One of the hallmark truths of global restructuring is that mergers mean
job losses. Jobs not lost through relocation to cheaper work forces are lost
as redundancies after merging, while still others have been lost forever to
technological improvements.
Traditional employers from the resource-based industries find their
commodities more expensive to mine, while competition and consumer choice continue
to increase. The value of our first world primary industries continues to spiral
downward, slipping considerably since the late 1980's. The Asian economic meltdown
in the late ?90's meant diminished demand continuing the trend of falling prices
in all commodities, except oil. Since 2003 demand for oil continues to spiral
upward, further undermining first world economies. The corporate response to
overwhelming change is to diversify through corporate mergings. In the industrialized
countries job loss is the result. Early pensions and severance packages are
the effect.
Compounding the problem for job seekers is the fact that restructuring
is happening everywhere. A high percentage of employees who lose their jobs
aren't likely to get another in the same field. Part time, low benefit, contract
work is the reality of employment today. For many people, the severance package
or pension buyout represents a one shot opportunity to secure a financial future.
In trusting themselves solely to arm's-length investments, hundreds
of thousands of people have watched their life savings squandered when the dotcom
bubble burst. The concerns that plague investment in mutual funds, securities,
bonds, GIC's, and stocks amount to a crap shoot. You are being asked to trust
your hard earned dollars to others on a field of play where diversity appears
to amount to whether the experts risk it for you playing blackjack or roulette.
When you play the stock market, you gamble. If the market fails, you risk losing
everything.
The Golden Handshake: your little nest egg of hope and security needs
to be nurtured. It's not enough to put your eggs in one basket, or watch them
whittled away with dollar deflation. You have to ask yourself,


What is it people have valued,
do value,
and will continue to value in the future?
When you know the answer to the aforementioned, then you will be safe
to trust yourself to invest with resolve. With practical experience, caution
will turn into confidence and fear will turn into freedom.



There are positives in the restructuring process. People have started
preparing themselves for self-sufficiency. Small business and entrepreneurism
are exploding in the industrialized countries. People are putting their corporate
nest eggs into things that are tangible. They may invest a portion into paper
investments for tax purposes and diversity, but their money is going where they
can see it and nurture it themselves. The risks in starting a new business are
formidable. New business bankruptcies have always been high. That being so,
banks are wary of extending lines of credit to fledgling businesses, making
it that much harder to survive the start-up phase. If you don't succeed, you've
lost everything and probably put yourself into a financial hole.
There is a need for secure investments that have an immediate and substantial
resale value, yet still have the potential to quantum in value. Buying a home
remains a secure investment. Even if the resale value does not go up, at the
very least you have a roof over your head. Moreover, shelter is a cost that
you must carry regardless.
Purchasing collectible art is another secure investment. Include its
appraised value in your home insurance. Collect them as you would stocks. Sell
them only if you have to. Show them whenever you can. The act of prospecting
for art treasures; of picking out pieces that appeal to you, from a body of
artists with collective potential and charisma, is enticing. You can begin by
nibbling at the corners of the print world for next to nothing, and invest robustly
after you've achieved a personal comfort level. All the while, relax in the
assurance that there is an established resale market should you need it.
With your first purchase as a collector, you increase the demand for
and therefore the investment value of, all Woodland Art. The same principle
holds true when other collectors buy. It lifts the value of your investments.
When you prospect for Woodland Gold the wonderful aspect is that there is enough
to go around, and every new find by someone else makes your find that much more
valuable.
Collecting in the art world, like the stamp, coin and antique collector
markets, is a massive undertaking if you attempt the global field of play. The
way to approach any of these markets is to focus on a specified area. One big
enough to create market demand, yet one small enough to be vital and financially
feasible.
This is the risk free beauty of an artistic movement. There is nowhere
for prices to go but up, and nowhere for the artists to go but out into the
global marketplace. Inuit artists, for example, are watching the valuations
on all their artist's? work lift to meet the growing demand of the international
marketplace. When one Inuit artist moves forward, they all do.




Alone, or in tandem with others, each of us will chart a course, not
only into the future, but through the present chaos and confusion. The opportunities
to ensure that our dreams can be realized will depend upon our physical, as
well as our financial, well-being.
Consider what your chances would be of finding the gold that you pan
for in a stream where thousands are already panning upstream. That is often
the reality of investing in today's markets. As in the BreX gold mine scandal
scandal, and more recently the dotcom insanity, the herd instinct takes over.
When the cliff of impending doom finally appears, it is already too late.
Another option is to take the risk and pan streams that are virtually
untouched. In such cases, one would still need a guide to properly explore a
prospective stream for riches. This book is a guide to exploring and acquiring
nuggets of gold in the form of Woodland Art collectibles.
As the globalization metamorphosis evolves, so do the markets of products and
services with appeal to the global community. Economic sectors slated for growth
well into the 21st Century include:
- computers and communication technologies, services and by-products.
- medical technologies and all related health services and by-products.
- humanitarian technologies, including all related social services and by-products.
Streaming out from an ancient inspirational wellspring on a vision quest
to reach the great ocean of humanity are works of art that build community. Like
newly born salmon, the artworks swim for the ocean to share their vision and to
fulfill their destiny in the world. Each creature carries with it a homing signal;
an inner calling leading back to the source of their creation.
When one discovers a nugget of Woodland Gold, it leads one back to the
Woodland School. If you strike gold when panning, it?s only natural to look
for the source upstream.



