In order to add value for his customers he is offering collectible art for $350 that is original, framed, signed, dated and instantly hangable. These pieces already can sell for 500+ and his art has sold for thousands.
He is offering 50% off to our readers today. Just click here!
He was accepted to the most prestigious Art Basel this year, has had solo exhibitions in South Korea (CICA MUSUEM), NYC (DACIA GALLERY), Southampton (Southampton Arts Center), Texas (Marburger Farms), Sold out his summer collection at Aloof Icon this summer and he has only been an artist for 2 years. He has been in the news all over the world.
The traditional art world thinks he is crazy for selling his originals for so little. But he has a vision. His vision? That his art creates long term value for collectors instead of selling prints which don’t hold as much value.
We asked PJPIII (The Artist) to explain, “I believe that my original art will be worth more in the future. My intention is to become the most collected living artist on earth. In order to do that I need to get my art in collectors homes. The idea that I have is much like getting in early on a start up or a publicly traded company. So if you buy my art now for $350 you are going to help support me to get you a 10X opportunity. If I am really successful it could be 1000X. Who really knows!
He is offering 50% off to our readers only! Just click here.
His vision for his art?
“I want to have a few thousand collectors who bought my art for $350+ and start to raise my prices to help people see a return on their investment. I will help collectors resell my art on my website. Just contact me if you want help reselling it later on.
With your help I can become the most collected living artist on earth and make my paintings worth way more in the future.
We are all in this together.
How it works:
Step 1: Buy an original piece here (Add hyperlink)
Step 2: Hang on your wall or store safely away.
Step 3: A few years down the road when he is a super famous artist you can sell just like if you got in early on a stock or a company.
Step 4: Brag about being a collector of the most famous artist on earth
PJPIII (The Artist) has a crazy story. He almost died from Covid and he used art as a way to heal from severe pain. He is a man on a mission. We highly suggest getting in on his art before it becomes too expensive for everyday people like us.
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Above PJPIII is recovering from brain swelling from Covid while he uses paint as his escape.
This story is literally going to be a blockbuster movie one day.
Patrick J Peters III went to bed on April 5th, 2020 and what happened next changed the trajectory of his life forever. He woke up sick, with Covid-19. Little did he know that he was in the fight of his life. He fought in his room alone against Covid-19 for 25 days.
During the darkest of moments Patrick found solace in painting. As Patrick fell more ill he needed to escape the fear of dying from Covid-19 so he started to paint. The craziest part of this story? He was not an artist before he started painting in his NYC apartment.
Patrick was an executive running a NYC marketing agency before he fell ill. After beating Covid-19 he thought he was in the clear but unfortunately his fight against Covid-19 was just beginning. See Patrick is what they call a long hauler. He has post-Covid-19 brain swelling.
(Above) PJPIII and his 10ft bunny JADE at the Southampton Arts Center
It's hard to believe but his work is already in the most prestigious galleries around America. Patrick is now a rapidly growing artist known as PJPIII (The Artist). His work is in Southampton Arts Center which is the most prestigious gallery in the Hamptons. He has had solo exhibitions in NYC and South Korea at the world famous CICA Museum. He was just accepted as a featured artist at Art Basel this winter!
PJPIII (The Artist) is on a mission to become the most collected living artist. He his offering a limited edition set of what he is calling "Bite Sized Collectible Art!" Selling 18x22 inch, framed (instantly hangable) original work for 50% off $350 for a limited time.
Below is a link to buy.
Billboard in Round Top Texas about PJPIII being the 'Next Picasso'
We asked PJPIII why he was selling his work for only $350. He said, "I want to be accessible to the masses and I won't be the most collected living artist if I only sell my art for $35,000. So I made a size that allows collectors and consumers who believe in me as an artist to afford my work!"
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His story is absolutely insane. Patrick J Peters III became PJPIII (The Artist) after severe brain trauma from Covid-19. PJPIII was an entrepreneur in NYC running a very successful digital marketing agency.
He woke up sick with Covid on April 6th, 2020 and ended up fighting for his life for over 25 days. What’s even more incredible he was able to avoid going on the ventilator with Chinese herbs and acupuncture which he had done by a NYC Doctor who was brave enough to treat him while he was sick.
After this severe brain trauma he started painting. He found solace in the paint brush. We asked PJPIII to elaborate on why he started painting and he said, “I needed to do something to escape the pain and painting was my savior. I was able to leave my pain for a little while and I noticed that my art was getting better and better."
PJPIII has only been an artist for less than 3 years. He has shown his art at Southampton Arts Center where he had a show stopping featured piece of art which was 8ft X 10ft called JADE.
He is a rapidly growing force in the art world. His summer exhibition at Aloof Icon sold out.
Beyond the Hamptons, PJPIII exhibited at Marburger Farms in Roundtop Texas, has had solo shows in NYC (At Dacia Gallery) and had his first international solo exhibition this past summer in South Korea at the world famous CICA Museum.
PJPIII wants to be the most collected living artist. He has created what he calls "Bite Sized Collectible Art" which is small pieces of art (22x18 inches) at $350 (Was $500) for new collectors.
