Thus, I have realized that if I am to maintain my integrity as an artist, I have to forget about galleries. Instead I will seek to hang my work in wellness centers, yoga studios, doctor's offices, spas, churches, and any other place that exists to heal and nurture the human spirit, not crush and deride it.
I'm pretty sure this is the right direction to take, because immediately after coming to this conclusion, I started working steadily, despite being blocked for over a year, despite being broke and stressed and taking care of an infant all day.
Does that make me a
kitsch artist? Well, it could, except that I'm not going to change into someone else. If people think my art is kitschy, they're not looking very closely. And if there's one thing I've discovered about New York art dealers, it's that very few of them actually know what they're looking at.
13 comments:
Galleries are high-profile but just one option for sharing your work.
Congratulations on finding the right path for you. Making it yours. For some, it's about making an attention-getting statement like "Art is War" http://hazeldooney.blogspot.com
For me, it's working with a niche publisher where our interests align, who pays me fairly for my work, and who gets my words and artwork into the homes of regular people who can pay $15 for it instead of $15,000 (though eventually I hope to sell some originals for that much and more)
*high-fives Pretty Lady*
I admit, I have been looking in at the struggle you went through over the past year with concern, but I knew you would find the answer and come out of it alive. Hooray! That mandala is looking very alive, indeed!
Commercial galleries, hipster galleries are such poison. I do feel bad for this person, but it sounds like she wasn't in it for the art, since she was so happy to walk away from it as soon as it turned out she wasn't going to be Una Gran Caca in Manhattan.
Hi Elizabeth, hi Spatula! It's good to be back!
I have a lot of respect for the way Hazel Dooney has managed her career, although her work is not something I particularly resonate with. I was reading her blog, back when I had the time to read blogs. :-)
I think that Becky Smith thought she was in it for the art, but she added in a big dose of social ambition, thinking that it was essential, or at least that it couldn't hurt. Turns out that social ambition can be fatal.
I visited her when she was still in Williamsburg, and the person who introduced us said, "I think she wants to be in Chelsea." If I'd been in the same position she was in, in 2003, I would have stayed in Brooklyn, kept my overhead low, and been a little nicer to my peer group of artists, writers and fledgling art dealers.
Who knows, she could have had some friends to crash with when she lost her apartment.
I have a water color of Franklin's hanging in my room at the spa. If it's good, it doesn't matter where it's hanging and people will notice.
Actually, Dawn, I don't entirely agree with you that it doesn't matter. Context plays a huge role in how even the best artwork is perceived; most people don't have the ability to edit the visual chaos of their surroundings, and hone in on the qualities of a work of art well enough to have an original opinion about it.
But I think that the context of a healing environment is precisely where I want my work to go. Moreover, I can take installation shots and use them to market the work online. Just as most people can't edit their visual surroundings, they can't usually visualize what a work of art would look like in their home or office. You have to show it to them there.
Elizabeth, are you the one who's been drumming up Hazel at EAG's blog and I think also on mine? Because Hazel's name keeps popping up and I think it's always you doing the popping.
Not that that's necessarily a bad thing. Just noticing.
I'm not overwhelmed by Hazel's alternate avenue; her work is kitsch, and of course there's always going to be a market for kitsch, especially if you happen to fall into the "hot chick painting hot chicks" niche. See also Audrey Kawasaki.
Now, I happen to admire Audrey's work. More than Hazel's. But it's still kitsch.
Pretty Lady, I cannot tell you how happy I am to see you've gotten back to art. And the mandalas are probably the most successful thing you've done -- artistically speaking, in my opinion. So I'm happy to see the return. Are they kitsch? I can't tell. I don't think so but I'm probably too close to them (and you) to form a real opinion on it.
I saw on LinkedIn that your status said something about displaying your work in yoga studios and so forth. Not a bad plan. Almost every time I find myself in a doctor's office or friend's house, and I see they have crappy art up, I have this urge to paint something for them. I don't think artists realize just how much crappy art is out there, from hideous Pottery Barn floral accents to faded prints. I went to a diabetes expert the other day and he had a poster of "Starry Night" so faded it was entirely blue.
People need good art. They want it. They just don't always know what it looks like. Thomas Kinkade has shown that regular people want real paintings; unfortunately, he's like the Burger King of oil paint.
I'd like to imagine a future where we can get the good art to the people. I have no idea how to do that, though.
Steph, this is great. I have no time for blog-reading, but I manage to come across yours now and then, and I'm always glad to. I went often to the Williamsburg Bellwether when it was there, and when she moved to Chelsea I was surprised. But I've always had my finger on my own pulse, not the big art world's. Tonight there's a talk at the Museum of the City of NY on "Creating an Alternative Art World", but the speakers are all over a hundred, I think, and I think they're talking about the alternative art world that they birthed 40 yrs ago. Yes, having a sense of history informs the future, but what about now? (Your idea sounds great for your work). I do like like Irving Sandler, merely because he was a teacher of mine and a kindly person. And I like Lois Dodd's ptngs. Anyway, I'd go if it was at Pratt nearby! -Chris K
Hi Steph,
I could write something more elaborate, but I would only be writing what you and others already know.
The problem is that what you describe is one of the worst things that is happenning in this world: the indifference that people are showing towards others' problems.
As an emerging artist, I won't forget those who are helping me getting my name out there.
I'm sure that if she has a good relation with artists, she'll be back again.
Best regards,
José
Jose,
When you say "she" are you talking about Becky Smith? I'm not sure what your comment is about.
anon
Steph, I enjoyed both your take and Chris' on this.
I love the mandala study. It dances as you watch.
Anne
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