Chris Burden’s Metropolis II is an intense kinetic sculpture, modeled…
Perhaps the most dominant art form of the last 100 years, film has an important…
Tuesday Matinees
Enjoy concerts featuring leading international and local ensembles in programs o…
Art & Music,Jazz at LACMA,Latin Sounds
LACMA offers in-person art classes for kids, teens, and adults, offering the cha…
Random International’s Rain Room (2012) is an immersive environment of…
Rain Room
Artist Robert Irwin’s work in the last five decades has investigated perception…
Barbara Kruger’s Untitled (Shafted) features her distinctive use of advertising…
Band (2006) may qualify as Richard Serra’s magnum opus, representing the fullest…
LACMA’s Modern Art collection features primarily European and American art from…
LACMA’s Acquisitions Group and Art Council members share a deep affinity for the…
Art Councils,Acquisition Groups,Art of the Middle East: CONTEMPORARY,Asian Art Council,Costume Council,Decorative Arts and Design Council,LENS: Photography Council,Modern and Contemporary Art Council,Prints and Drawings Council
Welcome to the employment page of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. To see a…
Jobs,Careers,Internships,Volunteer
Join museum educators, artists, curators, and experts for artist talks, virtual…
Create+Collaborate
In Golden Hour, over 70 artists and three photography collectives offer an aesth…
Established in 1967, the Conservation Center at LACMA supports the museum’s comm…
Chris Burden’s Metropolis II is an intense kinetic sculpture, modeled…
Perhaps the most dominant art form of the last 100 years, film has an important…
Tuesday Matinees
Enjoy concerts featuring leading international and local ensembles in programs o…
Art & Music,Jazz at LACMA,Latin Sounds
LACMA offers in-person art classes for kids, teens, and adults, offering the cha…
Random International’s Rain Room (2012) is an immersive environment of…
Rain Room
Artist Robert Irwin’s work in the last five decades has investigated perception…
Barbara Kruger’s Untitled (Shafted) features her distinctive use of advertising…
Band (2006) may qualify as Richard Serra’s magnum opus, representing the fullest…
LACMA’s Modern Art collection features primarily European and American art from…
LACMA’s Acquisitions Group and Art Council members share a deep affinity for the…
Art Councils,Acquisition Groups,Art of the Middle East: CONTEMPORARY,Asian Art Council,Costume Council,Decorative Arts and Design Council,LENS: Photography Council,Modern and Contemporary Art Council,Prints and Drawings Council
Welcome to the employment page of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. To see a…
Jobs,Careers,Internships,Volunteer
Join museum educators, artists, curators, and experts for artist talks, virtual…
Create+Collaborate
In Golden Hour, over 70 artists and three photography collectives offer an aesth…
Established in 1967, the Conservation Center at LACMA supports the museum’s comm…
Chris Burden’s Metropolis II is an intense kinetic sculpture, modeled…
Perhaps the most dominant art form of the last 100 years, film has an important…
Tuesday Matinees
Enjoy concerts featuring leading international and local ensembles in programs o…
Art & Music,Jazz at LACMA,Latin Sounds
LACMA offers in-person art classes for kids, teens, and adults, offering the cha…
Random International’s Rain Room (2012) is an immersive environment of…
Rain Room
Artist Robert Irwin’s work in the last five decades has investigated perception…
Barbara Kruger’s Untitled (Shafted) features her distinctive use of advertising…
Band (2006) may qualify as Richard Serra’s magnum opus, representing the fullest…
LACMA’s Modern Art collection features primarily European and American art from…
LACMA’s Acquisitions Group and Art Council members share a deep affinity for the…
Art Councils,Acquisition Groups,Art of the Middle East: CONTEMPORARY,Asian Art Council,Costume Council,Decorative Arts and Design Council,LENS: Photography Council,Modern and Contemporary Art Council,Prints and Drawings Council
Welcome to the employment page of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. To see a…
Jobs,Careers,Internships,Volunteer
Join museum educators, artists, curators, and experts for artist talks, virtual…
Create+Collaborate
In Golden Hour, over 70 artists and three photography collectives offer an aesth…
