Here are the first 25 winners - congratulations to them!
Winter Park Sidewalk Art Festival, Winter Park, FL - March 21-23, 2014
Old Town Art Fair, Chicago, IL - June 14-15, 2014
Ann Arbor Street Art Fair, the Original, Ann Arbor, MI - July 16-19, 2014
Des Moines Arts Festival, Des Moines, IA - June 27-29, 2014
Coconut Grove Arts Festival, Miami, FL - February 15-17, 2014
La Quinta Arts Festival, La Quinta, CA - March 6-9, 2014
One of a Kind Show and Sale, Chicago, IL - December 5-8, 2013
Krasl Art Fair, St. Joseph, MI - July 12-14, 2014
American Craft Exposition, Evanston, IL - August 22-24, 2014
Cherry Creek Arts Festival, Denver, CO - July 4-6, 2014
Port Clinton Art Festival, Highland Park, IL - August 23 & 24, 2014
Sausalito Arts Festival, Sausalito, CA - August 30 - Sept. 1, 2014
Mount Dora Art Festival, Mount Dora, FL - Feb. 1 & 2, 2014
Columbus Arts Festival, Columbus, OH - June 6-8, 2014
Summer Art Fair (The Guild), Ann Arbor, MI - July 16-19, 2014
57th Street Art Fair, Chicago, IL - June 7 & 8, 2014
State Street Area Art Fair, Ann Arbor, MI - July 16-19, 2014
Park Forest Art Fair, Park Forest, IL - September 20 & 21
Bayou City Art Festival (Memorial Park), Houston, TX - March 21-23, 2014
Gold Coast Art Fair, Chicago, IL - June 28 & 29, 2014
Brookside Art Annual, Kansas City, MO - May 2-4, 2014
Naples National Art Festival (Feb), Naples, FL - Feb. 22 & 23, 2014
Art Fair on the Square, Madison, WI - July 12 & 13, 2014
St. James Court Art Show, Louisville, KY - October 3-5, 2014
Riverwalk Art Fair, Naperville, IL - Sept. 13 & 14, 2014
Find more of the winners at this link: http://www.artfaircalendar.com/art_fair/best-art-fairs.html
The purpose of this survey is to have a solid list of "best art fairs" that patrons can refer to when they are traveling or looking for a great place to buy art. Consequently, we have deliberately not put numbers in front of each one.
The results are a resource for people to use and it is listed on our website, ArtFairCalendar.com, whose purpose is to alert interested parties to the best shows all over the country and bring them to the shows to see your work. They're all terrific shows.
We had a wonderful response to our long survey (22 questions). It was apparent by the participation and the enthusiasm of the people telling us why they thought a show was the "best" that art fairs are alive and well in America and that as long as you keep creating compelling work they will be there to see it.
Learn more details about the survey at this podcast: WINNERS! America's Best Art Fair Survey
This has been a big project for us and I specifically want to thank all of those who helped. Lisa Fritsch at the Rosen Group who shared the American Style magazine survey to get me started. To the artists who helped me build the survey: Ginny Herzog, Larry Oliverson, Michael Hamilton, Kathrine-Allen Coleman and Daryl Thetford. Also thanks to Allan Teger whose previous experience as a psychology professor helped me streamline the survey.
Thanks to Carolyn Edlund at ArtsyShark.com for sharing the story on her popular blog and to Leah Charney and Christina Villa at Zapplication.org for getting the survey info out to the shows.
I know several show directors also "got out the vote" by sharing the links and posting on Facebook. Thank you for expanding our reach. Most of all thanks to all the patron voters. Your love for art and the nation's art fairs was apparent in your responses. Thanks for all your great tips on "how to make shows even better."
We have lots of information to share with show directors, artists and the public coming up, fascinating conclusions to be drawn from the 1000's of responses we received.
Do you have a favorite art fair that you think should be on the list?
Comments
I've updated that graph on why people attend art fairs, fyi. It's still pretty small and I hope you'll all bear in mind that this is our first attempt and hope next year's will be written better.
