Category: News

  • Why Local ARTbeat Exists

    Why Local ARTbeat Exists

    I live in Kinston, North Carolina — a small town that knows what it means to be left behind.

    For decades, tobacco was the backbone of this region. Not “Big Tobacco” in the abstract sense, but real farmers — people who broke their backs working the land to produce something the world wanted. When that industry collapsed, the damage wasn’t theoretical. It was personal. Jobs disappeared. Identity fractured. Entire communities were told to simply “move on,” without being given anything sustainable to move toward.

    Today, we’re told solar farms are progress. Maybe they are in some places. But here, many sit unused or poorly managed, rusting into soil that once fed families. If studies are correct, some of that land may be compromised for decades. We replaced one extractive system with another — and the people still weren’t centered.

    What doesn’t extract and leave is art.

    Art circulates.
    Art invites people outside.
    Art creates conversation, pride, and memory.

    And most importantly: art creates local economic motion without destroying the land or the people who live on it.


    The Belief Behind the App

    Small towns are not obsolete.
    They are the backbone of society.

    There’s a reason people love Hallmark movies. It’s not because they’re realistic — it’s because they remind us of something we’re afraid we’ve lost: community, walkable streets, familiar faces, and places where people still matter.

    Artists bring hope into those spaces.
    They make people pause.
    They make people gather.
    They make people care.

    Local ARTbeat was built on the belief that when you support artists, you don’t just support creativity — you support place.


    Why This Isn’t Just Another Ad Platform

    Facebook will always be bigger.
    Google will always be louder.

    But those platforms don’t care if your ad actually reaches the people who live down the street. I do.

    Local ARTbeat is designed so local businesses reach local people, in real places, at real moments — while they’re walking, discovering, attending events, and engaging with their own community.

    This isn’t about chasing attention.
    It’s about anchoring it.

    When a business sponsors Local ARTbeat, they’re not buying impressions — they’re investing in visibility that stays rooted in the town they serve.


    The Personal Truth (and the Honest Motive)

    I’m an artist. I’m a journalist. I taught myself how to build apps because the tools I needed didn’t exist.

    I live paycheck to paycheck.
    And I want that to change.

    Not because I want to be rich — but because I want to keep building things that matter here, without burning myself out or leaving my community behind to do it.

    Local ARTbeat is not a side project.
    It’s a long-term vision for how art, business, and community can reinforce each other instead of competing for scraps.


    The Invitation

    Someone who believes enough in this vision — someone willing to invest — gets more than branding.

    They get to say:

    I helped art revitalize Eastern North Carolina.
    I helped small towns remember why people love them.
    I helped build an economic engine that didn’t erase its soul.

    That’s the story.
    That’s the why.
    And that’s what Local ARTbeat is trying to do — one town, one artist, one walk at a time.

  • How to Buy Local Art Online (and Why It Matters)

    Buying art online no longer means ordering mass-produced prints from a global marketplace. Today, many buyers are choosing to purchase directly from local artists—supporting real people, real communities, and original work.

    Buying local art online combines convenience with impact. Instead of navigating gallery schedules or traveling long distances, buyers can browse artists in their region, view portfolios, and purchase or commission artwork from their own community.

    Why buying local art matters

    When you buy from a local artist, more of your money stays in the local economy. Artists are often small business owners, freelancers, or independent creators. Supporting them helps sustain creative careers, public art projects, and cultural spaces that make communities more vibrant.

    Local art also reflects place. It tells stories shaped by geography, history, and lived experience—something mass-produced art cannot replicate.

    What to look for when buying local art online

    When purchasing art through an online platform, buyers should consider:

    • Artist background and style
    • Medium and size of the artwork
    • Whether the piece is original or a print
    • Shipping or delivery expectations
    • Commission options for custom work

    Clear artist profiles and transparent pricing help buyers make informed decisions.

    Buying directly from artists

    Platforms that allow artists to sell directly remove unnecessary middlemen. Buyers can communicate expectations, request commissions, and understand the process from start to finish. This creates trust and reduces confusion.

    Local ARTbeat was built around this idea: discovery paired with direct support.

    Who should consider buying local art

    • New collectors who want accessible pricing
    • Gift buyers looking for meaningful, one-of-a-kind pieces
    • Homeowners seeking art connected to their community
    • Businesses wanting locally sourced artwork

    Buying local art online is no longer niche—it’s becoming the preferred way to collect.