Yep, that’s Claude on the left, Morgan in the middle, and me on the right, with one of the top art dealers in the country, who came to bid at our auction, at one of our Black Tie Auction Events in Nevada City. I’ll give you an idea of what YOU need to know about art auctions.
How to Raise Money for the Ashram
17th Century Rembrandt Harmenz van Rijn etching, St. Jerome in a Dark Chamber
I am not an accountant, never was — failed math miserably — and I do NOT know tax law or what you or someone else might be entitled to. What I say below is a compendium of my best guesses. When it comes to art, that’s when I can say I’m an expert and mean it.
How to raise money for the ashram when you don’t have any money yourself? Easy as pie. Organize a Charity Art Auction. We can offer a broad range of ORIGINAL artwork from Rembrandt to Hockney, and of course we always have a large supply of local artists from our Grass Valley Graphics Group. Artists receive an honorarium — no donations from the already poor enough, thank you — and artwork from vendors are charged against the sale. Donated artwork would be exempt from this deduction off the auction sale price, thusly:
A 17th century Rembrandt which has been offered by a third party vendor at the wholesale price of $4500, which then sold in auction at $7,500, would realize a $3,000 profit to be split equally between the parties per specific agreements made prior to the auction. Keep in mind here that the retail value, the price paid in a gallery, could well be anywhere from $18,500 to $35,000 depending on the prestige of the gallery. Same piece in two different galleries could vary that much in retail price, yes. So the tax-deductable portion, less the actual retail value, for the donor is probably at best around $3,000 in this case.
Now let’s take a case of a large Leroy Neiman, the gallery price-tag is, let’s say, $190,000. No, I’m not kidding. So I would expect a donor to give at least double that in order to fully benefit the charitable intent of the auction, which is NOT to acquire cheap art because it’s a charity auction, but to give generously with the expectation of receiving a “thank you” gift in return.
Most charity auctions only put up junk, because it’s all donated art, which is, generally, junk art. Our auctions feature high-quality art pieces of the very finest degree. All our Blue-Chip Art pieces have pedigrees (called “provenance”, meaning “who owned it before you did”) and are subject to the most rigorous examination.
We ship artwork such as Rembrandts, Van Ostades and Renoirs directly to an IRS appraiser for appraisal and authentication guarantees. By law, we cannot pay for the appraisal, but you must have one anyway, and this is the best time to do that. Trust me, this is the only way to fly with valuable artwork.
I will also be offering Picasso, Chagall, Miro, Matisse and many more ORIGINAL works of art, mostly works on paper, some pencil-signed, some plate-signed. This haute coutoure will of course be peppered freely with Grass Valley Graphics Group and hundreds of donor artists and art donated by collectors.
The auctions will vary; at least one will be black-tie, and I’m hoping that FAXL will play some jazz favorites at the opening before the bidding. As at any Black Tie Auction, I plan to introduce our group of experts in various fields. As you know, David Franco is a graduate of not just book conservation and paper conservation, but of binding methods as well, so he gets to inspect the quality and binding of every rare antiquarian book we put up at auction.
I guess I’m elected as coin expert, and I’ll have a huge selection of Continentals, Early Federal, Lincoln Errors, Gold & Silver and more.
You can expect to see a variety of jewelry items, handmade goods and textiles. As we gather momentum, I’ll include saddle blankets and Tribal Weavings, rare Persian carpets and Tibetan bronzes and wooden masks.
I have a number of experts to help in the area of archaeology, but Claude Needham and I do most of the legwork. We have folks out there who can decipher Cuneiform and other early writing, so most of our work is done for us. We have the fun part, figuring out what in the world it is, and where it might have come from. With antiquities, even being present at the dig, you never know. I have a couple of Roman rings found at Amarna, because 1,300 years later, some Romans happened to stop there to fill their water jugs.
We’ll also have a variety of antiques; if you have some you’d like to donate, that’d be great, but don’t send it just yet, tell me about it first. We have enough backlog of material at the moment, at least in the art department, to last several auctions, but there, I’ve gone and done it…I plumb forgot to tell you how to raise money when you don’t have any.
You need to find a worthy, reliable, genuine and authentic, but most of all deserving, charity nearby. Find someone you can talk to. It’s best if you already know someone at the charity. Talk to them first. Tell them it’s about collab fundraising.
Collab Fundraising is getting more and more common. We often teamed up with Sierra Services for the Blind, Red Cross, 9-11 Fund and many local art services. The way it works best is, we provide the art and we host the live local audience at the tv studio; you provide the audience in your home venue.
Any winning bids from your venue will count for your charity. Winning bids from other venues or from our local bidders will not count for your charity. To win the charity donations, your group has to win the bids.
Your charity might prefer to be the only group bidding. That’s okay, but has to be specially arranged. It costs serious money to stage a live auction, and we can’t do it for two people who want bargain prices. You’ll need to gather at least 50 people who WANT to donate to charity in a fun and lastingly pleasant way.
One thing I can promise you; the audience will get a good dose of art history and a better view of what a work of art is and how it can enhance your life. Imagine the thrill of being able to donate an original Rembrandt to your favorite local museum! Many folks would love to do just that, but don’t know how. I plan to show ’em how to do it.
I have collected pieces and assembled them into important museum-grade collections, and you can do it, too, with a little help from your friends!
See You At The Top!!!
