Archive for the ‘Artist’s Corner’ Category

GYST Ink is proud to announce the release of Getting Your Sh*t Together (GYST) 3.0

Wednesday, April 21st, 2010


GYST Ink Releases Getting Your Sh*t Together (GYST) 3.0

 The Ultimate Business Software For Artists

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

 

CONTACT:

Tucker Neel, GYST-Ink Vice President

GYST Ink 
4223 Russell Avenue 
Los Angeles, CA 
90027-4511

tucker@gyst-ink.com

323.252.6898

 

Los Angeles-based and artist-run company GYST Ink is proud to announce the release of Getting Your Sh*t Together (GYST) 3.0, the ultimate professional practices software for artists, designed to help artists manage their careers.

 

About GYST 3.0 Professional Practices Software For Artists

After 10 years of extensive research and programming, GYST Ink is proud to announce the release of GYST 3.0, marking a dramatic development in the field of professional practices for artists. Created by artists, for artists, GYST 3.0 is the most comprehensive and affordable professional practices software solution available to artists today. The easy-to-use software, available for both MAC and PC, is a powerful business tool, enabling you to:

 

• Manage all the business-related paperwork for your art career, including artist statements, resumes, letters of introduction, PR, contracts, and research notes.

 

• Professionally archive everything related to your art practice, including a comprehensive artwork inventory, condition reports, collector information, inventory lists, invoices, and more.

 

• Control your own mailing list, do mass mailings, and keep track networking and pr campaigns.

 

But the software is more than an archiving application; it’s a manual for an artist’s life, guiding you through every possible situation an artist might face. It walks you through how to document your work, create exhibition checklists, write budgets, plan short and long-term goals, and provides step-by-step instructions for writing a grant or proposal.

 

Finally, GYST includes over 400 pages of up-to-date, vital information on all aspects of a professional practice, like how to secure exhibition spaces, negotiate contracts, file taxes, apply to art school, start and maintain a website, market and sell work, plan for retirement, and everything else an artist needs to know now and in the future.

 

GYST 3.0 is also packed with hundreds of helpful web links, suggested readings, and more. GYST 3.0 is available online for only $149.00 at www.gyst-ink.com.

 

Free 30-day Demo Download

Want to try out GYST 3.0 for free? Visit our website and download the fully functional demo and experience everything GYST has to offer free for 30 days. For more info, go to http://gyst-ink.com/buy/buyonline.php

 

Please contact tucker@gyst-ink.com for information on discounts to schools and artist organizations.

FEMINIST THREADS, OR, IT’S ALL ABOUT THE LADIES

Tuesday, April 20th, 2010

FEMINIST THREADS, OR, IT’S ALL ABOUT THE LADIES

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A few reflections from CAA 2010

During my brief stay in Chicago last week for the College Art Association annual conference, it was impossible to miss the exciting presence of feminist concerns running throughout the sessions, exhibitions, and affiliated societies.

Anna Shteynshleyger, “Father and Son,” pigment print, 2004-2009. Shteynshleyger’s works were on display at the Renaissance Society through February 14, 2010. Image: courtesy of The University of Chicago

On an organizational level, there were meetings of the standing CAA Committee on Women in the Arts, the National Women’s Caucus for Art, and The Feminist Art Project. Do these societies overlap in their concerns? Yes. Are they worthy organizationshttp://www.nationalwca.org/wordpress/wp-admin/post-new.php? Certainly. Is it entirely clear how each group differs from the other? Not exactly. All seek to promote the interests of women and gender issues in art, some from the inside (CWA) and others from the outside (WCA for years has had a separate but concurrent conference, or Confab). The Feminist Art Project (TFAP) promotes itself as a national initiative that celebrates both the Feminist Art Movement and the political, cultural, and aesthetic impact of women in art and art history.

Full story at: http://ereview.org/2010/02/22/feminist-threads-or-its-all-about-the-ladies/

Career Guide for Artists Tackles “Gallerist”

Friday, March 26th, 2010

NEWS RELEASE

AUTHOR TACKLES “GALLERIST” IN NEW EDITION OF
HOW TO SURVIVE & PROSPER AS AN ARTIST: SELLING YOURSELF WITHOUT SELLING YOUR SOUL

“Somewhere between the mid-1990s and mid-2000s, art dealers in New York reinvented themselves and changed the title of their occupation to ‘gallerist’,” writes Caroll Michels in the 6th edition of HOW TO SURVIVE AND PROSPER AS AN ARTIST: Selling Yourself Without Selling Your Soul, published in 2009 by Henry Holt and Company. “The new title arrived with a set of rules regarding who can use the title and who cannot . . . Although the new title is pretentious and a less-than-subtle embellishment of the occupation of ’sales person,’ it can also be interpreted that the ‘ist’ at the end of ‘galler-ist’ symbolically represents yet another encroachment into an ‘art-ists’s’ territory. It can be compared to the 50 percent sales commissions art dealers receive, an implication that they are major contributors to the creation of artwork!”

