Filed under: Software, iPhone, Graphic Design, App Store
Five Apps for the art lover

As part of our continuing Five Apps series, I decided to take on the challenging task of finding five applications for Mac and iPhone that would be useful to the art lover or collector. Read on for my take on the cream of the art crop.

#1 -- The first is an iPhone app simply called Art [App Store, US$0.99]. Art is a pocket compendium of the best works by 80 great artists and includes biographical information about each of the artists. The actual art works are stored in the cloud, so an Internet connection is a necessity. You can do a bulk download of the art works for offline viewing, and for using the art in several of Art's special features.
Those features include a quiz for learning which artists produced certain works of art, which is a wonderful way of learning the style of a particular artist. Art also provides a way to send your friends a link to online images of a specific piece of art, lets you store your favorite pictures in your own private gallery, and has an impressive search engine for finding art by artist name or the title of a piece. For less than a buck, Art is an excellent resource for art aficionados, whether they're new to art or established collectors.
#2 -- When you've graduated from art appreciation to collecting works of art, it's a good idea to keep track of your collection for insurance purposes. I like to keep a list of artists, acquisition dates, original purchase price, appraisal price, notes about the artists and galleries, photos of the art, and other important information. The perfect Mac tool for capturing this information is Filemaker's Bento [US$49.00].
Bento is easy to use, handles photos of your art easily, and comes with a set of customizable templates. I used the Home Inventory template as a starting point for my art collection database, deleting some fields and adding others, and within 15 minutes had a database that could track all of the information I wanted to keep.
#3 and #4 -- So, you've looked at the stark beauty of a Georgia O'Keeffe painting and decided that you have to become a painter. You could go out and purchase paints, brushes, easels, palettes, paper or canvases, and the rest of the artist's toolkit, or you could flex your artistic muscles using either an iPhone or a Mac.
For the iPhone, my favorite painting tool at this time is Brushes [App Store, US$4.99], although I'm intrigued by Layers [App Store, US$4.99] after reading Brett Terpstra's great review here on TUAW. Both of these apps let you use either your finger or a stylus like the Pogo (US$14.99) to draw and paint. I found that using my finger was rather unnatural (yes, I flunked fingerpainting in Kindergarten), so I have a Pogo to give me the feel of a pencil, charcoal, or a brush. On the Mac, there are a broad spectrum of painting programs from simple apps for kids to very expensive programs. My personal choice is Corel Painter Essentials 4.0 for Mac (US$99.99) with a Wacom Bamboo Fun digitizer tablet (US$99). What's great is that if you purchase a Bamboo Fun, you get Painter Essentials 4.0 for free. Of course, all of the wannabe artists out there can hope that Apple releases a touch tablet of some sort this fall that will be the portable artist's sketchbook of choice.
#5 -- The last of my favorite apps for art lovers is Firefox! It's my favorite browser, it's free, and it is the magic carpet that takes me to gallery and artist websites, sites about how to paint and sketch, and to those online art supply stores that tempt me every time I visit. I'll end with a list of wonderful websites to visit, all of which keep this art lover happy and continuing to learn about the world of art.
The Georgia O'Keeffe Museum
Louvre Museum Official Website
MoMA: The Museum of Modern Art
Art.com (Fine art posters and prints, and a great way to see the masterpieces)
Giverny.org -- going to France? Visit Claude Monet's village and see his art
Santa Fe Gallery Association -- the place to see the work of today's top artists
Watercolor painting tutorials on Watercolorpainting.com
Jerry's Artarama -- Art supplies and demo videos
That's my fave five in terms of art lover apps. Please feel free to leave comments pointing me and other TUAW readers to your favorite applications or sites dealing with art.


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Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Gian Piero said 10:51AM on 8-10-2009
Now we just need a similar list:
"Five apps for the fart lover"
With so many on the app store, that's a challenge!
:)
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50thstate said 12:10PM on 8-10-2009
High school comment ---lower than "v" envy
Justin said 12:35PM on 8-10-2009
LOL, Comment of the year!
bmcweeney said 2:30PM on 8-10-2009
Hands down #1 has to be Fartlicious :) And I'm not just saying that because I made it!
Nevan said 11:03AM on 8-10-2009
I made an iPhone app some art lovers might be interested in. It finds galleries and events in New York by location or category. You can get the same info from the site that powers my app too, even better since it's free. Their site is at http://nyartbeat.com/ and they have another one (the original one) for Tokyo at http://tokyoartbeat.com/
Check out my app here: http://nevan.net/newyorkart/
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Brian said 11:47AM on 8-10-2009
I'm not sure I understand why everyone keeps promoting Pano. I've tried it and it doesn't even compare to AutoStitch. With AutoStitch, I can focus on simply taking the picture, and merging them after. I have been on a few trips where I didn't particularly have the time to spend lining up the image and taking them from Pano. Instead, try snapping a few images, with a slight overlap (30% recommended, although it still does well with a little less), then open up AutoStitch and choose the images you want merged into a panoramic. It'll do all the work for you, and even includes a best crop feature.
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Brian said 11:55AM on 8-10-2009
Here's a link to the AutoStitch website: http://www.cloudburstresearch.com
carrespondent said 12:38PM on 8-10-2009
I tend to have other thoughts when looking at the "stark beauty of a Georgia O'Keeffe painting." Like, "Maybe I should surprise the missus with a bottle of wine and a massage later..."
http://deadbeatdirt.blogspot.com/2006/08/vagina-flowers.html
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Tom said 12:49PM on 8-10-2009
I love Art Envi Deluxe. The whole Envi line of apps is great.
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NutMac said 1:12PM on 8-10-2009
As much I like Firefox, this article should've been titled Four Apps for the art lover.
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Steve said 3:42PM on 8-10-2009
Hey, it'd be great to title this "Five iPhone Apps for the art lover", since we never know if you're recommending iPhone apps or desktop/laptop apps. Thanks!
Steve
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tadumbleton said 3:52PM on 8-10-2009
What about artnear. It is free and gives gallery listings all over the world?
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EA H8er said 10:16PM on 8-10-2009
I've lived north of Santa Fe for 10 years and have never bored of the drive to or from work. I was surprised to see the pano and instantly recognized it. I pass by it twice a day and love the shot. So are you a fan of red or green?
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Theresa said 10:45PM on 8-11-2009
Thanks for the post! I definitely agree with the Brushes and Art apps on your list.
Here is a list of a few more apps for the art inspired:
http://theteachingpalette.com/2009/08/03/30-best-iphone-apps-for-art-teachers/
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Maria said 5:54PM on 8-12-2009
Another great, really user friendly site is ArtId - http://www.artid.com
You can search for art and buy directly from the artist, follow their blogs, read great articles and also post art projects - like if you're looking for something specific. Check it out.
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Nihilistic_Poet said 3:04PM on 9-09-2009
Thanks for sharing. Technology and art, great combo.
For you and your readers. I have some original (my own) photographs of famous (not mine) works of art:
http://nihilisticpoetry.com/category/art/
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