Arts Advocacy - Westerville/Gallery 202

Wednesday, August 31, 2005

Boats Against the Current

This is from an email that I get on a regular basis and I wanted to pass along this reviewers comments. This is only a part of his except this month, so email him if you would like more info.


Boats Against the Current
City of Ember By Jeannie DuPrau
The Long Emergency James Howard Kunstler

Review By John Fraim

On an afternoon in late spring of this year, I swiped a small paperback from my twelve-year-old son Matt's backpack. It was one of the books his class was reading at school. I started reading it that night after Matt had gone to bed and couldn't put it down.

The book was The City of Ember by first time author Jeanne DuPrau. It was about a future where humanity has retreated to live in underground cities. Later I read that it was inspired by the author's memories of growing up in the 50s when people worried about nuclear bombs and built bomb shelters in their backyards. The city of Ember is somewhat like a great underground bomb shelter that people have lived in for centuries.
As DuPrau writes:

"In the city of Ember, the sky was always dark. The only light came from great flood lamps mounted on the buildings and at the tops of poles in the middle of the larger squares. When the lights were on, they cast a yellowish glow over the streets; people walking by threw long shadows that shortened and then stretched out again."

There is a problem. For as long as anyone in Ember can remember, the great lights have kept the endless darkness at bay. But now the lights are beginning to flicker and supplies are dwindling. Ember is faced withthe possibility of total darkness and the end of all life in the city. Although ancestors had arranged for information on leaving Ember to be made available after the inhabitants have spent 200 years there, a corrupt mayor lost the information many years before the novel begins.
The salvation of the city of Ember ultimately rests in the hands of two twelve year old children: a boy named Doon and a girl named Lina. The characters are real and compelling. The plot full of twists and
mysteries. The book rich with description.

Like any truly great book, the world created within it refused to simply disappear with the turning of the last page. Doon and Lina would not go away. I thought about the book a lot. For me, one of the most amazing things about the book was the wonderful sense of place the story evoked. Although things weren't going very well, still there was a tremendous
sense of community in the city of Ember. It wasn't the community of our modern suburbs but rather the community of the small towns of America in the early part of our history.

Soon after reading The City of Ember I began exchanging emails with Jeanne. She lives with her cat and garden in Meno Park, California twenty miles south of San Francisco. In one email I wrote her about the magical sense of place she created in her book. She wrote back:

"I know that place is very important to me as a writer - I must be able to see and feel the place where the story happens, and the nature of the place is deeply connected to the nature of the story. I am often surprised by the lack of a sense of place in contemporary novels for young people, especially teenagers; so many of them seem to happen in a generic school, or a generic suburb, usually without weather."

This comment struck a chord with me. A few years ago our family left California and moved to Ohio. We moved because my wife and I were concerned about the educational future for our children. But we were also concerned that they would grow up in a place that had a real sense of community. It was a sense of community we didn't have in the suburb we lived in out in California.

We settled into an old suburb in Columbus, Ohio. Many of the people in the suburb grew up in it. They didn't spend a lot of time thinking about the future. Rather they thought a lot about the past and think about trying to keep the suburb like it was in the past.

Columbus is the nation's 15th largest city and ringed with a huge fifty mile river of concrete called the 270 outer belt. Like many other suburbs of Columbus, our suburb is contained within the outerbelt. When the outerbelt was first built a quarter century ago it contained large blocks of rich Ohio farmland within its oval shaped loop. Today, though, many suburbs have spread out far past the outerbelt into the Ohio countryside.

One hardly ever needs to go outside the outerbelt these days. Everything you could ever want is contained inside the outerbelt: a few rivers with bike paths, the nation's largest university, more chain restaurants that you ever thought possible, numerous Starbucks, organic groceries, bookstores, movie theaters.

In all there's a vague sense of protection from the outside world. It is almost like the 270 outerbelt is similar to a wall around some Medieval city, protecting our suburbs and others from the outside world, the future.