Drawing on more than three decades of experience as a career coach and artist-advocate, Michels shares insights for navigating the complicated, often political, art world. In the chapter “Launching or Relaunching Your Career: Overcoming Career Blocks,” she pinpoints specific danger zones for artists - including an unwillingness to confront money issues, an awe of New York and self-imposed “regionalism,” the quest for external validation, and adolescent career goals.

Other chapters present advice and guidance on presentation tools, pricing work, art marketing and the Internet; public relations; exhibition and sales opportunities; dealing with art dealers; the mysterious world of grants; and handling rationalization, paranoia, competition, rejection, and the “overwhelm factor.”

Caroll Michels is on the faculty of the Continuing Studies and Special Programs division of the Ringling College of Art and Design, in Sarasota, Florida. She will be a keynote speaker at “Sweet Rewards. 2010 Next Step Career Conference” on March 19 and 20, sponsored by the College.

She served as chairperson of the Fine Arts Advisory Board of the Fashion Institute of Technology in New York City. She was also on the faculty of the New School for Social Research. Her artwork has been exhibited in museums and cultural centers in the United States and abroad, including the Georges Pompidou Museum in Paris; the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis; and Exit Art and the Institute for Contemporary Art/The Clocktower in New York City. Michels has received numerous grants, including those awarded by the National Endowment for the Arts, the New York State Council for the Arts; the New York Council for the Humanities; and the International Fund for the Promotion of Culture/UNESCO. She was a fellow at the Alden B. Dow Creativity Center, Northwood University, in Midland, Michigan. She is the founder of the Artist Help Network (www.artisthelpnetwork.com), a launching pad to help fine artists mine resources on career development and career challenges.

HOW TO SURVIVE AND PROSPER AS AN ARTIST:
Selling Yourself Without Selling Your Soul
By Caroll Michels
Published by Henry Holt and Company
6th Edition, 2009/ISBN: 978-0-8050-8848-9/ $20

#######
Press Contacts:
Julia Howe, Henry Holt & Company. 646-307-5237. julia.howe@hholt.com
Caroll Michels. 941-922-5277
carollmichels@verizon.net
www.carollmichels.com

CAA Professional Development for Visual Artists — held in PA

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

Professional Development for Visual Artists

ARTISTS & COMMUNITIES: Hybrid & Hyphenated
A Day of Professional Development for Visual Artists
at the Society for Contemporary Craft
in partnership with the College Art Association

Location: Society for Contemporary Craft, 2100 Smallman St, Pittsburgh, PA 15222 | 412.261.7003
www.contemporarycraft.org | open Mon-Sat 10-5

November 10, 2009, 8:00 AM—6:30 PM
$30 General Admission, $15 Students and Seniors
(A limited number of stipends are available. Please see below to contact Susan Schear.)
Price includes light breakfast, boxed lunch and networking reception

Program

8:00 AM – 4:30 PM: Artists & Communities: Hybrid & Hyphenated
8:00 AM: Registration, Coffee, Light Breakfast, Networking
8:30 AM: Introductions
9:00 AM: Building Artists Communities; representatives from the Lawrenceville Corporation, the Penn Avenue Arts Initiative, and Braddock Redux, PA
10:45 AM: Digital Communities; Elizabeth Perry and Brigitte Martin
12:30 PM: Boxed Lunch
1:00 PM: SCC Exhibition Tour of Transformation7: Contemporary Works in Wood
1:30 PM: Crafting an Art Career; Laura Jean McLaughlin
3:00 PM: Community Resources and Practical Business Application; representatives from the Greater Pittsburgh Arts Council
4:00 PM: Recap, Evaluation, Close
4:30 PM: Travel to Laura Jean McLaughlin’s studio for networking reception; carpooling is recommended.
5:00 PM – 6:30 PM: Reception for attendees at Laura Jean McLaughlin’s Studio, The Clay Penn, Garfield

Space is limited! To RSVP, please call 412.261.7003 x 26 or email kati@contemporarycraft.org. Credit cards are accepted through PayPal at www.contemporarycraft.org. Please make checks payable to College Art Association.

Please contact Susan Schear, CAA Professional Development Workshop Consultant, at susan.schear@artisin.com or 973.482.1000 with any questions or needs you may have.

College Art Association’s National Career Development Workshops are supported by a generous grant from the Emily Hall Tremaine Foundation.

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The College Art Association supports all practitioners and interpreters of visual art and culture, including artists and scholars, who join together to cultivate the ongoing understanding of art as a fundamental form of human expression. Representing its members’ professional needs, CAA is committed to the highest professional and ethical standards of scholarship, creativity, connoisseurship, criticism, and teaching.

