I'm sorry you've had a string of unpleasant experiences, Mackettric. While I've had a few (similar to some reported above but not really worth relating), I've also had more than enough good experiences to make up for it. After winning my CCS Syaoran "first appearance" pan cel, I had a long and friendly correspondence with the Japanese underbidder, who lived in an interesting place and had a husband (who was a little disconcerted by her collecting habits, just as my wife is about mine), small children, and other hobbies. While we do not send "pen pal" notes any more, we still exchange calendars every New Year's.Mackettric wrote:Honestly, I really wonder if having an RS gallery is worth it. Rubberslug just seems to bring the worst out of people rather than just being able to enjoy animation art.
As others have noted, animation art is different from other collectables. With figurines, cards, special edition plushies, you can own "a" very desirable item in excellent condition. But with animation art, you own "the" image, the single, unique, irreplaceable item that was used by the studio to generate a brief and often intensely important moment in the series. If you lose an auction for "an" item, you sigh, wipe away a tear, and wait for the next one to come along. If you lose an auction for "the" item, your despair is total, for there is no guarantee that you will ever know where that piece of art has gone or if you will ever get a second chance. And that despair can make people do desperate things. It's very much like fine art collecting, and I'm constantly bemused by what these folks do with amounts of money that make Mitt Romney look like a vagrant.
One can only try to embody what I called "restitution" in my academic essay on Anime-Beta (due out next month!). That is, one must understand that your owning something that no one else can have (or even view except by your permission) predictably causes stress within the community of collectors, and so it brings with it the responsibility of providing an acceptable form of service to others. In my opinion, that's one factor that tends to make the Betarian bunch very tightly knit. On one level we hate each others' guts for having the cels and sketches we'd slit our grandmothers' throats to obtain. And on another level, we try to react to that understandable reaction by responding with productive activities: conservation, research, creative display, advising and encouraging newbies.