shows (83)

422c15bc-03b8-4437-b217-4712315bcf8d.jpg?width=100
August 28
Littleton, Colorado
campus of Arapahoe Community College
9am-3pm (new hours)
150 Artists
Deadline: May 12 

NEWS:  AFSB National ranking for the AAF is still #36 
(out of 600 shows)!


We invite all artists to apply.  
From the Director of the Denver Arts Festival, this 5th year show promises to continue building on the successes of the last few years by bringing a proven festival concept to the ever expanding art buying market in Denver.  This fine arts/fine crafts show uses the successful formula of the $100 and under shows that have been around for decades.

In 2015 our crowds grew by more than 50%.  We had lines about 2 blocks long waiting 2 hours for the gates to open!  Several of our top selling artists went over $10,000 in sales with one artist hitting $22,000. These are great numbers for any show but the AAF is only 6 hours long! This festival will grow every year since those art buyers who experience it bring friends with them the following year.

4611e94c-8517-48f4-99ee-84d9c416e437.jpg 
Our artists and their work are posted on the website so we invite you to see who has exhibited and the kind of work that is available.  This is one festival where the artists and the customers all seem to have big smiles on their faces and energy created by the buying frenzy that happens the minute the gates open is contagious!

Still not sure what this show is about?
and listen to the 15 minute audio

  • Limited to 150 juried artists in 15 media categories
  • Marketing to the art-buying public in newspapers, TV, radio, press releases, magazines, social media and other venues
  • Jury/Booth fees are $30/$225 for a single 10x15 booth. Double booths available. Corners available ($50)
  • Set up Saturday August 27 or the morning of the show on the 28th
  • The festival is held outdoors in the large field on the campus which is highly visible from Santa Fe Drive where over 65,000 vehicles travel daily

Contact:  Jim DeLutes, info@affordableartsfestival.com
Phone:  (303)330-8237

Read more…

Call for Artists: 11th Annual "Woofstock"

8869172856?profile=originalMay 7
Atlanta, Georgia

Presented by Entercom
40 Artists
Deadline: March 30

Application fee: $30
Booth fee: $300

If you have pet themed art we think you'll love this outdoor event in the beautiful suburb of Suwannee in the Town Center, in Atlanta. This "Pet Party in the Park" caters to animal lovers, so we're looking for artists and crafters who have animal or pet themes. Pet owners are passionate and have high disposable income!

This year we are highlighting artisans who focus on animals. Do you have art that features animals or pets, or a product or craft item for a pet? If so we encourage you to apply for Woofstock!

 

Learn more about our party in the park: www.WoofstockATL.com

Apply right now: https://www.zapplication.org/event-info.php?ID=4844

Questions: Dave Demer, Dave.demer@Entercom.com, 404-238-9445

Read more…

Art Show Reviews written by You

I just want to thank Jeff Gracz for submitting several show reviews this month.  He wrote reviews for several west coast shows.  We are always looking for some west coast shows to help out artists on the west coast. 

You all know how important it is to have an idea of what to expect before applying to an art show.  Nobody likes to be blindsided once you get to a show and find out it is nothing like you hoped it would be.  That is why art show reviews are so important.  You can find art show reviews at www.Artshowreviews.com.

Here are a few west coast shows that we really could use a few more reviews for.  So, if you have done any of the shows listed here we would love you to review one or a few of them.

Bigfork Festival of the Arts - Montana

Proctor Arts Fest - Washington

Sequim Lavender Festival Street Fair - Washington

RAGS Wearable Art Show - Washington

Urban Craft Uprising - Seattle

Lake Chelan Fine Arts Festival - Washington

Bellevue Festival of the Arts - Washington

Woodland Hills Art & Craft Faire - California

America's Clay Fest III - California

We would also be happy for anyone to review any other show that you would like to.  If you want to review a show not on our site, that is fine.  Just submit it and I will get it added for you.  Then, you can add your review once I get it posted to the site.

To write a review or to submit a show just go to www.Artshowreviews.com

And once again, thanks so much Jeff Gracz for all of your help.  It was so appreciated.

Read more…

Holiday Art Show St Augustine

Just wanted to Thank Lynn Wettach, of Holiday Art Shows, for my space at the Jan 1/2 show in St Augustine. I won a space with her through Art Fair Insiders, and I gotta tell you, I would love to work with her again! 

 LARGE spaces, plenty of back space, quad set-ups, so everyone had corner space. Super easy set-up and break down. Friendly staff, nice coffee and breakfast for the artists.

Lynn made sure to stop by each artist to say hello and make sure things were good.

I say , give this show a try, lots of fine art at this show , with really good advertising.

Read more…

HAE Sarasota, A Pleasant Surprise

Over the years, I have been as critical as anyone regarding the Howard Alan Shows. I think he has too many shows and has diluted the market, at least here in Florida. This is exacerbated by the fact that many other promoters saw HAE's success and have copied his business model leading to a further dilution of the market. No show is special now because there are so many of them.

To compound the problem, all the big shows in Florida have expanded their events to create circus like atmosphere's charging entry fees and adding more food, more sponsor booths, more music, and as many other things that distract from the thing that made those shows great, which is the art work.

Increasingly every year, I felt that we, the artists, were just the draw to get people to come and then the show tried everything they could to take their money with items that would make them money. Increasingly, I felt used as my gross sales declined and the attendance grew. Many of us have stopped coming down to Florida because it wasn't a viable market anymore. This could be difficult for some because we need the cash flow to pay for all the spring, summer, and fall shows that are due now and in the next couple of months. Enter the Howard Allan Shows.