WHAT TO LOOK FOR WHEN LOOKING FOR A GALLERY

Friday, July 3rd, 2009

WHAT TO LOOK FOR WHEN LOOKING FOR A GALLERY

By Margaret Danielak © 2009

Artists often ask me what they should look for when looking for a gallery to represent them. As an art rep, and the daughter of a gallery represented artist (the late painter and illustrator Robert G. Stevens) I recommend that you obtain answers to the following questions before you attempt to approach a gallery about representation:

1. How long has the gallery been in business?

As we all know, even in the best of economic times, many small businesses including art galleries struggle to find their footing. My advice is to try to find a gallery that has been in business at least four years. In fact, on the Small Business Administration (SBA) website, I found out that…

“Two-thirds of new employer establishments survive at least two years,
44 percent survive at least four years, and 31 percent survive at least seven years, according to a recent study. These results were constant for different industries. … Of special interest, the research found that businesses that survive four years have a better chance of surviving long-term. After the fourth year, the rate of firm closings declines considerably.”

You don’t want to be accepted to a gallery only to find that it is going to close the next month so first and foremost, you want to find a gallery that has a longer term track record.

2. Does the gallery have a good location?

Do they have good foot traffic and adequate parking? If not, how do they bring in new business? You want to get a feel for their clientele and how they handle people coming and going into their physical location.

3. What is the director’s background?

Do the directors have an art background or a marketing background? (Ideally they should have both.) Keep in mind, per the SBA website:

“…the major factors in a firm’s survivability include an ample supply of capital, being large enough to have employees, the owner’s education level, and the owner’s reason for starting the firm.”

I would add to the list above that the gallery owner needs to have a passion for the art they are selling. If they are not passionate about the art, then you don’t want to be in their gallery.

4. Does the gallery cross-promote with other dealers?

Are they part of a gallery group or a regularly scheduled art walk or other event? In other words, do they make an effort to grow their business with each event they do? This is essential to their long term success, and to your assurance that your artwork will be seen.

5. Are you able to obtain a referral for the gallery and the director?

Speak to other represented gallery artists about the gallery’s operations and the people running it. Are they honest? Do they have written contracts and consignment agreements with their artists, and do they pay them on time? What percentage do they take? Even a seasoned gallery artist like my late father had a very bad experience with a prestigious gallery in Taos, New Mexico. Over the four years he was in the gallery, the director increasingly paid the artists very late, sometimes as much as six months after a sale! When the gallery closed suddenly with three of his paintings still in their possession, my father found out about it from a newspaper article. We have never been able to retrieve his lovely paintings from the gallery director who had stolen them.

6. What kind of marketing does the gallery do?

Does the gallery advertise in major art magazines, produce postcard mailings, work the internet and have a great website? Does the director write articles, speak in public or publish catalogues? Do they attend the major art fairs? You need to know how the gallery plans to expose your work to collectors.

7. How are you treated when you go to the gallery?

One of the best stories I’ve heard on this “due diligence” subject was from a sculptor. One Saturday she put on an expensive outfit, armed with her wish list, and spent the day visiting ten galleries in Santa Monica. She decided in advance that she would not mention that she was an artist looking for representation.

At two of the ten galleries she visited the doors were closed. There was no information on the door about their hours or how they could be reached. (She crossed them off her list.)

At three of the galleries she was greeted adequately by friendly people who knew absolutely nothing about the art on display, nor about any of the artists who created the work. (She crossed these galleries off her list as well.)

She was ignored completely at four of the galleries she visited. The people working in the galleries didn’t even say hello to her and spent their time talking on the phone or working on the computer. They never even looked at her! (She didn’t like this at all and crossed them off her list, too.)

At the tenth gallery she visited, however, she was greeted by a young man who was knowledgeable about the art. He seemed interested in her and her reactions to the work. He told her engaging stories about the artists and gave her additional information about the media the artists used to create the work. He invited her to their upcoming reception, and asked her for her contact information to add to their mailing list. She decided that, of the ten galleries on her original list, only this last gallery was worthy of her attention.

Remember that in your search for a gallery, one size does not fit all. Each gallery is unique in its location, how it is run, and the style of art the director will accept. Like the shrewd artist mentioned in the story above, before approaching a gallery you need to do some research to determine which gallery will be the best fit for you and your work.

Source Note:

SBA Website Quoted: “Business Employment Dynamics Data: Survival and Longevity, II,” by Amy E. Knaup and Merissa C. Piazza, Monthly Labor Review, vol. 30, no. 9 (Sept. 2007), pp. 3-10; “Redefining Business Success: Distinguishing Between Closure and Failure” by Brian Headd, Small Business Economics, vol. 21, no. 1 (August 2003), pp. 51-61.

Margaret Danielak is an Art Rep and the author of artist handbook A Gallery without Walls (ArtNetwork Press). She may be reached through her website at www.danielakart.com or Margaret.danielak@gmail.com Details about her upcoming PAINT IT…SELL IT! WORKSHOP may be found on the website www.theartengine.com

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