The Louvre in Paris is arguably the world's most famous Museum. It houses a wonderful collection of antiquities and European paintings, including Leonardo's Gioconda (Mona Lisa) and Madonna of the Rocks, Jacques Louis David's Oath of the Horatii, Delacroix's Liberty Leading the People and Alexandros of Antioch's Venus de Milo.


2- The Metropolitan Museum of Art (known as the Met) in New York was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1986. Its spectacular permanent collection contains more than two million works of art and is especially strong in American painting and Egyptian Antiquities. The museum owns thirty-seven paintings by Monet, twenty-one oils by Cezanne, and eighteen Rembrandts. Other highlights include major drawings by Michelangelo and Leonardo da Vinci, etchings by Durer and Degas, Van Gogh's Self-Portrait with a Straw Hat, Picasso's portrait of Gertrude Stein, Jasper Johns's White Flag, Jackson Pollock's Autumn Rhythm (Number 30), and five paintings by Vermeer, which represent the largest collection of the artist's work anywhere in the world.


3- The British Museum in London is England's greatest museum and one of the best in the world for Ancient Arts and antiquities. There are magnificent groups of drawings by Leonardo da Vinci, Raphael, Michelangelo, (including his only surviving full-scale cartoon), Dürer (a collection of 138 drawings is one of the finest in existence), Peter Paul Rubens, Rembrandt, Claude and Watteau, and virtually complete collections of the works of all the great printmakers including unsurpassed holdings of prints by Dürer (99 engravings, 6 etchings and a substantial number of his 346 woodcuts), Rembrandt and Goya.


4- The Vatican Museums houses the immense and outstanding art collection of the Catholic Church. Pope Julius II founded the museums in the 16th century. The collection includes some of the most important works of art in history, such as the Sistine Chapel and Raphael's The School of Athens.


5- The Hermitage Museum in Saint Petersburg, Russia is one of the largest museums in the world, with 3 million works of art (not all on display at once), and one of the oldest art galleries and museums of human history and culture in the world. Catherine the Great started the famed collection in 1764. The vast Hermitage collections are displayed in six buildings, the main one being the Winter Palace which used to be the official residence of the Russian Tsars. The Hermitage holds the Guinness World Record as having the world's largest collection of paintings. Highlights include works by Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci, Rubens, Rembrandt, Canaletto, Rodin, Monet, Pissarro, Renoir, Cézanne, van Gogh (Night Café), Gauguin, Picasso, and Matisse (La Danse).


6- The Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna is one of the premier museums in the world. It houses an important collection of Egyptian, Greek and Roman antiquities, and an outstanding collection of European paintings, including Infanta Margarita Teresa in a Blue Dress by Velázquez.


7- The National Gallery of London, founded in 1824, houses a rich collection of over 2,300 paintings dating from the mid-13th century to 1900. It is arguably the most complete collection of European painting from the 13th to the 19th centuries. Vincent van Gogh’s Sunflowers is one of many collection highlights.


8- The Museum of Modern Art (MOMA) in New York houses the world's best collection of modern and contemporary art, featuring masterworks such as Picasso's Demoiselles d'Avignon, Van Gogh's Starry Night, Dali’s The Persistence of Memory, Andy Warhols’ Campbell’s Soup Cans and Monet’s Water Lilies. It was developed in 1928 primarily by Abby Aldrich Rockefeller.


9- Museé d'Orsay in Paris is without doubt the best museum of impressionist and 19th century French painting in the world. Features masterworks include Manet’s Olympia and Luncheon on the Grass, Monet’s Rouen Cathedral, van Gogh’s Starry Night, Renoir’s Bal au Moulin de la Galette and Degas’ L’Absinthe.


10- The Egyptian Museum in Cairo is by far the most complete collection of Egyptian Art in the world. Its most famous artworks are the objects from the Tomb of Tutankhamen, discovered in 1922.


11- El Museo del Prado (Prado Museum) has one of the world's finest collections of European art, from the 12th century through the early 19th century, based on the former Spanish Royal Collection. The Prado features works by leading Spanish old masters like Velazquez and Goya. It is home to Las Meninas by Velazquez and once housed Pablo Picasso’s masterpiuece, Guernica.


12- The Uffizi, housed in the Palazzo degli Uffizi, a palazzo in Florence, Italy, is the most important collection of Italian Renaissance painting. It is home to works such as Botticelli's Birth of Venus and Primavera and Giotto's Ognissanti Madonna.


13- The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston is one of the oldest and most respected Art institutions of North America, with an outstanding collection of Western Art. It has a sister museum in Japan, the Nagoya Boston Museum of Fine Arts. The Morse collection of 5,000 pieces of Japanese pottery, is part of the largest museum collection of Japanese works outside of Japan. The museum is also home to Gauguin’s iconic work "Where Do We Come From? What Are We? Where Are We Going?"


14- The Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam is Netherlands National Museum. As you can expect, it houses the world's most important collection of Dutch painting, including its star piece, Rembrandt's "The Nightwatch"


15- The National Gallery of Washington features an extremely complete collection of Western painting from the 13th to the 20th century. Highlights of the collection include many paintings by Jan Vermeer, Rembrandt van Rijn, Claude Monet, Vincent Van Gogh, Leonardo da Vinci, Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse, Jackson Pollock, Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein and Alexander Calder.


16- The Guggenheim Museum in New York was designed by the famous architect Frank Lloyd Wright. The Guggenheim Foundation also has important galleries in Bilbao, Venice, Berlin and Las Vegas.


17- The Tate Modern in London is arguably the most important collection of modern and contemporary art in Europe. It houses pivotal works of artists such as Lichstentein, Pollock, Rothko, Warhol and Francis Bacon


18- The Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris is France's national museum for modern and contemporary art, housed in an important contemporary building by Rogers and Renzo Piano.


19- The Art Institute of Chicago houses one of the most outstanding collections of Impressionist and American art, featuring masterpieces such as Seurat's Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte, Van Gogh’s Bedroom in Arles and Edward Hopper’s Nighthawks.


20- The Getty Center in Malibu, California is arguably the world's wealthiest Museum, with an important collection of European antiquities, paintings, and manuscripts. Works exhibited includes Van Gogh's Irises and Titian's Alfonso d'Avalos.

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