The first thing you notice about the HA shows is that they haven't changed much over the years. He has a formula that works. Thirty years ago, we only did HA shows if we couldn't get into the blockbuster events. To their credit, they were and are loyal to their artists. If you supported them, they supported you by letting you have a space. That worked for a lot of people and artists preferred to do HA events because they could count on having a space in their shows.

Another word for not changing much is "consistency." That is a good thing. As shows got bigger and bigger adding more and more annoying distractions, HA stuck to the formula that the art is, not only the most important thing, it's the only thing. There are no food vendors, no music, no begging artists for donations for silent auctions, no t-shirt booths, no poster booths, no beer, etc., etc,. There is only the art. Ironically, as I was whining incessantly about all the crap at shows, I avoided Howard Allan events. I should have been paying closer attention.

I have done the Coconut Grove Arts Festival for over 30 years. I have won my share of awards there and numerous purchase prizes, when they made an effort to cultivate buyers. They used to have a pre-show event, starting at 8 AM on Saturday. The patrons would commit to supporting the artists by buying show bucks weeks before the show. They would get to see the images at pre-show events during the week and they would make notes as to who they wanted to buy from before the show started. This was fantastic.

For me, a few years in a row, I would have my best show ever before the show even opened at 10 AM on Saturday. CGAF has the record for my biggest single art fair day and it has been my best show ever. Sadly they cut this out a number of years ago, added a gate fee, brought the food vendors closer to the artists, added beer hawkers, replaced the appropriate live jazz with raucous music, appealing to a younger crowd that had no interest in buying art. Last year was the tipping point as they added a t-shirt/poster booth kitty corner to my space and parked a golf cart across from me and left it there all day. So, I didn't even bother to apply this year.

I had a choice to make to replace the Grove show. There was St Stephens. If I did that, I might as well go ahead and do CGAF because they are in the same area. I could have done Arti Gras, which I have never done. Arti Gras like CGAF, charges a ridiculous gate fee. Someone said it was $12. Someone else said it was $16. Either way, that was unacceptable. I wasn't about to support that. I could have done the rotary Sanibel Island show. I did that show once and I didn't like the fact that the show is run by ex-military types that were control freaks. I felt that I had to ask permission to go to the bathroom. So, that was out. That left the Howard Allan Sarasota Show. I'm glad I did it.

Set up is the morning of the show. This starts at 3:30 AM. You get to drive to your booth, unload your display and work, and then go park. If you arrive after 5:30, you have to dolly in. You are not supposed to start setting up your tent until 5:30. It takes me over an hour to unload, so, by the time I parked and got back to my booth, I could start setting up. Set up is really easy. There is plenty of space to drive in and unload.

There is more than enough free parking for artists. Since there are no vendors, there are no huge beer trucks, food trucks, etc. that you have to fight and work around. Take down is even easier, as there again is a lot of space and load out is staggered because everyone packs up at their own rate. One real pet peeve at a lot of shows is that the show tries to control load in and load out. I've often said that if you leave it up to the artists, it would only take a couple of hours to get in and out. If the show controls this, it will take 8 hours or more. HA allows the artists to control the set up and take down, so, of course, it is a quick pleasant experience.

The show opens at 10 AM. People start arriving at 9:30. There are only artists booths. As I said before there are no food booths, beer hawkers, etc. Consequently, there are no twenty somethings drinking and checking out the girls. There are only people who are serious about the art. I had many great conversations and a lot of compliments because, lo and behold, people were there to look at and buy the art work.

The one thing that everyone says about Howard Alan Events is that he brings in the crowds. I found this to be true. The streets are wide. Where I was, the booths faced each other. there is a section where booths are back to back. You get 11-12 feet, so, you aren't packed in like sardines. I'm guessing there are only 200 booths. Certainly, there aren't 400 booths. I saw everyone twice.

As a patron, it is an easy show to do. If you want eat something there are some really nice small restaurants around the show. The street is clean and wide so if the show had a lot of customers, there were no bottlenecks. A block away on a side street there is a farmers market with some great things to buy. You wouldn't know it was there unless you walked down the street. The area is upscale but not glitzy. Just my kind of place.

I never post numbers, but, everyone I talked to had a solid show. Some had a great show. My price points are $80-$800. I only sold only a few pieces under $200. I love making sculptural non-functional teapots. I used to sell 6-8 per show. The past few years I maybe sell 1 or 2 if I am lucky. Here I sold 6 teapots and all 3 sizes. Saturday, was kind of slow for me. On Sunday, I had a 3 hour period where I couldn't write fast enough. I will definitely do this show again next year.

In conclusion, this is a hassle free show, with plenty of patrons, free parking for artists and most importantly sales. Howard and Debbie have a strong presence at the show. They stop and talk to everyone numerous times. Debbie found it necessary to help fix up my booth with foliage, which I appreciated and enjoyed. When I think about how annoyed I was the past few years with the shows I did on this weekend, with how good I felt after this one, I had a good laugh. There were no negatives in Sarasota only positives. I liked it so well, I am going to do HA's Coconut Pointe show next weekend in Bonita Springs.

Read more…

Notes from the St. Louis Art Fair Mock Jury

Late in 2015, after I'd been rejected again from some of the top shows in the country, I was on a different forum, moaning about my plight. Someone said that the best insights I could have would be to sit in on an open jury. 

