| How to Get Your Work Displayed in Galleries |
| Written by Mike Ricci |
If you’re thinking of packing up samples of your handmade creations and taking them downtown to the eyes of local gallery owners, some retailers have this not-so-subtle suggestion: Don’t do it!
Stopping in unannounced is easily the biggest pet peeve gallery owners have when it comes to dealing with eager artists. That doesn’t necessarily mean retailers aren’t interested in your work. But it does mean that to improve your odds of getting a second glance, you first need to consider what approaches work well from the perspective of successful gallery owners. Making initial contact with galleries Heyman explains that she started the gallery as a way to have a nice studio space for her stained glass business when she was working as an artist. “Having been on the artist’s side of the fence, I feel that I have a good understanding of their needs,” she adds. After you’ve made initial contact with a gallery, if both of you agree there is interest in considering a working relationship, it’s time to showcase you and your work. “Give me information about you and how your work is created so I [could] describe and explain it and the creative process to customers,” Heyman advises. “Show me work that is organized and ready to sell.” This includes having jewelry (or similar small work) on professional- looking cards, providing clear information about the work and the artist and including prices on the work, she continues.
Both gallery owners are adamant in their belief that unexpected visits are not appropriate. “I definitely do not like it when an artist just drops in unannounced and wants to show things,” Wolf notes. No experience? No problem “I always think that maybe if someone [who is] up-and-coming contacts me, their [work] might not be in a lot of other places yet,” Wolf says, adding, “and I like that.” Consider consignment “I probably would not do consignment with a gallery that is newly opened,” she warns. “This is not the time for that kind of risk.”
But if you’re going through the effort and expense to attend wholesale shows as an artist, make sure you do them right, advises Joline El-Hai, the Seattle-based owner of Bella Luz Studio, and creator of lighting, note cards and fine art glass. El-Hai’s creations are carried in dozens of galleries nationwide. “Have a spectacular, classy booth display that really draws in the customers from the aisles,” El-Hai recommends as a requirement for standing out from the crowd at busy trade shows. After years of carefully building a gallery base, El-Hai has accumulated a handful of other tips to catch and keep the attention of gallery owners: El-Hai has found the most success in attracting gallery attention to her work by doing trade shows and by advertising in craft trade magazines that are read by gallery owners. (The Crafts Report magazine’s “Craft Showcase” pages are an example of an advertising section aimed at retailers, and some other magazines in the field have similar pages.) Networking to get into galleries
“I have some pieces I try to tailor to smaller spaces,” Keener shares, which can allow a gallery with limited floor space to carry some of his work. Still, he admits, it’s sometimes a challenge to find galleries that are both interested in carrying furniture and able to accommodate it. Artists and gallery owners working together Sometimes, it seems that gallery owners and artists treat one another as adversaries. But Keener argues that he tries to appreciate and understand the concerns and issues that gallery owners have about carrying new work, as well as their need to price work appropriately to cover expenses for marketing and other overhead costs. “I have a better understanding, so it’s not this adversarial relationship,” he notes. “Besides,” he adds, “We’re all in this business together and should be helping each other.” TCR Mike Ricci is the former art director of The Crafts Report, and a current freelance writer and designer. He can be reached at mricci7165@comcast.net. |