We are pleased to inform that the call for
the Artists-in-Residence Program in 2020 at AIR-HMC, Budapest has been opened. For applying, please write us for more info and application form to
bszechy@yahoo.com .
We are looking forward to receiving applications of artists who have interest in our program.
Beata Szechy,(HMC)
http://www.hungarian-multicultural-center.com/
All Posts (7723)
10545 Old Tom Frost Road
60 Artists
- The fees are purposefully low (only $65.00 total with $25.00 for submissions and $40.00 both fees, fees can be shared per booth), booth sharing is allowed, and the jurying process keeps the standards high, so you are not competing next to a person selling Chinese-made crafts.
- Our show is at a major anchor, The Old Farm Winery, 10545 Tom Frost Rd, Catawissa, MO 63015, just 20 minutes from Six Flags. It’s in a lovely, country setting, family friendly with pony rides for the little ones and wine and music for the adults.
- We have been putting out the word for over 6 months now and the interest is high with the patrons. So, come join us, have fun, sell lots, and have fun in our friendly and encouraging atmosphere.
- Add'l marketing: We’ll be doing a FaceBook Live broadcast, intermittent all day, both days to help spread the word about YOUR craft! Come join us and grow!
Coconut Grove Arts & Historical Association
Application Fee: $55 Booth Fee: $850
- Over $45k in Awards
- $15k in pre-purchased Art Bucks by Festival Collectors
- 24 hour security, coffee, lunch, snacks, water and soda provided all day
- Booth sitting, and discounted tickets available for your VIP costumers
Testimonials:
Naples, Florida
- Ranked # 20 Fine Art and Design Show - Sunshine Artist 2018
- "Blue Chip 100" Fine Art Events - ArtFairSourceBook.com 2019
APPLY: https://www.zapplication.org/event-info.php?ID=7555
More Information: https://naplesart.org/naples-new-years-art-show/
Contact: Maureen Roberts, Maureen.roberts@naplesart.org (239) 262-6517
Des Moines Art Festival Exec Stephen King sent me this story:
Des Moines artist Chris Williams never imagined his work would be in a Super Bowl ad, but he recently became aware that an ad by the supermarket chain Hy-Vee featured prominently his mural in a Des Moines neighborhood. Not only that, the narrator was Oprah. It was a 4 minute feature that showed his work twice. Right.
So you've got Oprah, the supermarket and original art. Who profited?
I believe you're right. Not Chris.
It’s clear that artists are sick of their creations being treated like neutral backdrops for a plethora of corporate initiatives, and they’re fighting back en masse.
Chris is suing Hy-Vee for $25,000. His story has spread way beyond Des Moines.
Learn more: https://observer.com/2019/08/chris-williams-hy-vee-oprah-advertisement-super-bowl-mural/
My husband was a photographer, he always carried "model releases" with him, to insure he had permission. Did Hy-Vee get permission? Is this copyright infringement? What do you think?
A few spaces left - apply today

Apply Online: www.artwalkcarlsbad.org
Whitehead Street, between Greene & Eaton Streets
10 x 15 corner $430

TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 5:00 - 5:30 PM ET
Part II of a series to understand the operations of creating a new art show.
Artists and Charities Hand in Hand will host its inaugural event on November 2 and 3, 2019, at the Palm Beach Convention Center in W. Palm Beach, Florida.
How does a new art fair get started? What are all the steps involved, and for heaven's sake, where does the money come from and where does it go? The show organizer, Ingrid Robinson, spells it all out, from the initial concept to opening and then closing the doors at the Convention Center.
- Finding a destination venue
- Finding partners and sponsors
- Finding exhibitors
- Marketing
- Paying the bills
This is a tutorial about starting an event from scratch, networking with a local community to build a "must attend" show that benefits all involved, the artists, the charities and the philanthropic goals of patrons.
Learn more: ArtistsandCharities.com
Apply: JuriedArtServices.com
We are eager also to hear from you and this will be a call-in show. What do you need to know before you apply to a new event? What would you like to know about this one?
