New Contemporary Landscape Art – Capturing the Spirit

As I type this I am listing to Joni Mitchell sing Canadahhhhahhahhhh, intermixed with birdsong coming through the patio door window of my office. I have just finished a new painting, about the spirit of the landscape, something I have been thinking about here in my studio on Vancouver Island where we are surrounded by nature and ocean on all sides. New contemporary landscape art, that captures the spirit of the landscape.

For years now my narrative brand of painting under the persona of #ICONICCANUCK has explored the people, symbols, icons and landscapes of Canada. Over the years I have overheard my work referred to as ‘visual storytelling’ and narrative art. Some have told me the work begs for a story from the viewer. Whatever the case I try not to think about it too much, my intention really comes from my need to communicate, visually, as words have never been my strong suit. Painting, like writing, gives me time to process what it is that I am seeing and my thoughts on these things. I am becoming more and more connected to the work, and less connected to the words, in a verbal sense, writing comes fluidly for me and flows like paint.

I am a human tuning fork, buried into the earth, vibrating outward onto the canvas and the virtual page on this blog and I have a new painting about the spirit of the landscape.

This new painting features an Elk that I met on a trip through Jasper National Park, a hummingbird that sips outside my studio and a Blue Jay. Set against a colourful modern background of sky, mountains, and trees, this is; “Only the Blue Jay Knows”. This original acrylic and gouache painting on canvas measures three feet high by four feet wide, with colours of Yves Klein blue, neon pop art outlines, and gilded gold details. With this painting nature ‘reigns’ and the vivid hues make the painting vibrate with life, like music on canvas.

A few photos and video clip of this new contemporary painting and behind the scenes in the studio;

contemporary landscape art

contemporary landscape art

new contemporary landscape art

This painting is available to own, see the full painting with additional photos here.

Feeling the spirit of the landscape and the nature that surrounds.

Sincerely Yours,

Brandy Saturley a.k.a #iconiccanuck

You Can Afford That Pricey Painting – Five Ways to Buy Original Art

Whether you are in an art gallery, at an art show, or browsing art online, you have probably seen a painting you love and thought, “I love it but I can’t afford that painting”. At this point, there is very little excuse to not have something original and interesting on your walls, in our humble opinion. Owning an original painting, by a real artist, has many benefits: for starters, the artist’s work gets more valuable with time, unlike a car, suddenly you have a lucrative capital asset. There is also the rewarding sense of owning an original piece of art that you can proudly display in your home, providing an interesting conversation piece when guests drop by, original art IS definitely something to talk about. But everyone knows the downside to buying original artwork is that it comes with a dollar sign followed by many, many zeros, even when the artist is fairly young and emerging on the art scene. We’re not saying artists don’t deserve every penny of that price tag, but chances are you don’t have that kind of cash lying around for a spontaneous kind of moment. But this should never keep you from buying an original piece of art today, before it is gone tomorrow. There are SO many ways to buy art, that makes it affordable for almost anyone. Here are five ways to buy art, today;

1. Finance Your Art Purchase:  That’s where this genius service called Art Lease Canada comes in; have that painting in your home now and pay for it over a time that suits your budget. Established in 2003, Art Lease Canada is a Canadian financing company that helps people acquire art within a monthly budget. Their approach is simple. They buy art on behalf of their customers and lease it to them over a specified period of time. The client enjoys the art in their homes or businesses while making monthly lease payments and at the end of their lease, they own the art. Art Lease Canada finances art purchases valued between $1,000 and $25,000 for art galleries and self-representing artists across Canada. This means the next time you’re sipping wine and browsing art online, or in a gallery and come across a $5000 painting you really, really have to have (and it’s not the wine talking), you could use an Art Lease loan to purchase the artwork. This means on a $5000 painting, you only have to drop $234.00 over the next 24 months. Buyers remorse begone! Or at least temporarily diminished. If you are buying for your office or business, Art Lease is business friendly – monthly payments are a tax-deductible business expense.

finance your art purchase

2. Rent Your Art: love a painting but not sure you want to make it a forever relationship? No problem, most galleries and professional self-representing artists offer rental options where you can rent an artwork for a small monthly fee and then trade it in when you are ready for something new. This is a great way to ‘try out’ new art that you may end up buying in the future. For as low as $50 a month, you can rent a painting. Once you select a work of art, we can hand-deliver and install the piece (local clients only Vancouver Island and Vancouver mainland). After a month, you can keep renting, return it, swap it for another work, or purchase it. Most rental pieces list for $1000 to $2500.

rent your art

3. Trade-In Your Art: you own a painting that you no longer have the same love for, or you may have a lot of art and not a lot of wall space, and you are not interested in paying for an art storage service. Many galleries, and a few professional self-representing artists, offer ‘buyback programs’ where they will buy back your art for the price of what you purchased the art for as a credit against a new art purchase of equal or greater value.

buy art online

4. Group Buy: do you have a few friends that love art? Ever thought of getting together to buy a great painting, or a few paintings and then sharing them? This option offers you the ability to move the painting from home to home every few months, offering the chance to enjoy something new on your walls every few months. We would only recommend this option if you know each other REALLY well and there is a good level of trust, you don’t want your original art purchase damaged.

five ways to buy art

5. Write-off Your Art: Encouraging purchases of Canadian artwork. Buying original artwork is considered as an amortization expense for corporations or individuals who operate a business. It qualifies as a tax deduction provided that certain criteria are met. The artwork must have been created by a Canadian artist and must be related to the business’s commercial activities, for example, it must be exhibited in a place of business where it will be seen by clients. If the purchase meets these criteria, the buyer is entitled to a declining deduction of 33% of the cost of purchasing the artwork (class 8.1) at the provincial level and of 20% (class 8) at the federal level. Some works of art are, however, excluded and do not qualify for a tax credit, more specifically works having a value of less than $200 or created prior to the 1900s – created over 100 years ago. Moreover, if the buyer is a GST and QST registrant, he can recover the taxes paid at the time of purchasing the artwork by claiming input tax credits. Lastly, if the work is rented instead of being purchased, the rental expenses are also deductible as long as the expense was made for business purposes.

Five Ways to Buy Art online

You CAN afford that original painting, now all you have to do is decide which painting is the lucky one for you!

buy art online

See more paintings by Canadian Artist, Brandy Saturley.