But one thing the outer belt couldn't protect Columbus and our suburb from this past summer was the incredible heat and rising gas prices. Both invaded the city in the early part of summer and never retreated. The prices shot up at the gas pumps and skies that turned from the bright blue of spring to a dirty white haze of humidity. Everyone talked about the weather and the rising gas prices. It was even hard for the old timers to remember a summer so hot in the city.

My work in marketing progressed to other projects. But it was still impossible to get Jeanne DuPrau's brilliant allegory about the future out of my mind. There was something approaching in the hot air like a great tropical storm. I found myself wondering in brief flashes if the city of Columbus might ever be brought down to its knees and become a type of "city of Ember" one day in the future. It was a stupid thing to wonder about. But still I couldn't help thinking about the vision of the
future in the children's book.

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John Fraim



John Fraim is President of The GreatHouse Company a marketing consulting firm and book publisher. He has a BA in History from UCLA and a JD from Loyola Law School (Los Angeles). Immediately after graduation from law school, the author was employed as Staff Analyst for Chevron USA in San Francisco.

He is the author of Battle of Symbols: Global Dynamics of Advertising, Entertainment and Media (Daimon Verlag, Zurich, 2003). His book Spirit Catcher: The Life and Art of John Coltrane won the 1997 Small Press Award for Best Biography. His most recent research is Media Nations: Global Dynamics of Media (2004).

His articles, reviews and criticism have appeared in a number of leading publications and online journals including Business 2.0, The Industry Standard, Ad Busters, The Journal of Marketing, First Monday, Spark OnLine, Media & Culture Journal, The Journal of Pyschohistory, Anthropology News and Psychological Perspectives.

He is also a leading authority on symbolism and the creator of www.symbolism.org, the Internet's most popular site for symbolism. His research and theories relate symbolism to media, entertainment, politics, marketing and popular culture. Currently, he is a consultant on symbolism for Imagine Entertainment in Los Angeles for their upcoming film The Da Vinci Code.

He can be contacted at jfraim@symbolism.org.

Sunday, August 14, 2005

artists have to worry more than about the art

After reading Jerry's post, I realized that many artist may not be aware of the needs of artists to be informed about such things as Homeland Security measures and the effect on the arts.

Gallery 202 co-op has opened a new gift shop and had to learn about the need for artists to have annual licenses for upholstery items/ stuffed toys and bedding (quilts?). http://www.com.state.oh.us/dic/dicform.asp will tell you about the state requirements. Not all states do require a permit/license but Ohio does.

I also have an artist who makes glass jewelry. She mentioned a story about another glass artist who made glass rings. A patron was wearing the ring when she was in an accident and severed her finger. The artist was sued!

Disclaimers may not prevent lawsuits but they should make the public more aware of your use of your artwork. Artists have to worry not only about just doing our art but also what happens after we sell it.

Food for thought.

Thursday, August 11, 2005

What should you paint - response

This was a response to the article on What should you paint, from the art league president.

I think you can chase every subject in the list and still not
sell. All of us should paint the subjects we have a genuine interest
in. Marketing is more about location. For example, a painter of ships/
boats on a lake or ocean would sell better in a gallery near a marina
or in a city on the coast. For sure, these same pictures can sell
inland but they have a much better chance of selling where people who
live near water and/or actually own a boat. If your name is well
known, you can sell your ships on the ocean, anywhere, even in
Lincoln, Nebraska.

I think another thing also to consider is the fact that there are
literally thousands of artists who are pretty good artists and there
are many exceptional artists. Both groups are selling and some in
both groups are doing well. The main reason all the artists in either
group can't sell well is due to what I call "market dilution". There
is simply too many artists; too much competition. While this is good
in some ways, it is what keeps each of us from selling well enough to
make a good living off of it.

Certainly there are exceptional artists who stand out from the crowd
and cannot be placed in either group. In order for them to do well,
they have to be noticed by a gallery and/or agent who loves their
work and is willing to invest money advertising and pushing their
work. This sort of thing doesn't happen often. But it happens.

