art shows (8)

All a Newbie Needs to Know... And More.

Got this email today from someone I don't know, asking for information on starting out with shows. I spent more time than I intended answering his questions, and thought some of your other newbies might benefit as well. Here's his email:

My name is *** and I’m a photographer...  As a fellow photographer I would like to ask you a few questions regarding art fairs.  

I’m exploring the idea of participating in a few art fairs for the 2014 season; I anticipate my start up cost to be approximately $10,000, does that sound right to you?  This start up money would buy a tent, print enough material to have on hand at the show, and traveling/art fair cost?   I assume subsequent shows won’t cost as much; is it safe to conclude each art fair thereafter would cost approximately $6,000?

How do you determine the number of prints to display; do you sell the display pieces, and if you do, does the customer take the purchased product at the point of purchase or do you keep it until the show is finished?

How many smaller unframed prints do you carry to each show; for example, do you bring twenty 8x10”, ten 11x14”, and two 14x17” of each picture?

In taking with other photographers I am aware that I want to look for shows that are juried, is that your opinion also?

My last question is a bit sensitive and I don’t want to make you feel uncomfortable, however, I appreciate any advice you can provide: Roughly, what kind of sales may a photographer expect to see at an average size art show?  I know there are a million factors that come into play but I’m looking for a rough idea on what to expect.

So here's what I wrote back:

That's a lot of questions. Fortunately there are a number of resources to help you get started, and to commune with your fellow artrepreneurs!

First off, let me suggest http://www.artfairinsiders.com

There is a lot of material there, much of it based on questions similar to yours. There are forums for just about every media, and many of the subjects come up time and again. There is also a photographer's forum.

On Facebook, there is a group for art show photographers. Started by Larry Berman as a Yahoo forum years ago, it's morphed into a group that sees some activity. Feel free to join, ask questions, lurk. If you're already on Facebook, here's the address: http://www.facebook.com/groups/artshowphoto/

There are several good books devoted to selling and setting up at art fairs. Among the best is Maria Arango's book:

http://www.amazon.com/Art-Festival-Guide-Artists-Festivals/dp/1430319763

and Bruce Baker's CD set on selling:

http://bbakerinc.com/store/

Check out the NAIA organizatoin: http://www.naia-artists.org
Some helpful information there, too, although you have to join to get most of the meat.

Show information is much easier to come by these days. Several pubs deal this out:

http://www.artfaircalendar.com/


http://www.zapplication.org is the main online art show application application. Most of the big national shows list on here. One thing to keep in mind: once the deadline is past, the show drops off the Apply to This Show list. You can find a list of all the shows that list though, under a separate navigation topic.


http://www.juriedartservices.com
This is the other major listing application. What isn't on ZAPP or JASV is on Entry Thingy

Greg Lawler's Art Fair Sourcebook used to be worth the subscription price, especially for those starting out. Now, maybe not so much, but take a look at it anyway. http://www.artfairsourcebook.com

Your cost estimate isn't too far off.  You will need display materials inside the canopy however, and those are not particularly cheap.


Flourish makes the most solid tent. Solid steel frame, heavy vinyl, heavy duty zippers. You can trick it out any number of ways, but a basic Trimline will run you about $1000.
http://www.flourish.com

You can start with an EZ-Up, a Caravan or any number of other cheap folding tents, but I wouldn't advise it if you can afford a stronger tent.

A set of Propanels (9 x 38" x 7') run another $1000 or so. Depending on if you buy braces and lights, you can spend more. Their site is instructional.
http://www.propanels.com

Armstrong Display products makes a similar set of panels for about the same cost.

Jury fees set me back about $1000-1500 per year, depending on how many shows I apply to. If I'm accepted, the booth fees run anywhere from $200 for a small local show to upwards of $1500 for the very top shows in Coconut Grove and Sausalito. Most good juried shows fall into the $400-600 range for a single 10x10 spot. I do about 20 shows a year, which run me on average $500 per booth. That come to about $11,000 just to play. Some shows are less, some shows charge you extra for electricity, if they have it, or a corner space, or a double.