One of the questions asked on the survey was "Do you plan your vacations to attend art fairs?" About 65% said no, which is understandable -- we are trying to get at the travel aspect of people coming to the shows. But what I suspected is they may not plan to travel specifically for a show, but they do plan a visit to a specific city for other purposes to coincide with an art affair. From one of my respondents:
With you on that, Geri. I was very heartened by the responses. You and I both attend art fairs probably more than any other outdoor excursion/destination and what attracts us to them? Yes, the art is first - even though we don't mind it at all if it is a beautiful day in a classy location with good food nearby, the gravy, so to speak.
One of my favorite quotes from the survey, we asked how an art fair could improve:
Am I the only one who found it interesting that things not art related were the least important factors in determining the best art fairs? Perhaps all those directors and promoters that have been listening to IFEA and adding more and more non-art related activities should take a deep breath and stop trying to come up with more and more silly activities and let the art speak for itself.
It is my reporting, Jim, of the results that were in error. Here is the question I asked:
Please rate the following options as to their importance for you in determining what is a "best art fair." Choose #1 first and then pull down each choice separately and rate it from 1 to 9.
So you can see I asked them to rank them in numerical order. There were nine choices.
Rating average:
"Quality of art" - 2.56
"Variety of art" - 3.38
"Venue setting & ambiance" - 4.05
"affordability of art work" - 4.66
"# of exhibitors" - 4.6
"location, restaurants, shopping, parking, accessibility" - 5.53
"good food and music" - 6.05
"family friendly with activities for children included" - 6.94
"all the other activities nearby" - 7.23
I asked them to rank their first choice as #1. People could only vote once. The survey did not allow multiple votes. They did what I asked - "quality of art" got the most votes. My error in writing the question so that a first choice got the lowest "ranking", it did though get the most votes and I wanted to show a graphic. So basically flip the chart.
This was the first time I've written a survey. We got lots of things right and really if I hadn't pulled this graph from the statistics I wouldn't even have learned I wrote the question wrong.
Now I know to write something like "here are 9 reasons people attend art fairs, rank them from 1 to 9 with 9 being the most important reason."
For 2014 we'd be pleased to have suggestions and people to vet the survey before it goes out. Two artists did step forward, who had survey writing experience (Allan Teger was one of them) and gave us input.
A lot of people over on Art Fair Review noticed it, too. And not favorably. That is methodology -- how you gather the data, how you tabulate it, how you present it.
Your charting procedure is at fault in this case. Instead of summing each of the scores and using that as the data, you could use the formula "count" for each of the ranks, and then chart that. If each person only voted once, that would be an accurate representation. But if each person voted several times, the counts won't reflect ranking, but just popularity.
To chart for ranking with your current data, you'd need to set up a table where 1=10 points, 2= 9 points and remap your data using the summing formula that gave you the erroneous chart. It's probably easier to do it than it is to try to explain it.
It wasn't my methodology, Jim, it was that I had people give a "1" to their favorite category -- so that when it was finally tabulated the one chosen last got the highest score. Am I explaining that correctly? Whereas the favorite should have gotten a 9. I don't know how to change the chart to reflect that. Do you?
And thanks for noticing ... you're the first to notice, although it troubled me when I saw it!
Regarding the first chart, Connie, you stated in a footnote that the results were skewed backwards because of your methodology in gathering the data. What would happen if you reversed the data so that the criteria that was ACTUALLY ranked highest had the highest score? What would the chart look like then? I think that some of your readers may miss that critical point when looking at the chart results.
You are welcome, Jon and Judy. It was a labor of love. There are no huge surprises on the list. Pretty much the shows that artists want to be in are where the patrons want to attend. Since I live in Michigan I was particularly heartened by all the votes for the Ann Arbor shows, which many artists say are "over." Maybe so -- but I was there in July, on what turned out to be the hottest day of the summer. There were plenty of people in attendance. Enough to take care of over 1000 artists? Hard to say on that ...
Thank you for all of your hard work. Very appreciated!
This is wonderful information to have, Connie--thank you! It confirms much of what artists have said are (or voted as being) the best art fairs.