Regarding prints. Digital (Giclee) or Litho will always sell well,
because the price is right for most of the population. So if you can
afford to make prints and your work looks good as a print, by all
means get into it. Sure, we would all like to be selling the $1000
originals, but when they aren't, those $75 prints can fill the void
fast.

Let's face it, lots of folks in the Central Ohio market, who will buy
art consider whether or not the painting goes with the colors in the
sofa. With that pathetic thought in your mind, abstracts are almost a
sure thing.

John A. Daniels

Selling -what should you paint.

This is an article passed to me through an email from local artist Karen LaValley from
http://painting.about.com/od/careerdevelopment/a/bestsubjects.htm

If you want to sell lots of paintings, what subjects should you be painting?


All painters know that some subjects sell better than others. Whether these are subjects you want to paint and whether you should be painting specifically for the market are two thorny questions. Only you can decide whether you want (or need) to paint with a view to selling as much as possible, or whether you can focus on painting subjects you choose. Of course, if your favourite subject happens to be the same as the market's, you're sitting pretty.


According to Art Business Today, these are the Top 10 best-selling subjects for paintings in the UK:
1. Traditional landscapes.
2. Local views.
3. Modern or semi-abstract landscapes.
4. Abstracts.
5. Dogs.
6. Figure studies (excluding nudes).
7. Seascapes, harbour, and beach scenes.
8. Wildlife.
9. Impressionistic landscapes.
10. Nudes.


So, having seen the list, are you reconsidering painting landscapes? I'm certainly pleased to discover that semi-abstract landscapes are on the list as this is one of my favourite subjects.


The survey also researched what the best-selling media are. I’m not really surprised prints sell more than original paintings, as they are cheaper; price is a major consideration for many people. But it’s worth noting that it’s limited-edition prints (where a set number of prints are made and each one is numbered), not open-edition prints (where the number of prints isn’t set; more can always be produced) that top the list.
1 Limited edition offset-litho prints.
2 Limited edition giclée prints.
3 Open edition offset-litho prints.
4 Oil and acrylic paintings.
5 Watercolours.
6 Artists' original prints (eg etchings, engravings).
7 Open edition giclée prints.


It’s interesting to compare the list of the Top 10 best-selling deceased artists to the best-selling subjects. Top of the list is Lowry, whose paintings are not what I’d call “traditional landscape”, though they are “local views”.
1 L S Lowry.
2 Monet.
3 Alan Ingham.
4 Russell Flint.
5 John Miller.
6 Rothko.
7 Van Gogh.
8 Picasso.
9 Klimt.
10 Matisse.


The survey was conducted by Art Business Today on behalf of The Fine Art Trade Guild; more than 800 galleries across the UK were asked to name their best-selling prints (limited and open editions) in 2003.

Saturday, August 06, 2005

Ohio Arts Council Individual Excellence Awards Deadline Reminder

To: Ohio Artists
From: Ohio Arts Council’s Individual Creativity Office
Re: Upcoming Excellence Awards Deadline

The Excellence Awards Deadline, September 1, 2005, is fast approaching! This is the first year for applicants to apply online through the Ohio Arts Council’s Online Grant Applications System (OLGA.) Interested applicants must read the Excellence Awards Guidelines only available on our Web site at http://www.oac.state.oh.us/grantsprogs/guidelines/IndividualCreativity.asp. Once you have read the complete Guidelines for the program, visit OLGA at www.culturegrants-oh.org You submit your application through OLGA but you must still submit support materials by regular mail. Support materials must be received by 5:00 p.m., September 8, 2005. We cannot accept digital/electronic support materials at this time. Please contact us if you have questions about this upcoming deadline or any of the programs we offer for individual artists. E-mail us at IndividualCreativityOffice@oac.state.oh.us or call 614/466-2613.


Kathy Signorino
Coordinator
Individual Creativity
Ohio Arts Council
727 East Main Street
Columbus, Ohio 43205-1796
614/466-2613
Fax: 614/466-4494
1/888/243-8622
www.oac.state.oh.us



originally posted by Jerry Smith 7/7/05