You should have liability insurance. Some shows require it. That may cost you $350-650/year, or you can insure per show with a company called Artists, Crafters  & Tradesmen Insurance http://www.ACTInsPro.com

Miscellaneous show equipment:

  • Weights for your booth: at least 50 pounds per leg
  • Awnings
  • A chair
  • Some sort of write-up desk
  • Bins or folding racks to display matted prints
  • A credit card system. Most people use the Square now, or PayPal's swiper, or Intuit. You can still open a merchant account and use a wireless terminal. Square requires that you have an iPhone or iPad, and a cellular data plan or access to wireless. Same for the others. Lots of research on this.
  • Office supplies: stapler, tape, duct tape, bags, all kinds of miscellaneous stuff.
  • A flashlight, lantern, or headlamp
  • Raingear
  • Plastic tarps
  • Bungie cords
  • A-clamps
  • A dolly to move stuff back and forth to your vehicle when you can't drive to your booth location
  • Plastic tubs to carry matted prints in


Travel costs depend entirely on how far you plan to range for shows. The further you go, the more it will cost you. $6000 / show is way high, though. For a two day show, you might have three days' of hotel, two days on the road, meals, gas, etc. Priceline, Hotwire, Orbitz, other sites all help you reduce travel costs. If you stay within a 50 mile radius of home, you can probably sleep in your own bed and cut out travel costs entirely. But you can't make a season of shows too easily doing that. You can get a couple of practice shows in.

A transportation system. This stuff needs more than a Honda Element to cart it around in. Although I know a painter from Canada who can do shows in an Element. Most people drive big white vans or Sprinters. I haul a trailer with a pickup truck. If you are going to use Propanels, you'll need something more than an SUV, unless you go with the knockdown panels. (I had those for a season -- got rid of them at the same time I bought my first trailer).

There is way way more to this than the summary above.

You single biggest cost over time will be inventory. You absolutely must have framed work or canvas wraps, or metal mounted prints, or some other sort of work to hang on your walls. As far as the number of pieces to make? Only time and experience will help you here. As a rule of thumb, you need a couple different sizes of matted prints, and a couple different sizes to hang on your walls to draw people in. I hang about 20-25 pieces, maybe have another 40-50 choices in the flip bins, in multiple sizes. You can start smaller than that, but you will need 4-6 pieces on each of three walls as a minimum. You are better off making fewer larger pieces than a whole passle of little dinky ones.

Selling

When you sell a framed piece off the wall, people usually expect to take it with them. You wrap it up, either in a black garbage bag (tacky and cheap) or using premium materials that show the work off as it walks down the street. It helps to have a postcard with your logo on it that you can slip into a clear bag. Sometimes you will have to deliver a piece if it's too large for the customer to take home. Every once in a while, you can keep the piece till the end of the show and the customer will return and pick it up, but that's the exception not the rule. Mostly the framed work is there to sell matted prints or smaller version. If you have two pieces, one bigger and one smaller, people will mostly opt for the less expensive of the two. Not always, but mostly. It helps to have a few extra framed pieces to fill in the holes when you sell one. Near the end of a show, it sometimes helps to leave a blank spot or two to indicate that you're selling out.

Sales are wildly variable, based on the show, the attendance, the weather, the competition in your media, the competition in other media that compete for wall space (paintings, drawings, prints, 2-D mixed media), how good you are, how cheap you are, how exclusive you are... I have grossed $0 at more than one show; I have also made close to $10,000 for three days work. Keep in mind that $2000 gross at a show where you can sleep in your own bed and sold nothing but low cost items will make more profit that $2000 at a show that you had to drive two days each direction to get to, with hotels at $100/day and a booth fee of $500. Make yourself a business plan that gives you an idea of what you have to sell in order to be profitable. If you don't you will lose money steadily for several years before you figure it out. There are very few photographers making good money at shows these days. I know most of them, and even those guys are not making what they did ten years ago.

