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Artists Chosen for Coconut Grove Arts Festival

This from the Coconut Grove Grapevine:

You may remember, in October, we sat in on the two-day blind judging process for the upcoming 48th Annual Coconut Grove Arts Festival. Well the artists have been chosen for the festival to be held February 19 to 21, 2011.

Out of 1232 applicants, 360 were chosen from the US and Canada. Over 100 of the artists chosen are from Florida and 19 are from the Miami area. Hans Feyerabend, Dan Bondroff and George Rodez are three Coconut Grove artists chosen.
Read the rest of the article here: http://coconutgrovegrapevine.blogspot.com

The article about the jurying is entitled "Long,tedious process involved in judging the art".

Now, that is funny! This second link is an interesting take on an art fair jury from an outsider, a reporter for the Grapevine.

Getting into or not getting into the Grove has been an important part of the festival business for a long time. At one time it was a make or break deal for many artists. For northern artists it meant winter income and many would trek to Miami for a string of shows. Those days are gone for many of us. The overhead and the low sales really meant it was better to stay home and shovel snow. Read the articles about the jurying and how they made their choices, ruminate a little and send us some feedback.

Are you going to be at CG in February? Did you decide not to apply this year? Why? Share your CG experiences. Do you live in Florida and feel like you're not invited to the prom if you are not at The Grove?

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ODC WinterFairs

Once again it seems that happiness and disappointment are scattered across the board for both shows. For me, Cincinnati is turning out to be my best show. (I have beaded "over the top" jewelry), having done extremely well both last year and this year. My average sales were 125. but I had several over 500. and one for a 1000. Friday was a good crowd, Saturday a little light and Sunday good after a slow start. The attached Marriott has WONDERFUL beds that I look forward to every year!

Columbus seemed a little off this year in attendance and my sales were definitely lower than previous years but that may be due to my coming in with a too low inventory. I did hear other artists say, though, that their sales were lower this year, too.

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Tempe Festival of the Arts on Mill St.

Just returned from the Tempe Festival of the Arts on Mill St. Crowds were fantastic, organizers of the show were great, sales were not. Lots of looking and most sales appeared to be in the $30-$50 range around us although we did make several large sales it basically just covered expenses, that is not a good showing!

Next show...Carefree, AZ Fine Art and Wine Festival Jan 14-16. Come by and buy!

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Tampatourdeclay

I just visited a great event on Saturday-the Tampa Tourdeclay which featured 6 studios with 20 Florida potters and their guest potters. Fun, food, music, shoptalk and sales were present as I went from each studio visiting with the potters with their unique styles and ways of marketing their work. Had a great time and enjoyed the comraderie. The event is a yearly feature of the Florida Westcoast Ceramic Society. www.tampatourdeclay.com

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Armadillo Christmas Bazaar (Austin, Tx)

The Armadillo Bazaar opens this week. This is it's 35th anniversary. It is a legendary venue for arts, crafts, imports, and live music, produced by the much-loved Bruce Willenzik. Is anyone else on this board going to be there?

I have only been doing it 33 years. I could tell you stories! Instead I will post a bunch of pictures of this year's event, once it gets going.

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Spreading the good spirit a bit

An observation or two, a hope or three:

Nels aside (odd duck he is) I have found most photographers to be somewhat reserved, less outgoing than most artists. Perhaps the lack of social grace due in part to inherent shyness, even lack of confidence. I certainly qualify for all the above. After a few years of doing shows, I came out of my shell and stopped looking at the booth down the aisle (and down my nose) as competition and decided to say hey (hey Andy. hey Goob.). I decided not to look at the work, but to look at the person, and what an eye opener this was.

We share so much, the human components to the traveling tent shows much more interesting to me than the work on the walls. I met those the crusty veterans with the twinkle of perspective in their eyes, the young whippersnappers who grabbed hold of the marketing elements and looked big time,the frustrated and bitter black cloud dudes I couldn't get away from fast enough, the young lady living off the grid in her camper ,her soul showing and glowing in everything she did.The guy in the white van whose work DID knock my socks off.

I came away from this year with a few bucks from my efforts, a new found respect for those that have paid the dues and make a living selling their wares off the tent walls. You guys are one of the last home grown entrepreneurs out there, America seems to have outsourced the entire manufacturing base, maybe even the whole damn middle class but in this traveling circus you get out of it what you put into it. Talent, creativity,marketing,communication, networking,schmoozing all make or break the deal for you. Ain't no one telling you where to go, or what to do.

