Call for Artists, Making Money at Juried Art Fairs, Craft Shows and Festivals
Okay I have been reading through a lot of the discussions and the wants and why of the “Art Fairers” as a job title and seems to me that the art fairs have really lost their value as an art fair. Back many years ago (early 70’s) the art fairs were another place for artist to show and sell their ART work. Now it is a business for many just to go to the art fairs and sell their product and not their art work. What I mean by this is that how many of you just make a product to sell at the art fairs? Are you making the same things over and over again because it is what sold before? Have you lost your creativity doing this? Do you still think that you as an artist are you making beautiful, interesting, mind provoking art? Are you too worried about just making the sales and not the art? And we wonder why the crowds are not buying and why less people are going to the art shows. Sure there are many excellent artists out their going to the fairs but what my take is that these excellent artists are not just relying on the income from the art fairs, they are making art. They as an artist have other mediums for selling their art work because people will buy their art.
Art fairs are getting boring and the public know this, they have lost the incentive to go and buy, same old things as last year or too much of the same stuff. From some of the discussions it seems to be very competitive on who has the best booth display, who can haggle sales, why promoters do not do a good job for the artist and where my booth is located. Let’s get back to making art and not just a product. I hate hearing the mind set “I go to just to sell”, sure but what are selling?
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Permalink Reply by Munks on January 27, 2010 at 3:39pm 
Permalink Reply by Larry Berman on January 27, 2010 at 4:18pm
Permalink Reply by Linda Anderson on January 27, 2010 at 4:43pm 
Permalink Reply by Munks on January 27, 2010 at 4:49pm The juries don't pick the exact same work year after year. What you see in the photographers booths may not be the pieces they jury with.
Some thoughts on picking jury pieces. A great many artists spend their entire careers putting together the perfect set of jury images. Each time they come up with a new image or piece that better completes the jury set, they eliminate the weakest and add the new piece. This goes for many different mediums, not just photography. And on the other hand is the artist who creates a new body of work and replaces all of the jury images every year or so. The third type of artist has used the same images for thirty years because they get into every show they apply to because their work is that good.
Larry Berman
Digital Jury Services
http://BermanGraphics.com
412-401-8100

Permalink Reply by Larry Berman on January 27, 2010 at 5:27pm Clearly the answer is Yes - with a few qualifiers however.
From my perspective: During the last few years:
- There have become too many Art Fairs (it's become a hugely profitable business for many promoters/organizations)
- It seems as if EVERYONE thinks this is easy therefore the number of "artists" has increased to include many that in no way should consider themselves "artists". These are the ones who typically only do art shows as extra income, something to do on a weekend etc. Many of whom likely began due to loss of job, need of additional income, and my favorite: "oh wow... I got this new camera and my snapshots are great therefore I must be an artist".
Is it no wonder art patrons are bored? It has become boring to me! This year I am cutting back on the shows I apply for - I think many are. Of course, that leaves holes for the "I think I'm an artist therefore I am" types to be accepted by those promoters looking to fill a 10x10 spot and obtain the jury/booth fee - contributing to the first claim of mine that there are too many art shows..... it's all become a catch-22.
My entire income comes from my artwork. This is not to say those that do this part time are not artists. I do think however this committment perhaps contributes to my focus on the art. It is my life. It is what I do not only for income, but also enjoyment. I take my photos for me. The fact that others want to pay money for them - that's the bonus. I can't tell you how many times I've been asked by those viewing my local gallery or even my website "I'm trying to find a picture of xxxxx, can you take one for me?" I'm always amused but never produce anything that does not interest me. As you've likely noticed from other posts Warren...... I'm not a people pleaser in that respect. I don't need to perform to other's expectations to feel fulfillment.
Don't get me wrong - I do need income from art shows/fairs to continue my current lifestyle. Lately however, I'm exploring other avenues for exposure. I would certainly hope in the next couple of years they become exciting again - for both the artists and the patrons.

Permalink Reply by Munks on January 27, 2010 at 6:05pm I'm not missing any points. I didn't even read the other posts. I was responding to the comments about jurying.
Back to the issue. What makes you think art fairs weren't always like this. When I started doing shows 33 or 34 years ago, I used to do all the mall shows in the NYC area, I used to see the exact same artists with the exact same artwork week after week. The difference was what they were selling was something you couldn't find in the stores. Today's issue is that the same people who used to go to the shows to find different work to hang on their walls now stay at home and shop on line. And that's where you can find a lot of what's now sold at shows. The only difference now is the fulfillment factor. How often do you actually see something so different and original that you can honestly say you've never seen or thought of it before? It's exciting when that happens but it doesn't happen often enough.
Larry Berman
Digital Jury Services
http://BermanGraphics.com
412-401-8100
I never said the shows weren't always like this. 30some years ago, the people that could not sell their art in the market either got better, or they simply went away and did something else. Outstanding original work does still happen, but it truly doesn't happen enough, and it is not encouraged to happen by the current system. The current system of juries, cronies, bribes, favorites, gimmicks, and pure lottery-style luck rewards consistency and mediocrity and guarantees nothing - including sales. But, it does rather falsely imply that success will be achieved and an artist's ego will be stroked if they are in such and such show, festival, fair, or gallery - or if they contribute to this or that charity or cause. Again, the reality is - artists should be focused on making art not "products" just as Warren stated so marvelously stated. (If you haven't read the entire thread, at least take a moment to read his post.) The current art market is sending his message pretty clearly. Why do I give a damn? - Well, how can I get better as an artist if I have no sense of competition. If I set up in a show full of b/s or just plain old crap or reruns or some other permutation thereof - what is my motivation to get better - to move my work up to the next level? Hmmm?
Larry Berman said:I'm not missing any points. I didn't even read the other posts. I was responding to the comments about jurying.
Back to the issue. What makes you think art fairs weren't always like this. When I started doing shows 33 or 34 years ago, I used to do all the mall shows in the NYC area, I used to see the exact same artists with the exact same artwork week after week. The difference was what they were selling was something you couldn't find in the stores. Today's issue is that the same people who used to go to the shows to find different work to hang on their walls now stay at home and shop on line. And that's where you can find a lot of what's now sold at shows. The only difference now is the fulfillment factor.
How often do you actually see something so different and original that you can honestly say you've never seen or thought of it before? It's exciting when that happens but it doesn't happen often enough.
Larry Berman
Digital Jury Services
http://BermanGraphics.com
412-401-8100
Permalink Reply by Warren Townsend on January 27, 2010 at 7:26pm
Permalink Reply by Michelle Sholund on January 27, 2010 at 11:12pm
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