Keep your presentation cohesive. Don't show a little bit of wildlife you shot at the zoo, some pictures of barns in the snow and the shots you took on vacation. That stuff will NOT sell anymore. Trust me on this. Develop a point of view, and DO NOT steal other people's ideas. You will need an artist statement that says, in 100 characters or less, what it is you do, and what makes your work different. Start there, and develop a few key images around a concept. Otherwise you will be throwing your money down a rathlole. People can get cute kitty cats and lions sleeping at the zoo on the interwebz for much less than you can sell them at a show.

You will need a booth shot showing how your booth looks when setup for a show in order to jury for shows. If you don't have this, some shows will let you apply in the emerging artist category without one. Ann Arbor, the Original, for one. Main St. Fort Worth, for another. Do your research. Start with the local shows, closer to home. Call the show if you can't find the answer online. But look online first. Check the show websites.

You will need a website. Something simple at first, that can showcase your concepts, highlight your show schedule and maybe sell some work for you in the off season.

Be prepared to work very, very hard. Be prepared to get very, very discouraged. This is not a business for the faint of heart. It helps to have deep pockets, because you will lose money learning.

And lastly, you can check out my blog for some personal ideas. I haven't updated it in a while, but there are some useful posts there.

http://www.parkerparker.net/studio/blog

Okay, I'm sure you all have your own tips and tricks to add to this, so I'll leave it at that.

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OR, WHAT I DID NOT KNOW BEFORE THE SHOW

Not too long ago I requested information about this show and received one response.  I was surprised as this is a large show.

That prompted me to share my experience in hopes of helping other artists make informed decisions.  

My Medium:  Ceramic Sculptures (Cats)

My Price Points:  $250 - $700

Weather:  Hot and humid Saturday, rain on and off Sunday

Patrons:  Saturday:  steady flow but not a crowd, Sunday:  Thin traffic due to the weather.  In general, the public seemed apathetic

In spite of the weather and lack luster traffic I had a terrific show, although there were many artists that had marginal to zero sales.  The mood of the artists was mostly grim, at least on my street.  So my success was an exception rather than the rule.  Sadly, the buying mood of the public and the weather cannot be predicted with any accuracy. 

              

ACCEPTANCE - SELECTING A LOCATION

Once accepted you are requested to select the location you want.  This really stumped me as I had never done the show or even been in the area.  Also, not all locations have electricity.  What I thought to be the prime location (around a pond) had an early load in with 75 spaces available.  By the time I got to this point of the process, all of those spaces were full.  So I just tossed a dart and selected Walker St.  This turned out to be a good choice as the parks (cement pond and heritage) did not get as much traffic as the streets, or so it seemed to me.

LOAD IN

Oh my!

The cement pond and heritage park artists were able to load in around 4 pm, they are required to dolly in.

 My load in time was at 8 pm and they recommended we bring some sort of light in the event the street lights were obscured by trees as was the case in some locations.  We were OK, but I would bring "head lights" next time.  At 7 pm Friday they had us stage at some parking lot far away from the actual show (or so it seemed due to the horrible one way streets which were always going the wrong way).  Artists that donated to "Art Heist" lined up first for a 7:30 load in - then the 8 pm load in - and finally the 8:30 load in.

There was no staff present at 7 pm so most of us were milling around wondering what to do.  We were originally informed that we would have a police escort to our locations.  The staff showed around 7:30, got everyone sorted out and off we went - oops, where were we going . . .no escort, and we got stopped at a light a lost sight of the van in front of us.  But we were able to catch up, and were directed to the proper lane for our street.  With big color coded cards and color coded light sticks, this went smoothly.

We thought that there were not very many artists at the staging area and learned that "those in the know" skipped the staging and went directly to their street. Fortunately it did not present a problem for us and we had no problem locating our space and began setting up.

The booth spaces are located on both sides of the street, one side backs up on the cement pond, and the other side backs up on a steep berm, I think that is the east side.  But you cannot select which side of the street you are on.  Also the street slopes down to the curbs, so plan on leveling as needed.

