November 19, 2008

Art Business News

Art-Business-News-Blog

I did a Google search today for "Art Business".  Art Business News was 3rd from the top with a blurb that said "Provides industry news, marketing matters and emerging trends that drive sales for art publishers, galleries, solo artists and art-related business."

This free website is worth a look, especially if you are interested in poster art. The URL is www.artbusinessnews.com

Pros

  • Podcast interviews with the leaders in Poster Art click here
  • Free Online access of featured articles since 2004 click here
  • Online video library click here

Cons

  • Cluttered look due to advertising links
  • No international coverage

The target audience seems to be art consultants and those who run frame shops, not top-dollar New York Galleries.


November 08, 2008

5 Tips for using this Website

Succulent-Leaves_4938 Succulent Leaves_4938

This website has grown over the last year-and-a-half. There are over 600 "posts" (short articles) on the blog. Here are five tips to help you sort through all those articles to quickly find what you are interested in:

  1. Use the Search Feature
  2. Look at the Table of Contents
  3. Don't miss Older Posts
  4. Leave and Read Comments
  5. Use Hyperlinks

Search Feature

If there is a topic or person you are looking for, type it into the Search field on the upper right. For example, if you type in "Budget" dozens of references to budget on the blog appear.

Picture_6

Table of Contents

One problem with blogs is that they are arranged by time rather than by subject. The newest posts are always at the top. To help narrow down your search, I created a table of contents. You can find it on the upper right hand side of the page.

If you click the on the word "Interview" you will see a list of the leaders in HealthCare that I have interviewed.

Older Posts

No more than ten posts can appear on one page of this website. But older articles may have the information you are interested in. To see them, when you get to the very bottom of a page be sure to press the >> icon with an underline under it.

Picture_8

Leave a Comment

One way blogs are different than other websites is that they allow readers to leave comments. This can lead to some pretty interesting discussions. To read those discussions you need to click the word "comments" found at the bottom of every post.

If you have an opinion on a topic, please leave a comment. Click here to see an explanation about how to leave comments.

Use Hyperllinks

If you see underlined text, that probably means it is a "Hyperlink". If you put your cursor over the text and cick, you are taken to a website that goes into greater depth on that topic. For example in ther paragraph above this one, I added a hyperlink to the words "Click here."

October 28, 2008

We are a Featured Blog on TypePad!

Featured-on-TypePad-Blog
I am proud to say that Henry Domke Fine Art is a "featured blog" with TypePad this week.
Click here to see their featured blogs.

TypePad is the largest paid blogging service in the world. I have used TypePad for this blog since I started in early 2007.

I have to say I have been very happy working with them. They have templates which are easy to use and look professional. I never have to worry about coding (good thing, since I don't understand programming).

My two favorite blogs also use TypePad:

To learn more about TypePad, their website is: www.typepad.com

October 27, 2008

HealthCare Leadership: New Resource on Evidence-based Design

HealthCare-Leadership-Blog
HealtlhCare Leadership is a new free website to help you learn about Evidence-based Design (EBD). The URL for the website is: www.healthdesign.org/hcleader

The goal of the website is to "summarize the latest scientific research - also offer practical solutions, action steps and an ROI evaluation framework for healthcare executives who must evaluate and justify investments in new construction and renovation projects."

The site, which is oriented toward the "decision makers", offers a variety of free online tools. For example they have Five "White Papers" on key concepts. These are Acrobat PDF publications which are free for download:

  • The Business Case for Building Better Hospitals Through EBD
  • Culture Change and Facility Design: A Model for Joint Optimization 
  • Implementing Healthcare Excellence: The Vital Role of the CEO in EBD
  • Maximizing the Impact of Nursing Care Quality: A Closer Look at the Hospital Work Environment & the Nurses's Impact on Patient-Quality Care
  • A Review of the Research Literature on Evidence-Based Design

It is the last one; the review of the research literature that really caught my eye. You can download this essential 76-page document for free. This was just published in the journal HERD. If you are serious about understanding EBD and Evidence-based Art, this is required reading.

The HealthCare Leadership website is a collaboration of the Center for Health Design and Georgia Tech. It is funded from a grant by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.

October 23, 2008

The Guild Sourcebook - Now Online & Free

Guild-Onlline-Blog
The Guild Sourcebook just went online. The Guild Sourcebook connects the design trade with professional artists and their work. If you are involved with the use of Art in HealthCare, this is an essential reference. 

To see The Guild Sourcebook online: click here

The printed version is great. Filled with large full-color images, you can really see what the art looks like. But it is much more convenient to just look things up on the web, even if the pictures can't match the quality of the printed page. Plus, the website is free and open to all. 

The website is particularly easy to use. It opens up with a full table of contents, all with hyperlink to the different categories:

  • Architectural Glass
  • Architectural Elements
  • Atrium Sculpture
  • Public Art
  • Non-Representational Sculpture
  • Representational Sculpture
  • Liturgical Art
  • Lighting & Furniture
  • Murals, Tiles & Wall Reliefs
  • Paintings & Prints
  • Fine Art Photography
  • Metal Wall Art
  • Mixed & Other Media Wall Art
  • Fiber Art

You can also search for artists by name. Click here

I covered the print version of The Guild Sourcebook just a few weeks ago. Click here

September 12, 2008

What the heck is Social Networking?