How you can participate:
- email me any questions you'd like me to ask Ingrid (info@artfaircalendar.com)
- put your question or comment in the box below so we can discuss it on the podcast
- call in to the show to speak with Ingrid directly during the show: (805) 243-1338
- listen to the podcast at this link: Where Does the Money Go?
- or if you can't make it at that time listen later at this link or download it for another time.
(Booth fee includes $110 per "Vendor" fee paid directly to the City of Miami)
- Plenty of parking for all.
- Show Producer Patty Narozny brings 30+ years of media & event experience, and holds a national, outstanding reputation for her integrity and for producing extremely high-quality juried art shows.
- In addition to great media coverage with broadcast TV, print, radio, and digital marketing ads, signage in the community will bring quality patrons to the show.
- All featured artwork must be original and personally handmade by the artists in the show. If you do not make your work, please do not apply.

www.zapplication.org/event-info.php?ID=7786
This Show is held in a lovely trees park right in downtown Lexington. Always the third weekend in August.
Lexington is a thriving town. You have the University there. Then you have all the horse biz. They raise them, they race them there. Lot of dinero flowing the town.
Everywhere you look you see new apartments going up.
Not many shuttered stores.
The locals dress up for the show. This is not a Walmart crowd.
That said, this is not an easy show to sell high end at.
The whole weekend I saw less than a dozen large 2-d pieces go by my booth.
Of course I am at one of many entrances to the park.
I never sold anything over $150 this weekend, yet I had one of my best shows there.
I have onerous criticismdone this show more than ten times, this was the best.
Thisots is craft country so 3-d does well here.
All my neighbors were very happy. I had a potter to my left and a pastelist to my right. They both left rich and happy.
This Show is Run by a local art association. They do a great job.
Easy registration, mellow setup and takedown, nice food and water, lots of volunteers, plenty of storage room and an enthusiastic director.
These are the ingredients for a successful show.
Also this is the only really major art show for the town all year.
My only complaint is that this show is too large, about 200 exhibitors, for the population it serves.
The Show size is such that booths are laid out in meandering patterns thru the park.
Not everybody gets the full crowd because there is not a continuous flow to walk the show.
This more a Lowend crowd that buys, think $150 or less.
I saw only a few big pieces go out the entire show.
I had a record show but I never sold one piece over $150.
February 1 & 2, 2020
Downtown Fort Myers, Florida
210 Artists
Option to participate in Opening Night - January 31, 2020
Deadline: September 10, 2019
Looking for a profitable and stress-free weekend show? Apply to ArtFest Fort Myers - Southwest Florida's premier fine art festival and largest weekend event. Creating an artwork-selling festival for artists is the focus of our year-round professional staff with 20 years of consistent management.
ArtFest Fort Myers takes place in Southwest Florida's largest metro area, featuring an international airport serving 9.2 million passengers. With 1.2 million year-round metro area residents already, Wallet Hub recently scored Fort Myers as the #1 Fastest Growing Small City in the U.S. and the Census Bureau reports a 22% increase in our population since 2010. YES, our construction activity is topping the charts! This means your appreciative audience of upscale and savvy art patrons grows everyday.
More information: ArtFestFortMyers.com
$175,000 Marketing Campaign targeted to art buyers from Marco Island to Sarasota to West Palm Beach. We are getting the word out about your fabulous art work via TV, radio, daily newspapers and weekly publications, digital billboards, magazine articles, our mobile friendly website, our online Artist Gallery, regional theatre and symphony programs plus social media outreach and e-vites to our special patrons.
HOW DO WE SET THE CONDITIONS FOR ARTIST SUCCESS?
You need an appropriate environment to showcase your artwork and create vigorous sales. ArtFest Fort Myers creates that environment along a wide boulevard with ease-for-patron flow of artist booths flanked by a beautiful riverfront park and yacht basin.
