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To: DIRTYSECRET

As an artist, I call BS on her article. Artists think they shouldn’t have to “work” at being an artist. I look at my art career as a job.

I am the creator, marketer, logistics, framer all wrapped up in one. I work hard to put the miles on my brushes. Painting when I don’t feel like it or when there is no inspiration.

Since the advent of the internet, there hasn’t been a better time to be able to produce and sell artwork. I can reach the entire world with social media pages.

Collectors become more intimate with the artists. We don’t have to rely on middle-man galleries for example.

If you work hard and only sell a small $300 painting a day, that’s a good payout at the end of the year.

But it takes hard work and commitment. The most long term, successful artists I follow, are the hardest working of all.


51 posted on 12/21/2023 10:09:27 AM PST by wyokostur
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To: wyokostur
If you work hard and only sell a small $300 painting a day, that’s a good payout at the end of the year.

$80M a year good (weekdays). But where's the target audience for that? How many people are seriously gonna spend that much money on a painting or sculpture that, really, isn't that different from the 100s or 1000s of other artists selling the same stuff, to where even a significant number of artists can sustain themselves at that level (or even half of that)?

And for a painting to be worth that much, how much time and effort is required? Ten hours (netting $30/hr)? Twenty ($15/hr)? More? Yes, internet helps you find a wider audience, but it also helps buyers find a much wider market. If you can manage to develop a relationship with a collector, awesome!, but again, how realistic is that for your generic artist? You have to be actually good enough to make something they want, and have the luck to come across them to even have the opportunity for the sale / start of any potential relationship.

Sure, you, and a couple friends, might be putting in the work and effort required to find that audience and generate enough to sell, but in general most "artists" don't and can't. The sheer number of people with useless art degrees (not to mention those that do it without a degree), simply doesn't have sufficient support to do that, if even a small fraction of artists put in the effort.
57 posted on 12/22/2023 8:35:28 AM PST by Svartalfiar
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