a fundamentally different approach to

Accelerate Your Art Career…

a fundamentally different approach to

Accelerate Your Art Career…

a fundamentally different approach to

Accelerate Your Art Career…

Selling Your Art: Building Block No.2: Art Visibility/Studio Time (Part 2)

Selling Your Art: Building Block No.2: Art Visibility/Studio Time (Part 2)

Where Studio Time Plays The Central Role In “Your Art Is Visible” 

First, let’s do a quick review of the last blog post Selling-Your-Art: Building Block No.2, Your Art Is Visible (Part 1.) where we looked at a process called “Map The Gap.” And how this keeps the dynamic connection between your art’s visibility and selling your art alive and strong. 

Map The Gap: Let’s review  

There are a number of ways your art can become unintentionally more invisible than visible. 

  • When you’re faced with an art sale falling apart.  
  • Or a time when you want to put your art in the world, but you hit roadblocks with other people who are involved.  
  • Or you have a difficult commission client who presses all your buttons. 
  • You’re struggling with a collector, buyer, gallery owner, or another artist 

In any of these scenarios, Map the Gap is a sleek and easy process to identify, and eliminate, one internal factor that can gum up selling your art.  

When you Map the Gap, you can adjust your behavior to accurately reflect your sincere intention. This comes in handy when you need to navigate any sticky relationship affecting you selling your art.  

In five easy steps, Map The Gap often untangles the knot. 

But how? 

Since most of us, most of the time, think and feel that our internal experience automatically aligns with our external behavior, we fail to check it out.

But if we recognize this dissonance (the gap), and if we Map the Gap, suddenly there’s a release in any tangled knot of circumstances for us to: 

  1. a) Recognize that our behavior is not honoring our intention accurately
  2. b) Address the gap with the person involved 
  3. c) Mindfully create behavior that reflects the truth of your intentions
  4. d) Align, with integrity, with whomever is interacting with us

All of which leads to the potential for selling your art with grace and ease. 

Now, let’s tackle the next visibility/invisibility factor that might be affecting when you are selling your art: Studio Time. 

 Selling Your Art Building Block No.2 Visibility Studio Time Part 2

Is Studio Time Undermining The Visibility You Need For Selling Your Art? 

When other demands come into play, studio time often gets no play time. Or at least, not as much as your creative spirit needs and wants. Which often means, after taking care of the “others” in our lives, we end up with crumbs. 

But the truth is that studio time is the one external, visibility factor guaranteed to affect selling your art. 

Then, there’s the “putting ourselves first” to deal with. We harbor a cultural mandate that declares nurturing and caring for others as an altruistic character trait, and caring for ourselves as selfish.  

If we ignore this mandate, we run the risk of being labeled “selfish,” a form of social shunning that exacts a black mark against our reputation as a good person. 

Unfortunately, other traits, like self-centered, get thrown into the same roiling pot. 

In truth, there’s an unacknowledged irony here.  

Being selfish, where someone behaves only in their own interest with no concern for others, most often rises out of that person’s inability to discern what their real needs are. So their Alert Protective Self works very hard to grab their attention… to pay attention to what they truly need.  

This hyperfocus—or self-centered focus on essential inner needs that are not being addressed—means the person’s inner attention is totally absorbed in an effort to wake up the part of themselves that is sleepwalking.  

This isn’t selfishness as a disservice to others, but as a disservice to oneself. 

If you, in an effort to make studio time a priority so selling your art becomes a reality, experience either yourself, or anyone around you, labeling you as “selfish,” or “self-centered” … 

Pause, breath, and take a moment to examine which kind of selfishness is actually operating. 

Do you truly need to focus on taking care of what you need? And, so, for a time this means you don’t have the bandwidth to also be a caretaker/cheerleader/nurturer for others? 

If you can't time find to create, you can't make art to sell

Finding more time to create, so selling your art becomes viable, is what haunts most artists I’ve worked with. 

And oddly enough,  even the most productive artists, who seem to easily overcome roadblocks, they also tell me they feel as if they can’t carve out enough studio time to make the art they need for selling their art.  

Which makes me to wonder if time is the culprit, or merely an easy rationale masking other issues. 

Often Time Slips Away Because We Aren’t Paying Attention To It  

When you want to change behavior that operates on autopilot, try this: 

  1. Name, or better yet, write down the specific roadblock, or roadblocks, that take away from your studio time. 

When we name something directly, it directs our brain to retrieve it from our sub/unconscious to make it consciously available so we can work with it. 

You can't work with something until you actually know what it is.

  1. Brainstorm options for what you, or those around you, can do to reduce the amount of time you spend on this roadblock. With classic brainstorming, you need to get all the “obvious” options out of the way first before the creative ones come up. So get every idea down on paper, without editing or judging. 
  2. Keep in mind that we operate on a limited amount of will per day. Every decision, or action we take, eats up a portion of our will. If studio time is paramount (and I’m hoping it is), do that before you do anything else. This is the best way I know to maximize any amount of time you have for a project, especially if it has to be limited
  3. Write a mantra for your studio time. Print it out. Or paint it out…and put it where you can see it every day. 

      Here is a list of the most common Studio Time Thieves stealing the very art you need to sell your art: 

      Work/Income Conflicts: 

      • Where you have to balance making art with a day job (or two, or three…) 

      Responsibility for Caregiving: 

      • When children, elderly parents, or other members of your family need you 

      Issues With Your Health: 

      • When physical or mental health issues limit your energy and focus 

      Household Responsibilities and/or Distractions: 

      • When  daily life chores and demands nibble away at your studio time 
      • Where frequent interruptions or distractions break your creative focus 
      • When you don’t have a dedicated, separate studio space to remove you from home life  

      Motivational Factors: 

      • When you struggle with procrastination, lack of motivation, or creative blocks 
      • When you feel guilty dedicating so much time to your studio  
      • When you have an inspiration drought or burnout from life on steroids 

      Time Management: 

      • Where your administrative, art related tasks (exhibitions, teaching, marketing, etc.) interfere with your creative focus 
      • When you over commit to projects with deadlines that collide 
      • Faltering when it comes to a consistent studio schedule 

      Logistical Issues: 

      • When you need to travel regularly, so keeping a routine feels impossible 

      when you make your art, your art becomes visible

      Here are three different perspectives on finding studio time that I’ve lifted straight out of the smARTist Telesummit Revival Podcast #2.  

