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Welcome to the
BeSensitive
Network.
BeSensitive to yourself, our environment and each other, click here to see our multimedia presentation.
The Art and the Artist

Our Mission: To unify a global community and make a significant contribution to the development for our world; address a growing cultural imperative that art must reassume its integral position in the world as the facilitator of positive change, 2B Sensitive.
Why?
One of the most extraordinary aspects
of life in the United States is the persistence of hunger. The U.S. Department
of Agriculture (USDA) reported that in 2006:
More than 850 million people go hungry worldwide, 985 million live on less than a dollar a day. More than 1 billion of our global neighbors do not have access to clean, safe and sustainable sources of water. More than 2 million children die needlessly every year from diseases directly related to dirty water. Every $20 we raise can provide clean water for one person for an entire year.
As not to make this exhausting, a simple web search will provide more information than we have time or space regarding the above issues, as well as the hazards we are all facing pertaining to environmental issues even global warming. The only real question here is what are we going to do?
How we can help!
The above facts are but a few of the reasons we are offering for sale /auction
and gifting of the
The Collectors Choice
photo: Dee Watkins
Who is the Artist?
"Woody has been called
What is this art called?
Did you know the art world is between two worldviews, one slowly dying, and one not yet born?
What do you think the quintessential art movement will be that accurately
reflects the moments of our time?
Transpersonal Art
is not magic, it's the creative imagination realized an expression of Action Art. Transpersonal art is a movement, a growing trend among academics; because it focuses on self-realization and design psychology, it will be the tool used increasingly to create inspiring places. Spiritual considerations and psychology are now the principal design tools used to create aesthetically and functionally beautiful places, emotionally and socially fulfilling spaces, because all significant events in life reflect a deeper sense of purpose, meaning and direction in this, the human experience! For more information
Q. How is "Woody's" Artwork Priced?
A. All paintings represented within this
website (besensitive.net) are original works of which no further copies will
be made unless under licensing terms in which a benefit is derived for a
mutually agreed not for profit organization and or environmental or
humanitarian project.
to view portfolio
In general terms, how is Artwork Valued?
The major prerequisite for collecting art is an innate desire for the object. While historical, critical and even social context may enrich the story behind a work or series of paintings and explain its conceptual production, it is the initial connection between viewer and object that sets tone and dialogue; the emotional connection a collector feels towards a work of art or an entire collection creates personal value.
Although personal value and preference may vary greatly, the methods by which one translates an appreciation and passion for art into dollars and cents remain the same. A variety of factors must be considered in determining an artwork’s monetary value.
Condition is one of the most important factors in assessing value. Has the object been maintained in the same condition since its creation? If there are changes in the condition, what are they? Have they affected the appearance? Has the original integrity of the work been upheld?
Artworks may be most effectively assessed by examining the market for similar items, sometimes referred to as “comparables.” Many variables affect the relevance of a comparable, most importantly its sale date. As with any market, the art market is fluid; comparable sales with dates over five years old may have little or no impact on an artwork’s current value. Recent sales indicate the most reliable information in determining the value of a work.
The most accurate evaluation of comparables comes from searching for works within the same medium (painting, sculpture, watercolors, drawing, collages, prints). For example, paintings tend to achieve higher prices than works on paper; the print market is more or less self-contained and specific. Therefore, a print sale, no matter when it occurred, has little relevance in determining the value of a painting, as opposed to the sale of a comparable painting by the same artist that took place during the past year.
The greater the volume of public sales records for an artist, the more important it is to find comparable sales of works within the same criteria. If an artist is new to the auction market and has only ten public sales (in various media), any price realized will be important in determining the value of the work. In the case of an artist whose work has appeared at auction often, and who has perhaps two hundred, or even two thousand sales records, finding an average price for similarly measured, “comparable” works is essential in understanding present value.
Subject matter, or the image depicted in a figurative work, may provide clues to trends within certain genres. For instance, still lifes from the Impressionist era, such as works depicting a bouquet of flowers or a bowl of fruit, have a slightly different market than a landscape painting or a commissioned portrait by the same artist. Thematic factors are combined with creation- or execution-date, followed by medium and size.
Pablo Picasso provides an excellent example of this point. Straddling between figurative and abstract, the works he created between approximately 1908 and 1914 are the product of his investigation into basic geometric elements of form, a method known as Cubism. As these Cubist works differ in style, date and subject matter from his 1940s and 1950s portraits, they also hold very different values.
Rarity is determined by the frequency with which a work by an artist appears on the market, or the number of a specific type of work that is currently available from a particular period in an artist’s career. When combined with demand, rarity becomes very important in appraisal. Visiting Picasso’s career can again be helpful in demonstrating this fact. A naturalistic or figurative Picasso painting from the turn-of-the-(twentieth)-century is extremely rare, compared to a similarly figurative work from the 1920s. Works from the earlier era, referred to as his “Blue Period” – due to the heavy usage of blues and darker, more dramatic hues – rarely come to market. In addition, they are in demand by museums and important collections. Because of these two combined factors, rarity and demand, when a Blue Period painting does appear for sale, its price is very high.
Although an artwork’s value is subject to a wide range of variables, these variables are not always relevant. For example, guidelines for insurance or sales appraisals may be more specific than the introductory definitions described above. Or a collector might assign an artwork or design object a value based on a more emotional level. In any case, understanding the conceptual background of one of "Woody's" paintings and its current market will serve you the buyer in making an educated purchase.
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the primary galleries of james e. woody
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