professional practice 2014

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professional practice turn up on time, be nice and put in the hours Grayson Perry

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presentation given to ma book art students at camberwell

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Page 1: Professional practice 2014

professional practice

turn up on time, be nice and put in the hours

Grayson Perry

Page 2: Professional practice 2014

role

what is your job?what do you do?

Page 3: Professional practice 2014

goals

know what you want

Page 4: Professional practice 2014

visibility

let people know that you existillustrate activityadvertise your activities past – present – futureshare – give to get

Page 5: Professional practice 2014

visibility Showing work – exhibiting work - Giving work in progress a title Working with people (residency) e-mail Printed Material Applications (selection panels) Catalogues/books Portfolio sessions Personal websites Collective websites e.g. Axisweb Press releasesForumsBlogs

Page 6: Professional practice 2014
Page 7: Professional practice 2014

How to make yourself visible

Know your audience Make contactHave clear marketing tools and be honestProject a positive imageProvide strong referencesShow your initiative/independenceBe aware of the competition

Page 8: Professional practice 2014

networks

what systems/networks do you use now?

who do you know?

Page 9: Professional practice 2014

the network

(as exchange) Write down everyone you know professionally. Tutorspeers galleriescurators writers people you have exhibited with/discussed your work with ....also friends and relatives if appropriate

Page 10: Professional practice 2014

network

now identify who you would like to work with (remember working with someone is an exchange). If you would like to work with a curator - which one? books/fine art/photographyIf you would like to work with a gallery which one(s)This can form part of your mailing list for your MA exhibition.

Page 11: Professional practice 2014

investment and returns

how do you measure success?

how many shows/projects do you want to do a year?

will they get progressively bigger/push boundaries/increase your visibility?

Page 12: Professional practice 2014

identifying goals (direction and progression). Identify key areas in which you would like to develop or move into.exhibitions / artist talks / publicity / application success rate / number of projects each year / regional - national - international / financial goals also - mixed economy / workshops / teaching / also further study / travel /creative development / workshops/ residencies/ funding application.

Page 13: Professional practice 2014

taking or leaving opportunities

Consider the following Is it appropriate? How much time do I have? How much money will it cost? Is there an artist fee? Who will see/experience it? Reviews likely? (Is this one of my aims?) Will it lead to anything else? What can I contribute / gain?

Page 14: Professional practice 2014

applications and opportunities Be selective - avoid the scatter approach - focus on your aims and goals. It’s not advisable to stretch your practice to ‘fit’ opportunities, applications or to fit funding criteria. Look around for something more appropriate.

Where to find things - publications such as an, also Axisweb if you are a member has opportunities, Artquest and individual gallery websites

Consider a mixture of self initiated and opportunity applications. Self initiated projects you will likely need to finance yourself or make funding applications. Opportunities often already have the funding secured.

Page 15: Professional practice 2014

the artist statement

(as sorting process). statements are required for applications.They feed into funding proposals, and are available in exhibitions and projects, on blogs, web-sites.

Page 16: Professional practice 2014

the artist statement

Write a draft you could start by identifying 10 keywords and building from there. Asking a colleague to say what they think your practice is about can be useful and illuminating way to start. anywhere from 100-500 words usually.

Page 17: Professional practice 2014

the “elevator pitch”

compose a single sentence that sums up who you are and where you want to get.

Page 18: Professional practice 2014

the 30 second CV

just as you can develop a minimalist CV highlighting your key points to interest an employer or attract a funder, it is also useful to have a verbal version of this type of CV to communicate key points.

Page 19: Professional practice 2014

connections

keep notes of meetingspersonal database and mailing listsuse and build

Page 20: Professional practice 2014

digital tools

Appropriate?

blog databasesonline portfoliossocial networkswebsiteforums

Page 21: Professional practice 2014
Page 22: Professional practice 2014

some social networks...