A few days later, the mock jury presentation opened in Zapp. I was one of the first 150 who applied, and so I was accepted. I could hit St. Louis with only a slight detour on my route to Arizona to visit my dad and participate in the Tubac Arts Festival. 

I went with some trepidation. I'm self-taught, started painting 10 years ago when I was 50, and so I am relatively new to the art festivals. I have self-doubt from those situations and from a lifetime of self-doubt, and so I was quite nervous about putting my work up for critique in such a public forum, while I was in the room. But this is the year I stop hesitating because I'm afraid, so off I went. 

The event was held in the conference room of a Budweiser distribution company. There was room for probably 50 attendees, but only 15 or 20 attended. About a dozen emerging artists attended, as well. Many of them, interestingly, were in their 50s and above. 

SLAF President and Executive Director Cindy Lerick and Deputy Director Laura Miller organized the presentation, greeted us cheerily and dealt with all the technological particularities (they were doing a webinar for the first time). 

In a typical SLAF jury, there are five jurors. For the mock jury, there were two - Steve Teczar,artist and retired professor of Art at Maryville University in St. Louis; and Peg Fetter, jewelry artist and metal smith. 

Typically, a SLAF jury would receive 1281 applications and choose 150 from them. The waiting list is another 11.7 percent of the total. Missouri applicant make up 8 percent of the total, Lerick said; first-time applicants make up 25 percent of the total. 

The SLAF jury process is three rounds, Lerick said. The first two are yes/no/maybe and it takes a unanimous five "no"s to drop an applicant. In the third round, jurors slow down a little, comment and wrangle. Peg said that when she participated as a juror, the process took 27 hours, and was more than a little contentious at many points. 

The mock jury presentation was set up as the SLAF jury is set up, i.e., five slides - four of work and one of the booth - are shown at the same time. In the regular jury process, they said, the jurors look at the work for about 10 seconds before voting. 

Generally, in my opinion, the work that was submitted was good, though I have to say that I found only a handful of the entries actually exciting. The jewelry category had the best work overall, in my opinion. To my eyes, the sculpture category was the most uneven, with many artists making similar work (small, eccentric, amusing pieces made with reclaimed materials). The sculptors who made different work stood out astonishingly - to me, at least. 

Over the course of the day, several themes emerged. In general, the booth shots were where much of the focus was directed. I was amazed at the many booth shots that were just horrible. EZUps put up crookedly, with the sides open, junk piled in front and a standing fan in the middle. Sagging walls with drooping fabric on them. "Booth shots" that were just tables set up in a gymnasium - or basement, or garage - with chairs and boxes visible in the backgrounds. Booth shots with sunshine slicing across the ground and up the wall, obscuring the work. Booth shots obviously (to the experts' eye) photoshopped. 

Like everyone, I've wondered at the stress that's placed on the booth shot, and now, I understand it a little better. It's incredibly difficult to cut 1281 entries down to 150. I think that the standout work declares itself - at least it did, to my eyes, during the presentation. The truly bad work - and there was some of it, in my opinion, in the presentation - also declares itself.

And then there's the rest of it. If a lot of the work is sort of typical, middling, seen before, this is where the jury shot makes the difference. 

So, people, don't send terrible booth photos to juries. Set up your booth in the back yard, in the driveway, somewhere where you can find even light without bright sunlight or dark shadows. Don't clutter your booth with too much work. That was one of the themes. Again and again and again, the jurors said the booths were cluttered. They wanted to booths to be elegant, spare. "Galleristic" is the word they used. Put up the work then take a third of it down. 

They hated nearly all the booths with brown as the background. Oatmeal-colored backgrounds often got "anemic" comments from the jurors. Peg did not respond well to white or black backgrounds generally, though there were many exceptions; she was not just against white or black, but to her eyes, these colors either washed out the work or were too bleak for the work. A medium gray was what these two jurors suggested repeatedly. A number of times, Steve suggested using a color - not red! - on one wall. 

A few random observations...

  • The jurors - and even the audience, after seeing about 50 entries - could tell professional photography from homemade shots, especially in the jewelry category. 
  • Do not include frames in your images. 
  • Surprisingly, at least to me, the jurors were accepting of some shots I'd not have expected they're like. Jewelers who sent photos with multiple pieces in the same shot, that was OK. One sculptor sent a shot of a couple pieces on the wall, and included the edges of two chairs, to give a sense of scale. That was fine. One box-maker had a photo that showed the box at the top, and a detail of the box at the bottom. And re the recent discussion here about detail shots, these two jurors were OK with several detail shots that artists entered. 
  • Work on your 100- or 200- or 300-character descriptions. The SLAF jury reads these out loud, on the third round (I believe). Just because Zapp implies that you should be giving technical details of the work, that doesn't mean you must. And if you enter two bodies of work, tweak your description. Don't just send in the same one for both bodies of work.
  • If your booth shot is photoshopped, and the jurors realize that, they will toss you out. 

As for my own work, I got no life-changing comments from the jurors, but that was OK. I got a lot of ideas over the course of the day, and understand much better now how to make my entries stand out from the pack. 

The most important thing I took away from this event came from Cindy and Laura, the organizers. They stressed that we, the artists, are the stakeholders, and that they, the show organizers, are happy to help. We should call with questions about our art, our application, our booth, anything. They are there to help us! 

So, thank you, SLAF. You have definitely helped me see my art in a different light. 

