Category Archives: business

Ya Snooze Ya Lose

Banksy sells original work for just $60 in Central Park – video

Over the weekend, New York was given a wake up call. British artist Banksy set up a pop up art stall in Central Park. His booth advertised 100% authentic original art by Banksy and like the “snobby” New Yorkers we are, most of us ignored it, passing it off another knock off. Because of the environment it was staged in — a random sidewalk, it was easy to overlook because it most likely reminded most New Yorkers of the pop up stalls that littered the streets of lower Manhattan, Canal street and Soho where vendors sold a lot of fake products.
This reminded me of the time when Joshua Bell played the violin in a crowded metro station in DC. He did this as a social experiment to see how people would perceive talent and beauty given the environment it is placed in. The aim of this experiment was: “in a commonplace environment at an inappropriate hour: Do we perceive beauty? Do we stop to appreciate it? Do we recognize the talent in an unexpected context?”

So, in the case of Banksy selling his art on the street, do we only recognize his art as great when it’s in a clean white gallery and ignore it if it’s just sitting there on the street?

Welcome to Seminar I: The Arts in New York City!!

Hello Everyone!  You are one of the VIPs in our seminar in which we will not just talk about seeing, hearing, and thinking about art, but we’ll also explore it.  And we’ll do it together.  This blog is our virtual community.  Please use it to express yourself and your thinking about what we’re doing in the classroom, and about what you see when we go into the City together.  You can also use this blog as your point of reference–the syllabus, contact information, updates, and supplemental reading and resources are all here.

After formal introductions, we’ll spend some time during our first class session discussing Jay-Z’s performance art video, “Picasso Baby:  A Performance Art Film” (dir.  Mark Romanek). What does it mean that he understands himself as a Picasso, and as Picasso?