You need a supportive, income-appropriate audience in a broad age range to produce excellent sales. At ArtFest Fort Myers, you will find:
HOW DO WE TAKE CARE OF ARTISTS?
BE A PART OF ARTFEST FORT MYERS:
Apply Now: ZAPPlication.org Questions: Jeanne.Seehaver@ArtFestFortMyers.com
Mail to: Jeanne.Seehaver@ArtFestFortMyers.com
Jeanne Seehaver, Associate Director
1375 Jackson Street, Suite 401, Fort Myers, FL 33901, (239)768-3602
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Call for Artists:
Smithsonian Craft Show 2020April 22-26, 2020
National Building Museum
401 F St,NW
Washington, DC
Preview Night Benefit: April 22, 2020Show Open to the Public April 23 - 26, 2020Mark your calendars for the Smithsonian Craft Show, the most prestigious juried show and sale of American fine craft in the country.
Jurors who will select the 2020 artists are:
Apply Online: http://smithsoniancraftshow.org/
Or contact us for more info:
Kelley Gillespie - kelleygillespie@gmail.com
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Hi all. I've recently semi-retired from the 9-5 routine & I've been expanding my show circuit to include out-of-state shows. Before signing up for a new show, I come over to ArtFairs to check out reviews. I've been confused about why some reviews are in the main "blog" section rather than in the "Art Show Reviews," which is where I look first (& have posted a couple of reviews). I've compared the Blog reviews to the Art Show Reviews and don't see that they have the same posts. I find it helpful to search Reviews by state, but I'm realizing that the Blogs generally have more current information. Unfortunately, a search of the Blogs by state comes up with all information that references that state (call for artists, comments, etc.). Am I missing something, a different way to use the sites? Any suggestions?
Uptown was held on first weekend of August in a very trendy shopping,eating, and partying area of Minneapolis.
It is a theee day show with setup the day before except for those on Hennepin Ave.
The Show is held in two distinct sections: booths are setup on the street and grass of a mall that runs about five blocks long. Those booths setup in staggered times on Thursday. The second section sets up on Friday on Hennepin Avenue which runs across the top of the mall.
Some artists swear that sales are better on Hennepin. Others, like me, prefer the mall.
Hennepin has very little shade and you have moving traffic going by the rear of your booth. There is a metal barricade that separates booth from cars.
You are on hot burning pavement in the height of a Minnesota summer.
Reminds me of an old joke about this. “Minneapolis has two seasons, August...and winter”.
The mall is shadier(typestyle just changed, do not know why.) and a lot more mellower.
I have done this show since the late 80-ies. Many years sales were in my top ten show range.
The last three times have been showing a serious downward slide in sales, mostly, Lowend.
This year was no different.
They charge a big booth fee and frankly, most people are lucky if they do $3500. Not good.
The crowd tends to be young and tattooed with little disposable income.
Lots of people with dogs and they do not buy art.
Lots of the Zombie Walk going on, they do not even look at the booths.
Uptown claims over 300,00 in attendance. I would question that.
This year they instituted a new wrinkle that contributed to a decrease in sales.
At the lower end of the mall they had a number of tents setup that were giving away free food in boxes and bottles.
So all show long I had people clutching three boxes of macoroni in hand. Others with frappe bottles from Micky-D.
None of them bought anything.
I sure hope the committee revisits their thinking on this. It is not good for the artists.
They are following the current trend of too many shows who are calling them an “art event” when they are really just an event to attract crowds.
Our whole biz is slowly getting sucked down the drain.
We had lovely temps which we’re slightly marred by a freak rainstorm about 5pm on Saturday.
It did not even show up on the radar but lasted an hour.
It flooded the gutters and made water rise high in booths. It also drove away the crowd who never returned.
Sunday we had great weather and crowds, I did more then the other two days combined.
I talked to many artists in different mediums, very few were happy.
Sales were off by 30% or more. This has been the trend this year.
For those of you living in the Midwest this is still a doable show. If you live further, like Florida, I would have second thoughts.