8869166877?profile=original

Above, the jury looks at work by jeweler Cynthia Battista

Read more…

Sharing an Experience

I'm sharing this because I suspect I'm not the only one who's ever done anything like this, and not the only one who's had ambivalent feelings about it. 

I had a very good summer of shows. I got into some top shows, my paintings generally sold well, and I enjoyed myself. I did 25 shows between February and September, and honestly, I was exhausted. 

In September, the dog of my heart died. She had liver cancer, and I had to euthanize her. This broke my heart and left me truly sad, deep inside. Two weeks afterwards, I rallied to attend a plein-air paintout in which I'd been invited to participate. I wasn't up to being social, but I painted and met nice painters, and enjoyed myself. The sadness ebbed. 

Right afterwards, I headed to Dayton, Ohio, for a show. I had a cheap Air BnB rental ($42 for an entire house), so I got there early, to rest and finish my taxes before starting the show. On Thursday, my husband called to tell me that another of our dogs had died.

I went home. Canceled out of the show (lost my booth fee, even though the show called someone from the wait list to take my place, but OK). I simply could not face people, could not interact, could not engage.

A month later, I realized I just needed a dog. I'd been painting, I'd been gearing up for my final three shows, in Texas, but I was still sad. Still lacking energy, drive, hope. My husband found a rescue dog who looked good, so I met her on my way to Texas and made arrangements to pick her up on the way home.

I got to Texas and drove to my first show, Huffhines Art Trails, in a total downpour. Cars were off the road the entire way. It poured, thundered, lightninged, and the show was canceled. I looked ahead to the weather and saw that hurricane-driven rain was predicted for the next weekend, too, when I was scheduled for a show in Houston. 

So there I was, stranger in a strange land, and all I wanted was to go home. I was tired. Spent. Staying with strangers who were nice, but with whom I couldn't be myself. I tried a couple different things, went to Austin (unbeknownst to me, there was a Formula 1 racing event there that weekend, traffic was horrible, there were no rooms to be had). I tried to paint, but everywhere I could have gone, it was raining. I thought about heading to Arizona to see my dad, but he was away for the week. Nothing worked. Nothing felt right. 

Finally, I just decided to go home. Blow off my two remaining shows, lose the booth fees, just check out. 

The moment I made the decision, my world righted itself. I headed east, got my little dog (photo below), and am happily, safely at home. 

I've since felt tremendous guilt about skipping those shows. I've felt that if I were really a tough, serious fair-going artist, I'd have stuck it out. But I have also felt tremendous power and freedom in my decision. One reason to work for yourself is to do just what I did, not work when I really, truly, in my heart didn't feel like working. 

Of course I worry about the money, but there were no guarantees that those other Texas shows would have been good ones for me. I have commissions to paint, I have a project to start, and people have begun to call me asking to buy the paintings I still have. 

I really wanted to share my experience, even though I suspect some artists might deride me for my decisions. It was hard to make these choices, but they were the right ones. And maybe my experience will help someone else. 

ps, Hi, Connie! 8869166688?profile=original

Read more…

We like breaking records here at AFI

If you missed the Daily Tip a few days ago you may not know that we broke a record here at AFI.  We broke our record for the number of art show reviews submitted during a one month period.  In April we had 56 reviews submitted!  That was simply amazing. 

Everyone realizes that it is a real help to have a place where you can check a show out before you apply.  Nobody likes to go into a show blind.  Artists also hate to waste the jury fee if you find out later that the show just isn't a good fit with your art work or that there is something just not right about a certain show.  It is always good to be able to do some research before you apply to a show. 

We also try very hard (and it is quite an undertaking) to keep www.Artshowreviews.com up to date and ready to use.  Not only do I add the reviews people write to our site but I also try very hard to make sure all the other show vitals are current.  It is nice to find jury fees, booth fees, application dates and show venues all right there to help you with making your decisions. 

We have over 200 shows on our site now.  Plus, we keep adding new shows every week.  We also try to make sure that we have a good variety of shows on our website from all parts of the country.  There are so many art shows up and down the eastern half of the country that our website would be full even if we only included shows from that side of the country.  But, we don't want that.  We want our website to have a great variety of shows from one side of the country to the other to help artists everywhere.  However, to be able to provide that service to artists that requires your help.  That is why Connie put out a post asking for reviews.  Artists make our site what it is today.  That is why we often times will ask people to review a show they were just in. 

So, getting back to our record, you might like to know just how big this record break was.  Our previous record was set about 2 years earlier.  Our high point had been 40 reviews in a month.  That, in it self, is a lot of reviews, too.  I am the person that gets the reviews added into the site and I was so busy this  past April that I decided I needed to check out how many reviews I had been working on.  I counted up over forty reviews.  That was around April 20th.  So, I set out asking a few more people to submit  a couple more reviews.  Many people responded and the reviews kept coming in.  I didn't tell Connie I was working hard to get a few more reviews.  I wanted it to be a surprise when she saw our new record posted as the tip of the day. 

We all know that records are made to be broken.  We can break that record again with your help.  Quite often we hear artists say how thankful they are that they can have the use of a site like Art Show Reviews.com.  If you use our website and you like it, please take a few minutes to write up a review.  It really only takes a few minutes and the information is so useful and helpful to so many people.  How about this, if our website was useful to you could you add one show review as a way to say thank you.  This plea is for those who have never written a show review before.  Of course, we also won't turn down any reviews that are submitted by those who help us out regularly.

