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Description
Beyond the Couch: How Interior Designers Can Help Clients Buy Art That Lasts
There's a pattern almost every interior designer knows. The project is nearly done — the room is beautiful; the furniture is right; the lighting is perfect — and the walls are still bare. The art budget is what's left over, which usually means it's nearly nothing. Something goes up to finish the space, or nothing does, and either way, the room never quite arrives. Not because the client doesn't care. Because the conversation happened too late, or never happened at all — and somewhere along the way, everyone quietly agreed that art was optional.
This session is especially useful if you've ever had a client tell you they don't really care about art. That's usually not the whole story. What it usually means is that nobody has found the right way in yet — and that has nothing to do with budget. The conversation this session is about is one you can have with any client, at any price point, at any stage of a project.
- The first half makes the case that art isn't the finishing touch — it's the thing that does what designers were hired to do in the first place. A well-designed room is functional and beautiful. A well-designed room with the right art is a story the client gets to live in.
- The second half is about how to actually have that conversation — early enough to matter, and with enough confidence to see it through. Every client who hesitates over art is hesitating for one of four reasons. Once you know which one, you know exactly what to say next. Designers will leave with a tool that helps them have the right conversation at the right time, so the room they finish is the room they originally imagined.
When you RSVP, we'll ask you one quick question about a recent client. Your answer will help shape the session, so it's as useful as possible for everyone in the room.