      • Organizing as a foundational factor in studio time  
      • Defining your artistic direction with concrete specifics  
      • Understanding how both artificial and natural time impacts how we create

      ORGANIZATION 

      1. Jennifer Loudon (our smARTist Organizing Expert) starts with reminding us how we take ourselves to task for not having enough time in the studio, which undermines our creative mood. 

      With simple exercises, she helps artists find a way to be okay, in this moment, just as we are. Embracing the radical choice to truly believe there is nothing to change or fix, solve or get rid of.

      Because, once you breath in that choice (and Jennifer knows exactly how to guide you toward this awareness), you open up to new moods and new choices that paradoxically, and gratefully, lead to finding more creative time in the studio—no matter what. 

      ARTISTIC DIRECTION 

      2. Aletta de Wal, M. Ed (our smARTist Art Career Expert) comes from a more traditional stance where you unleash the forces of desire, will and planning to the studio time you need and want.  

      Two of the building blocks affecting studio time that she explores are 1) how you define your artistic direction and 2) how you approach organization. 

      In her presentation, Aletta has you answer specific question to help you identify where you are right now, and what you need to go forward. 

      WHAT’S TIME GOT TO DO WITH IT? 

      3. Waverly Fitzgerald (smARTistâ Time Expert) offers a radical view of time in two distinct realms of experience: natural time and artificial time, and how understanding time in both realms impacts the personal, natural rhythms of our life. 

      As a creative herself, she shows us how to identify our sweet spot for creating, how to use the seasons to trigger a surge in creativity, how to find our “prime time” so we’re ready to work when we’re most creative, and why the ultradian rhythm works so well. 

      But, for me, the most influential part of Waverly’s presentation is her distinction between goal setting and theme setting and how she uses both of these, in tandem, to orchestrate time within her own life. 

      Here then are three, immediate tools you can use to get more studio time. 

      1. Embracing your inherent, human wholeness as you organize and manage your studio time so selling your art becomes viable 
      2. Paying attention to your artistic direction so selling your art becomes part of the artistic vision 
      3. Learning how natural and artificial time impacts you on a daily basis so you are selling your art as a whole artist  

      Now, it’s your turn. When did you last experience the feeling that your time in the studio was “selfish?” 

      I’d love to start a conversation, so please leave me a comment.  

      Ariane Goodwin's signature file

       

        Selling Your Art: Building Block No.2: Your Art Is Visible (Part 1, cont.)

        Selling Your Art: Building Block No.2: Your Art Is Visible (Part 1, cont.)

        Let’s do a quick review of last week’s Selling-Your-Art Building Block No.1 and Selling-Your-Art Building Block No.2 (Part 1)

        Selling-Your-Art Building Blocks Recap

        Selling-Your-Art Building Block No.1: Your Art Is Created:

        This is a foundational building block, which needs your attention in three key areas:

        1. You’re putting in the time and effort to reach a certain level of skillfulness.
        2. You’re establishing your artistic fingerprint, your unique artist angle.
        3. You’re reaching deep into your creative spirit and manifesting a creative truth for the world to experience.

        Selling-Your-Art Building Block No.2 (Part 1): Your Art Is Visible

        This might seem too obvious to bother with, until you consider all the ways your art might be functionally invisible. This can run the gamut from not being visible at all, to being visible, but inaccessible.:

        1. Your website contact form doesn’t work (and you don’t know this because you don’t email yourself—on a regular basis—from that same form!).
        2. You lost a gallery and haven’t worked yourself up to move on.
        3. Your website is a ho-hum, portfolio-only menagerie of your work.
        4. You truly think words don’t matter, so no artist statement and a boring bio.

        are you unintentionally blocking the visibility you need for selling your art

        Are You Unintentionally Blocking The Visibility You Need For Selling Your Art?

        If you are already a professional artist selling your art, or you are heading in that direction, you realize how essential it is to be the sensitive creative you are, and a pragmatic, life-long learner.

        You realize that the truth and power of your art, and thus the truth and power of selling your art, rests on more than the surface-level, nitty-gritty, administrative and marketing tasks.

        As important as these daily, weekly, monthly external tasks are, they can also be the barrier to paying attention to the less obvious, emotional and spiritual capacities of our internal experience.

        It’s this rarely explored, internal territory with its exotic fauna and flora that underpins what determines how you sell your art, because it determines the most basic relationship you have:  your relationship to your art.

        And your relationship to your art is what pulls the invisible strings of success for selling your art. I go into this in depth in my artist manifesto: Your Path of Visionary Affluence: A Manifesto for Artists who want to sell more art.

        When you don’t pay attention to the internal stories you whisper to yourself, they control your internal experience in the same way an out-of-control child wreaks havoc in a grocery store because the caretaker isn’t paying attention.

        The key is being psychologically strong enough, and intellectually willing enough, to be wrong from time to time. Or willing  to experience emotional discomfort from time to time, without putting your hair on fire.

        Otherwise, you may be unintentionally blocking how visible and accessible your artwork is, and then passing this off with “I forgot.” Or, “I didn’t know.” Or (my favorite), “I didn’t mean to… (fill in the blank).”

        When Your Art is Visible, You Are Visible. And Selling Your Art is the Most Visible of All.

        When Your Art is Visible, You Are Visible. And Selling Your Art is the Most Visible of All.

        But, how do you know which old triggers are keeping you from selling your art because its visibility and accessibility is compromised?

        For a lot of creatives, being visible is a double-edged sword. We crave it, on the one hand; while being skeptical and cautious on the other.

        The joys of being visible means we’re on the road to success. We’re seen—the holy grail of human desire. The artwork we love is in the world and for the world, and what could be more satisfying?

