“ A struggling Artist needed some free advice?”
“ A struggling
Artist needed some free advice?”
I was asked by an
Artist who does very good work for advice, he is struggling, he works
at outdoor venues, art fairs and group shows in Artist run Galleries.
He said he had no money and would I help him, I said of course. He
wanted to know how he could promote himself on a very limited budget.
So I asked him if he
has a Facebook page, an email address, he said yes but he was not on
Twitter or any other platforms, I said no problem, lets work with
what we have.
First of all I said
he needed to go and buy an Address Book for all the Art shows that he
would be part of and begin to collect email addresses.
Ask everyone who
makes a nice comment or seems interested or buys to sign the guest
book.
I told him to stop
using Facebook for family pics and times spent with friends, but to
consider it as his business page. He said his friends have Artist “
like” pages and I said, no do not do that, you want everyone to
become your friend, then you will be able to private message them
right to there phone, the place where all eyes are.
Most Artists use
Facebook wrong, they get a “like” page because that's what
Facebook wants you to do, so you can get lots of likes, but I prefer
to have friends.
Please do not try to hard sell on Facebook,[ Title,
medium, size, price] but use it to bring people to you, talk about
your art and paintings and what they mean to you, people want to
connect.
To me Facebook is
the Bill Board leading to me, if you sell on it that's great, I know there is that Artist out there who is selling heaps of
Art on Facebook, but that is not the norm, use it to direct customers
to your studio or art fair or Gallery.
Facebook is the sign
post for direction.
Now all the emails
you collect, start to do a Monthly Newsletter, again do not do hard
sell, title, medium, size, price, use your newsletter to become
better friends. Do not make it to long, just a catch up note saying
what you are doing where you will be showing work and how you would
love to catch up with them. Invite them to where you are showing.
Talk about the work you are showing and how you would like to show it
to them, story tell.
We live in a time
when Facebook has made everyone our friend, so just chat to them like
friends, people love to be part of something to connect especially
with Artists, because to the average person, the Artists live a very
exciting life.
Now none of this has
cost very much but time, then the big step for this shy Artist, I
said start a blog. Cost you nothing to do but it will attract people to
you as you talk about the Artist life, the Artist process of creating
a painting. Show the process of painting from white canvas to
finished painting and make lots of comments, talk about your
frustrations and your triumphs, tell the story of the painting, as I
said people want to know and be part of the creative process. Then
post the blog up on Facebook.
People love the back
story, I know when I speak to non Artist groups, they always want to
know, what's it like to be an Artist, to be able create something
from nothing, what does it feel like?
It taught me that
people want to connect to the creative process and thereby the
Artist, story tell your life.
You may say that
this a lot of work?
Yes it is, hours of
work but success does not come cheaply.
This is your shop
front window and the best thing for the Artist is that these three
platforms I have talked about are all free, use them but remember you
must be diligent and do it even when you do not want to. Answer ever
comment, thank people, be nice to everyone even the difficult ones,
trust me I know, some times the people I give free advice to push
back at me the hardest, but as I always say, just smile for all the
negative people there are lots of very nice people out there.
Never before have
Artists been able to promote and market themselves like they can
today, I have only talked about three social platforms and I know
there are many of you who are using far more than just these.
The problem that I
face in my practice is that I get Artists started on social but the
urgent slowly takes over and they become hit and miss with social.
For social media to work for you, you much approach it is part of
your Art practice and do it diligently every day, your public is 24/7
now and in every time zone across the planet, something to think
about.
For most of your I
am telling you what you already know and you are using many platforms for
your Art practice, which is wonderful and keep doing it.
I hope this has been
a little help to someone, my young Artist friend is doing what I told
him and I hope success comes his way, like I want for all artists.
Hello, I am no stranger to your artists trials and tribulations. This is the story for emerging artists in Oz, and I would argue the rest of the world. Live painting is becoming a bit of a trend in Australia, so perhaps he could approach bars to see if they'd host him during the earlier hours of trading. If he could perform during a bands performance all the better. He may even film himself doing tutorials on his processes and post them on YouTube. The work of an artist these days entails 30 percent art and 70 percent marketing and networking, if you're lucky. A majority of time marketing is definitely recommended. Gone are the days when a Gertrude Stein is going to walk into your life and turn you into a legend.
ReplyDeleteHi Mark, your approach to this has vital information and ia a good basic guide in promoting art via social media for any artist - so thanks for sharing. I agree that Facebook & email should be part and parcel of an artist's practice and ideally provide content (a story-line) as naturally as possible. A true artist will do this of course as what they do (generally) comes from the heart. And yes I believe that is what an audience wants to see and learn. Through this an artist will gain a following and create a market for his/her art rather than spend a lot of time targeting a specific market hoping that something will happen - as this a hard road to follow. A committed artist will know that being an artist is a long journey and that communicating their work is essential to exposure and eventual success. Fortunately we live at a time (right now) where the media has been democratised and an artist can have an enhanced voice outside the mainstream media. It just a matter of plugging into the right channels with the right content to the right people (friends who share your message) at the right time. So you need as many friends as you can get.
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