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Last week, a photograph by Andreas Gurksy, Rhein II, was sold at auction for $4,338,500 to an anonymous buyer. The record-breaking sale allowed Gursky to reclaim fame as the artist whose work has claimed the highest price paid for a photograph. This auction was a secondary market sale. As in most art auctions commanding high prices and press attention, the artist sees little if any financial benefit.

What do you think of the image? Is it art? Is it art you would consider to be worth $4 million? $1 million?

Rhein II

It wasn’t this lowly jpeg that was sold. Seeing the print — considered a very important part of the art of photography — is an experience in itself. To see this work in person, you would be gazing at a print eight feet by twelve feet. Even today’s relatively advanced digital cameras, devices used by professional wedding photographers and amateurs like me around the world, wouldn’t be able to produce a print that size with quality and resolution. This image was most likely produced with a large format camera using analog film.

There’s only one way to determine the value of a work of art: offer it to a wide audience of potential art buys and determine what at least one of them would be willing to pay to take it home. Looking beyond the simple supply-and-demand answer, any piece of art is able to fetch a certain price at auction due to only a few factors. Some aspects moving a price aren’t related to the specific piece of art as much as the artist.

  • Buyers look for a works by photographers who have a history of creating art in demand by galleries and collectors.
  • Photographers who were trained by other artists who have been successful are also rewarded for their potential.
  • In most cases, buyers believe that the art will be worth more in the future, and view the purchase as an investment.

Some reasons behind a price relate to the process of creating the art. It’s only recently that photography has become accepted as art, color photography even more recently, and many artists still consider photographs with digital manipulation in editing software like Photoshop not art at all. Photography still has a long way to go before it’s fully accepted alongside oil painting and sculpture as art. That’s reflected in value as well; while this $4 million price for Rhein II is a nice sum, it falls short of the Running Man I sculpture by Alberto Giacometti, which fetched a sale price of $104.3 million recently.

The fact that this image was captured using a large format camera, a process that is significantly more involved than pointing and shooting, helps to add to the value, but many photographers, particularly landscape artists and architectural photographers, still use large format cameras. The type of camera cannot be the sole reason driving the value of art, but it is an important factor when an artist is striving for the best quality possible.

Although this image looks simple, a lot of planning went into its creation. Artists carefully plan the time and place, bring the right equipment, and without a digital camera, do not have the luxury of taking a flurry of snapshots to choose the best image of one hundred on a memory card. Often, a work of art is part of a series or a study on a particular theme, and in the case of Rhein II, the photograph falls within a series about the river in Germany.

Ken Rockwell, a respected but divisive photographer who has one of the most popular websites about the art, has this to say about the photograph.

It is valuable because it is art, not just a photo. Rules are worthless. If [Gurksy] was just a photographer instead of an artist, he would have been crippled by the nonexistent “rule of thirds” myth, and put the horizon someplace else. In his case, the horizon slams right through the middle, which adds to the power by giving a sense of unease. Our minds ask “what’s up with this? This is so barren and empty; where is this place?”

Likewise, if it’s not captured on film, it is not art. Artists create art, not photographers. Artists may choose to work in photography, but being an artist is what matters above all…

If shot with a digital Nikon or Canon like amateur photographers, it would not have been art. If he used a zoom lens or many modern prime lenses, their distortion would have subtly curved the lines, weakening and destroying the artist’s work.

Ken doesn’t point out that Gursky did digitally manipulate the image after making the capture. The view portrayed by the image above doesn’t exist in nature. Gursky removed people, dogs, and a building from the captured image to create the art.

Nevertheless, the image is so simple that it looks like something anyone can capture, standing beside any river in the world on any dreary day. One nature of art is the ability to stir emotions in a spectator, even if that emotion is anger in response to a sale price, frustration that an image of mostly straight lines and solid colors can be considered art, jealousy that another photographer’s images wouldn’t fetch such a price, confusion about why it’s acceptable for some digitally manipulated images to be considered art while others aren’t, or questioning whether the image is art at all.

This describes the industry reaction to the sale. The Luminous Landscape forums are buzzing with comments about this sale and the image from professional photographers — mostly commercial photographers who dabble with artistic photography, specializing in medium and large format cameras.

Why spend so much money on art?

With so many problems in the world, why spend $4 million on one piece of art rather than using that money to build a school or feed starving children? This is a fair question to ask. At this high level of sophisticated art acquisition, there is a big emphasis on the investment aspect of art. With the photographer still living and with photographic art still being rare compared to other visual art methods, there is a good possibility of the value of this work increasing over the very long term.

