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art, art career, art selling, Artist, artwork, career, creativity, facebook, google +, google plus, hard work, how to promote your art, how to sell art, how to sell prints, learning, original art, patience, perseverance, photographers, photography, pinterest, practice, print selling, prints, promoting, self promotion, self representing artist, selling art, sharon cummings, skills, social media, strength, stumbleupon, twitter
If you are an artist or photographer who has a dream of making a career out of your craft, you will need three things: practice, promotion and patience. And you will need them exactly in that order.
Practice means that you will be painting a lot of paintings. Many will be thrown right in the trash because they just didn’t work out. Photographers will be taking many photos in a single shoot only to find that none of them work or if you are lucky one is good enough to list for sale. You will try new things that will either be total flops or lead you to something really cool and interesting. You will invest money that seemingly never pays off. These days I sell about 5 prints a day on average from the various POD sites I am on and about 2 originals per week. The majority of what I am selling now is work I have created in the last year. Since I have been selling my art professionally for over 10 years this means that I am a much better artist today than I was back then. I have removed 100’s of images from my portfolios because as I practice and improve, I realize they aren’t my best work anymore. If you have just started creating photography or any kind of artwork within the last 2 years, I guarantee you that you need a lot more practice before your work will sell really well. If you look at the famous creatives most of them never sold early work while they were producing it and many never made a dime from it at all…money was only made after they were dead. In the Internet age we have so many opportunities that they never had. So keep creating regularly. The more you produce the better you will become and eventually sales will start rolling in. Babies do not come out walking and neither do artists. We crawl first.
While you are busy perfecting your art, there is a key ingredient to success that cannot be overlooked. Much like creatives of yesteryear we have to have someone believe in us and “get us out there” in order for our work to sell. For them it was luck and chance by being discovered by the right person at the right time. These days that someone is ourselves. You must believe in your work and be willing to share it with the World. Social Media provides us with instant access to millions of people from the comfort of our own studio computer, laptop or phone. We can connect to a mind boggling amount of followers with a few clicks. As an artist or photographer who lists on online galleries, if you are not using ALL of the FREE social media sites available to us, you are completely missing the boat. This post would be way too long for me to delve into all of the ins and outs of Twitter, Facebook, Google+, Pinterest, StumbleUpon, etc. but there are tons of free resources online to get you started. Check out the link to my social media in my blog and see what I am doing.
Once you have the discipline to create new work on a regular basis and you are willing to put in some hard work promoting yourself what you are left with is time. It takes time to become successful. Patience will be your best friend for awhile. A year ago today I was only selling about 1 print a week and 2 years ago only 1 a month! Now it is 5 a day! But that did not happen overnight. It took about 2 years to get moved up in searches and it took about 6 more months of creating new and better art than I was used to producing and HEAVY social media promoting to see the magic start. And I am still learning and improving myself.
Not everyone is cut out for the kind of hard work and perseverance that an art career requires. But if you can commit to at least 3 years of constant creativity and as much promotion as time will allow, you can definitely find your market and succeed!
Reblogged this on B.E.S.T. Arts Gallery.
Great advice Sharon. Thank you for sharing. Keep up the gorgeous paintings.
You are more than welcome Tina! Thanks for stopping by my blog.
Reblogged this on william patrick photo and commented:
art, art career, art selling, Artist, artwork, career, creativity, facebook, google +, google plus, hard work, how to promote your art, how to sell art, how to sell prints, learning, original art, patience, perseverance, photographers, photography, pinterest, practice, print selling, prints, promoting, self promotion, self representing artist, selling art, sharon cummings, skills, social media, strength, stumbleupon, twitter
Reblogged this on The Photography & Writing of Lincoln Rogers and commented:
This is an EXCELLENT blog post on selling your art. Sharon Cummings is successful at this and is generous with her knowledge.
Loved this, Sharon! Spot on. Reblogged.
Yup…success looks an awful lot like hard work. 😉
I’ve been quietly enjoying your posts for a couple of weeks now, Sharon. Even if they follow your three P’s, I don’t believe everyone will succeed. We also must have talent, don’t you think? If you don’t have any innate talent but keep at it nonetheless, I wonder if you’ll get anywhere. Something you obviously don’t have to worry about. 😉
Anyway, your art and your words get me to thinking. In a good way!
Peggy….”talent” is in the eye of the beholder. I see A LOT of artwork sell on a variety of sites that in my opinion lacks talent. But someone loved the work enough to buy it. In my honest opinion, the 3 P’s are far more important than innate talent. For the record….over the years I have heard it ALL regarding my artwork…I’ve heard “My 5 year old paints better than you.” years ago and “You are the worst artist I have ever seen.” just recently…..to….”You are an absolute artistic genius.” and “Your work belongs in the finest museums.”…..I could go on and on with the remarks both positive and negative regarding my art. If you give it your all as I have suggested for 3 years and still never sell anything at all…well then it is up to you to decide if you want to keep going with it. It may have nothing to do with talent. I know of a surreal artist who is absolutely brilliant…his work is awe inspiring, but he rarely sells because there just isn’t a big market for surrealism the way he does it…it does not lack talent…he just isn’t using the 2nd P effectively. Thanks for stopping by and my best to you!
Thanks for your very thoughtful reply, Sharon. Thanks also for sharing some of the comments you’ve received about your artwork. I would think that would help others more than you could ever know.
I get a lot of positive feedback because I’m out in the public just about every week, selling my work (photography) at craft fairs and such. (Fortunately nobody’s ever said anything too nasty to me! I sell online as well, only not as much as I’d like to. I know I need to work way more at promotion. That’s where I really fall down. There’s only so much time in the day (although you seem to fit in tasks to a superhuman degree!) This might be unfair to ask, but if you could only choose a couple of social media outlets, what would they be? Which do you see the best return from, or can you tell?
I live in Canada so I forgot you have Thanksgiving weekend coming up. Enjoy!
If I could only have two it would be Google+ because I share my links to the PUBLIC and Pinterest…both are VISUAL sites….we sell visual art…so those just make the most sense. If I had to drop one, I would drop Twitter…it’s like yelling into a void. StumbleUpon is also very useful as all I do is post to the PUBLIC there too…..I’ve also had success on Houzz, but you’ve got to work it. Facebook can be good, but also you have to really work it. Hope this helps!
Reblogged this on Imagine That! JB Photography.
Thanks for the info, Sharon!! Appreciate you sharing your wealth of knowledge!
Hope this helps more people! Thanks for reblogging!
Very interesting insight for everyone to learn from..
Thank you Sharon and have a wonderful Thanksgiving with all your Family.
Thanks Rafael….I always hope I can help others! You enjoy your Holiday too!
Thanks for your more detailed reply, Sharon…yes, that helps a ton! You just happen to have picked the two that I know absolutely nothing about but I’m determined to learn and be persistent. (BTW, would’ve replied directly beneath your comment but it seems as if I can’t.)
You are welcome!
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Thank you Jo Ann!!
Hello Sharon, I just had to come here to tell you what an inspiration you are to me. Reading your blogs give me a feeling like I know you. Your art is amazing and it was this blog that set me off and the only place I can go is up! Thank you so much for your taking time out of your busy schedule to help other fellow arts who want to reach their dreams as you are making others realize it IS possible by your own success.
Sincerely
Brigitte Cadena
Hi Brigette……..so glad I can inspire! I’d write my blog even if it was just me seeing them….I have found I really enjoy the writing…it’s a type of self reflecting meditation…..
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Reblogged this on S.O.U.L. S-P-A-C-E.
Thank you Jo Ann!