So thanks to those who shared a bit with me, and I hope I managed to do the same.Please remember there are other business people that need your support. Stay away from the mass framers, and get to know the little guy running the frame shop.Maybe give him a chance for a feature piece. Avoid Walmart and Target, hit the bodega and tha Ma and Pa specialty stores (remember where the old downtown is). Starbucks will survive without you, but the woman and her corner coffee shop won't.Oh, and tip the bejeesus out of that waitress that takes care of you all year. And if you're having breakfast at an establishment without waitresses, man you gotta change that up right now.

Keep the spirit of the independent businessperson alive, for the holiday season and the coming year.Peace.

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Artists' Colony Blossoms in Hannibal, MO

Another one of the great things about being an art fair artist is that you are not wedded to a particular locale, you can move close to the shows, you can find a region that appeals to you, you can choose a big city or a small town. In 1987 when our home in Detroit kept getting broken into (because everyone could see the big van was gone on the weekends) we realized we could live just about anywhere and started looking as we traveled to our art fairs.

We moved to Coldwater, MI, that winter, chosen because there were big homes we could afford (which we needed to hold the studio, darkroom, framing area), it was within a few miles of the Indiana Toll Road (good for east-west travel), on a north-south Interstate and we could reach Cleveland, Indianapolis and Chicago within three hours, as well as our regular Michigan shows. Plus, it was so safe that some of our neighbors didn't even have keys to their houses, they left them unlocked. If your property got broken into the police would immediately catch the culprit because someone would know someone who knew who did it. It has been perfect for us.

Where to live is a continuous thread of conversation at the shows. Here is a terrific article by Susan Hegger from the St. Louis Beacon about Hannibal, MO, a haven for artists Joachim Knill, Janice Ho, Matthew Naftzger and others. They have bought houses, apartment buildings, old community centers, the old jail and are transforming the town.


Do read the article. It is full of information about artist's lives, earning a living and gives hope. Then tell us more about your life style choices.


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ART FESTIVAL EXTENDED DEADLINES////

While I am here online HOW DOES EVERYONE FEEL ABOUT THESE EXTENDED DEADLINES FOR ART FESTIVALS////// LET US HEAR IT ALL////

Did the largest $$$ prize show and one of the oldest art festivals have to extend their deadline// 1000 applications weren't enough to choose 200 artists????

ANY COMMENTS OUT THERE???

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SARASOTA- AMERICAN CRAFTS FESTIVAL

The patrons that came / came to buy/ Easy set -up/ break- down// I saw BIG $$$$ items sold and many pleased happy artists // My ceramic neighbor almost sold out- my jeweler neighbor was always busy/the leather, & clothing across were busy// my sales were just fine// Thanks Richard for saving this event for us artists and Sarasota- those that didn't apply-- you missed it///
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Call for Artists: Omaha Summer Arts Festival

June 10-12 - new date!*
Downtown Omaha, Nebraska
135 Artists

Deadline: January 10

The 37th Annual Omaha Summer Arts Festival invites you to be a part of one of the most lively art festivals in the Midwest. Located in downtown Omaha alongside a beautiful park, the award-winning Summer Arts Festival draws a diverse crowd of 80,000 people for a weekend of unique visual arts, great music, tasty food and hands-on children's activities.

Festival patrons enjoy browsing and buying an eclectic mix of functional and non-functional pieces by 135 artists in 14 media categories. High-quality work in the $50 to $200 range tends to sell most frequently, but, of course, higher priced artwork does not go unnoticed (or un-purchased) by Omaha's fair share of art-lovers.

This is an excellent, well-organized festival," one artist said. "I have my highest sales here and always encounter enthusiastic, loyal customers.

In addition to $2500 in cash awards, artists can expect hospitality and concierge services that are a step above the rest. The Festival offers you:
  • discounted hotel rates
  • complimentary snacks and beverages
  • an Artists' Awards Brunch on Saturday and an Artists' Meeting on Sunday with continental breakfast
  • an air-conditioned lounge with indoor restrooms
  • booth sitters; water delivery; overnight, indoor storage
  • 24-hour security
  • reserved parking and electricity
Artists also reap the benefits of the festival's substantial marketing efforts and media coverage.

[The Omaha Summer Arts Festival] is my favorite show to do; and [the] treatment of artists is the best! said one artist. Not many shows do anything for artists anymore-it is very important to us.

*New date info: The move is being made to accommodate 16.jpgthe opening of the new TD Ameritrade Park. With the College World Series relocating in 2011, Farnam Street will provide direct access to westbound travel out of the downtown area. As a result, the Festival was asked to change its dates to avoid traffic congestion.