We really appreciate the many artists who have helped us over the last few years to make Art Show Reviews such a helpful site.  We could not have done it without you.

Let's go for another record!

Read more…

Plein Air Mt. Lebanon Artists' Market

Hi Everyone!  Just finished my last outdoor show of the year in Mt. Lebanon, PA this last weekend.  Mt. Lebanon is a very well to do neighborhood south of Pittsburgh.  The show is put on in the PNC bank parking lot one block over from the main road (Washington Road).  

New directors took over the show this year and approached me at a show earlier in the year and invited me to exhibit there.  Now, I know several of my friends have done the show under the old management and have dropped it over the years because they didn't do well.  I decided to give it a try because I really liked Steve and Wendy Denenberg and their enthusiasm.  They own a beautiful gallery in Mt. Lebanon.  

This was one of the most organized show I've ever done.  As soon as I pulled up, volunteers came up and had my van unloaded in about 3 minutes.  They were also there for tear down, and they were helping people take down their tents!!!).  I was able to move my car and come back and set up while drinking nice warm coffee and eating gourmet pastries from a local bakery (The second day it was homemade biscotti).  Plenty of volunteers and Steve and Wendy were available for even the hard stuff.

There were 64 booths of mostly beautifully juried art (too many jewelry booths, though).  The weather was perfect both days and there were people shopping.  There were food trucks in a small parking lot adjacent to ours, food Trucks included Pgh Taco Truck, Oh My Grill, Bella Christie and Lil’Z’s, and crepes.  Luke Williams Band was set up for a good part of both days and entertained us with his beautiful voice.  

A lot of other events were going on at the show, a food drive, a blacksmith demo, touchstone center for the arts had an information booth.  It was impressive for a first time event.  The show was the end of a weeklong Plein Air event in town where artists from all over came into town to do some open air paintings, then they were judged for awards.  

Sales for me on Saturday were disappointing, but several of my friends had good days.  I sell jewelry.    Then on Sunday, I had a pretty decent day.  One lady who bought a pair of earrings for a gift on Saturday, came back on Sunday and said her husband told her she couldn't give them away....so she came back and bought a matching bracelet and pendant AND 4 other items for Christmas gifts!  

I didn't make what I usually make at shows or what I wanted to make, but many others did and this show will do nothing but improve.  I did well enough to want to do it again next year, but honestly would want to do it again even if I didn't do that well.  Of the artists that I talked to, some did very well, some did not.  But most would give it another try.  I think in a few years, this will be one that will be very hard to get into.

Steve and Wendy and all of the volunteers were there the entire time and wanted comments and suggestions from us.  I really believe that they will implement some of the suggestions that were given by some of us 'seasoned' artists and make this one of the top Pittsburgh shows.  

There was talk of changing the date, but then maybe not.  Also talk of not being a part of the Plein Air festivities, but as a separate event (GREAT idea, maybe change the name too).  They may even provide housing for some out of town artists (do I qualify?).  Just a very artist friendly show that really appreciates the artist's.

In my opinion, this is a show to watch.  If you are interested watch their website for updates and information: http://www.mtlebopartnership.org/mt-lebanon-arts-initiative/

Read more…

Ive been waitlisted at the big ones, bayou, woodlands.  Are there any other decent shows for painters in texas or nearby in the spring. I'm either leaving florida to go to texas in late march for bayou city if i get in, or april then to the midwest for the summer. I travel full time so I'm flexible.  I've applied to many, but havent gotten a good schedule sorted out as of yet. 
So ya, looking for some recommendations, I havent done any in texas yet.

Read more…

SONO, so bad

This is a review of the 39th Annual Sono Arts Celebration, held on Connecticut's "Gold Coast" town of South Norwalk, on Sat/Sun, August 16-17, 2014. The "celebration" consists of an art show, several music stages, food court and children's activities, all contained within two cross streets that juncture at the SoNo train trestle overpass.

I had been hearing mostly bad things about this show for several years but jeweler acquaintances supported it and said with the large crowds, it was still a "good selling show" for them. I decided to give it another shot, "jurying in" with both my line of porcelain jewelry and decorative porcelain wares. I had exhibited at this show many years ago, mostly in the nineties with my last participation being around 2004/2005. It was never a stellar show for me but yielded a decent profit and good times with its regular stable of artists and the ever popular "Puppet Parade". It was fun. There used to be great art by 200 or so artists run by very capable artist-organizers, even awards and a "somewhat" buying public. None of this remains. Partly due to the "somewhat" buying public but largely due to the state of things in general. South Norwalk has seen better days and this event has morphed into nothing but a crowded street fair.

I was impressed with the show's "Pre-show" materials that the management company emailed. The info was clear, well organized and alluded to some perks which led me to be very optimistic about the event. Not much of it proved to be all that accurate. I had the earliest set-up time of 5:30-6 am and the line of cars to get into the festival street hadn't moved until after 6 am because no one could find the staff to let us all in. With the light of day, the vacant storefronts and the homeless sitting on the benches were unsettling but nothing proved as maddening as the unswept streets, littered by several days' worth of refuse. Several other inconsistencies came into light as well: parking fees, no vegetarian option with Sat/Sun's free lunch, artist hospitality tent not well stocked. But this is the small stuff.