Established in 1967, the Conservation Center at LACMA supports the museum’s comm…
Chris Burden’s Metropolis II is an intense kinetic sculpture, modeled…
Perhaps the most dominant art form of the last 100 years, film has an important…
Tuesday Matinees
Enjoy concerts featuring leading international and local ensembles in programs o…
Art & Music,Jazz at LACMA,Latin Sounds
LACMA offers in-person art classes for kids, teens, and adults, offering the cha…
Random International’s Rain Room (2012) is an immersive environment of…
Rain Room
Artist Robert Irwin’s work in the last five decades has investigated perception…
Barbara Kruger’s Untitled (Shafted) features her distinctive use of advertising…
Band (2006) may qualify as Richard Serra’s magnum opus, representing the fullest…
LACMA’s Modern Art collection features primarily European and American art from…
LACMA’s Acquisitions Group and Art Council members share a deep affinity for the…
Art Councils,Acquisition Groups,Art of the Middle East: CONTEMPORARY,Asian Art Council,Costume Council,Decorative Arts and Design Council,LENS: Photography Council,Modern and Contemporary Art Council,Prints and Drawings Council
Welcome to the employment page of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. To see a…
Jobs,Careers,Internships,Volunteer
Join museum educators, artists, curators, and experts for artist talks, virtual…
Create+Collaborate
In Golden Hour, over 70 artists and three photography collectives offer an aesth…
Established in 1967, the Conservation Center at LACMA supports the museum’s comm…
Chris Burden’s Metropolis II is an intense kinetic sculpture, modeled…
Perhaps the most dominant art form of the last 100 years, film has an important…
Tuesday Matinees
Enjoy concerts featuring leading international and local ensembles in programs o…
Art & Music,Jazz at LACMA,Latin Sounds
LACMA offers in-person art classes for kids, teens, and adults, offering the cha…
Random International’s Rain Room (2012) is an immersive environment of…
Rain Room
Artist Robert Irwin’s work in the last five decades has investigated perception…
Barbara Kruger’s Untitled (Shafted) features her distinctive use of advertising…
Band (2006) may qualify as Richard Serra’s magnum opus, representing the fullest…
LACMA’s Modern Art collection features primarily European and American art from…
LACMA’s Acquisitions Group and Art Council members share a deep affinity for the…
Art Councils,Acquisition Groups,Art of the Middle East: CONTEMPORARY,Asian Art Council,Costume Council,Decorative Arts and Design Council,LENS: Photography Council,Modern and Contemporary Art Council,Prints and Drawings Council
Welcome to the employment page of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. To see a…
Jobs,Careers,Internships,Volunteer
Join museum educators, artists, curators, and experts for artist talks, virtual…
Create+Collaborate
In Golden Hour, over 70 artists and three photography collectives offer an aesth…
Established in 1967, the Conservation Center at LACMA supports the museum’s comm…
Chris Burden’s Metropolis II is an intense kinetic sculpture, modeled…
Perhaps the most dominant art form of the last 100 years, film has an important…
Tuesday Matinees
Enjoy concerts featuring leading international and local ensembles in programs o…
Art & Music,Jazz at LACMA,Latin Sounds
LACMA offers in-person art classes for kids, teens, and adults, offering the cha…
Random International’s Rain Room (2012) is an immersive environment of…
Rain Room
Artist Robert Irwin’s work in the last five decades has investigated perception…
Barbara Kruger’s Untitled (Shafted) features her distinctive use of advertising…
Band (2006) may qualify as Richard Serra’s magnum opus, representing the fullest…
LACMA’s Modern Art collection features primarily European and American art from…
LACMA’s Acquisitions Group and Art Council members share a deep affinity for the…
Art Councils,Acquisition Groups,Art of the Middle East: CONTEMPORARY,Asian Art Council,Costume Council,Decorative Arts and Design Council,LENS: Photography Council,Modern and Contemporary Art Council,Prints and Drawings Council
Welcome to the employment page of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. To see a…
Jobs,Careers,Internships,Volunteer
Join museum educators, artists, curators, and experts for artist talks, virtual…
Create+Collaborate
In Golden Hour, over 70 artists and three photography collectives offer an aesth…
