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We make art you can cook with

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Summer at the Gallery Picnic

July 8, 2007 By Vivid Image

In The Good Old Summertime…
We’d like to Say “Thank You”!
So You and your friends are invited to a
GOOD, OLD FASHIONED PICNIC
(AND ART FAIR) IN THE COUNTRY….

The Clay Coyote Gallery summer open house is much more relaxed than the spring and fall extravaganzas.

We get a chance to chat, you relax over Sloppy joes with all the picnic fixin’s, slurp down some fine root beer and other refreshments and, if you want, have a watermelon seed spitting contest!

And you can buy fine art and hand-crafted
work for the rest of the summer’s gift giving (or yourself if you’ve been good).

UNIQUE GUEST ARTISTS!
Patti Ellis from Chicago with framed Pheasant Feather art;
Madam Lorna – Wayzata, with unique oils, salts, soaps and scents
Lolly Hinkle, Mankato, fine handcrafted silver jewelry;
Margo Bonniwell, our neighbor, with handmade books and cards;
Kim Hensel of Hutchinson with her Maille jewelry (maille is the ancient art of weaving with wire…as in chain maille.

In The Gallery, you’ll find new artists and new works – jewelry, pottery, glass, accessories…and much more! What a Great Excuse for a summer road trip! Bring your friends and neighbors! Meet someone here.

Check the website for other things to do in the Hutch area!

www.claycoyote.com
FIFTH ANNUAL
Summer at the Gallery Picnic
Sat., July 14th 10 to 6 PM Sun., July 15th – 12 noon to 5 PM.
17614 240th St., Hutchinson, MN 55350
320-587-2599 1-888-737-4014
From the Cities, go west on 394/12 or Hwy. 7 to MN Hwy. 15 –
about 60 miles, then it’s 4.5 Miles North of Hutch off MN Hwy. 15 — 8/10’s Mile East on County Rd. 60 (240th St.) Watch for signs on 15
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Filed Under: Events Tagged With: clay, Gallery Open House, Madam Lorna

Art Show Reflections

July 5, 2007 By Vivid Image

 

Bob Carls, Woodturner, Aitken MN…couldn’t resist.
THE ART SHOW …
… an insider’s viewMany artists and craftspeople make a good portion, or all, of their living from sales of their art at art fairs and shows, sometimes called street fairs. We know artists that do a few shows a year, and some that do 25, 30 or more. But it is an ‘industry’ that is changing rapidly, and there are some circles where the discussion is about the death of art fairs as we know them.

Many shows are sponsored by organizations for which the show is a source of income. When this happens, there seems to be a consistent result. The show gets watered down, one way or the other.

Costs of running a fair are significant, to be sure. Advertising, administration, porta-potties, websites, fair maps, … the list goes on and on. Expensive and complex.

The basic process for shows is that they put out a call for applications via mail, internet and magazine advertising. Artists submit the application with, typically 3 to 5 slides of their work. These slides are viewed by a committee of jurors who select the show participants. These juries may be practicing artists, interested arts supporters…but more frequently a show committee or, in one case, business students at a community college who are acting as interns (not good). Good shows will publish their jury list…at least by qualification. Typically there is a $25-$35 fee for applying. This jury process usually takes place 3 to 5 months before the show, and they advise you as to whether you’re in, 2 or 3 months ahead. If you’re accepted, typical fees per booth range from $125 to $425 depending on the size of the show). There is usually some relationship between potential sales and booth fees.

What’s changing:
The Internet…for applications, slides can now be entered digitally, and shows are entered with just a few clicks resulting in more people applying to shows and making quality jurying more difficult. If you’re interested, one of these venues is Zapplication ( http://www.zapplication.org/ ) (I wish I could give you our id and password … but you might sign us up for more shows ).

A computer downside is that it is now easy to manipulate slides before submitting.

So What’s happening? As shows find it tougher to fill the booth allotments (and budgets from fees) there is a tendency either to let in lower quality work, or start selling “commercial” booths … cell phones, packaged food items, sampling … whatever. A trend this year seems to be to take out a row of art booths, generally in the prime space, and put in these commercial booths, moving the art booths to the side.

The second trend is for more and louder entertainment. Especially rock bands. As the woman who used to run the Edina Art Show pointed out, the least sponsors could do is match the music to the art audience.

The effect of these 2 moves is to dramatically decrease sales by artists at art shows. The inclusion of commercial booths makes the atmosphere more of a flea market or retail street sale than an art fair. The addition of intrusive entertainment changes the message from ‘this is an art fair’ to ‘this is a music festival’….entertainment. As sales go down, the artists who make a living from their work will have to find other ways of selling, and suddenly shows are in a negative spiral.

Long term, this direction also prevents new, young artists from breaking into the crafts world. If shows aren’t working, they will find other ways to market.

One of the ways we judge whether a show will be good for us and our customers, is to judge if the art show is the “reason for being” for the event. If it is, the show will attract serious customers, interested in buying because they know there will be a good selection of high quality work. If the art show becomes secondary to other activities, quality inevitably slides and the show rapidly becomes entertainment.

If you feel that a favorite show of yours is changing in negative ways, please, go out of your way to let the show’s organizer know your feeling. For one, for shows that we do, we will start posting the show’s management contact information in the section of our website where we list our show schedule.

If you want to spend some time reading other’s comments, the potter’s discussion group had a thread in 2002 about this subject. (Copy and paste into your browser – click the lightbulb in the header to move through messages). (Copy and paste this address to your browser)Anyway … the one person not heard from in this is YOU! What are your impressions of Art and/or Craft fairs? What do you like and not like? Click on comment at the bottom of the blog. You can leave your thoughts as anonymous to save the hassle of signing up but we’d really like to know who your are.

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Filed Under: Events Tagged With: art, Bob Carls, clay, Ripple RIver Gallery

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