Booth spaces are about 10.5' wide, no wiggle room at all.  Fortunately, not everyone tried to set up at 8 pm so there was a bit of room to maneuver, however you can imagine the congestion with a 10 ' space available for each artist to park their vehicle when many vehicles are twice that long. There is parking on both sides of the street, but it does get tight depending on your vehicle.  No one parks and unloads their display in the "allotted" hour or two. We all jockeyed around to accommodate the "big rigs" and it was not too bad.  We were there until 11 pm with many artists still setting up.  We were back at 7 am to complete our display.  So, it is an exhausting set up.

THE SHOW

I encountered no problems during the show.  Staff came by frequently to provide water, snacks, and relief as needed.  If you make prior arrangements, lunch is delivered for a fee.  Portable pottys are located conveniently. Judges made their usual "fly by" and did not deign to talk to me.  But that was OK, I had a great show.

LOAD OUT

We were provided with the usual load out instructions - start tearing down at 6 pm, wait for the patrons to clear, and plan to start driving in around 7-7:30 (once we got our Street Captain's OK).

However, due to the weather (even though the rain had stopped) we got the OK to start breaking down around 5:30 and drove to our space once everything was dismantled and ready to load.  This went surprisingly smooth even though we had to pause to jockey our position to allow other vehicles room to pass or park.  Our tear down is usually slow because of packing up the product, but we were on the road by 8:30.

Oh yes, the early load in folks did not have such an easy load out due to limited parking.

OTHER STUFF

Bring bug repellent.  Lots of mosquitoes and flys.

Great underground parking at the Theater District for $7 per day.  Exits to Walker and a short walk to our booth.  Artist parking is really removed from the show, and no shuttle was provided.

Crown Plaza was an acceptable hotel, although a bit pricey.  Even with "free valet parking" be prepared to tip the valet, frequently.  There is no other parking at the hotel.

Bring a fan.  It can be hot in October.

Of course, the staff may change any of the procedures that I have shared with you, but maybe there will be some information here that will be helpful.

It was a positive experience and I thought the staff did a pretty darn good job.

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40 Question Blog Series – Question 21 What can I do to relate to mycustomers better?


Everyone buys something for different reasons. Whether it is a car, a cellphone or even art, everyone is not the same. Recognize this becauseall of your customers are not the same. You know your work insideand out, but do you know your customers? Can you relate to them? Ifyou are a “middle class” artist, can you relate to an audiencethat is upper class with your art? Here's some tips on how to get inthe head of your customers...


Question 21 What can I do to relate to my customers better?


To understand your customers you have to know who they are. Generallyeveryone has a typical customer/marketing audience for their art orcraft. The key is to learn what their beliefs are, their passions,favorite shows and books, and so on. While most folks may questionthe logic of learning a customers favorite t.v. show, this info canhelp in breaking the ice when it comes to selling to customers.Here's some examples.


  1. Finding a common ground can help ease both parties when talking about yourart. It isn't enough to just have your work on a wall or shelf at ashow, you have to sell it and each person responds differently towhy they buy. Tell interested customers whether a particular pieceis inspired by a piece of artwork on a popular t.v. show or the bowlis just like one that Paula Dean uses on The Food Network. Theseexamples allow customers to personally identify with a piece,which will make them more likely to buy it. Those from a higherincome bracket might want to know if your work was featured in arecent art exhibit or if it a popular seller at a local gallery.Knowing where these people shop, watch on t.v. and so on are allways to get customers to relate to your work and help them becomeattached to your art.

  2. People with different economic backgrounds display art in different waysand this can affect how your work sells. Those with money often buylarger format work because, with having bigger homes, their wallsare bigger and are less interested in small 11x14 photographs, butgravitate towards large format work. At the same time those withsome spending money, but live in apartments or smaller homes,gravitate towards smaller pieces, this is why having a largeselection of art work sizes (for example) opens yourself up to alarger buying audience.