Established in 1967, the Conservation Center at LACMA supports the museum’s comm…
Chris Burden’s Metropolis II is an intense kinetic sculpture, modeled…
Perhaps the most dominant art form of the last 100 years, film has an important…
Tuesday Matinees
Enjoy concerts featuring leading international and local ensembles in programs o…
Art & Music,Jazz at LACMA,Latin Sounds
LACMA offers in-person art classes for kids, teens, and adults, offering the cha…
Random International’s Rain Room (2012) is an immersive environment of…
Rain Room
Artist Robert Irwin’s work in the last five decades has investigated perception…
Barbara Kruger’s Untitled (Shafted) features her distinctive use of advertising…
Band (2006) may qualify as Richard Serra’s magnum opus, representing the fullest…
LACMA’s Modern Art collection features primarily European and American art from…
LACMA’s Acquisitions Group and Art Council members share a deep affinity for the…
Art Councils,Acquisition Groups,Art of the Middle East: CONTEMPORARY,Asian Art Council,Costume Council,Decorative Arts and Design Council,LENS: Photography Council,Modern and Contemporary Art Council,Prints and Drawings Council
Welcome to the employment page of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. To see a…
Jobs,Careers,Internships,Volunteer
Join museum educators, artists, curators, and experts for artist talks, virtual…
Create+Collaborate
In Golden Hour, over 70 artists and three photography collectives offer an aesth…
Established in 1967, the Conservation Center at LACMA supports the museum’s comm…
Chris Burden’s Metropolis II is an intense kinetic sculpture, modeled…
Perhaps the most dominant art form of the last 100 years, film has an important…
Tuesday Matinees
Enjoy concerts featuring leading international and local ensembles in programs o…
Art & Music,Jazz at LACMA,Latin Sounds
LACMA offers in-person art classes for kids, teens, and adults, offering the cha…
Random International’s Rain Room (2012) is an immersive environment of…
Rain Room
Artist Robert Irwin’s work in the last five decades has investigated perception…
Barbara Kruger’s Untitled (Shafted) features her distinctive use of advertising…
Band (2006) may qualify as Richard Serra’s magnum opus, representing the fullest…
LACMA’s Modern Art collection features primarily European and American art from…
LACMA’s Acquisitions Group and Art Council members share a deep affinity for the…
Art Councils,Acquisition Groups,Art of the Middle East: CONTEMPORARY,Asian Art Council,Costume Council,Decorative Arts and Design Council,LENS: Photography Council,Modern and Contemporary Art Council,Prints and Drawings Council
Welcome to the employment page of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. To see a…
Jobs,Careers,Internships,Volunteer
Join museum educators, artists, curators, and experts for artist talks, virtual…
Create+Collaborate
In Golden Hour, over 70 artists and three photography collectives offer an aesth…
Established in 1967, the Conservation Center at LACMA supports the museum’s comm…
Sometimes it’s unclear what the difference is between art print companies, especially if you compare them online. However, all of us can agree that high-quality printing can make or break the display of a piece. High-resolution, well-crafted prints bring art to life, capturing the vibrancy, details, and textures that a lower-quality print might miss. With advancements in printing technology, fine art printing has evolved into a specialized service. In this guide, we’ll explore the benefits of using high-quality art printing services and why it’s worth the investment for collectors and creators.
#1 Maintaining Originality and Detail
A major benefit of high-quality art printing services is the ability to reproduce broad and accurate color spectrum, contrast and details of the original, fine art. Standard printing processes may fail to capture super fine brushstrokes, texture, and shifts in tone that create a special feeling when we look at art. So art printing companies that use high-resolution giclée or specialized pigment-based inks can offer reasonable fidelity.
If you plan on using the art printing service yourself, you must have a high-resolution, digital file to print from that’s at least 300 dpi and saved as a png or raw file. jpegs are compressed images and the file compression may show up printing large posters.