Socialnetworkschartblog

What is Social Networking and how might it relate to the use of Art in HealthCare?

At this point I have to say that I "don't get" Social Networking. I know it is surging in popularity, especially with young people, but should I pay attention to it?

My good friend Steve Mays insists that it is time to take a look. Steve has a good record as a digital media guru. He was the one who encouraged me to get into Podcasting a couple of years ago. That resulted in 50 weekly interviews on the Living Healthy Podcast. They are still online, to listen to them click:www.livinghealthypodcast.com

Steve was also the one who encouraged me to start this blog (HealthCareFineArt.com). Not only did he encourage me, he helped me set it up and still offers suggestions on how to make it more useful.

Now Steve is telling me to check out Twitter.

It is hard for me to see why I would want to do this; do I really want to stay connected online that much? Why would anyone care about what I'm doing right that second? However, Steve seems to have a good sense of future trends; he might be right.

To test this out I have signed up for:

Could a community of geographically dispersed people interested in the use of Art in HealthCare form an online community? We will see.

The chart at the top of this page reveals one problem.The people using Social Networking now tend to be under the age of 30. Most of the people involved with Art in Healthcare are older than that; I'm 56. Will people of my generation embrace this? I remain skeptical, but I will give it a try.

September 02, 2008

New: Table of Contents

Newimprovedblog
Today I've added a new feature to this website to make it more useful; a Table of Contents. Please let me know what you think. Does this make it easier to find what you are looking for?

You will find the Table of Contents listed in the upper right hand corner. There you will find 15 groups of topics. You might think of them as chapters in a book:

Now if you are want to read about Evidence-based Design, all you have to do is click that word in the Table of Contents and the titles of 24 different posts (short articles) dealing with that appear.

I have left out about half of the 530 posts on this blog. I've included only those that I thought had staying power.

August 30, 2008

Getting the Most from this Blog

This blog has grown over the last year-and-a-half. There are over 540 "posts" (short articles) on the website. Some of the articles may be of no interest to you; on weekends I often write about personal stuff that might not have anything to do with the use of Art in HeatlhCare. Here are five tips to help you find what you need quickly:

  1. Use the Search Feature
  2. Look at the Table of Contents
  3. Don't miss Older Posts
  4. Leave and Read Comments
  5. Use Hyperlinks

Search Feature

If there is a topic or person you are looking for, type it into the Search field on the upper right. For example, if you type in "Budget" dozens of references to budget on the blog appear.

Picture_6

Table of Contents

One problem with blogs is that they are arranged by time rather than by subject. The newest posts are always at the top. To help narrow down your search, I created a table of contents. You can find it on the upper right hand side of the page.

If you click the on the word "Interview" you will see a list of the leaders in HealthCare that I have interviewed.

Older Posts

No more than ten posts can appear on one page of this website. But older articles are still there. To see them, when you get to the very bottom of a page be sure to press the >> icon with an underline under it.

Picture_8

Leave a Comment

One way blogs are different than other websites is that they allow readers to leave comments. This can lead to some pretty interesting discussions. To read those discussions you need to click the word "comments" found at the bottom of every post.

If you have an opinion on a topic, please leave a comment. Click here to see an explanation about how to leave comments.

Use Hyperllinks

If you see underlined text, that probably means it is a "Hyperlink". If you put your cursor over the text and cick, you are taken to a website that goes into greater depth on that topic. For example in ther paragraph above this one, I added a hyperlink to the words "Click here."

August 07, 2008

New Definition of Evidence-based Design

Picture_2

The Center for Health Design just redefined Evidence-based Design:

"Evidence-Based Design is the process of basing decisions about the built environment on credible research to achieve the best possible outcomes."

For the full story click here.

I suppose if you wanted to define Evidence-based Art (which is just a form of Evidence-based Design) you might say:

Evidence-Based Art is the process of basing decisions about Art for HealthCare on credible research to achieve the best possible outcomes.

July 03, 2008

Why is Everyone So Afraid of Beauty?

Beautyblogjohns
Jasper Johns (American, b. 1930), Moratorium, 1969. Offset photolithograph.

Why is Everyone So Afraid of Beauty? is the title of a post on edward_ winkleman's blog today. He has it as an open thread and already 59 people have already written comments.

The fact that so much of high-end contemporary art is indifferent or even hostile to beauty has long fascinated me. In the book Regarding Beauty: A View of the Late Twentieth Century Neal David Benezra wrote:

The assault on beauty by the contemporary art world has left a confused and baffled art-viewing public uncertain about one of the very cornerstones of Western art and culture, namely, the pursuit of beauty.

Interestingly art selected for hospitals is often beautiful.

Any ideas on why that might be?

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