  3. Don't be too specific with your work. While the economy prevents peopleto spend money easily, the more specific a buying audience you havethe more likely you will not have great sales. My personal storywith this deals with my new line of candles. Granted everyone sellscandles these days it seems, the key is to offer something others donot offer yet anyone would be interested in. I developed a line ofpalm wax candles called Destination Scentsations which ties intravel and scents to those who love candles. I can't think ofanyone who doesn't freely talk about their recent vacations andmix that with those obsessed with making things smell nice became myinspiration with my new line. Combining the two opens my product tonot only people who have money to travel but teens who dream oflounging on a tropical beach to those planning a destination weddingand so on. Doing this opens the door to people who wouldn'tnormally buy candles, yet love to travel and at the same time givecandle lovers an even better reason to buy my candles over others.


Look at your work and ask yourself what else can I do to make my work moreappealing to others. Get to know your audience because if you can'trelate to them, how do you expect to sell to them. The more youappear genuine and honest to your customers, the more they will buyfrom you – economic recession or not. Next question will covernaming your business – soo many people are doing it wrong, learnhow to do it right!!! - Michelle Sholund,www.bythebaybotanicals.comand www.quickcraftartisttips.blogspot.com

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Last Call for Artists: Arts. Beats & Eats

Arts, Beats & Eats September 3-6
on the streets of downtown
Royal Oak, Michigan
Deadline: April 7


Please consider joining us in 2010 as Arts, Beats & Eats presents its 13th annual event at its new location in downtown Royal Oak, Michigan.

If you remember the excitement surrounding this event in its early years with its wall-to-wall coverage in the media and the citizens of affluent Oakland County flooding in to enjoy the fine art, the elegant restaurants and both the nationally known and homegrown music on the stages then you will want to be part of this renaissance as Arts, Beats & Eats positions itself as THE cultural destination on Labor Day weekend for metro Detroit.

Art Fair Calendar.com

The new site not only continues the separation of the art from the food and stages that we instituted a few years ago, it also places it in a downtown full of unique stores, popular restaurants and theatres, a favorite destination for young professionals, families and residents
of the nearby cities of Birmingham, Bloomfield Hills, Troy and Huntington Woods.


Our promotion is considered among the best of art festivals nationwide. You cannot be in the metropolitan Detroit area on Labor Day weekend without seeing specials about the arts activities on television, hearing artists' interviews on numerous radio stations and seeing comprehensive feature articles in the press, directed solely to the juried fine arts show.

300,000 peopleprojected over the 4-day weekend, based on last year's attendance, promotional media, event programming, reasonably good weather, and our wonderful new
site in downtown Royal Oak.
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Artist Amenities:

  • Onsite and overnight security provided
  • Vehicle unloading and loading at booth
  • Individual artist electricity (included in booth fee)
  • $7500 in artist awards
Ready to be part of a legend?

Apply today: www.juriedartservices.com
For more info: www.artsbeatseats.com

Questions?
lisa@artsbeatseats.com
connie@artfaircalendar.com

Full disclosure: I am one of the art directors for Arts, Beats & Eats.
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June 26
Elk Rapids, Michigan
Veteran's Memorial Park
10 am to 5 pm
75 Artists
Deadline: April 1

Where is Elk Rapids? Visit this link.

Elk Rapids is at the center of some of the most affluent real estate in northern Michigan, on the shores of Grand Traverse Bay, near Charlevoix and Harbor Springs. This area has really blossomed with new homes, golf courses and galleries in the last ten years, making it a desired vacation, second home location, for people from Chicago and Detroit.

It is held in Veteran's Memorial Park, by Grand Traverse Bay in the heart of this charming harbor town. Patrons can walk two short blocks where they will find restaurants, antique shops and art galleries. Elk Rapids already attracts an art-loving clientele the year around.

Patterned after the very successful Charlevoix Waterfront Art Fair, the organizers have planned every detail including a reception (appetizers and wine) the night before for the artists and volunteers. The next morning volunteers are on hand with golf carts at 5 am to unload artists vans and help with setup. Then the sun comes out and the people show up. As they know this is a one day show so it is "now or never."

Prize money: Art Fair Calendar.com
$1000 Best of Show
$600 Honorable Mention
$125 Best Display
$125 People's Choice.

