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♡  𝕍𝕀𝔾𝕆ℝ ℂ𝔸𝕃𝕄𝔸  ♡'s avatar

Thanks for your text. Here is my approach:

I have developed a very simple perspective on this. So simple, in fact, that I sometimes worry I may have overlooked something crucial, like the need for food, shelter, or the ability to tolerate other humans. But no matter, I practice something I completely unironically call “the royal arrogance of the artist.”

Whenever a client approaches me, I expect - no, I don’t politely request, I don’t wistfully hope, I EXPECT! - their trust. Trust in my artistic abilities, trust in my visionary and dreamlike power. After all, I am the artist, and I have spent years strengthening and nurturing these skills, rather than, say, learning how to file taxes properly.

No matter what my client thinks their rights are or what they imagine their money entitles them to, their influence ends at the moment they specify the subject, size, approximate colors, and the core message. At that point, they must simply let go and trust. And, of course, pay in advance, because I have already spent three lifetimes chasing unpaid invoices, and if there’s going to be a fourth, I sincerely hope it involves an inheritance and a tropical island.

And in 30 years, except for a single exception (you know who you are), my clients have always been satisfied.

By “the royal arrogance of the artist,” I mean that an artist must uphold their dignity and honor at all costs, even if it means starving in a garret, though preferably one with decent Wi-Fi. A true artist, if necessary, would rather perish than be reduced to churning out “Live, Laugh, Love” wall décor on commission. And that, is where the genuine article differs from the multitude of well-meaning hobbyists who are quite content to paint whatever the masses demand.

Of course, another option is to categorically reject all commissions and simply create whatever one pleases, trusting that somewhere out there, in this vast and perplexing universe, a patron exists who will recognize and invest in my art. There aren’t many of these enlightened beings, but there are just enough to keep things interesting. This approach does, however, mean that occasionally a particularly beloved piece will fail to find a buyer. That’s fine. Off it goes to Marjory the Trash Heap. Future generations may never know what they missed, but that’s their problem. I had my fun, and I refuse to rent storage spaces just to accumulate unsold masterpieces like some sort of avant-garde dragon hoarding existential crises.

The royal arrogance of the artist demands difficult decisions. And yes, it would be lovely if I lived in a world where my art was universally recognized for what it truly is: a mirror of the soul and a heartfelt message to humanity. But alas, such a world exists only in some parallel dimension where people understand art instinctively and are also slightly better at using turn signals. In the meantime, I shall continue as I always have, happily, unapologetically, and with an unwavering belief in my own genius.

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