        And… selling your art is the culmination of creative work and the ultimate joy of visibility.

        Meanwhile, in the underground of our psyches, visibility can also dredge up all shapes and sizes of triggers related to early trauma. From the belittling remarks of classmates to terrifying nights with a drunk parent, a good many of us have experienced life in ways we do not wish to repeat.

        And even though we’ve historically grown way past those incidents, they often live on in the crevices of our bodies, and pop out when the trigger conditions are right. For most of us, this happens on the QT, buried beneath the more urgent, daily tasks of living.

        If we don’t become aware of our visibility triggers, then they quietly slash and burn our art careers in ways our daily Creative Self doesn’t see. And selling your art becomes the casualty.

        An emotional trigger just happens. No control here. The trick is what you do after the trigger shows up

        So, what do we do with this? I mean, isn’t a trigger out of our control?

        Yes… and No.

        An emotional trigger just happens. No control here. The trick is what you do after the trigger shows up.

        First, notice the visibility trigger that just happened.

        Your clue will be somewhere in your body where a major shift occurred: your stomach lurched / your headache started / your shoulders tightened / your jaw clenched.

        This body reflex will be consistent for each trigger; it doesn’t change until you become aware and awake.

        Next, once you’ve identified your physical reaction to your emotional trigger, ask yourself: What’s going on here?

        And listen for a response, which might not turn up right away. But that’s okay. If you follow noticing your body’s specific response to the trigger with the question– What’s going on here?—over time you’ll become aware of the connection to something that happened to you before.

        The key is both self-kindness and self-respect. You’re doing this to strengthen your internal ability to allow your art to be completely and wholly visible so selling your art doesn’t hit any speed bumps.

        This is not the time for blame or ridicule or self-criticism. It’s only time to become aware and awake so selling your art becomes a joyous success.

        Alongside visibility triggers is another tricky pattern of behavior I’ve identified as The Gap.

        Selling Your Art: Building Block No.2: Visibility (Part 2)

        Selling Your Art: Building Block No.2: Visibility (Part 2)

        Most of us experience The Gap on any given day as an unconscious, socially acceptable response to some mis-step we’ve taken. In most cases, it’s not worth paying attention to.

        However, in some cases it can, inadvertently, derail the visibility you need for selling your art. But, this is tricky territory, as you’ll see, because as far as I know, no one has dug into this common, human pattern of behavior to understand it’s true nature.

        In fact, this behavior is so common it’s dismissed out of hand. And this is one of its greatest feats: hiding a deceptive deflection behind a familiar, innocent sounding refrain…

        I’m sorry… I didn’t intend to… (fill in the blank).

        But, there is a way out of this coverup.

        selling your art map the gap

        It’s rare when we take the time to examine the interplay between our external reality and our internal landscape.

        And yet, dialogue between these two realities pretty much determines how we move through the world: what art we make, how others perceive who we are and what we do, and how we perceive ourselves.

        It’s also the disconnect between our external behavior and our internal intentions that get us into trouble.

        This common remark—“Yes, but I didn’t intend to do xxx (fill in the blank).”—is hiding an ego-generated reaction (in a moment you’ll see why I call it that) that poses as a rationale for behavior that has, to some degree, troubled the person on the receiving end of the behavior.

        “Yes, but I didn’t intend to (fill in the blank)…” is, in reality, always a cleverly disguised excuse.

        First, consider that the behavior (whatever it is) has actually happened. It’s a done deal. No taking it back.

        A Couple of Not-So-Fun Examples Where Internal & External Realities Collide

        You accidentally knock over your friend’s water glass and it spreads over the painting she’s been working on for weeks.

        Of course, you didn’t mean to. But how does that change the hours of work she can never get back?

        Or, blissfully unaware that the gallery owner can hear you, “She just won’t stop yammering!” becomes a hot moment you can’t take back. I didn’t intend to hurt her feelings has zero impact on feelings already hurt.

        As bad as you might feel, “I didn’t intend to do that” does not, nay…cannot mend fences.

        Why?

        If you uncloak the “rationale” of this reaction, you will find a scared, ego turning the spotlight away from the (mis)behavior and the person affected, and onto the ego itself as the real victim of… of all things…an intention.

        I didn’t intend is a way to avoid responsibility for the result of some behavior by implying a kind of innocence behind the behavior that should be the real factor considered.

        So, what’s really going on here?

        why is the gap relevant to selling your art

        And why is The Gap relevant to Selling Your Art: Building Block No.2?

        Most of the time, most of us are oblivious to the disconnect between what we are experiencing internally and our external behavior.

        We assume, 99% of the time, that whatever we are experiencing internally (the home of all intentions) is automatically showing up in our behavior. And, of course we also assume that anyone else can see this is true.

        Sometimes these two distinct, yet constantly intertwined realities are aligned. What you experience internally is manifesting in your external behavior. And that makes for smooth sailing.

        But a good deal of the time, there is a gap between the two. And this gap can be a one, on a scale of 1 to 10, or a ten—or anywhere in-between.

        The problem is, it’s very hard to know how much of a gap is manifesting (or if there’s any gap at all) by ourselves.

        It’s as if the Divine Order of Things has decreed that “the eye cannot see the eye” as a clue that we need each other. That cooperation and connection trumps isolation and disconnection.

        selling your art cooperation and connection

        So, then, what to do when selling your art is on the line…

        because you’re struggling with a collector, buyer, gallery owner, or another artist?

        Here’s a five-step, Map The Gap Process that’s easy to learn and apply:

        First, check out, with yourself, if the bumpy interaction might be exacerbated by your unawareness of the gap between your intention (internal experience) and your behavior (external manifestation).

        Second, trust yourself. Self-honesty is a hard-won trait that can breathe life into any tangled knot.

        Third, firmly (internally) tell your ego to: Please take a back seat  (climb a tree, go read at the library, etc.). I’m happy to let you back in afterwards, but for now, I need my space—go!

