The weirdest part of this is it isn’t even good art. It’s the sort of art you would expect from 12-year-old junior high students.
So at least he probably hardly sold any of it.
The weirdest part of this is it isn’t even good art.
“Good art” is a matter of marketing and who you know in the “art scene” more than it is anything else. There is plenty of shit in museums and fancy galleries that demonstrates less technical proficiency than these works, and plenty of shit in thrift stores and yard sales that demonstrates more.
Do you hate Isabelle Becker’s sans titre works? Wanda Koop? Adelisa Selimbašić? Niklas Asker? Bram Demunter?
Like I’m seeing loads of cool and talented artists from the last couple of years.
Okay, well maybe you think these drawings are worth $151, but I sure as hell wouldn’t pay that for them.
These are Canadian dollars though, so it’s kinda like paying with Monopoly money (I kid. They’re around 112 USD).
To be fair, it does kind of look like Monopoly money…
But then U.S. money is boring.
metamodern child labor issues
“Non, Timothy, we stopped working with chiaroscuro and are doing pastoral scenes! Go to zee time out!”
“This pastoral looks like a Kinkade picture. We want Sargent paintings. Get it right or you’ll get my right, capische?”
Dude was almost there.
Make it into a bake sale to fund the school arts program then ask for a raise in salary for heroism.I first read it as a raise in salary for heroin… lol.
But real talk, most school districts have no incentive program for being a better teacher. They are mostly on a set year and education grade.
Possible that the teacher can’t pay for shit on their small income. If that’s the reason, this is pretty depressing.
I was going to shit on you because I’m used to Ontario teacher wages where they are compensated adequately (as opposed to say the US). But that apparently doesn’t hold true for Quebec.
Here in the freedom land, we make our teachers buy their own art supplies.
So talk to the kids, parents and/or the school and do this the right way. Instead of, you know, sketchy online tactics. They’d probably sell better with community support too.
The school won’t do jack squat.
The right way is to suck up to 100s of people on the chain of command. The alternative is to do it yourself. I think the decision is easy on this one (maybe not for you, if you’re into that shit)
The decision of stealing form literal kids and getting fired? I mean… If that’s a clear decision for you…
I am sure you will forget all about this once this “criminal” is behind bars. But you will never lift your fingers for actual education reform or raising teachers’ salaries.
Wow, you might wanna chill with that whataboutism my friend.
Ok then what other venture takes others’ creation and sells it off as their own?
Sorry, I don’t feel comfortable trying to defend a grown ass man stealijg from children. wtf.
Actually, these are fucking great. Super outsidery. I’d buy but want to make sure the kids get the bulk of the profits, not the teacher.
Selling your students artwork online for your own profit = $1000 (est)
Getting outed by your tech-savvy students = priceless
I kinda like the girl with the clown nose. Not enough to pay $151, maybe $25?
“learning that their kids’ art is showing up online, seemingly for a profit.”
Seemingly for a profit?! Nah mate, that’s $100 of pure Crayola on locally sourced printer paper.
How else is she supposed to afford to buy art supplies out of her own paycheck because the school refuses to supply a proper budget?
He. And from what I can tell, Saint-Lazare is a pretty well-off suburb of Montreal, so I’m guessing he’s not paid too badly.
I’m pretty sure every single teacher in the entire world is underpaid, with the possible exception of some that also coach sports or something like that.
In the overall sense, I don’t disagree with you. I just mean that this teacher probably wasn’t impoverished and probably also didn’t have to buy his own art supplies.
My mom was a teacher in an affluent area up until the pandemic. Definitely underpaid, definitely had to purchase supplies with her own money every year, and then was nearly fired for paying more of her own money to discover that there were toxins in her classroom that were making her sick.
Teachers are treated horribly, and their hard work and money is often the only thing making a classroom livable.
Yup I’m down for Olivia’s creepy portrait #2. That shit is brilliant.