business skills for visual artists

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Evolving Your Career: Basic Business Skills for Visual Artists Spacetaker ARC Workshop led by Taft McWhorter

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Page 1: Business Skills for Visual Artists

Evolving Your Career: Basic Business Skills for Visual

Artists

Spacetaker ARC Workshop led by Taft McWhorter

Page 2: Business Skills for Visual Artists

Overall Vision & Goals

• What do you want to achieve with your art?

• Full-time profession?• Set a long-term goal. –Write it down.–What steps do you need to take to

accomplish this goal?– Start today.

Page 3: Business Skills for Visual Artists

Evaluate Your Current Status Pt. 1

• Be honest about your current status.• Are you painting every day?• Are you ready to turn your hobby into a

career?• Are you selling your work on a monthly

basis?• Do you have an available body of work?• Do you have high quality images of your

work?

Page 4: Business Skills for Visual Artists

Evaluate Your Current Status Pt. 2

• Do you have a website? • Do you have an Artist Portfolio?• Do you have business cards?• Do you have a client contact list?• Do you have a current bio and artist

statement?• Do you check your email and voice

messages regularly and respond promptly?• What other web visibility do you have?

Page 5: Business Skills for Visual Artists

Presentation

• Look professional• Style and ability must be up to par• No ½” canvases• Paint the sides or frame your work• Pricing your work

Page 6: Business Skills for Visual Artists

Pricing your work

• Price based on what your market can bear• Starting low is good ($100-$150 for 30”x40” piece).

Primary goal is to move your art so that people are seeing it around– You can easily create 40-50 collectors at a lower

price and then bump the price up once a year as long as you’re continuing to sell

• Set your price per square inch• Always be consistent with your pricing (don’t

charge one thing in one city and another in your home city).• Remember art pricing is always negotiable

Page 7: Business Skills for Visual Artists

Marketing/Networking Pt. 1

• Networking is key• Go to local art exhibits• Meet artists and collectors• Create a Top 10 list of people you want

to connect with• Begin inviting these people to your

exhibits• Donate your best work to auctions as

long as you get the buyer’s contact info

Page 8: Business Skills for Visual Artists

Marketing/Networking Pt. 2

• Web presence– Website– Social media (Facebook/Twitter)

• Other marketing avenues– Spacetaker.org; Artshound.com;

Glasstire.com

• Business cards• Primary goal: Build your “list”• Additional goal: 5 meetings a week to

network

Page 9: Business Skills for Visual Artists

Exhibiting

• Exhibit as often as possible; when you send your portfolio to galleries, the first thing they will look at is how often and where you’ve exhibited

• Organize joint or group exhibits with other artists

• Art markets, co-op galleries, vanity galleries, restaurants & coffee shops, Spacetaker’s ARC Gallery

• Look for representation by galleries in other cities; only exhibit in your own city

Page 10: Business Skills for Visual Artists

Submitting to Galleries

• Co-op Gallery– Run by artists– Usually pay a small fee and/or volunteer to be involved– Usually 50/50 split

• Vanity Gallery– Pay fee for wall space– Usually 70% artist/30% gallery split

• Fine Art Gallery– No fees– 50/50 split

Page 11: Business Skills for Visual Artists

Your Portfolio

• Submit under gallery’s guidelines.• If there are no guidelines, include:

– Cover letter explaining your intention and professionalism– Bio

• Artist Statement (3-4 sentences only)• List of Exhibitions• Gallery Representation

– A CD with 6 images that show a consistent style– One or two recent PR clippings– Any other marketing materials (catalog or small book of your work)

• Include a self-addressed stamped envelop so they can return the submission

• Have the 6 pieces that you used for images on the CD ready for shipping (do not use these pieces for anything else).

Page 12: Business Skills for Visual Artists

Follow Up

• Call the day you mail your portfolio to let gallery know it’s in the mail.

• Make follow up call 1 week after mailing to make sure they’ve received your submission– If not listed on gallery website, ask:

• Process for reviewing artist submissions• Who makes the final decision

• Call/email every 3 weeks until you get an answer

Page 13: Business Skills for Visual Artists

Getting Signed

• Read the contract. Take it to an attorney.• Only agree to exclusivity with that city.• Only agree to 50/50 split.• Negotiate that the gallery pays 50% of shipping to

their city and 100% of shipping to your city.• They should offer you a group exhibit within 12

months and solo exhibit within 24 months.• Ship work immediately.• Follow up to make sure work arrived safely.• Follow up monthly to check on the status of your

work.

Page 14: Business Skills for Visual Artists

Special Thanks:

Taft McWhorterTaft McWhorter Fine Art

www.taftmcwhorterart.com