Logical investment went out when the Internet came in. Logical investment
is not a gamble. It is about doing the right, the sure and the wise thing. It
is about erring on the side of caution. The Logic of the quantum rise in anything
web-related defied all previous economic principles of valuation except one;
"The Gold Rush".
The sure thing no longer finds a firm foundation in history. The dotcom
madness was a rush to lay stakes in the new global communications platform.
In the Internet arena, visual content reigns supreme. With a potential audience
in the billions, the Internet is any salesman's dream.
They rushed for California. They rushed for the Yukon and they rushed for the
world-wide web. There was gold in California. Gold in the Yukon and there is
definitely gold on the web. The best stakes went to those who arrived first,
while those who came later lost. While they can, they buy in, knowing others
are in line right behind them. Rather than miss the boat, they set sail for
uncharted waters, navigating without charts or history, to an unknown destination.
The fools who bought into BreX are a case in point. Those who were first
in line received a piece of paper entitled, ? BreX Stock?. They sold it to
other fools who sold it to still other fools. The longer they held onto the
BreX hot potato, the more money they made, until someone let the cat out of
the bag. Those left holding stock lost a lot of money. The world lost time,
attention, and funding for real growth. Similarly, the dotcom situation was
an exercise in mass deception. Those who got out before the bust did well. The
majority of these were seasoned financiers who understood the insanity of the
situation. Those who didn't lost their shirts. How different are pyramid schemes
than the aforementioned?
The shepherds of the 20th Century may not understand globalization and
the new media society, but when they smelt wealth, the sheep couldn't help from
following them. Just behind the sheep were the thousands upon thousands of people
who lost savings because of the losses incurred by experts who also control
mutual funds and blue chip stocks. The chances of the last minute investors
getting anything but table scraps weren't good, yet the experts chose to play
the game out. The wise ones were those who chose not to get in line at all,
yet even they lost.
What we must consider are the similarities and the differences between
speculative value and inherent value. Both options have the potential to quantum
when exposed to demand, however the visual substance and multi-dimensional usefulness
of art are inherently valuable. Art includes speculation, yet goes beyond it.
Art appeals to the herd instinct thereby creating demand, yet demands a personal
hands-on discovery of humanity's history in the making in order to appreciate
and navigate it. Art has a rock-solid place in 21st Century economics.



When we speak of the modern day myths that plague the Indian (myth#1-
Natives have been called Indians since Columbus thought he landed in India),
we must first consider the social prejudice that Natives collectively face before
we can consider individuals. The misconceptions that abound are as likely to
snare Natives in illusionary perceptions as non-natives.
It is interesting to note that a similar attitude is true in the art world.
Modern day myths and preconceptions about art still make it a cozy sanctuary
of the wealthy elite. Today's Art world is inaccessible to most, yet it is now
affordable to all. Must one be wealthy to understand and value art? Of course
not, yet the myths that have plagued artists and visionaries throughout recorded
history continue to the present day. Today collectors or dabblers in art collectibles
enjoy unprecedented access to wonderful collections. Information and a resale
market are only a key stroke away.
Another problem myth that surrounds art and artists is this idea of
a lucrative death. This idea continues to shroud the still higher value of having
great creators in our midst for as long as possible. The artistic death myth
is truly an outdated idea as it finds its basis in the era of the localized
market. In the past, the extensivity of an art collection would only be confirmed
with the finality of the artist's death. Today, limited edition prints alone
can have great value to collectors. Moreover, printing increases the collectibility
of the original painting, thereby lifting its marketability and valuation.
The uses and applications of a work of art are virtually limitless from
a cultural or commercial perspective in today's world. The second aspect of
this death myth revolves around the misconception that a living artist can taint
the present value of the existing supply of his work with some insane initiative,
statement or project. In today's world, anything that draws attention to an
artist would probably increase demand, and with that, the value of the existing
collection. When Salvador Dali threw a brick through Macey's department store
in New York to get attention, it brought him instant fame in North America.
This further increased his fame in Europe, and therefore the overall demand
for his work. His prices rose dramatically.
Emergence into larger markets achieves the same result as the death
of an artist in a smaller market. The myth of the death of an artist and its
lucrative value to the collector persists, and will continue to persist, because
there is a tenuous basis in reality. Still, imagine how much your collection
would be worth if the artists who created your paintings lived to a ripe old
age and continued to grow in fame like Picasso and Dali.
In a global market, with information and images at your fingertips,
you can learn all you need to know about the art you are interested in, and
then do what even the experts do in secret. Buy what you like. Figure out why
later! The myths that surround art, natives and a hundred other established
inadequacies of civilized humanity, need only be exposed alongside alternatives
to become history.