Although it’s common to question the intent of purchasing a work of art for $4 million, investors who dedicate the same amount of money to a company to become an owner of that company usually won’t face the same questions about the virtue of their investment. Both buying art and buying a company are capitalistic endeavors, but while the value of a company can be easily justified by looking at a set of financial reports, the art is more difficult to rationalize. Regardless of the reasons, the value of a company or a work of art is whatever someone is willing to pay.

By investing in art, it sends a signal that art, in general, is worth society’s attention. Art is an important part of civilized society, and both reacts to and inspires thought that drives a society forward.

Photo: Andreas Gursky/Christie’s Images, Ltd., 2011
NPR, Seattle PI, Ken Rockwell

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My household has almost always included pets. First, let me establish the true hierarchy. It’s very clear when you live with one cat or more that they own the place, and we humans are only permitted to share living space with them because we provide food and shelter. The only years I’ve lived in a house or apartment not “owned” by a cat were when I was living in a dorm on my university’s campus and for some time following graduation.

As a single man without a human roommate, my cat spends a lot of time with me. He greets me when I come home from work and spends the evening at my feet while I work on Consumerism Commentary and other projects. What we interpret as unconditional love from a pet like a cat is invaluable — you cannot put a price on such a thing.

That’s what we’d all like to believe, anyway. I knew this when I wrote about 10 unusual ways to save money for U.S. News & World Report. I had the apparent audacity to suggest that if you cannot afford the responsibility of fully caring for a pet, you should not have a pet. More precisely, I said, “get rid” of the pet, which may have been a more heartless way of stating the fact, but I still stand by the thought behind the words.

Pets are money drains, cute and lovable money drains. My cat happens to be a low-maintenance, frugal pet. Food and litter cost me only $50 a month or so, and that’s normally the bulk of my expense. I took my cat to the veterinarian this past weekend for a check-up and to determine whether there’s a pathological reason he lost weight over the last few months. The one visit cost more than $250. While results of the blood test are still to be determined, the vet was able to tell during the visit that my cat’s gums are not healthy. Possibly in an effort to scare me away from a procedure, he mentioned that full dental work could easily be $1,000.

He’s an older cat, and as he continues to age, I expect expenses like these to increase. But my experience so far pales in comparison to my boss’s dog. Her dog has a thyroid problem that keeps the pet on and off medication. Not only must she pay for his drugs, repeated visits to the vet, and special dietary considerations, but she also must factor in the cost to clean up after a large dog that cannot always control its bodily functions until it is let outdoors.

Taking care of a pet can be a significant expense, and it is not a responsibility that anyone should take lightly. If you’re not in a position to take care of a pet, including the ability to afford a healthy lifestyle that involves regularly visiting the veterinarian and paying for procedures that ensure the comfort of the creature’s continued existence, you should not own a pet. Living beings deserve better care, and love is not enough.

If your financial circumstances change due to forces beyond your control and caring for a pet is a major expense that you can no longer afford, then you must at least consider your options for removing the pet from your care. While adoption agencies are already overcrowded with pets who need a home, living creatures designed for domestication, as are dogs and cats, deserve families who can care for them fully, not just with love.

When my friends had baby who was determined to be allergic to cats, I agreed to adopt their pet when they were having difficulty finding a home for him. This is the cat who has lived with me for the past five years. I agreed to adopt knowing I was likely to be able to care for him through his old age, not because I selfishly wanted a pet. I would not have been able to do so several years earlier, a time I was having trouble affording necessities for just myself.

I strongly suggest considering the financial and emotional responsibilities before committing to care for a pet. The “unconditional love” we receive from pets is not worth the financial hardship we may encounter if we are not prepared for all the responsibilities. The New York Times has an insightful look at the true cost of pet ownership here. I found this link on Free Money Finance, where FMF often discusses the financial realities of pet ownership.

Update: For more on the realities of pet ownership, take a look at Donna Freedman’s article, Why You Can’t Afford a Dog. Also, PetFinder has these tips for saving money on pet care.

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Happy Vacation-makes-finances-a-bit-messy Friday! It’s been about a month since my last credit card debt update. Since then, we managed to pull off something akin to a coup or a miracle. With help from my wife’s bonuses (which are only considered miraculous because mis-management at her company makes those difficult to realize), we were able to have a nice six-day vacation without putting anything on a credit card.

Well, not anything more. Sometime last Fall, I put the price of the ‘Con we went to on the Newer Credit Card, totaling about $1,300. It’s exciting for me to think that if we decide to go back again next year, the tickets can be paid for without credit card interest.

