Re: A visit to an art fair
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Peter De Smidt
Yesterday, I walked through an art fair centered around the John Michael Kohler Art Museum in Sheboygan, WI. There were a number of photographers there. A few things jumped out at me. First, color, especially bright, saturated color predominated. Second, frameless or framed but without glass artwork, was much more common than framed/glazed pieces. No doubt that has to do with cost, breakage and general hassle. There were a lot of metal or rigid acrylic looking prints. Prices ranged from $2K for the biggest prints down to about $200-400 for mid-sized prints.
As another data point, around these parts, the most successful (commercially, not artistically) art fair photographers sell landscape photos, most of which contain many colors not found in nature, and almost all of which are printed on canvas. <sigh>
And almost all of the art fairs now charge admission, too, which IMO, adds a financial insult to the visual injury I usually experience.
Re: A visit to an art fair
I went to several art fairs here. Many photography booths showed color digital prints on metals or acrylics too, which are very saturated. I have not seen any black and white large format prints in art fair for many years.
Re: A visit to an art fair
Re: A visit to an art fair
Yes, colors that are never ever seen in nature.
Re: A visit to an art fair
Can we ever reproduce nature. Exactly?
That would be un-natural.
Most critters see differently.
Some are on a different wavelength.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Peter Collins
Yes, colors that are never ever seen in nature.
Re: A visit to an art fair
Outdoor art fairs are not a place to find serious art. They tend to be kitschy. Bright, unnatural colors appeal to that crowd.
Re: A visit to an art fair
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Peter De Smidt
Yesterday, I walked through an art fair centered around the John Michael Kohler Art Museum in Sheboygan, WI. There were a number of photographers there. A few things jumped out at me. First, color, especially bright, saturated color predominated. Second, frameless or framed but without glass artwork, was much more common than framed/glazed pieces. No doubt that has to do with cost, breakage and general hassle. There were a lot of metal or rigid acrylic looking prints. Prices ranged from $2K for the biggest prints down to about $200-400 for mid-sized prints.
I found exactly the same at a well-attended fair near me. I'd rather buy a painting from a local artist. Or just turn up the color settings on my TV and let it cycle through all the photos it displays when I pause a program too long.
Re: A visit to an art fair
Most viewers, especially lay viewers, are immediately struck on entering my tent at the lack of color. It's an immediate visual difference, and I do think people take notice.
Thanks for the report on the pricing, that is interesting. Of course there's always folks that think a matted 16x20 print should be $20, which can be frustrating to deal with.
Would love to have you in my booth Peter! :)
PS...not sure I should "announce" it on the forum, but I was featured on the Studio C-41 podcast yesterday talking about selling photography at art fairs...
Re: A visit to an art fair
I'd love to visit a fair that you're at, Bryan. I have no doubt that your work is excellent. I also don't want to poo poo color. In the past I've seen Jim Becia's color work at the very same art fair. Jim is a member here. I liked it enough that I've bought three prints over the years. I'd buy more, but funds are scare. The big art show in the state is the one in Madison, but I haven't been able to get there for a few years. Sure, I've been to a bunch of shows where I didn't like anything, but the same can be said for a number of museums that I've visited.