He has given an additional 10% if you click here >> Check out his art here. 2. Cy Gavin
Cy Gavin is a multidisciplinary artist who creates unusual materials in his paintings such as Diamonds, staples, sand and really anything that inspires him. His art is created across sculptures, performance art and video.
His first solo exhibition Fugue States, opened in February 2014, followed by his debut New York solo exhibition, titled Overture, at Sargent's Daughters in July 2015. 10 paintings were shown and the works explored the artist's childhood, specifically his relationship with his father, as well as the tough life of growing up black in America. Gavin often paints his abstracted figures using a unique combination of paints that render the subject in "ultra-black" and contrasts the figure's austerity with bright, saturated colors for the landscapes and backgrounds.
3. Diamond Stingily
This isn’t morbid it’s actually quite interesting. Diamond’s first solo exhibition was a funeral called Forever in our Hearts opened at Egg in Chicago in 2014. Stingily's work explores various themes of hot topics that we need to be talking about today. From racial identity and femininity to memory and even touching on her childhood, iconography, surveillance and paranoia as well as freedom.
Her social and economic background was growing up in West Chicago and you will find her work represents those times and is the backbone of much of her inspiration. I couldn’t help but get inspired by this incredibly talented young artist.
California-based curator Hanna Girma notes that "Stingily courageously navigates between consolation and discomfort, personal and shared memory. Her work celebrates youthful perception, black creativity and resilience while simultaneously thrusting the viewer into their current disposition, with its fear of contact, normalized violence and ancestral hardship.”
We are so excited to see the trajectory of these 3 artists. We will give you updates on them as we learn more.
PJPIII made a special offer to our readers. Use this link to get 10% off >>
Art is one of the purest forms people can use to express themselves. This is true over any medium, but especially in painting. Through a paint brush and canvas, artists can express their true emotions creatively.
This rings very true for Patrick J. Peters III who entered the art world as a way to escape from his health struggles and found a deep love for the craft. While relatively new to the art world, he came to the scene only months ago, Peters’ art is highly-acclaimed and has even been featured in Southampton Arts Center.
Patrick Peters spoke with RoundTop.com on what led him to start painting and the collection that’ll be available during the show at the antique and events venue, The Halles of Round Top.
It’s safe to say that 2020 was a year of trial and tribulation for a lot of people. COVID-19 came and in its wake has left a lot of damage. For Peters, who contracted Coronavirus in April 2020 and has been fighting it off and recovering ever since, this is especially true.
A busy New Yorker with an even busier career as a successful entrepreneur and head of Jump 450 Media, Peters had to leave all that behind when he got his diagnosis. After battling an intense bout of COVID where he was almost to the point of needing a ventilator, Peters thought the worst was over. However, in a terrible twist of fate, Peters ended up being a post-covid long hauler. Still having to fight off terrible headaches and brain swelling, Peters turned to painting as a way to get his mind off of the pain.
What began as a way to escape quickly turned into a passion and Peters amassed an impressive collection of paintings while recovering and quarantining in the Hamptons.
Away from his family and friends for so long, Peters gradually started having some friends come by and visit him. They all remarked on his canvas paintings saying that this was clearly something special.
Now in 2021, Peters has amassed several collections of work and has very quickly cemented himself as one to keep an eye out for in the art world.
Peters is bringing his “Hold it Together” collection to Round Top. Directly inspired by the collective trials of the past year, the collection juxtaposes the more solemn inspiration with bright colors and some more silly interpretations mixed in.
“‘Hold it Together’ is a series about not thriving. It’s literally just getting up and getting through the day. That’s what it’s about and I think there’s a lot of beauty in that,” Peters explains.
With a mixture of more haunting renderings like Crazy Winston, there are also more playful paintings like that of Lulu the deer. Centered on this historic period in time while also harkening back to other watershed moments, such as WWII, ‘Hold it Together’ turned specific moments into timeless pieces of art.
“The whole idea is about holding it together in really rough times. It’s not about thriving and I think that people need to be praised just for getting out of bed today. Just for going to work if they are, or opening up their computer. I think that is what ‘Hold it Together is,'” Peters says.
‘Hold it Together‘ will be on sale at Marburger Farm at Round Top from March 30 through April 3.
Find the article here: https://roundtop.com/home-design/michelle-cheatham-design-brings-napa-style-round-top/
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April 6th 2020 PJPIII (The Artist) almost died from Covid-19. After surviving he struggled with Long Covid from severe brain swelling. In order to escape the pain he was experiencing PJPIII (The Artist) painted. Before he got sick he wasn’t artist, so his story is incredible. It’s one of perseverance, creation and love.
Before he got sick PJPIII (The Artist) was Patrick J. Peters III a Co-founder of a digital marketing agency and Executive. Once we started to paint he knew he could never go back to corporate life and started selling art. In less than 2 years he has been featured in major publications.
Beyond the major publications he has had his own solo show in New York City at the Dacia Gallery. This June he is having a solo exhibition in South Korea at the CICA museum. Additionally he has been featured in South Hamton, NY prestigious gallery South Hamptons Art Center.
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