        Fourth, trust the other person. People rarely back away from a genuine, heartfelt plea for help or an apology given sincerely. So, ask the person in the tangle with you, I’d love the truth right now: how do you interpret what I am saying and doing?

        Fifth, listen to the other person. To keep it safe and simple, only do this with one person at a time. Group dynamics can be dicey when you’re learning to work with your ego instead of against it.

        Okay, this has been a lot.

        Map The Gap: Let’s review the dynamic connection between your art’s visibility and selling your art.

        When you’re faced with an art sale that has just slipped through your fingers. Or a time when you are trying to put your art in the world and you keep hitting roadblocks with other people. Or you’re working on a commission with a difficult client, see what happens when you apply the five steps in Map The Gap.

        Because most of the time, most of us feel that whatever we are experiencing internally is naturally aligned with our behavior, we fail to check it out.

        But if we do, and if we Map the Gap, suddenly there’s a release in any tangled knot of circumstances for us to:

        1. a) Recognize that our behavior is not honoring our intention accurately
        2. b) Address the gap with the person involved
        3. c) Mindfully create behavior that reflects the truth of your intentions

        When did you last experience The Gap and it’s consequences?

        I’d love to know, so please leave me a comment.

        Ariane Goodwin's signature file

         

          Selling Your Art: Let’s Start At The Beginning 

          Selling Your Art: Let’s Start At The Beginning 

          Selling Your Art: The Beginning…

          When a piece of your work sells, it lights you up. When I hear about it, it lights me up too. 

          Nothing is more validating, more affirming than someone wanting to pay you for the piece you’ve poured your heart and soul into. 

          It’s a high like no other. 

          And in that split second transfer of money for art, all the hours with their endless details—some high, some low—melt away. 

          But along the way, you had to take three foundational steps toward those art sales. 

          Each one seeming so obvious, and in some cases inevitable, that taking time to pay conscious attention might feel frivolous, or unnecessary. 

          I’d like to stress-test that by peeking under the ArtLife hood. 

          3 basic building blocks to selling your art

          No.1 —  Your art is created.  

          You’re putting in the time and effort to reach a certain level of skillfulness. You’re establishing your artistic fingerprint, your unique artist angle. You’re reaching deep into your creative spirit and manifesting a creative truth for the world to experience. 

          No.2 —  Your art is visible. You’re in a gallery. Or hosting an in-studio reception. Or at an art fair. Or maintaining your website, not as a glorified portfolio, but as an experience for people who will become lovers of your work.  

          No.3 —  You, the artist, are excited to engage. You’re answering a question from a potential collector standing next to one of your pieces in a gallery. You’re responding to an email from a potential buyer who just saw a piece on your website. You’re answering an email from someone who met someone who told that someone about your work. You’re replying to comments on Instagram that invite the sale. 

          Nail all three steps, in sequence, and the golden ring on the Selling Your Art Merry-go-Round is yours. 

          Obvious, you’re thinking.  

          I agree. 

          Only, let’s see what happens when we reverse it, shall we?  

          Because, after decades of experience with artists at all career levels (and in all genres), I have watched as one (or more) of these obvious basic steps become… A stumble. A missed opportunity. A missed art sale 

          what happens when we reverse the basic building blocks of art sales

          No.1 – Your art is sort of made. It is generic or superficial. It needs more technical expertise. Your art needs an honest critique from a trusted art-community source. It fails the authentic artistic fingerprint test. (You know…unique to only you…) Your art needs more of you more of the time. 

          No.2 – Your art is invisible: Your website contact form doesn’t work (and you don’t know this because you don’t email yourself—on a regular basis—from that same form!). You lost a gallery and haven’t worked yourself up to move on. Your website is a ho-hum, portfolio-only menagerie of your work. You truly think words don’t matter, so no artist statement and a boring bio. 

          No.3 – You, the artist, fail to engage: Because the art is invisible, how can a collector stand next to you asking questions at an opening? There is no potential collector emailing you, either from your website or from someone who never saw your work, so couldn’t recommend it to someone else. Or you have the work up on a website, but no email list and no newsletter. You do Instagram, but forget to respond to comments. 

          With any one of these basic building blocks, if the artist falters, selling your art falters. 

          Let’s Dive Deeper Into Each Basic, Selling Your Art Building Block  

          art sale building block no.1 your art is created

          At first glance, Your art is created might seem too obvious to bother with until you encounter three sticky wickets : getting enough studio time, being clear about what you are making, and consistently developing your artist fingerprint. 

          Some might frame each of these as a problem, which, for me, is problematic. Problems have a habit of indicating that you’re at fault in some way.  

          If you frame these as artistic intentions, then accountability becomes connected to the impartial marker of “Is it working?” “What would work better? Faster? More easily?” 

          1. Intention: Get enough studio time to make the work you need for selling your art. 

          When I gave out my Vision Questionnaire of 28 questions to the smARTist Telesummit participants, so they could identify where they were in their art career, a consistent response to one of the questions was: I need more time in the studio. 

          It seems everything eats into studio time: family commitments, health issues, survival issues, even the irrepressible kitchen sink makes demands. 

          What’s hard is to take responsibility for what part of this is unconscious self-sabotage. We might wish to lay reasonable, rational, and often guilt-laden demands at the feet of fate, or duty, or obligation, or anything but at the feet of our own choices. 

          It’s not to say that family commitments, health issues, survival issues, etc. aren’t real. They are, and often alarmingly so. 

          But first and foremost, we are responsible for how we show up. And if we are not taking stock of what we need, along with everyone else’s needs, that is on us. 

          Give yourself the gift you give others: the time you deserve.  

          It’s truly that simple. 

          1. Intention: Be clear about what you are making so you have art to sell.

          Because creativity is not genre specific, most creative people have more creative inspirations than they know what to do with.  

          for some of us the sheer luminosity of an idea becomes a firefly of creative possibilities that we'll follow deep into the forest

          This is both a gift and a curse. If we harness this instinct, it turns into the gift of creating with intention. But if we spend too much time chasing down one inspiration after another, it muddies our creative waters. 