Oh well, I am in Lexington, KY right now waiting to setup and hoping for better sales.
Stay tuned.
- 150,000 football fans and art lovers in attendance
- Individual artist electricity
- Complimentary artist hospitality
- Free parking
- Truly a LOT of fun with great crowds
(sponsored podcast)
Tuesday, August 20, 5:00 to 5:30 pm ET
Can Florida use another art festival? Does Palm Beach need an indoor art fair, during "the season?" Ingrid Robinson thinks so. Listen and learn how Ingrid gathers resources to host a show that will attract snowbirds to attend a new event. Joining her is Julie Mullen, co-founder of the award winning women-owned public relations firm The Buzz Agency, that is supporting Ingrid's plan.
We'll talk about:
- Developing an idea that shows success potential
- Choosing the venue
- Finding sponsors
- Choosing the tech team and marketing team
- Partnering with local charities
This is a tutorial about starting an event from scratch, networking with a local community to build a "must attend" show that benefits all involved, the artists, the charities and the philanthropic goals of patrons.
The show: Artists and Charities, November 2 & 3, West Palm Beach, FL, at the Palm Beach County Convention Center. Learn more: ArtistsandCharities.com
We are eager also to hear from you and this will be a call-in show. What do you need to know before you apply to a new event? What would you like to know about this one?
How you can participate:
email me any questions you'd like me to ask Ingrid (info@artfaircalendar.com)
- put your question or comment in the box below so we can discuss it on the podcast
- call in to the show to speak with Ingrid directly during the show: (805) 243-1338
- listen to the podcast at this link: Planning for a New Art Fair
- or if you can't make it at that time listen later at this link or download it for another time.
I hope we hear from you. There is a lot to learn for both show organizers and artists. Seeing behind the scenes can be very useful, especially to artists newer to art fairs.
Greenville, South Carolina

Marketing Plan:
Rehoboth Art League's Outdoor Fine Art and Craft Show
Rehoboth, Delaware
Venue: The Rehoboth Art League's Henlopen Acres campus, which used to a farmstead.
Dates: First two weekends in August
Hours: Sat 10-5, Sun 10-4 PM
FEES
Booth fee 450 for one weekend and I believe 800 if you Do two weekends. I just did the final weekend.
Plus 50 dollar fee to be a member of the Rehoboth Art League - mandatory to do the show) and $50 host fee if you choose to stay with a host family for the weekend or $100 for two weekends (these are members of the art league who put up out of town artists, which is appreciated as this is high tourist season in a beach resort town where there are no cheap hotel rates). Our host was lovely and made us dinner Fri night as well as breakfasts (which is not required). I stayed at a beautiful house a couple of blocks off the beach and a half mile from the show. Our host drove myself and some other artists each day if we needed it (also not required).
MEDIA AND PRICES
My medium is mixed media contemporary animal paintings. Price points $150 to $3900. All originals, no prints. Lowest price point sold $300. Highest was $1800.
VENUE AND MISC. LOGISTICS
The art show is held on the gorgeous campus of the art league, which is in a neighborhood about 10 min walk from the beach, and is surrounded by multi million dollar homes. Your tent is on grass between gravel lined paths. As this is in Delaware there is no sales tax. There is a 5 dollar admission fee for visitors (children under 12 are admitted free) and a free trolley / shuttle service.
I did this show for the first time last year, and decided to do again this year as the art quality is very high. It's juried, and if selected, you are pre-approved for two years. This is fine art and craft. No buy sell or imports. Last year they kicked out someone who misrepresented their art and were selling work made by others. There are about 125 artists I think, as well as some music (not too loud) and a beer garden. The artists range from fairly traditional to more contemporary and abstract or even whimsical or funky. They had paintings, ceramics, sculpture, textiles, glass, jewelry, etc. etc etc.
