Originally Posted by
stlukesguild
It's this weird misconception that there were historically a lot of high paid authors, musicians, and artists.
Visual art is another game altogether for the simple reason that the traditional visual arts have always retained the element of being a luxury craft and depended far more upon wealthy collectors than a market based upon the whims of the masses. Most "old masters" made a decent living... akin to that they might have made as a skilled carpenter or goldsmith. Standards were incredibly high and rigorous and controlled by the guilds. The patrons, in most instances, were wealthy and educated aristocrats, clergy... the church and various regional governmental entities. With the rise of the Dutch burgher class we see the development of the "middle-man" and art begins the move away from artists working directly for the wealthy patron toward art as a commodity sold on the open market by dealers. As a result of this the guilds lost their power and we get a situation where art education is no longer under rigorous control and individual artists begin to follow their own "vision" more. As a consequence, we also get artists such as William Blake, among others, who fail to really succeed within the market system. Still, a good many artists did very well for themselves whether we are talking of Delacroix, Ingres, Turner, etc... There is the image of the Impressionists as a bunch of artists starving in a Parisian garret... unaccepted by the salons. While this might have been true of these painters at age 20 or even 30... by middle age they were very much in demand and quite financially successful. Van Gogh, quite likely, would have died quite well off... his paintings selling very well just a few short years after his death following a short 10-year span as a painter. Picasso was a millionaire by his 40s and a great majority of the artists whose names are familiar from Modernism did well in financial terms. Beyond these, there are always those artists with a definite mastery of realism or a decorative style who are able to do reasonably well in the market. Of course if an artist insists on making conceptual installations about the Holocaust or working in some esoteric manner that most would find "ugly" there is no chance of success in the marketplace unless one makes it into the top tier galleries.