          This doesn’t mean sticking to one thing—an impossibility for a good many of us. 

          It means focusing on what makes your art…well…your art. Which brings us smack into the third intention for making art: developing a consistent artist fingerprint. 

          1. Intention: Consistently selling your art depends on a consistent Artist Fingerprint.TM  

          Does your work have an identifiable, artist fingerprint TM, visual cues that signal to any viewer that this work of art is yours and only yours?  

          Are you aware of these visual cues?  

          Are they intentional and conscious, or merely part of your creative flow outside of verbal language? 

          You know a Judy Chicago, a Georges Seurat, or a Louise Joséphine Bourgeois because they each have an artist fingerprint that immediately identifies their work and often spans decades, styles, concepts, and mediums. 

          Even if you’ve not thought of this before, can you look at several pieces of your work and describe what aspects are reliable from piece to piece?  

          It might be a technique, a way of using color, light, perspective; subject matter married to a unique technique; a crossover of artistic genres (think writing and painting).  

          Besides these visual cues of your art making,  there’s a more enigmatic characteristic of your artist fingerprintTM:  it’s the light passing through your spirit/soul into your earthly mind/body that guides you when you manifest creativity for the world to experience. 

          Once you put in the time and effort to hone your skill and technique, it’s time to reach deep into your creative spirit and pull out your artistic truth.  

          your artist fingerprint is the indelible foundation of your artist identity

          And your artistic identity is the true force behind your art sales. 

          So, what have we covered so far?  

          Let’s do a quick recap for Art Sale Building Block No.1. 

          When you  

          1. get enough studio time 
          2. and are clear about what you are making with your indelible, artistic fingerprint 
          3. then, Your Art Is Created, becomes the obvious first Selling Your Art Building Block. 

              Art Sale Building Block No.2

              Here again, Your art is visible might seem so self-evident  as to border on absurdity. 

              Then again… 

              What if your website contact form isn’t working? Or you’ve lost the one gallery (or two) that you had?  

              Or you keep waiting for the perfect piece to materialize under your fingers before daring to go public? Or you’ve hit a creative roadblock? Or self-doubts have asserted themselves? Or family demands force studio time off the map? 

              Or… your don’t sell your art because you refuse to show your work—for one reason or another. 

              Once upon a time, an artist contacted me for private coaching.  

              I had one spot left in my practice and I was excited to fill it—with the caveat that we first determine if coaching together would be a good fit. The last thing I ever want is to work with an artist who won’t, for one reason or another, be able to benefit from a coaching relationship. 

              This time, my standard preview session proved invaluable in a way I could have never imagined. 

              Ms. Private Extraordinaire (you guessed it… not her real name) had been painting for three decades. She had thousands of pieces in several storage units. But, she had never, ever, shown a single piece. 

              Let me repeat: Never.  Shown.  A.  Single.  Piece. 

              Or, put another way: Never.  Sold.  A.  Single.  Piece. 

              Thank goodness this was a phone conversation, and not Aoom, as I’m not known for my poker face. My voice, on the other hand, I could manage. 

              What’s holding you back from showing your work? My voice even, curious. 

               Nothing, she said. My work is private. Just for me. I don’t want to show it. 

              And do you have any intention of making artwork for others to experience?  

              No, she said, I definitely don’t want to show it. 

              Given that, I continued, what would you like from me? 

              I don’t know, she said, I was hoping you could tell me. 

              Is there any chance I can help you find a way to release a select group of your paintings from their storage units for an exhibition?  

              Or, that you would work on a select group for such an exhibition? 

              Meanwhile, the graphic text bubble over my head: 

              Any chance I can get you to release the fear cocoon  

              that holds you, and your creativity, 

              as prisoners under lock and key? 

              I could never do that, she replied, answering my spoken and unspoken question.  

              Her voice was steady. It didn’t quaver. She didn’t hesitate in her response. She held the silence that followed. 

              (I listen very, very carefully to silences because they always have so much to say…) 

              We exchanged a few pleasantries before … 

              I don’t see a way forward, I said, because the work I do is about artists changing the world by putting their work in the world. 

              She understood.  

              Our parting was amicable. 

              When the work is invisible, you literally cannot sell your art.  

              The trick here is understanding what “invisible” actually means. 

              In the case of Ms. Private Extraordinaire, invisible was literal. I’m pretty darn sure if you’re reading this, that’s not you. 

              Most likely, you’re working just as hard to have your work visibile as you are making the work. 

              Or, your work is visible, but perhaps inaccessible: An outdated website. A contact form that’s not working. A gallery with odd opening hours that keep changing. Or, heaven forbid, a gallery that doesn’t respond to queries from collectors and buyers. 

              I can’t begin to tell you how many times I’ve gone to an artist’s website and sent them an email from their site…and…silence. Or the last work they uploaded is 2018. There’s no artist statement (you know, that personal connection that furthers the bond between artist and collector).  

              So, maybe you’re not guilty of any of these “let’s-make-visibility-as-hard-as-possible” no-art-sale crimes. 

              are there unintentional ways the visibility you desire, and need, for an art sale are being hampered

              In next week’s blog post, I’ll tease apart how the gap between your internal experience and your external behavior can, inadvertently, derail the visibility you need for art-sales. 

              It’s a process I call Map The Gap. 

              I’d love to “see” you here. But that’s only possible if you drop a comment or two below in the comment fields. 

              Tell me, do you have specific issues with making your artwork visible? 

              Ariane Goodwin's signature file

               

                Selling Your Art: An Invitation, Not a Transaction

                Selling Your Art: An Invitation, Not a Transaction

                A Couple of Sad, True Stories 

                Selling Your Art, STORY ONE:  

                I’m on Instagram thinking about how you are selling your art, and looking at the truly astounding roll of artwork. If a piece catches my eye, I scroll through the comments, curious as about what other artists think. 

                Most comments are discouraging: “Bravo,” “Beautiful,” “Love it,” and a tribe of emojis. 

