Saturday, April 16, 2011

Teasers & Soundbites





A sneak peek of just a few pieces of my new work- not the final versions. Hopefully not too much longer for a total new website unveiling. There's tweaking, cropping, photo enhancing, writing, and some new software to learn in the process. That's always fun. Not really. I'm getting technical help to speed some things up. Then to market to market to sell.

Are we having fun yet?  Talk to me.

Thursday, April 7, 2011

Painting with Numbers: 3, 7, 21, 711510

Artists Who Thrive. What a concept! It's definitely a personal aspiration. In real and virtual reality, it is more than a concept. It is a resourceful website and Facebook page that helps artists effectively market and sell their art. I LIKE them on FB. And it inspires me. I welcome any and all assistance to grow and remove obstacles in my path.

My de-Obstacle committee of 3: Deities Ganesha, Buddha, Durga.
I have this in the entry of my apartment. My dabble with a recycled shelf I had, mosaic glass tiles, acrylic paint. 
The photo doesn't do it justice. Shot it my laundry room.  Clean though.

I have not been feeling the artist "thrive." Just the opposite. I am behind in fulfilling the things I said I was "expecting"  and said to have done by now. Website, new work created, shot, and MARKETING.   I'll share a little well known secret about "expectations": DON'T HAVE THEM. For those who know me and those who don't: yes, I can be very hard on myself.

According to an extensive 2010 survey commissioned by Leveraging Investments in Creativity (LINC) and posted on a recent ArtistsWhoThrive FB page, I came across two statistical findings that gave me a sense of belonging and made me feel less like an "outsider" artist:
  • Seven in 10 artists hold at least one job in addition to making art. 
 I have a full time job with a schedule that changes weekly. Last year I had two jobs in addition to making art. That didn't last too long. Hooray.

  • "Artists who earn less than 21% of their income from their artwork are the least likely to market themselves in any way."
 
Since my art is changing from what I have done in the past, I haven't done much marketing this year or last. There's the 21. It has taken time for me to fully emerge and solidify. I do have a photo shoot scheduled for next week. A professional one! And there has been offline work on the new website.

As for 711510, that’s the IRS code for full time artists.   The ultimate number I aspire to and fantasize about, but don't expect soon.

Whatever, I plan and will continue to be an artist who thrives. That means continue having a full time job, working at creating and marketing new work, and try to control font size when I can (having lots of trouble with this post for some reason -hrumph.) It is a numbers game (and software) and I'm in regardless.