Sir Frederic Leighton, La Nanna
#2 Using Archival-Grade Materials
Archival-grade materials are designed to last decades without fading, yellowing, or warping. This level of durability is essential for anyone looking to keep their art prints in pristine condition over the long term, especially when they are limited-edition or rare art prints. Companies like the Stackhouse printing use the highest-quality materials for colorful art reproductions that can last over 100 years without fading under museum conditions.
Always keep your art and prints away from a direct sunlight, artificial light, high humidity and changing room temperature conditions. Art and prints fade, crack and warp if they're not custom-framed with archival, non-glare plexiglass and backing.
Archival materials used for printing add an extra layer of protection, helping fine prints resist the effects of light and moisture, thereby preserving their beauty and market value. When you shop for a printer, ask what supplies they use because paper must be pH-neutral not to yellow over time.
Moonlight, 22x30in, closeup, colored pencil on art board, Veronica Winters
#3 Using Advanced Printing Techniques
Companies that create high-quality art prints use advanced printing techniques. Some of these methods include:
● Giclée Printing: A technique known for its exceptional quality, giclée printing uses pigment-based inks and high-resolution printers. This method is popular among artists and art collectors due to its ability to render incredibly detailed reproductions that mimic the look and feel of the original piece. ● UV-Protective Coatings: UV coatings shield prints from sunlight, which can fade colors over time. This added layer of protection is necessary for prints displayed in well-lit spaces or under direct lighting. Printing companies like the Stackhouse use these advanced methods for high-end art reproductions.
#4 Having Customization
Customization is a big advantage of working with a high-quality art printing service. Standard printing services often have limited choices in sizes, framing, and finish. A specialized art print shop can print pictures in a requested size. It’s invaluable for art collectors aiming to match a print to their collection’s theme or display needs, as well as for artists wanting to maintain complete control over the presentation of their work for a show.
If you plan to make a large order, ask for a test run of your pictures. I'm sure the shop could print a sample for you to appreciate their quality.
#5 Enhancing the Viewer’s Experience
Usually, we can distinguish between the art print and the original when we look at art in person. The emotional impact is lost in art reproductions. However, today advanced printing techniques are so good that high-quality prints can evoke similar emotions as the original piece. If you go to the Miami Art Context you can look at gigantic photographs that have beautiful detail, color, contrast, and sharpness. Sometimes art galleries display printed digital art that looks impressive because of high-definition in prints. The quality is so perfect that it looks like art, not a print.
Javier Bellomo Coria, Face, Miami Art Fait, 2017
#6 Offering Long-Term Value and Investment Protection
Both limited-edition prints and rare art prints could become a valuable investment when these art prints are signed by a famous artist. Such prints may appreciate in value over time because the artist gains recognition. Therefore, it’s important to know if they were printed with high-quality inks, paper, and UV coating to ensure longevity and peace of mind, knowing that art prints will continue to hold their value and appeal.
Andy Warhol’s silkscreen print seen at the auction in Naples, FL
You must understand the difference between a giclee print and a hand-pulled lithograph or silkscreen. Both types of prints can be signed by a famous artist, but the first one is a computer-generated print, while lithographs, silkscreens and intaglios are hand-made prints pulled through the press. Done in multiples, these prints should have a much higher price point as opposed to a giclee print.
Next time you see a beautiful art print, ask its owner where it got printed. I keep a short list of businesses that offer different art services. For anyone serious about their collection or artistic portfolio, investing in a professional art printing service is a decision that pays off in the quality and satisfaction of each piece produced.
The right art display can transform an ordinary room into a personal museum. Whether you’re showcasing family photos, collected paintings, or your creative works, a well-planned home gallery adds character, style, and mood to your living space. But how exactly do you create the right space for a gallery? Do you need a room with many windows, or is artificial light better? What should the layout of the room look like? Let’s break down the essential steps to create an impressive art display that fits your home, lifestyle, and budget.
Pick the Perfect Space
The first step is choosing the right location for your gallery. While many homeowners automatically think of the living room, consider other spaces that could work better. A wide hallway, home office, or even a dedicated spare room can serve as an excellent gallery space. Your bedroom could have a large, empty wall. The office space might have a long, narrow wall that’s grey and boring unless you put art into it. The key is finding an area with enough wall space and natural traffic flow.