                Once in while another artist will make  an astute comment related to the art process, or a technique that captured a certain element. But this is rare. Always interesting, but rare. 

                Sometimes the artist, who took all the trouble to post (and posting is always a bit of trouble), will respond to the comments. And in this age of “good marketing,” no matter how banal a comment might be, a reply is di rigor. 

                Other times, I’ll see no replies from the artist, which is just odd. 

                One day, I see a post by a fan who went from Instagram to the artist’s website to buy a piece, that was sold, then returned to Instagram to ask if they could to buy something similar. Or if the artist would let them know when they do a similar piece. 

                Does this artist jump for joy? Look at their bank balance? Start fantasizing about new supplies? 

                Nope. 

                Yes, there were 222 comments on this piece the artist posted. And the artist replied to bland comments on either side of this direct request, yet failed to respond.

                Do you want to sell your art? I wanted to ask… and then shake him! 

                Sad but true. Sad. Sad. Sad. 

                selling your art story two

                Let’s call this artist, Annie, shall we? We’re in a private coaching session and she’s just told me about one of her core collectors mentioning that she’d like to buy more art for her vacation home. 

                “When did this happen?” I ask. 

                Oh, about six months ago,” she responds. 

                “And did you follow up on her comment?” 

                “Why, no,” Annie tells me. 

                “Because…?” I ask. 

                “Good heavens,” my client says…“I didn’t want her to think I’m bothering her!” 

                It’s a good thing we’re not on Zoom or my rolling eyes might have been misunderstood.   

                I wasn’t my rolling eyes at my client, you know, but at how often I get this specific response. At least 90% of the time I ask an artist why they haven’t followed up on a lead for a sale, it’s some variety of: I don’t want to presume/assume/bother them/have them think I’m pushy/bug them, etc. 

                I understand both the hesitation and the inherent instinct to be a considerate, polite person. 

                But, seriously, do you want to sell your art?

                In truth, this is a landmine of a mindset.  It’s a conditioned habit born out of a misplaced sense of politeness. 

                And it’s a mindset that will sabotage selling your art every darn time… which is why I roll my eyes. 

                When a mindset gets between you and selling your art, you have to yank out the old mindset before you can plant one that bears the juicy fruit of a dollar sign.  

                3 strategic steps for selling your art

                Our, collective, cultural go-to for selling always implies psychological coercion and manipulation to benefit the seller – the buyer be damned. 

                For decades, carefully calculated advertising research has backed this up where billions are spent on focus groups to get inside our heads and push us to buy, buy, buy. 

                In our psychological, arm-twisting commerce, we have ignored two key human conditions: genuine desire and real need. 

                At its core in any culture over time, commerce is the simple exchange of one benefit for another. I do need a new sofa. I do want what’s around me to be enriching. 

                In this culture, at this historical time, my exchange and your exchange for having these needs met is money.   

                Clean. Direct. Simple. 

                Selling Your Art First Step:   

                A Mindset That Supports You 

                Clean.  

                We all have our money stories. They are a combination of how we were raised, and how we’ve conditioned ourselves to experience making, saving, and spending money.  

                On top of that, we have industry after industry founded upon the premise, and research, that buying is a mindset to be manipulated and controlled.  

                As a result, we have muddied the waters around the bedrock principle of authentic value for selling your art.  

                Yes, value is subjective and, yes, you have responsibility for determining value for yourself. 

                You also have responsibility to become aware of what value means for the people who love your work (buyers and galleries included). 

                Direct. 

                If your artistic vision is paramount, and you know what your art has to offer our collective human experience, then how on Earth can someone be on the receiving end of your creative vision if you are not on the offering end? 

                You have to offer to sell your art before anything else. And, there’s a trick here.

                Simple. 

                Simply put: how can someone buy your work if you are not offering to sell it? 

                The trick is switching your mindset away from selling your art and toward an invitation to buy your art. 

                 

                Selling your art is not a transaction

                Selling Your Art Second Step:   

                Enchant, Rinse, and Repeat  

                As intimidating as selling your art may seem, remember that each buyer, each collector, and each gallery dealer is, like you, first and foremost a person. 

                And like you, they respond best when they feel acknowledged and seen. 

                The most graceful way to a buyer’s heart, after they have purchased a piece of your work, is a simple, hand written, Thank You note. 

                The same is true for a gallery you are pursuing. Even if you haven’t broached the subject of representation, sending a hand written, Thank You note immediately after any interaction (talking informally while visiting a gallery, attending an event/opening, etc.) is a thoughtful and kind way to keep you and your art in front of interested parties. 

                Now especially, in our digital wasteland, old-fashioned, hand written notes stand out. They carry a forgotten ambiance, a resonance with old-fashioned courtesy and care.  

                Of course, you have a ready supply of envelops and note cards—with an image of your work on the front (titled + email & phone no.), blank space for writing inside, then a thumbnail of a different piece on the back along with all of your contact information. 

                However, once is not enough when you’re selling your art.  

                The research behind repetition is at the heart of all advertising and has never wavered for multiple decades.  

                You’d be mindful to take advantage of this simple technique for selling your art: after your first note, touch base a second time within six to eight weeks. This is long enough for someone to feel appreciated all over again, but short enough so they haven’t forgotten you.  

                The first note is physical, mailed to a physical address or post box. Your second note needs to be an email so you can invite the person to click on one of the following links that… 

                1. Takes them to your most recent work.   
                1. Takes them to a page where they can sign up for your list.  
                1. Takes them to your most current exhibition.  

                Be sure to personalize the email by noting some aspect of your new work (or a website page you are directing them to) that is aligned with what you know about them. 

                • For your buyer: Perhaps they have an alternative space in their home, where they would have put the original piece they purchased. Except, for reasons they shared with you, that first piece wasn’t exactly right for that spot. But now, you have a piece of work that is right. 
                • For the gallery dealer: Perhaps draw a parallel between your work and the work of an artist they already represent—the boldness of color, the nuance of perspective, etc. 

