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It seems to me that anyone who has had success online has had moderate success with the traditional craft or traditional art market. Bloggers only seem to link or discuss widely known artists.
I'm trying to have it both ways, but I don't feel like I have any examples to look to or others to bounce ideas off of.
I have been slowly dipping my toes into the online social media/marketing/networking thing. I see the huge possibilities for it, but it is so time consuming. I would love to hear about how to deal with using it more efficiently or in some manner that isn't such a time suck.
Fabietto, young italian artist
My new blog (which will launch in January through redesigned website) may now have a additional twist because of the posts I have read today.
Great perspective.
Thanks! Kate Nasser, The People-Skills Coach
Thanks!
Great post!
Lance
I'm so glad Amrita has popped into the Toronto social media scene (exploded into? :) and I can't wait to see how she helps change it in 2009. Great post!
I love these four cues to creating a fabulous life-the ultimate installation piece, eh?
**Find inspiration outside your domain
**Make your own rules
**Choose your critics wisely
**Live an interesting life
THANKS!!
/flourishingjudy
As a musician, another favorite "skill" of mine is improvisation. In charting new waters with social media and business, sometimes you have to learn to adapt and improvise a bit until you find what works. Few things are certain, and at the speed of today, "rules" have a short shelf life. I'm a big believer in understanding the need once in a while to vamp your way through a few bars until you hit your stride.
Really enjoyed your perspective. Thanks.
I've been approaching galleries for a little while now and whenever I get a rejection they always tell me that my art "doesn't fit" the gallery. I have also heard a lot of curators talk about really looking at the work in the gallery before submitting your portfolio.
If I'm trying to find galleries where my art will fit, what should I be looking for. I feel like my eyes are open, but I feel like I'm missing something.
And as Jay pointed out above, it's true, artists must create. But creation isn't just about making physical representations. I look to create all things in my life, including doing the laundry! it makes the whole process so much more interesting! Learn your process, know yourself and walk through all your solutions from that place. :)
Jason Alba
CEO - JibberJobber.com
Author - I'm on LinkedIn -- Now What???
Thanks for the mention and @jaygoldman is correct we are very lucky to have you in Toronto. Looking forward to #arts&crafts talks :D
<3 @ryantaylor
David - I would be happy to talk to you about approaching galleries - please email me at amrita@tinkugallery.com or ping me on Twitter @tinkugallery
Ellen - your PC is not acting up, seems IE7 browsers aren't viewing the image on the gallery site so I am needing to fix it - long laundry list of site updates I need to get to in January.
Thanks for the post.
I am an artist and have been active on Twitter for a whole month now.
I have found social media to be a kind of natural pool I can swim in, because I am a communicator. There are no gate keepers, pretensions, or social ranks. Anyone can follow me and we can message each other. I follow all my followers.
One of my first act was to stage an art event on Twitter. More is coming soon.
I agree that the Brooklyn Museum is doing a good job. I hope more museums begin to reach out and interact, rather than just post their own info. soon
And thanks also to Chris Brogan for inviting you to the blog.
Judy Rey Wasserman
On Twitter: judyrey
The thought behind "How Johnny Cash Would Tweet" also has to do with authenticity in social media. I argue that Johnny Cash is great inspiration if you’re thinking of using Twitter for business.
The post is How Johnny Cash Would Tweet at
http://blog.b2bcommunications.com/2008/12/25/ho...
Cheers,
Connie
A couple of decades ago, I was graduated from college with an English degree. The first thing anyone ever said to me then was "What can you do with THAT!" My reply was then and still is, "What CAN'T I do with an English degree."
Because I can read and write well, I have been blessed with a creative life thus far that has very little to do with pigeon holes and almost nothing to do with technology as an end, only a means. (http://gerardmclean.com/cv if you care to see )
My son graduated this month with a BFA and he is getting the same question. He answers it a little bit differently, mostly with a kind of blank stare at the other person as if they simply don't understand the question they just asked. But, he'll be fine and in demand because while he can run circles around the tech guys in PHP, Perl, MySQL, etc, he has the added advantage of understanding that ultimately anything he creates -- whether digitally or not -- is to enhance the human experience.
http://twitter.com/chirn9980 if you wish to follow a ground-level art career.
@Connie Crosby too bad tech people and artists don't mix in the same circles all that often. Shame on us as a society for putting them in separate camps to begin with. Shame on them for adding bricks to the walls.
Great article! I've been a bit frustrated by the volume of conversation *about* the tools. It's like hanging out in Home Depot all day. But the true magic is what people DO with the tools. Thanks for posting.
p.s. I posted recently about "life as art." http://is.gd/e0DY
Thanks,
Adam