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Kathy's Notes
Mickey's Notes on Successful Promotion of Your Images
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Mickey's PhotoPlus Expo 2007 Seminar Notes...
...on Successful Promotion of Your Work
[PhotoPlus Expo is an annual 3-day show in New York City.]
How to get your work seen.
Bill Hunt and Panel's Top Ten things (and six extra things) to do:
- Be talented
- Be smart, figure it out, don’t be a jerk.
- Be focused – be ready, have work edited, be ambitious
- Be Clear – be able to articulate what your doing don’t necessarily say why but say what, keep records
- Be ready – slides, discs resume, business cards
- Send Thank You notes after meeting with people
- Be full – have a life, don’t be a monk
- Be active – do the homework, go to galleries, find out how dealers behave, get published, get a mentor, get referrals, donate your best pictures to charity auctions and make sure that the image can be seen if it were shrunk down to a 1x1” image
- Be receptive
- Be merciless with yourself- EDIT, EDIT, EDIT, take out everything that isn’t good. Be great, be exceptional there are thousands of good photos and few great photos
- Be Patient. None of the panel has ever shown an artist that has come to them cold. The gallery shouldn’t be a surprise to the artist. Ask yourself, is my work appropriate for this gallery?
- Some of the panel like to see prints; some like books. Books are better than a random series of images. Books can contain a complete thought.
- Don’t try to show dealers your work at AIPAD
- Get a photo review…portfolio reviews are the best way to meet dealers.
- Be able to talk about the work. Articulate in a cohesive manner why you are doing the work.
- Enter as many competitions as you can.
Presenting your work to the fine art community.
Notes on a seminar by Mary Virginia Swanson.
- Do your homework
- Have a dialogue with your peers
- One artist wanted to have show in NYC. She took a map and drew a 25mi radius from her house and tried to show in every gallery in that area. Next she did a 50 mile radius. By the time she got near NYC she had lots of local referrals.
- Apply for every grant your county and state have to offer
- Have a dialogue with your peers
- Get portfolio reviews (20 minutes) – don’t bring big stuff, bring at least 1 final print, always listen. Record your sessions, what did you show them, what did they like, make a printout of thumbnails and make notes for each one. Photo Lucida, review Santa Fe, PhotoFest, Atlanta celebrates photography, society for photographic education, photonola.org, print center in Philly
- Get your work out
- Enter contests-even if you don’t win people will be discussing your work, gift your work (tax write-offs) [Note: See our Calendar page for some competitions.]
- If you see a gallery you like ask them what their submission guidelines are.
- Read about artist statements on photo-eye.com and www.metergallery.com, come up with a 1 sentence statement of your work, a 1 paragraph statement of your work and a 1 page statement.
- Keep in touch with people you meet, send out updates of your shows, new work, etc. send thank you notes.
Resources:
Art Fairs:
- Meet gallery people who you think your work might be a fit.
- Don’t bring work
- Be a fly on the wall
- Look at pricing, how stuff is mounted, what people are selling
- PhotoPlus Expo is an annual show in New York City
- Photo LA show in Santa Monica in Jan. has cheap airfare and hotels
- FotoFest is an annual festival that alternates between Paris, France and Houston, Texas
- If you can’t go to the show see if you can go online and get a catalogue of the show
Books:
Web:
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