Here are ten reasons that you should buy original art from living artists.

1. A painting is a thing of beauty forever
You should buy a painting because it strikes you with beauty, evokes a deep longing, moves your heart to ache or smile, reminds you of a place, tells you a truth, etc. In other words, you should buy art that hits your heart like beauty can. In purchasing art, beauty is really in the eye of the beholder. What matters is that it has to be beautiful to you. Buying a painting is very different than eating a meal. You have to eat to live. But you don’t have to buy art, ever, to live. You can live your whole life without buying one artwork. It is always a free choice to buy an artwork. And usually because of the price of art, and because money doesn’t grow on trees, we have to think twice about buying it. That is actually good. Because just thinking about buying art forces you to ask the question of values. What do you value? What will you spend your money on? And why? Many people, like myself, have come to the conclusion that beauty matters. And that making the investment in bringing a beautiful painting into our home is a good investment. Not because we expect the painting to go up in value, although that is a good thing when it does, but because we value bringing beauty in our home.

2. A painting connects you to a place
The older I get the more I see how much place matters to people. The places where we grew up, the places where we live (or have lived) awaken and evoke powerful love and longing. Artists, for the most part, tend to be rooted in a place and their art tied to those places. T.C. Steele is known for his Indiana Landscapes https://sunnyshorestudio.com/2015/06/26/my-trip-to-the-t-c-steele-studio-gallery-with-gary-boring/, Heaton Cooper with his beautiful watercolors of the Lake District in England, https://sunnyshorestudio.com/2015/06/01/my-visit-to-the-heaton-cooper-studio-grasmere-england/. Andrew Wyeth’s paintings come were inspired by two places, the Brandywine Valley around Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania, and the area near his home in Cushing, Maine. Many of us can’t live in the places we love, but we can buy art that evoke the feel, moods, smells, and glories of those places.

3. Artworks can become friends and travel with you through life.
There is very little in this world that you can take with you when you move to a new place. You can’t take your old house. You can’t bring your friends. Moving involves saying goodbye to your house and friends. But books and art can go with you. I experienced this when we moved from Indianapolis, IN to Redmond, WA. We said goodbye to a beautiful, 3,000+ square foot home in a historic district and moved into a small apartment. We said goodbye to friends that we had walked with, some for thirteen years. But we brought my books and our paintings with us. Many of the paintings we had bought while in Indy where the church I pastored shared space with art studios and galleries. Some had been given to us by artist friends as gifts. Each painting represented a person, a story, a place that mattered. I wrote about that here. https://sunnyshorestudio.com/2015/10/20/on-buying-books-and-art/. The painting above is one of my friends. It was painted by Jan Zoya, and it reminds me of the water and sky at night and evokes deep emotions.
You should invest in collecting art, just like you invest in friendship. And maybe the tie between friendship and art is even stronger: many of us will purchase art from people with whom we are friends, or our purchase of artwork will bring us into a closer relationship with the artist.

4. Buying art supports artists. Period.
It is extremely hard to make a living as an artist. There is a reason for the “starving artist” term. My dad made it as a professional artist for ten years. Then to provide for our family he took a job at Boeing. I tell that story here: https://sunnyshorestudio.com/2017/01/16/jack-dorsey-sketch-of-an-artist-1/ When you purchase art, you not only encourage the artist by valuing their creative work, but in a very practical way you support their livelihood and their family. There has always been a symbiotic relationship between artists and their friends, collectors and patrons. Artists create beauty and tell truth and even take their stand against the purely pragmatic and functional realities of life saying by their existence and work – creativity matters! Beauty matters! Art matters! Stories matter! Place matters! By purchasing their artwork, friends, collectors and patrons stand with them, support them, and create communities where artists and creativity can thrive, which is good for all of us. We need each other to thrive.

5. Art is an investment in your kids
Really. I mean this. Our kids had the advantage of growing up in a home with artwork on the walls. For thirteen years they roamed the church I pastored in Indianapolis that shares space with a cultural organization that ran four galleries, 35+ artist studios, and monthly art openings in the facility: www.harrisoncenter.org. My kids have watched, and helped, Jenny and I run Sunnyshore Studio which was built to showcase our family of artists. In a word, they have grown up around art and artists. That is a good thing. They have access to art. They know artists. They have learned to value it. Art, books, music, film can be important parts of the development of your children, just like sports and doing their chores are. Here’s one example of how.
My dad, Jack Dorsey, was drawn into being an artist by spending hours looking at the artwork of Grady Spurgeon. I tell this story in Jack Dorsey: Sketch of an Artist.
“Jack’s Uncle Norm and Aunt Marion were an important influence in his development as an artist. They lived above Northgate in Seattle, and Jack’s family visited their home often. Grady Spurgeon, who worked as an illustrator for a printing company and who was also a fine artist, was a family friend and many of his beautiful oil and watercolor paintings hung in their home… Jack still remembers ‘a striking painting of a rapids in the Cascades, another one of birches with reflections, and one of a night scene looking out over water with reflections.’”
Those paintings were engraved in my dad’s memory, they stirred in him a love for beauty and maybe even a desire to be an artist himself.
Why keep your walls bare? Why not invest in beauty for yourself, and your children after you?
Thankyou, well thought out and well written. I never have regretted buying original art! Thanks for your original art and for the example to your children and grands!