But since then, my wife saved up enough to spend a roughly equal amount for airfare, car rental, and lodging & meals for the days before and after the ‘Con. Well, some of the post-Con expenses were paid for jointly, and the pet sitter costs came out of the Joint Savings account. That’s what I meant earlier when I said vacation makes finances a bit messy. Looking at our purchases online, it’s intimidating to try to make sense of all the things we spent money on, but the real messy part is that I forgot to take out my usual $100 in cash on Saturday to use this week, so I’ve been using my debit card for the last couple of days.

But when I look at the credit card balances, I know I’ve been doing the right thing.

Debt Totals

Today is a payday, and including the credit card payment scheduled for tomorrow, here’s where things stand right now:

Credit Card Debt Totals Change
Legacy Debt $0.00 -496.81
Newer Debt $2,668.23 -1066.13

Since I started the debt updates on January 26th, the combined debt has gone down from $6,828 to $2,668.23.

The most recent credit card payment (just one card, not two!) was $659 instead of the planned $765, because my wife and I decided to be a little nice to ourselves and get an electric lawnmower. But I’m still on track to be free of credit card debt sometime in July. The annoying thing is that this card doesn’t let me make more than two payments in a month.

(Deep breath.)

At some point, when I think about our household debts, I’m going to have to start including car loans and the mortgage, but I can’t yet bring myself to do that, those totals are just too big.

P.S. The other miraculous part is that while we were gone for nearly a week, our mostly-not-smart dogs didn’t destroy any of the furniture. I think it helped that the evening pet sitter visit was an hour long instead of half an hour. Based on previous vacation experience, I was prepared (psychologically, not financially) to come home and immediately need to buy a new couch. The current one isn’t in good shape by any measure, but I think it can wait until we can buy a new one without using credit.

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As you might know, I live alongside three ridiculous dogs. We take turns being in charge, but most of the time I end up feeling like their servant with titles like “Emergency Backup Food Giver” or “Guy With the Food That Smells Better Than Mine.” The eldest of our three dogs has a friendly relationship with me, though. He’s my good-natured buddy.

But he wasn’t always that way.

When he was young and without peers, he was a biter. He would bite anything and everything. For hours. In addition to the biting, he would chew, and tear, and otherwise disassemble every toy we gave him. Ropes, frisbees, other ropes, rubber bones, and don’t even get me started on the stuffed animals. Literally 100% of the toys we brought him were destroyed and spread across the floor within minutes or hours.

One year we took a trip to the top left corner of the country and in a moment of boredom, stopped into a pet store, where we found the Everlasting Fun Ball.

IMG_0070

The package read “Virtually Indestructible” and we had a good laugh about that; we knew better what was destructible or not, but at the same time, this was a material that we’d never squeezed before. We were on vacation, and in a mall, so we were in a spending mood. I think it was about $15 with the store markup, but here it is on Amazon for $9.99.

That was over four years ago, and as I was sitting here writing this, the same bitey dog just brought me his “green ball” to play with. It is indestructible, and it lasts forever. If you have a dog that constantly chews things up, I can’t recommend this enough.

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TV Everywhere Might Just Be a Big Bully

by Smithee

My family turned off our TV service a few weeks ago, and we’ve been fine so far, watching things through Hulu, iTunes, or Netflix, wherever it’s cheapest. When we get it through iTunes, we’re paying for each episode, when it comes through Netflix, we’re paying a monthly subscription fee, and when it’s “brought to us ... Continue reading this article…

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Podcast 10: Jim Wang From Grill Maestro and Business Success Blogger Erica Douglass

by Flexo

In the tenth episode of the Consumerism Commentary Podcast, Tom Dziubek interviews Jim Wang and Erica Douglass. Jim Wang is the creator of Bargaineering and Grill Maestro, and in today’s interview, Tom and Jim discuss a variety of tips for creating a successful and frugal barbecue for July 4. Erica Douglass is a business success ... Continue reading this article…

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Am I Required to Report All Income to the IRS?

by Flexo

In general, if you have to ask whether you need to report certain income to the IRS, the most likely answer is, “Yes.” Here are some examples, courtesy of MSN Money. Q. I hosted a party to sell products to my friends (and use my social circle for multilevel marketing from some corporation), and the ... Continue reading this article…

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My Newest Bank is Changing Names: TD Commerce Bank to Update Branding Later This Year

by Flexo

A few months ago, my girlfriend moved her checking and savings accounts, which where previously in separate, small, community-based banks, to Commerce Bank, a larger bank based mostly in New Jersey and New York City. I particularly like their long hours and the fact that they’re open on Sunday, and signed up for an account ... Continue reading this article…

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