There were about 65 "artist" booths with only 60% really qualifying. The remaining were filled with buy-sell (cut-rate at that), DIY booths (henna, silk scarves, etc) and designer booths (work designed by them, made elsewhere). One such designer booth was the hit of the show with an under $10 product neither constructed nor decorated by them (it says it on their website). Quality overall was abysmal and clearly NOT juried at all. The music was not suitable for any art show with very loud hard rock throughout both days. Two days of nice weather (sun/clouds, temp's in the upper seventies, low eighties) brought out the crowds but sadly they were not there for the art fair, rather just to walk the streets.

Though, I did make a small profit (80% jewelry sales, 20% ceramic sales; $65 the highest priced item sold), I would not return to this event. It was uncomfortable. The puppet parade wasn't even fun anymore, with only a handful of puppets making the rounds...if you blinked, you missed it. For anyone who remembers, this used to be a huge draw, as art organizations, clubs, high schoolers, etc., would construct life-size puppets to parade with accompanying drums throughout the festival streets. It would last 20 minutes or so. I was so bummed. And yes, the jewelers who had done so well in years past, were complaining about how dreadful sales were this year, too. Even a couple of painters who had enjoyed "great" sales last year, echoed the jewelers' sentiments. In the end, it's a street fair in a with an expensive buy-in. So sad.

Read more…

Call for Artists: Atlanta Arts Festival

AtlantaArtspiclogo September 13 & 14
Atlanta, Georgia
Historic Piedmont Park
Saturday 10am-7pmSunday 10am-5pm
200 Artists
Deadline: April 21
  

The Atlanta Arts Festival is a two day, outdoor festival with an emphasis on the visual arts.
 

Set in historic Piedmont Park, this autumn festival of excellence in the arts is an event dedicated to bringing together outstanding artists from across the country with the large and enthusiastic art buying community of the Atlanta area.      

The  Atlanta Arts Festival is produced by a highly qualified staff and  strong volunteer pool, both with multiple years of event production and  promotion in the City of Atlanta.  This annual September event is committed to delivering a quality experience for both artist and patron! 

1725.jpg?ver=1391791289000&width=300
Eddie Myers, 2013 poster winner, "United"

Items of Interest:

  • Held in Piedmont Park
  • Juried show; artists selected by a panel of experts
  • Limited number of participants to increase sales
  • $7,500 in award money
  • Artists retain all proceeds from their sales
  • Commemorative poster image will be selected from a show participant
  • Ranked in the 100 Best Fine Art & Design Shows by Sunshine Artist Magazine, September 2012

Artist Amenities:

  • Artist hospitality providing continental breakfast & refreshments
  • Booth sitting
  • Load-in/load-out at booth space
  • Free parking (parking information will be forthcoming in artist acceptance packet and/or check-in packet)
  • 24 hour security patrols
  • Discounted rates at participating hotels
743.jpg?width=300


For more info: 
 www.AtlantaArtsFestival.com
        

 

Applications:  www.Zapplication.org


          

(770)941-9660 (office)

(866)519-2918 (fax)

Read more…

Our future buyers, starting young...

I just have admit that in the past when I had kids coming to my booth and started touching everything would drive me a little crazy, but it is not always the case. I have learned to listen to them, pay more attention and explain them why I love to paint and do shows. Sometimes they look and after couple hours you see them coming back with their parents and their cash. I am so proud when I see them the next year, taller, more grown up, more mature and to purchase a second piece. They see the artist with respect and admiration, something that I wish some adults will do. These little guys won't try to bargain with you or tell you "I could do that" (like a woman just told me this weekend "40.00 dlls for this?? It's only a piece of wood with paint!") They just watch, listen, learn, look at you in a WOW way and can't wait to come back to see you the following year. I see a good future in art :) Cheers to kids! And cheers to their parents that teach them to love art young :)8869111293?profile=original

Read more…

Door County, WI Shows

This is my second year doing shows. I am based in the Milwaukee area. I have decided to branch out and try some shows in Door County this year. However, now that I have gotten into a few of them, I am stumped at figuring out where to stay economically. Does anyone have any ideas? I may end up borrowing a tent and camping for $20/night, even though that seems like a bit more trouble than just sleeping in my car in the Walmart parking lot for free. Unfortunately, these art shows all fall on holidays where the motel rates are higher to begin with. 

Read more…

Ok, y'all!! Still have the accent in my head, I am going to break this down into two sections, the positives first and then the negatives and I will warn you now, there are a lot of negatives. 

The Positives:

Set-up and check in for this show was a breeze.  I had no issues at all and was alone with no help from any volunteers and I got the whole display up and polished in about 2 hours.  Security was very evident and I felt totally comfortable leaving all the art there overnight.  I had about $10,000.00 in inventory.  My neighbors were all very nice and friendly and the weather was perfect.  The weather for this show was perfect all weekend actually.  No rain and temps in the mid-upper 70's with a light breeze.  I returned Saturday and not a thing was out of place in my booth.

 

Saturday crowds were light and thready.  I would have a bunch of people in the booth, then a trickle and then a bunch more.  I recieved countless comments on my work, the people were very polite and kind and the compliments were flowing freely and seemed genuine.  Parents were controlling their children and their dogs and I met some very nice people and petted some wonderful dogs.  My neighbors were friendly and chatty and I enjoyed them.  Greg Little, AFI member was two booths down from me with his wife Carol.  Greg and Carol are wonderful people, very nice and fun to talk to.  The three of us had dinner Saturday night at a Greek restaurant and visited and ate good food.  I really hope to meet up with them again.  Greg had a great show and won the award of distinction.  Greg's work is amazing and I am so glad he won.  He said it was his first award.    