FacebookInstagramPintrestTwitterLinkedin

Blog

Etsy

Page 23: Professional practice 2014

www.blogger.com

Page 24: Professional practice 2014

www.wordpress.com

Page 25: Professional practice 2014

www.jotta.com

Page 26: Professional practice 2014

http://www.artsthread.com/

Page 27: Professional practice 2014

http://www.artindustri.com/

Page 28: Professional practice 2014

www.dedsignscouch.org

Page 29: Professional practice 2014

www.prospects.ac.uk

Page 30: Professional practice 2014

http://www.bookartsforum.com/

forum/

Page 31: Professional practice 2014

http://artistbooks.ning.com

Page 32: Professional practice 2014

www.axisweb.org

Page 33: Professional practice 2014

www.a-n.co.uk

Page 34: Professional practice 2014

http://www.a-n.co.uk/jobs_and_opps/shortcut/article/92660

Page 35: Professional practice 2014

http://www.a-n.co.uk/jobs_and_opps/shortcut/article/345238

Page 36: Professional practice 2014

http://www.a-n.co.uk/jobs_and_opps/shortcut/article/168331

Page 37: Professional practice 2014

physical tools

CVbusiness cardportfolioimages/statementsprinted leaflets -

Page 38: Professional practice 2014

CV’s and statements

see Artquest www.artquest.org.uk it has information about ‘how to create a CV’. Also look at artist’s websites; axis has a particular layout in terms of headings etc. expect to be writing (or changing) your CV and statement for each application or opportunity.

Page 39: Professional practice 2014

paperwork

there is inevitably lots of paperwork being self employed as many artists are. financial, correspondence, applications, your own image banks etc. all need to have some kind of order so you can locate things and manage the volume that will accumulate over your professional careers.

Page 40: Professional practice 2014

paperwork is likely to include some or all of the following:

• Tax returns• Funding applications• Using funding marks• Correspondence with galleries• Records of applications / statements / proposals / CV’s• Publicity archive

Page 41: Professional practice 2014

paperwork is likely to include some or all of the following:

• Tax returns - make sure you are aware of statutory requirements. In addition for each grant (from public money) they will expect you to keep accounts which they can request at anytime.

Page 42: Professional practice 2014

paperwork is likely to include some or all of the following:

• Funding applications - keep copies of your application and proposal, award letters and evaluations. Remember to read the requirements of the evaluation so you know what data to collect during the project (audience numbers etc).

Page 43: Professional practice 2014

paperwork is likely to include some or all of the following:

• Using funding marks - get into a habit of reading funding guidelines at the beginning of a project - (size, dimension, exclusion zones, reproduction etc) and include on all your PR materials and communications.

Page 44: Professional practice 2014

paperwork is likely to include some or all of the following:

• Correspondence with galleries - it’s good to be able to refer back to what you have sent, the result and any ongoing dialogue. Perhaps they suggested you contact them in a year or 18 months in which case write this somewhere memorable.

Page 45: Professional practice 2014

paperwork is likely to include some or all of the following:

• Records of applications / statements / proposals / CV’s - you can recycle and re-order a lot of the text you write so keeping electronic copies is very useful as you can copy and paste. Remember if you do this to closely proof read your final version so it reads coherently (and not like a copied and pasted document).

Page 46: Professional practice 2014

paperwork is likely to include some or all of the following:

• Publicity archive - most professionals and practitioners keep a publicity archive, catalogues, postcards etc. Good for when you deliver professional development seminars or similar events. It can also act as a catalogue of your outputs which helps to celebrate your successes.

Page 47: Professional practice 2014

expectations of people

Personal artistic skills ExperienceCreative expertise EnthusiasmFlexibility CommitmentCommunication skills ReliabilityInitiative

Page 48: Professional practice 2014

Following up This needs to be done regularly, if you take the trouble to send a proposal/application/information, make sure you follow it up. You can use your follow up contact to let them know about any developments in the project you are proposing (for example) or other exhibiting or professional activities.

If someone consistently fails to get back to you, perhaps you don’t want to work with them.

Page 49: Professional practice 2014

good luck