If you do both weekends you are allowed to keep your tent up in between weekends if you want. If you do only one weekend you can set up the Thurs or Friday before. One caveat, the neighborhood is VERY strict about no commercial activity (which includes an art festival), before 830 am and after 5 pm. So you can NOT do any set up or breakdown before or after these hours. On sat our host dropped us off at 820 and we were made to wait across the road until exactly 830 before we could go into our tents. When you set up before you can drive up to your spot to unload then move your car to the side. The show is pretty well organized but has a relaxed atmosphere for the most part.
Also you get a parking pass for a specific house to park at. If you park anywhere else you will get ticketed. Make sure you follow the rules for this show.
They also provide secure wifi for the show, however, at my location it was super sluggish.
Note: if you drive in Friday to set up, get into town before noon if you don't want to be sitting in traffic.
Last year I did mediocre as far as sales ( I paid my expenses but only had a very small profit which is not really worth it if you consider the amount of time and energy spent on the show), but I had a good vibe about the fest so I wanted to try it again, especially as I was new to the area. I did A LOT of promo on social media and my email lists beforehand and the day before the show i even presold a small original.
REVIEW
Saturday was mid 80s and sunny, no wind or rain. I was originally supposed to be in one location but The day before I drove down they had to move my spot and I ended up on a main path in a well trafficked area,. The only negative there was a tree in The space so I needed to set up in front of it so The roots made The ground uneven and my booth was not flush with my row. This did give me a partial outside wall on my tent that I could now use as it could be seen by oncoming traffic.
The paths you are on are wide and many artists will sit in the center where there is shade. They are pretty relaxed about this here.
The morning traffic was decent then died just after lunch. I did one $900 sale to one person and then nothing else. My impression was many artists were not happy with traffic. The previous week I was told was brutally hot but busy and one lucky artist got $16k in sales when a restaurateur bought up a bunch of art for a new restaurant.
I did hear that there was a fatal accident on one of the main roads and traffic (already hugely congested on Saturdays) was a standstill for a few hours, so that may have impacted us some.
However, due to past experience, my Sunday sales are often stronger than Saturday so I reserve judgement until after the show is over.
They have an artist reception Saturday night but I didn't go. They also have boothsitters, free water, an air conditioned artist only bathroom and sitting area, and complimentary breakfast and snacks. They also have a cafe you can order from for lunch but I just ate some food I packed.
On Sunday it was 80 degrees, very light wind and pleasant. Traffic came in strong and stayed fairly consistent all day. Please note this is not a HUGE festival so it's not like Ann Arbor crowds, but they can have a steady stream of people.
I sold two large more expensive works on Sunday that made my sales from meh to something I was pretty happy with.
Nobody asked for a discount and nobody acted shocked at my prices although It's true not everyone could afford it. I had a couple of people ask about reproductions, which I do sell online so I gave them my card to shop there. I had a few other people take a card to think about a purchase so i have to see if they actually do contact me (I'm not holding my breath though). I did get the usual questions: how long did this take to make and did you make this, but in general this audience is more educated. There was also a wide range of ages, families and couples. There is also a large gay demographic here as well so if you make pride or gay-friendly related work, it may be popular. In general it was a nice, educated and well behaved crowd.
I will say most of the works I sold were sea animals or regional animals. So, something to think about if you do the show. People are looking to put work in their beach houses. At the end of the review are some pics of the work I sold.
The impression I got from others was that Sunday was better in general for most. Not everybody did well though, but that is like every show.
The show is not currently on Zapp but I heard a rumor that next year it may be.
BREAKDOWN
You can get your car once your tent is down but this is sort of not well enforced but everyone figured it out. A couple of artists did block one of the paths with their car which caused some confusion as they wouldn't move.
I think I thought of the main review points but if anybody has questions let me know.
I don't know if this is a show to drive across country for, but i live three hours away and it is worth it to me (though I did meet a couple of Florida artists). I do think it's a very high quality show and well run and artists are treated very well.
Most of the other artists I met were from Delaware, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York, Maryland and DC.



