Gorby
Gorby’s Fine Art Charity Auctions
Sorry for the lapse in posting. I had to eradicate the previous post — my flaky internet connection wouldn’t let me post anything for almost a week now. Claude insists that he has no idea why it suddenly works again, but I’m able to post right now, so I’m posting:
I’ll be conducting LIVE online fine art nonprofit charity fundraising auctions starting this very day — at 4 PM I’ll be conducting an experiment for the benefit of several folks who are interested in raising money for worthy causes, among which will be the museum of ancient and modern art, the ashrams and possibly a charter school and a children’s academy, a medical clinic and more. Watch this afternoon LIVE and I’ll give you a basic run-through on THE PLAN. Basically, it’s the sale of a large and important inventory of blue-chip artists such as Rembrandt, Chagall, Matisse, Miro, Picasso and Renoir, as well as modern and contemporary artists, plus gold & silver coins, antiques, daguerreotype vintage photos, gold & silver jewelry, diamonds, high-grade natural gold nuggets from the Blue Tent Mine, rare and important meteorites and fossils, exceptionally rare and important antiquarian books & manuscripts, important historical items, stage magic collectibles, handmade clothing by Jed, myself & others and a wealth of other items, including some rather extraordinary items from my Tibetan shelf. We’ll be doing a charity auction as often as I can manage it — getting the items is harder than selling them — probably once a week, a one or two hour auction, with the proceeds going accordingly: Continue reading
Wynton Marsalis & Ted Nash & Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra
I was determined to get to the concert venue to see the installation, and maybe run into Wynton Marsalis and Ted Nash, and by golly, to everyone’s surprise including my own, I actually made it into town in late afternoon — about 3:30 — and sure enough, ran into many old friends at the jazz venue, many musicians, photographers, artists and more, all there to see the show. I knew I wouldn’t be able to remain, but stayed awhile, long enough to meet with Ted Nash, Julie Baker and a few other old friends (“old friends” never sounds right — they’re young friends from long ago…dang if that don’t sound no better). The band arrived late, after my energy ran out at about 6:30, a very long time in town for my tired old frame. So, I’ll meet you in the ICW in a few minutes from now, where you’ll see a wonderful collection of very famous art — I’m making a video catalog of the art collections that are up for sale for an art-dealer friend…actually two friends, with quite different interests; one specializes in Old Masters — not the cigars, the painters — and the other in Modern & Contemporary. You’ll be seeing a lot of museum-grade original works by everyone from Renoir to Rauschenberg.
See You At The Top!!!
gorby
An Art Show Every Month!!!
In the Organic World, an artist is lucky to have four shows a year, period. One gallery might show your work every year, others will have you wait three or four years between shows, not to eat up the market with overflow. In Prosperity Virtual Ashram, there’s no reason you can’t put up a new show every month, and if you’re totally beyond bizarre, a new art show every single day. Why not? You’re your own boss on your parcel! And speaking about parcels, don’t forget to learn how to promote your shop, gallery, hangout, club, showroom, chapel or whatever! You can find out more about this at this upcoming weekend’s WORK RELATIONSHIPS workshop. Don’t miss it if you can!!! We’ll be having live auctions inworld for items that are out of this world!
See You At The Top!!!
gorby
Tom X Has Arrived in the Ashram BigTime!!!
There it is, behind me, on the corner of Street of Dreams and Fifth. The gallery rent is outrageous, but worth it for the exposure on this great well-traveled corner. You can buy Tom’s works on paper for your buildings, but you cannot resell them with the perms set as they are. If you want to be a Tom X dealer, contact any staff member at the Ashram. Actually, you can ask anyone. Surely someone at the docks will have a watch.
See You At The Top!!!
gorby
Go Here & Take a Look
Go here & take a look. Of course, you’ll need to be in Second Life to do it. This layout of a high-fashion New York Loft contains a large number of my original artworks and a selection of fine designer furnishings, and it will be completed, if all goes well, sometime in the next 24 hours. It’s a work area, so please have the good sense not to touch anything. Thanks. Here’s the address:
http://maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Prosperity%20Downtown/68/88/3953
See You At The Top!!!
gorby
Teaching Art in Second Life
It’s true — you can teach art classes in Second Life, and here’s how it’s done. First, get hold of this instant artist easel shown here. I’ll put in a link where you can get it:
click here for your very own gypsy easel
But now that you have your Gypsy Easel in hand or at least in Inventory, what do you do with it? How do you use it to teach an art class? It’s very simple if you can follow directions well.
Hoaxes & Happenings
Richard Dawson, Phillip Grant, EJ Gold, Ron Matthies on Tempo TV show, circa 1969, presenting their views about the Great California Earthquake and other current issues.
Back in the 1960s, many artists were staging “Happenings”, art events of various kinds, which today might be classified under the category “performance art”, but it went way beyond that into socio-anthro issues, such as the fear that California was about to sink into the Pacific Ocean, as predicted by a local psychic. The Fellowship “unpredicted” the earthquake and said “The Big One is not scheduled for a while yet … we’ll let you know.” The story generated millions of words in print and hundreds of media hours.
Kiki’s Paris
http://youtu.be/m6UijAIzByE
Alice Prin was known as Kiki de Montparnasse. She posed for absolutely every major painter of her day. Hundreds of portraits of Kiki adorn museums worldwide. We used to live together for a while back in the day. Here is her favorite song: