Beatty & Co. Art Advisory Is Open

Introducing Beatty & Co. Art Advisory — and what it means to have someone in your corner.

Most people don't. And that's exactly why I built it.

Beatty & Co. Art Advisory is open. And if you've ever thought about collecting art — or tried, and found the process exhausting, opaque, or just not for you — this is for you.

Here's what I mean by that.

Think about the last time you wanted to change something in your home. Really change it. You didn't want to just swap the coffee table and hope it shifted the energy of the room. You didn't want to buy a new sofa and leave everything else exactly as it was. You didn't want to paint one wall and call it a redesign. And if you were finally going to tackle the garden, you wouldn't plant one thing and leave the weeds crowding in around it. You wanted the whole thing. The vision, worked out in advance, with care, so that when it was done it felt intentional. Loved. Like it was always supposed to look that way.

That's what collecting art can be. And almost nobody experiences it that way, because almost nobody has someone walking them through it.

No surprise invoices. No expenses that haven't been discussed. No scrolling through endless PDFs at midnight hoping something speaks to you. You set the budget. You set the timeline. I do the work — the sourcing, the research, the relationships, the negotiation — and I bring it to you.

What you bring is yourself.

That's the part most people underestimate. Your collection is not about matching your sofa. It's about making visible who you are — where you come from, what you've overcome, what you want your children to understand about you, what you want a stranger to feel when they walk through your door. Art can hold all of that. Most people just don't know how to ask it to.

My job is to ask the right questions. To be a mirror, not a projection. I'm not here to tell you what I love. I'm here to help you find what you love — and then find the work that says it better than you could. That means getting to know you on your terms. Where you come from. What your story is. What your North Star is. How you surround yourself with joy and how you push through struggle. What your friends would say about you if they were being completely honest. What you want to leave behind. All of that comes through in a collection, if you let it. That's the part I promise you.

Think about what you're surrounded by right now. A TV screen. An iPad. Your phone, your laptop, another screen. The silence of objects that cost money and say nothing. Now imagine the alternative: a home that feels unmistakably like you. Where every room tells part of a story. Where guests ask questions and you actually want to answer them. Where you wake up and the walls mean something. That's not a fantasy. That's a project. And it's one of the most rewarding ones you'll ever take on.

Along the way, you'll get an education. We'll have the opportunity to visit galleries and museums, travel to art fairs, find artists early, discover hidden gems that have nothing to do with what's trending on Instagram. You'll learn where your taste lives, which movements speak to you, which relationships with artists are worth having. This is not a transaction. It's an entrance into a world that will enrich your life long after the paperwork is done.

I've spent a decade in this industry — in institutions, in galleries, on the floor and behind the scenes. I know how it works. I know where the value is and where it isn't. I know which questions to ask on your behalf and which red flags to name before they cost you.

Grand Opening of La Scène des Artistes, Cannes FR

And I work only for you.

Beatty & Co. is officially open for clients.

Reply to this email to start the conversation. I'll follow up with a call, and if we're a good fit, I'll walk you through exactly what working together looks like.

Doors will be opened. Adventures will be had. I'll be with you for every step of it.

Allee

Beatty & Co. Art Advisory | beattyartadvisory.com

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Museums are a Mausoleum to Culture

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What a Life Does to an Artist