I had one sale on Saturday evening, toward the end of the show.  It is funny, I was in the bathroom when the sale occurred and my neighbor actually handled it for me. 

 

Sunday was more of the same.  Light, thready crowds, lighter than Saturday.  I had a zero sale day on Sunday, but again nice people, warm compliments and good weather. 

 

The negatives:  Stop reading this now if you don't want to be depressed or very mad.  If you are contemplating doing this show, please read it word for word and e mail me for pictures.  I have proof of everything.  I am not the type to critique without proof.....

 

I drove 650 miles each way for this show.  I chose to do that willingly, so no one is to blame there.  I arrived Friday night and while I was setting up passers by in droves going to and from a concert kept asking me and my neighbors, "What's all this for?"  They seemed to have no idea that there was an art fair there that weekend.  My neighbors were concerned that either they didn't promote this show or the promotions were centered on the music festival going on and not the art.      

 

Saturday was light, thready crowds as I mentioned earlier.  I would not say this show was well attended at all.  I was surprised at how many people were carrying these lawn chair in a bag things.  I had never seen these before and then it happened.  A very careless woman comes into my booth with her lawn chair strung over her shoulder and knocks over a pedestal.  She destroyed a $300.00 piece.  My claws don't usually come out, but they did then.  I told her she needed to pay for it and of course she refused.  I said some very unpleasant things told her where to shove her lawn chair and to get the blank out of my booth. 

 

Compliments galore all day from everyone who entered my booth, but these people were not buying.  I saw very few packages going by and most of them were carrying beers and ice cream cones.  I know a few people had a good show, but I did not and several other artists I spoke to didn't either.  One painter came up to me and was noticably upset with lackluster sales and I tried to council her as best as I could.  It was very hard to not break out in tears several times throughout Saturday.  I almost did once and had to go to the restroom and then call my husband. 

Due to the fact that they had no booth sitters and no volunteers checking on artists with the exception of the free lunch that we will get to later, I had to leave my booth unattended or under watch from a neighbor multiple times to use the restroom or take a refreshment break.  This made me nervous and I felt bad imposing upon my neighbors so much.  They were gracious though and I appreciated that.  My one sale from the show came late Saturday evening and was sold by my neighbor, Shirley while I was in the bathroom.  Go figure.  Thanks to Shirley for being an angel.      

 

Lunch:  Ok, this is where I get insulted.  This show gave the artists lunch both days as one of the very few amenities it offered.  It was a joke.  I recieved a 2 inch square sandwich/hors d'ouvre and a bag of crushed potato chips and a bottle of water each day for lunch.  I know how this sounds and it was so absurd, I took a picture of it, e mail me if you want to see the proof.  I am not one to be ungracious or unappreciative of anything.  I have manners, am polite and appreciate the effort, but come the f**k on!!  If you are going to do something, do it right or not at all.  I would and I am sure anyone with a modicum of class or respect for another person would have been embarrassed to serve that.  My advice to this show is to spend the money for the lunch on a volunteer coordinator or better advertising.  We can fend for ourselves and do much, much better.  Just about everyone I spoke to ended up getting something else anyway.  We were all starving again in an hour. Thank god they had good popcorn available in the arts center for purchase. 

 

Amenities for the artists:  the lunch both days as mentioned above, a beer cozy that went straight into the trash and a little promo bag of coffee from a local coffee distributor.  It was actually good.  That was it!! No booth sitters, no director's cell phone number in case of emergency, no artist reception, no t shirt, nothing!!  Again, I don't need much and I appreciate everything that anyone gives me, but this show advertises southern hospitality and falls flat on its face in reality. 

 

Ok, I met the director of the show on Saturday after I asked her who she was and then introduced myself.  She was talking to someone else outside my booth and I approached her because I saw her radio and had hoped she was a booth sitter.  She was too busy to talk to me and promptly left and said she would be back tomorrow (Sunday).  I never saw her again.   She has recieved an e mail from me already, I will update this blog if I ever hear back from her.     

 

I met my first volunteer on Sunday night as I was packing up my van.  A lady named Nancy, who was very nice, unfortunately got an earful.  I asked her where she had been all weekend and where the other volunteers were.  She didn't give me a straight answer, but did help me load up a few things.  In all fairness, I was told by another artist that they had a hard time getting volunteers for this show.  Appearantly this show was moved up a month earlier than usual so as to not compete with New Orleans and this was the first year for the new date.  It would have been nice to know that up front. 

 

Financial:  I did not come remotely close to making expenses for this show.  I had one sale, had a piece broken that cannot be fixed and was told by several other artists that the sales were way, way down from previous years.  At least four other artists I spoke to said they would not be back.  In all fairness, my neighbor, Greg as I mentioned before, had a great show.   I am so glad he won the award too, he certainly deserved it. 

I had to drive straight home on Sunday night becuase I could not justify the cost of spending the night in a hotel.  I drove the 650 miles home and got in at 5:30 this morning.  I already had incurred so many costs, and with one sale, I didn't want to go in the hole even more. 