Look for rooms with minimal furniture and clean sight lines. To display art beautifully at home, you need to make it possible for viewers to focus on the art without visual distractions. Also, consider how people move through the space — a gallery shouldn’t block normal traffic patterns or create awkward bottlenecks where you bump into the art with your shoulders.
Don't hang big art where is not enough space between art and the viewer to see it properly. Don;t hang art too close to the kitchen's oven or cooking stove as hot vapors may damage the art in the long run.
Before you start hanging artwork, assess the walls. Older homes often need wall repairs or fresh paint. Fix any cracks, holes, or uneven surfaces. Color your walls in a light, neutral hue like light grey or beige. A smooth, clean wall surface makes your art look more professional and protects your pieces from damage.
Light It Right
Proper lighting can make or break a home gallery. Natural light is beautiful but can damage artwork over time. UV rays fade colors and can crack canvas art. If your chosen space has large windows, consider installing UV-protective window film or light-filtering shades. In general, it’s best to display the art under diffused light that has minimal UV impact. I’m not a big fan of direct, artificial light that leads to uneven fading of any art.
For artificial lighting, you have several options:
Track lighting offers the flexibility to adjust individual lights as you change your display.
Picture lights mounted directly above artwork provide focused illumination.
Recessed ceiling lights create overall ambient lighting. This might be the best option to display art without creating damage to it.
Wall-mounted sconces add both function and style.
Coderch and Malavia, ALIS VOLAT PROPRIIS, sculpture display with track lighting at the Context Art Miami 2023
The color temperature of your lights matters too. Aim for bulbs rated between 2700K and 3000K for warm, natural-looking light that shows true colors. LED options now offer excellent color rendering while staying cool and energy-efficient.
If you display drawings (art on paper including watercolor), I strongly recommend the UV-protective, non-reflective plexiglass to protect art from damage. The thicker the plexiglass, the more exponential the protection is for art.
Installation and Layout
Before making any holes in your walls, plan your layout. Many professional installers use the paper template method: cut paper sheets to match your artwork sizes and tape them to the walls. This lets you experiment with different arrangements without damaging walls or artwork.
Consider these layout principles:
Keep larger pieces at eye level, roughly 57–60 inches from the floor to the center of the piece.
Allow enough space between works so each piece can “breathe.”
Group similar pieces together: by theme, color, or frame style.
Mix up sizes and orientations to create visual interest.
Leave room for your collection to grow.
Keep space small between art and sofa. Most people hang art too high above the sofa’s line.
Structural Considerations
Most home walls can support small framed art (under 16 inches long and light frame), but heavy pieces need special attention. Locate wall studs with a stud finder and use appropriate anchors for your wall type. In older homes, plaster walls may need different hardware than modern drywall. If you don’t do this, your heavy art may fall off of the wall, break the frame, and damage both its surface and the floor or furniture below it.
If you’re planning an extensive gallery, consider these structural updates:
Adding wall studs for heavy piece support
Purchasing heavy-duty hooks for big art display
Installing dedicated electrical circuits for gallery lighting
Building shallow display niches for three-dimensional art
Adding crown molding with integrated picture rail systems. This is an advanced method and a vast majority of homes don’t really need this for picture display.
Protection and Preservation
Your home environment affects artwork differently than a museum setting. Consider these factors:
Temperature fluctuations can damage certain materials, especially canvas.
High-humidity areas like bathrooms are ok for art made of metal but please don’t hang valuable paintings in your bathroom space no matter how big it is! Humidity and strong light deteriorate any art quickly.
Air vents can blow dust onto pieces.
Direct sunlight causes serious fading and deterioration. Don’t put too much light onto your wall art. Pick a wall that has enough natural light on it but no direct sunlight or electrical light!
You might need to upgrade your home’s climate control system or add a dehumidifier to protect valuable pieces. Installing quality air filters helps reduce dust and other airborne particles that can damage artwork over time.
Besides creating a wonderful art collection at home, you can also become a trendsetter by displaying art in your office. If you’d like to create a unique environment in your business space, consider the following details.
