| In the interest of speed and timeliness, this story is fed directly from the Associated Press newswire and may contain spelling or grammatical errors. |
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) An art collector for most of her life, author Danielle Steel is opening a gallery of her own, full of the kind of art she loves best.
Artists who create dark and depressing works need not apply. If paintings and sculpture are to be displayed in her gallery, Steel says they ``must speak'' to her.
``I established the gallery to present bright, exciting, well thought-out pieces that will bring the viewer joy and happiness and which are fun to live with,'' Steel explains.
The love theme is evident inside steel gallery. Steel's favorite color, red, screams from almost every angle. Some of the artwork for sale contains hearts.
Steel says the pieces are ``selling like crazy'' even before the official Oct. 7 opening. Others in this city's art scene seem impressed as well.
``I loved the feeling of the gallery, fun and casual,'' said Ariane Maclean, who directs Gen Art, an organization that promotes young artists, audiences and collectors in San Francisco.
That's the goal, says Steel, who says all the pieces reflect her personal preferences.
``I've been working with the mentally ill and the homeless and those are very heavy, very saddening pursuits,'' says Steel, whose son Nick suffered from manic-depression and committed suicide at 19. She now runs foundations involved with mental illness, and counsels families.
San Francisco already has more than 60 galleries, but Steel says she's not trying to compete with them. The gallery, occupying a space just blocks away from her Pacific Heights mansion, is about promoting little-known artists, mostly from the San Francisco Bay Area.
``You are an artist whether your work sells for $200 or $2,000,'' says Steel, who considers searching for new talent to be one of her favorite hobbies.
Steel has tried her own hand at visual art, making collages that ``tell a story about how I'm feeling.''
``My books give people hope, and gives them context in their daily life,'' she explains. ``My paintings, my happy art, does the same,'' she adds, referring not to her own collages, which she doesn't plan to display, but to the work of the 16 artists she's signed up so far.
Steel, who has nine children of her own, sounds positively maternal when she talks about the emerging artists she's chosen to promote.
``I feel like I've taken on 16 new children,'' she says. ``It's a decision of the heart. I'm proud of all of them.''
``It's nice being able to give them a venue. Because of my success I can show whom I want to show,'' adds Steel, whose books are consistent best sellers. ``My idea is it should be happy art. Fun art. I want people to feel great.''
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