Space Fees:
1 space, 1 artist $125
1 space, 2 artists $175
2 spaces, 1 artist $250

Testimonials from artists:

--This was a terrific show, well organized, advertised, and well attended. Glad to be in the show.

--My compliments to all involved. The art presented was upscale. Very well done.

--Thanks for selecting fine art (as opposed to crafts). It's very difficult to find art shows, and if you continue to keep a high standard and accept only fine art, you will get that reputation and buyers coming with the knowledge that it is an art show and they are prepared to spend accordingly.

For more information and to download an application visit: www.artrapids.org.
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Art Fair Calendar.com
August 21 & 22
Mt. Gretna, Pennsylvania
35th Annual Outdoor Art Show
Sponsored by the Pennsylvania Chautauqua
265 artists
Deadline: April 1

Jury Fee: $25.00 per application
Booth Fee: $350.00 per 10' x 12' space

In mid-August as many as 18,000 festival-goers will plan on enjoying a weekend of art, crafts, entertainment and gourmet food.

Where is Mt. Gretna, PA? Visit this link.

Every year, during the third weekend of August, this community of some 700 homes and cottages suddenly springs to life, welcoming 265 artists chosen through juried competition and
20,000 visitors who-by their presence acknowledge the role that
art plays in their homes, hearts, and lives.

6a00e54fba8a738833010536f4f239970b-200piAnd every year, as thousands of art show patrons return, many others discover Mount Gretna for the first time. For everyone who comes, it is a return to an earlier era: a time when neighbors greeted neighbors from their front porches, when going for ice cream meant going for a stroll rather than getting into an automobile, and when life itself pulsed at a rocking chair pace.

New this year:
20 fewer artists and booth sizes increased to 10 x 12

Very nice things were said about Mt. Gretna at ArtFairInsiders.com by this year's participants, including, "I will certainly sign up for the Mt. Gretna, PA show again."

Learn more about the event at: www.mtgretnaarts.com
Contact them at: mtgretnaart@comcast.net
or 717-964-3270

Apply online at Zapplication.org
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Where is Sonny Dalton?

My dear friend, the much loved sculptor, Sonny Dalton, of Mattawan, MI, may have participated in his last art fair. If you remember his smiling face at the art fairs, have admired his quirky sculptures and been impressed with his vision, you undoubtedly also have taken one or more of them home with you. Sonny was seduced by the lure of a life that enabled him to create every day. Leaving a secure job at GM behind a long time ago he has been exhibiting his work around the country since the 1970's. Now the bad part: last Monday (February 23) Sonny visited a pulmonologist who immediately hooked him up to an oxygen tank. The decades of welding have not been good to his lungs, a fair amount of scar tissue is impairing his breathing. At this time he is on the oxygen 24 hours a day. The jury is still out on how long this is going to be the case, but I'm sure you can understand that an oxygen tank and a welding torch do not mix well. Do you know Sonny? I'm sure he'd love to hear from you. Cards, love notes, flowers, chocolate chip cookies, good jokes, kisses and other tokens of affection and admiration are welcome at: 26610 Red Arrow Highway, Mattawan, MI, 49071. Or: rsdalton@aol.com Do you have stories about Sonny to share? Please add them below.
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8871784074?profile=originalYes, it is Sunday morning on a long holiday weekend. There were very few art fairs this weekend. Those of you who are online should be ready for this challenge from an old friend of mine who is looking for your most outrageous art fair/craft show story and who wants me to:

1. "spice this _ _ _ _ _ _ up a bit

2. stimulate the prurient to expose to the voyeurs the full story (in other words, what really goes on behind the booths)

3. forbid anyone who paints beach scenes or clowns from becoming members (guess he wants me to jury for membership on this site)

4. offer tickets to my festival and the opportunity to burn one with an old freak (or maybe some equally outrageous prize, I'm working on this, Jack)

5. dump the goofy that seem to want serious cone parking (wasn't that you who stole the cones at the last event?)"

Lots of very fun people create art and have a great time meeting and playing with one another at events across the country. I have many stories of traveling with my rather outrageous partner, and the people he attracted and enjoyed.

Who wants to go first?

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