                This helps them associate you with an artist they already know. For this, it’s imperative that you are accurate, thoughtful, and engaging when you draw a parallel between your work and one of their artists. One way is to invite them to reflect back to you if they also see the same connection you do. 

                Of course, you have a website. Of course you have a third party that keeps your email contacts organized and spam free. And of course you update the work on your website every single month – taking off old work that no longer represents the best of what you are doing now.  

                Selling your art is the art of repetition 

                because it’s not just children who need to hear or see a consistent pattern multiple times. 

                It’s all of us.  

                Selling Your Art Third Step:  

                Be Connected to Commitment and Committed to Connection  

                Here’s a story from a US gallery dealer in the southwest: 

                A Canadian artist stopped to visit, portfolio in hand, and asked for representation on the spot. The dealer, however, had a full stable, so he declined, but did indicate he liked her work. 

                Once the artist returned home, she sent him an email with a link to one of her newest pieces. 

                He clicked on the link, again liked the work, and emailed back a polite note. 

                The next week, the artist sent a new link to new work (being prolific helps!). Again he clicked on the link, looked at the work, but did not email her back. 

                The next week, here came another email from the artist. This time the dealer did not click on the link and did not respond to her email. 

                She emailed him a new piece of work every week for an entire year. And for an entire year all the dealer did was delete her emails. 

                Then, something happened. The dealer lost one of his artists. He had an opening… and who did he think of first (repetition!). And who did he invite for representation (repetition!)? 

                Yup, that artist who didn’t for one minute worry about annoying the dealer. 

                Note: her emails were short, consistent, and always friendly. And, I’m sure, if he’d asked her to stop sending emails, she would have. 

                Plus, besides keeping her work in front of the dealer, she was also showcasing that you could keep up with gallery demand should her work prove to be a best seller. Nothing frustrate a gallery dealer more than representing an artist who can’t keep up with demand. 

                The point is not to duplicate this artist’s story (though, in some cases, it might be a perfect strategy), the point is to understand that… 

                value is a two-way street

                After that, develop follow-up strategies aligned with your belief. 

                Which inspires others to experience the value of your work. 

                And, maybe, just maybe… send that email with new work once every three weeks. 

                ————————————————————————————————– 

                Unswerving belief in your work is the mindset for selling your art.  

                The practical key for selling your art is consistent repetition. 

                ———————————————————————————————— 

                As for bothering someone… here’s the rest of Artist Annie’s story: 

                After Annie confessed that she didn’t want to bother her former collector, I suggested that she write a simple email, reference their conversation, and say that she had some new work, which might be perfect for her former collector’s vacation home, and would she like to look at it? 

                Turned out the collector was thrilled to hear from Annie (please, note the word “thrilled” because I do not use it lightly!). 

                The collector asked to see the new work and immediately purchased two more pieces for her vacation home. 

                Moral? 

                Do not over estimated nor under estimate, the art of bothering someone. 

                ============================================= 

                So, when has “bothering” someone landed you exactly what you wanted? 

                ============================================= 

                 

                Ariane Goodwin's signature file

                Whenever you’re ready to update your artist statement, or even write your first one, join my waitlist for: Writing The Artist Statement eBook & Ambitious Bundle. 

                It’s not enough to know what an artist statement is. You need to know how to write one! 

                This new 3rd edition eBook with its Ambitious Bundle takes you from head scratching to a polished, compelling artist statement. Check it out! 

                  HOW TO RELISH YOUR ARTIST STATEMENT 

                  HOW TO RELISH YOUR ARTIST STATEMENT 

                  Here’s two things I know to be true about artist statements:  

                  1. An immediate, very human desire arises when someone is moved by your art: to know more about the person who moved them. Simple. Undeniable. 
                  2.  At the outset, an artist statement may be used for art patrons, gallery owners, websites, applications (grants/residencies, etc.), press releases, etc., but more than that, it’s also for you, the artist. Here’s an Artist Statement Stress Test: A True Story 

                    I suggested to one of my private clients that he display an “art” statement beside each of his sculptures for an major exhibition. 

                    Wait… let’s back up. What’s an Art Statement? 

                    An Art Statement is an artist statement tailored to an individual piece of art. Instead of a succinct, overview of your artistic vision, the Art Statement sticks to a single piece.  

                    Now, Back To Our Artist Statement Story… 

                    Before his solo, sculpture exhibit, he and I talked at length about presentation strategies. 

                    If you’re going to the trouble of writing a statement, then making sure it’s easy to access and read just makes sense. 

                    I was pleased, when I attended the exhibit, with how he’d mounted each typed “art statement,” on handmade paper,  at the top of a thin, metal pole set in a simple disc on the floor.  

                    Those typed statements were assembled at the perfect height. A viewer could walk right up and read it. And, even if someone else was peering over the first person’s shoulder, the font size and word placement allowed that second, or even third, person to read it too.  

                    His presentation followed all the best practices I’d put together. But what I observed, as over 200 guests mingled in and around his pieces, truly astounded me. 

                    Written Artist Statements Are Innately Compelling. 

                    The caveat: when presented well!  

                    I make this claim because of my first-hand experience during a long evening of quiet observation. 

                    As I too mingled with the guests this happened: whenever someone approached a sculpture, they would glance at his piece, then immediately turn their head to read his art statement for that piece. 

                    After reading, they would turn back to look at the piece with an appreciative nod or smile. These weren’t cursory observations. They would lean in and study the sculpture, walk around it, talk about it, then walk around it some more. 

                    Once in a while, they would return to the art statement again. Then back to the sculpture. 

                    You could almost see, on their faces, how their brains were connecting with what they saw (visual language) with what they read (word language). 

                    And this happened over and over and over again… confirming what I’ve suspected all along… 

                    The Heart of an Artist Statement Embraces a Deep Truth… 

                    When your statement is effective and presented with care, that statement creates an engaging, meaningful connection to your artwork because it ignites our human thirst for story. 

                  Blog 4 Ariane Goodwin The Heart of an Artist Statement Embraces a Deep Truth

                  And that’s not all it does. 

