Getting Exposure: The Artist's Guide to Exhibiting the Work
Editorial Reviews
Book Description
Art rarely sells itself. It must be promoted - and the complex world of galleries, art fairs, and other sales venues can be bewildering to the practicing artist. Here is a reliable, helpful guide to: traditional commercial galleries; college and university galleries; artists' organizations; other nonprofit spaces; alternative spaces; museums; how to run your own gallery; pricing, handling, shipping, and display considerations; conducting successful studio sales; creating your own special events; booth shows - from street fairs to Artexpo; maximizing juried competitions; competing in public art venues; cooperative galleries; "vanity" and rental galleries: worth it?; handling rejection; and much more. (Art rarely sells itself. It must be promoted - and the complex world of galleries, art fairs, and other sales venues can be bewildering to the practicing artist. Here is a reliable, helpful guide to: traditional commercial galleries; college and university galleries; artists' organizations; other nonprofit spaces; alternative spaces; museums; how to run your own gallery; pricing, handling, shipping, and display considerations; conducting successful studio sales; creating your own special events; booth shows - from street fairs to Artexpo; maximizing juried competitions; competing in public art venues; cooperative galleries; "vanity" and rental galleries: worth it?; handling rejection; and much more. (6 x 9, 264 pages, b&w photos)
From the Back Cover
Art almost never sells itself. It must be promoted - and the complex world of galleries, art fairs, and other possible venues can be bewildering to the practicing artist. Getting Exposure is a helpful and reliable guide to: traditional commercial art galleries; college and university galleries; artists' organizations; museums; how to run your own gallery; pricing artworks; conducting successful studio sales; competing in public art events; winning public commissions and much more. (8 1/2 x 11, 256 pages, b&w photos)Art Calendar, the premier business magazine for visual artists, has published hundreds of articles covering a variety of subjects of interest to working artists-the myriad exhibition venues available and how to get into them, marketing, planning, psychology, self-promotion, advertising, law, and much more. Art Calendar was founded in 1986 and is the only artist-run magazine in the United States. All of the people involved in producing it are artists or art advisers.
Getting Exposure: The Artist's Guide to Exhibiting the Work,The Editors of Art Calendar Magazine,The Lyons Press,1558217312,Art,Art & Art Instruction,Art (Economic Aspects),Art Museums And Galleries,Collections, Catalogs, Exhibitions - General,Entrepreneurship,Exhibition techniques,Exhibitions,Reference,Sidewalk art exhibitions,Art / Commercial / Advertising
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