 

Blacklisting:  Here's the deal...I will never review a show or say anything negative about a show that is not true and that I can't prove.  I am someone who struggles every month to pay the bills and can't afford to do shows that are this bad on a regular basis.  Occasionally, we all have bad shows, it's part of the business, but I also think there are things shows are responsible for doing/providing when they take our booth fees and I will hold them accountable.  I have serious concerns, empathy and respect for other artists that compell me to share information that may help them avoid situations like this.  I think that when a show is this bad and underperforms what it promises/sells to us as artists, we need to be informed about it.  If a show director is going to blacklist me for speaking the truth, be my guest!  I do not deal with people that are untrustworthy or corrupt, so if you are a director and want to avoid having me in your show because you are afraid I will speak the truth, go right ahead and blacklist me forever, take me out of your shows if they are in the future and send me my booth fee back.  I don't want to do your show if it is poorly ran anyway.  I simply can't afford to.    

 

Ok, bottom line is this:  I had high hopes for this show.  I went into it with an open mind, a positive attitude and spoke kindly to everyone around me and everyone who entered my booth and complimented my work.  I willingly and happily drove a long way and took the risk.  My attitude could not have been better for this show.  I am sorry to have to write such a negative review, but it is true and deserved.  I will never do this show again and will never recommend it to anyone.  If you are local and have low costs and a free weekend, it may be ok for you.  I did not make booth fee and application fee for this show.  Advice to anyone travelling to shows, avoid this mess at all costs. 

 

I will be at Great Lakes Art Fair in Novi, MI this weekend, I hope and pray for a  better show there, look for my review next Monday here on AFI.  Thanks! Elle     

 

 

Read more…

Call for Artists: Atlanta Arts Festival

AtlantaArtspiclogo September 14 & 15
Atlanta, Georgia
Historic Piedmont Park
Saturday 10am-7pm; Sunday 10am-5pm
200 Artists
Deadline: April 29

The Atlanta Arts Festival is a two day, outdoor festival with an emphasis on the visual arts.  Set in historic Piedmont Park, the festival fills the fall time art festival void in the City of Atlanta.

This autumn festival of excellence in the arts is an event dedicated to bringing together outstanding artists from throughout the country with the large and enthusiastic art buying community of the Atlanta area.

The Atlanta Arts Festival is produced by a highly qualified staff and strong volunteer pool, both with multiple years of event production and promotion in the City of Atlanta.  This annual September event is committed to delivering a quality experience for both artist and patron!


1253.jpg?width=234 Items of Interest:

  • Held in Piedmont Park
  • Juried show; artists selected by a panel of experts
  • Limited number of participants to increase sales
  • $7,500 in award money
  • Artists retain all proceeds from their sales
  • Commemorative poster image will be selected from a show participant
  • Ranked in the 100 Best Fine Art & Design Shows by Sunshine Artist Magazine, September 2012 

Artist Amenities:

  • Artist hospitality providing continental breakfast & refreshments
  • Booth sitting
  • Load-in/load-out at booth spaceAtlanta
  • Free parking (parking information will be forthcoming in artist acceptance packet and/or check-in packet)
  • 24 hour security patrols
  • Discounted rates at participating hotels

 

For more info:  www.AtlantaArtsFestival.com    

Applications: www.Zapplication.org  

(770)941-9660 (office)

(866)519-2918 (fax) 

 

 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Find more shows for your 2013 show season: www.CallsforArtists.com
Read more…

I am looking for a show the last 2 weeks in March and didn't see much in the show reviews about either, I'd love it if anyone could give me some feedback or suggest another one for this time period in March in Florida. I also wondered about "Mayfaire by the Lake" in May, it looks very interesting. I,m a potter live in FL so none of them are all that far for me. Thanks in advance, Jackie 

Read more…

Selecting Shows - Do your homework

Subtitle:  Don’t rely just on the word of other artists

 

I will start out by letting you know that I am on a bit of a rant right now due to feeling grumpy after another artist, who called to ask advice on shows, also “chewed me out” for recommending a show last year that for us was great, for her this year, not so great.   A lot of the new artists I meet are unaware of the various websites that post show info.  Some of them seem to rely entirely on other artists or ZAPP for new show ideas for future months or future years.  Over the past year  I’ve seen several newbies at shows I would not have expected to see them at and they seem surprised when their results are less than what they expected or they tell me about a particular show and complain about how bad it was.  I even got asked by one artist why I didn’t warn her about a particular show.  Well, she didn’t ask about the shows I thought were bad, she only asked about shows  I thought she should consider.   

 

As has been stated on this site numerous times, as people are asking advice on shows, each artist needs to do their homework including:

  • Searching AFI, both the discussions and the blogs
  • Searching Art Show reviews
  • Searching AFSB if you have a subscription
  • Searching the Sunshine Artist Forum
  • Reviewing any other art / craft subscriptions you have
  • Talking to other artists
  • Searching other Internet sites for any input, even if it’s just the local paper giving some idea of attendance, events, parking, etc.
  • Review the demographics of the area, number of expected attendees
  • See if there are other “big events” scheduled for the same weekend – example: does the show clash with the annual cross state football game, etc.
  • Look at previous artists if they are listed on the events website – does your work fit?

 

Once you make a decision, own your decision. I understand, it sometimes feels like a roll of  the dice, a lot of factors are out of our control such as weather, Wall Street, etc.    Shows also change over the years.  We all know what it’s like to do a show that didn’t meet expectations.  Whatever you do, if you haven’t done your homework, don’t pass the blame to the artist who told you about the show.  

 

Any other “homework” ideas?  I’m sure I’ve missed something, but I’m about ready to email the list to this other artist and ask her to please do her own homework!  I don’t mind sharing info but I don’t need a rude call that managed to distract me from important stuff, like taxes.  LOL, usually I enjoy a distraction from taxes but today’s distraction was most unwelcome.

Read more…