                  Once you fan the flames of an engaging story, that goes on to trigger someone’s long-term  memory.  

                  Connecting your visual language with word language builds neural connections in the viewer’s brain about you and your work, because it immerses the viewer in not just one, but two languages: visual and linguistic. 

                  As the viewers read those art statements that night, and then looked more closely at the sculptures, they also began a conversation with the people near them about the connections they were seeing between what they read and what they saw.  

                  Between these two, different forms of creative expression. 

                  This highlights some of the brain research in science communications that shows how thinking about a narrative, and talking to others, reinforces our memory and, over time, can drive a broader change in attitudes—quite literally changing aspects of our world. 

                  In an interview with Liz Neeley, a scientist working in science communications, the host of NPR’s Short Wave podcast, Maddie Sofia, gave Neeley the opportunity to make two points: 

                  1. Word narratives are so powerful they can “shift stereotypes” about who we are.
                  2. Research data suggests that people remember things better, and are more engaged by stories, over a list of facts, like a resume or artist bio. 

                  Blog 4 Ariane Goodwin Word narratives are so powerful quote

                  Imagine the implications of these two points for the people in your world who love your work. 

                  An Artist Statement can, subtly, alter some of the artist myths and stereotypes floating around. And simultaneously, help you and your work stay longer in your viewers’ brains. 

                  Why would any rational artist give up learning to wield this kind of power? 

                  It’s a question that haunts my sleep. 

                  Artist Statements: What’s Good for the Viewer is Even Better For the Artist. 

                  Writing an artist statement is not easy. 

                  Oh, I know, all kinds of artist advocates might use the “5 Easy Steps to Writing Your Artist Statement” to persuade you otherwise. 

                  And, if you’re a surface-level kind of artist, who doesn’t enjoy digging into their psyche for hidden material, I suppose you could write an artist statement that would hit all the surface benchmarks. 

                  What a surface-level artist statement can never do is give you the kind of insight into your own artistic process that signals to your viewer, “Ah, now this is fascinating. This is compelling…” 

                  At best, it passes English 101. At worst, it comes off trite, inauthentic, and padded with generalizations. 

                  Once you’ve decided to use writing your artist statement as a way to deepen, enrich, and expand your relationship to your artistic process, you’ll find the exercise gives you a surprising and new way to reflect upon your work. 

                  It’s not at all unusual, when I’m working with a private client, to get some variation of what my most recent client, a mid-career professional artist, said to me: 

                  I didn’t think I would have anything to say but there are all these  words and phrases and sentences coming out now…L.A. 

                  And that was followed by pages of material she’s uncovered, all waiting inside her psyche for permission to show up. 

                  It Takes Courage to go Into the Heart of Your Artistic Process… 

                  … and bring the intuitive into consciousness. 

                  The magic happens when you search for words that truly reflect your relationship to your art, and experience an upsurge in your creative flow. 

                  Surprising benefits show up whenever we tackle a form of self-expression that pushes us out of our comfort zone. Like sweat from physical exertion, the very struggle gets our juices flowing. 

                  One of the great keys to creativity is to work against the grain,  get out of familiar mindsets, and shake things up. And for artists, whose very practice is founded on being unique, it can be hard to recognize when a pattern has become familiar. 

                  For prospective art buyers, your artist statement will draw them closer to your work. For you, the artist, writing your artist statement gives you an opportunity to deepen your own awareness. 

                  I mean, what’s not to love? 

                  Writing my artist statement gave me a chance to focus on myself. It opened up more creative juice and self-expression than I had experienced in a long time. Taming my internal critic, and the roadblocks to my inner mind, gave me new skills to express my heartfelt emotions to others. 

                  Working on my statement gave me the opportunity to delve into my inner soul and reflect on the science of “me.” When I took the time to evaluate what, how and why I do what I do, it refined my work and gave me a fresh, determined self-confidence that I had lacked before.  

                  ~ Norbert Ohnmacht, sculptor 

                  ***** 

                  Nine Reasons to Banish Resistance & Relish Your Artist Statement 

                  For The Artist:

                  Writing an artist statement asks you to, once and for all, recognize the faces of your true self: Truth. Power. Beauty. 

                  • You may feel the relationship you have with your work is already pretty strong. But once you write your artist statement, I promise you’ll lift way above your level. 
                  • Writing an artist statement affirms what you do, and so, by extension, also affirms you. And who would give up being affirmed? 
                  • Self-trust can be hard to come by. Writing your artist statement makes another statement about you:  that you trust yourself enough to flow into another realm of creative expression.  
                  • Writing your artist statement invites you to experience an expanded awareness about yourself and your art. Given a chance to update your own art experience, why wouldn’t you? 
                  • Writing your artist statement is a rare and precious time to engage your artistic soul. 

                  Digging deep into the artist statement reveals more about your work than even you suspected. Surprise yourself! 

                  Blog 4 Ariane Goodwin writing artist statement affirms what you do quote

                  For The Viewer, Your Potential Buyer: 

                  • Your artist statement builds a compelling bridge between your viewer and your work. Of course your art is the real deal. But when connecting to your potential buyers on  more than one level increases their interest, and thus the likelihood of a sale, why wouldn’t you? 
                  • Your artist statement enriches the connection between the artist, the art, and the art patron, and influences how long the memory or your work stays in your viewer’s long-term storage. 
                  • Because it is a powerful experience for your viewers when you use the tool of language to support the art you love giving to the world. 

                    Drop a line in the blog post comments below. 

                    I’d love to know what stage you’re in of the writing-your-artist-statement process.  

                    Do tell! 

                     Ariane Goodwin's signature file

                    Whenever you’re ready to update your artist statement, or even write your first one, join my waitlist for: Writing The Artist Statement eBook & Ambitious Bundle. 

                    It’s not enough to know what an artist statement is. You need to know how to write one! 

                    This new 3rd edition eBook with its Ambitious Bundle takes you from head scratching to a polished, compelling artist statement. Check it out!