Typing art-support.com into a browser while expecting a photography resource produces an immediate surprise. The site redirects to ww1.art-support.com, which resolves to a sports news aggregator called Sportsvot. That is what a visitor finds today: World Cup 2026 match recaps, NBA trade rumors, and NFL contract news, all under the VOTMedia network banner alongside sibling sites named FunnyVot, CryptoVot, NewsVot, HealthVot, and GamesVot. None of it has any bearing on photography. There are no galleries, no equipment guides, no service descriptions, no booking pages, no portfolios. Whatever ArtSupport once was as a photography destination, that content is gone from this domain.
Domain redirect to sports aggregator
The most likely explanation is mundane. The original ArtSupport registration almost certainly lapsed, and the domain was picked up and pointed at an aggregator that monetizes residual traffic. This is a common fate for expired names, especially those that still carry inbound links and the occasional curious visitor from a business directory or a search result. The redirect chain itself is the clearest evidence of this. A maintained photography business does not bounce its own homepage to a third-party sports feed under a different subdomain. So the practical question for anyone hoping to reach a photography service here has a short answer: there is nothing to reach.
Likely cause of the domain change
Trying to verify the business through outside sources runs into the same wall. A search across the open web turns up no usable information about art-support.com as a photography operation. There are no reviews tied to this domain on Google, on Trustpilot, on Yelp, or anywhere else a search surfaces. That absence is not a neutral data point here. When a site has been live and serving customers, it tends to leave traces: a few ratings, a social mention, a cached page, a forum thread. The trail for the ArtSupport photography business is effectively blank, which fits a domain that has changed hands and changed purpose.
Absence of reviews or online traces
What a search does return are unrelated entities that happen to share a similar name. There is ArtSupport Australia, a nonprofit focused on supporting careers in the arts, which is a different organization entirely and not a photography provider. There are also a handful of Facebook pages for separate "Art Support" entities with small followings. None of these connect back to art-support.com, and treating any of them as the listed business would be a mistake. The name is generic enough that several groups have adopted versions of it, so a similar label is not a confirmed match.
Similar names that are not this business
On the matter of contact, there is nothing here for a photography client to use. The current destination, Sportsvot, exposes a Privacy Policy and a pair of GDPR data-processing links, and that is the extent of its visible governance pages. No phone number, no street address, no contact form, and no business hours appear for any photography service. That is not a case of a business quietly omitting an email to dodge spam. It is the simpler fact that no photography business exists at this address to be contacted. A redirect to a sports network leaves a would-be customer with no route to a photographer.
No contact information available
It is worth being precise about what cannot be claimed here. The listing gives no founding date, no service list, no pricing, no client roster, and no evidence that the original ArtSupport was ever a strong or weak photography resource. So this is not a judgement about the quality of work that may once have lived here. It is a judgement about the current state of the link, and that state is unambiguous. The domain has been repurposed, and ArtSupport's photography content, if it ever existed at this URL, is not accessible.
What cannot be verified about the original site
A listing under Photography should send a visitor to a photographer or a photography-related resource, and ArtSupport no longer does that. The redirect to an aggregator is exactly the kind of signal that flags an expired or hijacked domain, and the listing entry is a dead end for the purpose it is filed under, and entries like it are candidates for removal rather than recommendation. Anyone maintaining the list would be right to flag this one.
Why this listing should be removed
Digging around for any surviving footprint of the original ArtSupport photography operation turns up nothing concrete. No archived portfolio pages, no old press mentions in photography circles, no Wayback Machine captures that show a working service. That total absence across multiple angles makes it harder to give the site even a partial credit for what it may once have been. A domain with a clean handoff to something new at least leaves forwarding context; this one just lands visitors on sports news with no explanation. Whether ArtSupport ever ran a credible photography operation at this address is genuinely unknowable from the public record as it stands, and the current owner of the domain clearly has no interest in preserving that history.
Checking for archived photography content
The verdict is plain. There is no working photography offering to evaluate at art-support.com, no contact path to a service, and no third-party reputation attached to it as a photographer's site. ArtSupport, in this address's current state, delivers sports aggregation to people who came for photography, and the gap between those two things is absolute. The photography listing entry should be treated as expired.