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How to Start an Art Collection

One of the first pieces of art that Lauren Kotmel ā€™11 ever bought was a huge mixed-media canvas from a hole-in-the wall gallery in Washington, D.C. At the time, she was interning at the Smithsonian as part of Kent Stateā€™s Washington Program in National Issues. ā€œWhen my parents came to pick me up [at the end of the internship], they almost killed me because it took up half the car!ā€ laughs Kotmel.

That was just the beginning of the artwork sheā€™s collected over the past few years. ā€œI love to support local, and Iā€™m an unconventional collector,ā€ Kotmel says. ā€œI have a little bit of everything: lithographs and screen prints of exhibits or gallery openings, sketches from a fashion designer friendā€™s recent fall line, vintage surrealist black and white photography, mixed-media prints and rare or framed vinyl album covers.ā€

Here are Kotmelā€™s collecting tips:

  1. Learn what you like. ā€œTrain your eye because there are so many different types of mediums and genres available. Expose yourself to different types of galleries or installations; even if you donā€™t think youā€™ll like something, go and look anyway. You may be surprised!ā€
  2. Know your budget. ā€œIā€™d never encourage someone to buy something they couldnā€™t afford, but a little stretch is worth it if you find something you love. Most gallery owners will do payment plans for young people just starting out. They donā€™t advertise it, but it never hurts to ask.ā€
  3. Buy it because you love it. ā€œDonā€™t buy something because someone talked you into it or because the artist is trendy right now. Do you love it? At an auction at the Smithsonian, I bought a lithograph poster celebrating the 1974 grand opening of the Smithsonianā€™s Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden. Posters and screen prints are usually affordable and a great way to start collecting. I bid on the piece because I loved the bold colors, and the Hirshhorn is my favorite museum. I didnā€™t realize it was by Larry Rivers, one of the founding fathers of pop art, until after I fell in love with it. It will only appreciate with time. So go with your gut!ā€
  4. Be confident in your taste. ā€œDonā€™t worry about getting too academic. There are no rules. One of my favorite pieces is a mantra block made out of repurposed driftwood from Lake Erie, engraved with the power word ā€˜Fearless.ā€™ I gravitate toward pieces that include words because I find them empowering.ā€
  5. Take care of your artwork. ā€œFraming or mounting can be more expensive than the price of the work itself. Proper archival preservation and maintenance is important for your long-term investment. Be sure to ask the artist or gallery owner for their advice in matting, framing, lighting and placement.ā€