For more information about the Omaha Summer Arts Festival, please contact Elizabeth Balazs, Visual Arts Coordinator, at (402) 345-5401 or ebalazs@vgagroup.com .
Learn more: www.SummerArts.org
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Market Days Tallahassee Florida

Market Days

December 4 and 5, 2010

Tallahassee, Florida


Market Days is an annual show held at the fairgrounds in Tallahassee, Florida. Artists are set in fourbuildings that line the road in and out of the fairgrounds. Thereare additional booths between the buildings in the median. Theirwebsite (www.marketdays.org)advertises approximately 300 artists with 15,000 people inattendance. However, paperwork delivered to the artists for nextyear noted 20 – 24,000 people in attendance annually. The weatherwas nice both days. A little cool in the morning but in the upper60's in the afternoon.


Most items were hand made by artists exhibiting. Of course there was some buy and sell, and then therewas an imported metal booth that covered approximately 10-12 10*10booth spaces; they did tell folks that they bought the items forresale.


Saturday was crowded by most show's standards. It was approximately 10-12 feet across the isle and manytimes it was impossible to walk across from booth to booth due to thecrowd. While there was plenty of people, they appeared to be goingfor lower end items. The mustard and soup mix ladies next to me hada booming day. Unfortunately, Sunday was dead. Even the niceweather could not bring out the buyers. 80% of my business onSaturday with sporadic sales on Sunday. All of my sales except onewas under $50, and I had one sale that was over that amount.


Fellow artists I spoke with didn't have much good things to say about sales, however, I spoke with severalthat did very well with their Christmas and under $20 items. Thebooth fee was $450 and I did ok. It's an easy show to do and I gotto visit with my friends that drove down from Atlanta for theweekend. Plus I found a nice gift for my lovely wife.


The folks running the show do a great job. They are friendly, constantly checked in to see if Ineeded anything, had coffee and donuts all day. Additionally, I hadfour of the main show staff including the director to spend timetalking with me and thanking me to be there. I just can't say enoughabout them They really make an artist feel special.

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This last Saturday was the Winter Market held at the Eiteljorg Museum in Indianapolis Indiana. This was my 5 or 6th Eiteljorg show (I also participate in the Women in Art show in the spring) and overall it was in keeping with past shows.

Load in is not the easiest as you have to park at a curb - traverse a winding ramp to gain access into the museum and then depending upon booth location possibly load onto a very small elevator.

This year, layout was more challenged by the addition of an exhibet devoted to trains that took up much of our prior artist space. Because of this - upstairs space was utilized, booth sizes were greatly diminished and artist numbers were reduced greatly.

We were not thrilled to find ourselves upstairs in a smaller darker location - but our neighbors were friendly - we bring our own lighing just in case and we made it all work.

Being upstairs - we believe our foot traffic was not what the main floor artists had in numbers - but we were still happy to be in the show at all as many past artists were not accepted due to the diminished numbers.

Load in was helped by being able to load in the afternoon prior to the Saturday event (thankful I did that as it was snowing hard and very wet Saturday morning). Load out was slowed because of the bottleneck at the elevator - but still only took us a bit longer than our usual hour strike.

My husband and I paint and do photography. Sales were fairly good - this is always one of our better shows as the crowd tends to be a little more high end. We sold one nice sized painting as well as a couple smaller ones, some photographs and notecard sets as well as a number of smaller miniscape paintings.

I have been noticing a trend lately that people are purchasing more what I would call purposeful art - ceramics and jewelry and perhaps a bit less decorative.

All in all a great way to spend a snowy Saturday. This was our last show of 2010 - next up is the Indiana Artists show at the Indiana State Museum in February. This will be a new one for us - so I'm looking forward to seeing how it goes.

Happy arting all!

-k-

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Sawgrass Village @ Ponte Vedra

Has anyone heard what happened to this event? I heard nothing but kudos and thought I'd love to give it a whirl. Since I couldn't find an application for anything more current than 2009 I e-mailed the promoter (Venues). No response, site not updated since 2009. I called and left a message, and although it is still a working number, no reply. So, I called the Chamber of Commerce in Ponte Vedra. They've never heard of it, have no information. Now, I'm curious.

Did this once great event simply disappear? Any decent Jacksonville area shows to recommend?

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New Item

Greetings,

Looking for art fairs in Houston TX. Anyone can provide a lead? Thanks.
Also, I have a new idea for a 3-D art item. I am looking for a good craftsman in Houston that can manufacture things for me, using all sorts of materials. Will appreciate any leads for this as well.
Thank you all and have a blessed holiday season.
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Community Affairs mid week gulf coast shows.

'I am considering doing the Community Affairs mid week shows in February on the gulf coast. The entry fee seems pricey for the show. I am coming down to Fl in February from Atlanta, will do Mt Dora and looking for another show.Did not even bother to apply to the bigger Fl shows as many friends had a tough time with sales last year..

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