1. Brand positioning
Your art collection can make your brand and space different from millions of boring office spaces. You can attract new clients by showcasing your unique, luxury space that sparks conversations and makes you and your business memorable! Many offices looks the same having no clear direction or authenticity. Contemporary art can help you stand out from a crowd.
Describe your company using visual language so we can understand it without words. Bring art that relates to your business and matches in color. If you sell flowers, have floral art on the walls. If you’re in the real estate business, art with local scenery well. If you sell cars, have excellent, high-quality art or photos of rare cars on your walls. If you’re a law firm, you have many options keeping it either conservative or contemporary.
2. Visual comfort
You can create a soothing productive environment with light and art pieces that distress workers. Office employees can improve focus by resting their eyes on art. It creates a positive energy flow. Art can make offices a safe and comforting space you want to come back to. Pay attention to how psychologists decorate their offices because their art often creates inner comfort and warmth. Art with green plants can match your interior or canvases with blue landscapes may be a perfect fit for your space. Think of a feeling you want to elicit, colors help you communicate that feeling.
3. Inspiring space
Your art wall displays can become an inspiring space your clients will want to come back to. Art encourages positive emotions, creative thinking, and a light or fun atmosphere in an otherwise boring workspace.
4. Cultivate culture & become a trendsetter
Give people more chances to talk about your business for free! Without buying expensive ads, a great art collection speaks for itself. Be the leader in your business by displaying memorable, high-quality art that gives people more chances to talk about your business! Invest in art that inspires us and holds value long-term.
How to find & fit original art in your office space
Finally, let’s talk about the most important and practical aspect of your art collection for office space. Before rushing to your local art fair to buy paintings, think of all 5 points I mentioned earlier: brand positioning, color, visual comfort, feelings you want to create, and trendsetting. Here are a few more things to consider.
The easiest thing to do is to create wall art displays designed around 1-2 colors (white-blue, green-yellow, or pastel colors of soft blue-lilac-pink, for example). Think of a specific color scheme to represent your brand in chosen artworks. Warm or cool? Light or dark? Red-white or gray-aqua? Vibrant or subdued?
Another simple idea is to hang landscapes/local natural scenery art or photographs. Many medical offices do just that. Hang big art at eye level to have a visual impact.
Think of the medium. Large-scale photography or canvas art?
Consider the wall size to choose the right art for your space. Most of the time people make the mistake of hanging art that looks too small on a huge wall. The result is that art gets ‘lost’ on the wall.
Have consistency in your art collection display. It needs to tie in together in color, type, theme. Abstract or representational? Bright or soothing? Figurative or floral? Framing should be consistent in style too!
If you feel intimidated by this work and need help organizing office space, check out local services that include interior designers, local artists, and art consultants. If you know a local artist you like, invite him or her to see the space to commission art for your space.
One of the rules in home and office decoration is to arrange art, furniture and plants around a single color. Make it two if you have to. Say, green-white. Color the walls in a neutral color (light grey), so any change in art would be ok for the wall space in your office.
Making It Work Long-Term
A home gallery will grow with you. Leave space to add new pieces, and don’t feel locked into your initial arrangement. Professional galleries regularly rotate their collections — you can do the same at home. This keeps the space fresh and lets you highlight different pieces throughout the year.
Consider practical matters like cleaning and maintenance. Leave enough space between pieces to dust effectively. Think about how you’ll reach higher artwork for cleaning or rearranging. If you’re installing track lighting, make sure you can access it for bulb changes.
If you hang art in office space, strongly consider foot traffic around your art. Some artsy hotels display original art in glass cases, large wall spaces can have canvas art displays in groups that have no direct reach to it. In other words, your customers shouldn’t bump into wall art displays constantly.
To sum up, creating a home gallery or a business space decoration takes planning and often some home modifications, but the result is worth the effort. A well-designed gallery space showcases your collection, adds personal character to your home, and lets you feel joy. Take time to consider all aspects — from wall preparation to lighting to preservation — and you will create a display space that works beautifully for years to come.