Approaching a Gallery
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Approaching a Gallery
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Images of Work Invest in a professional portfolio filled to the brim with beautifully laid out colour photography on a black background. Don't walk into the gallery with a handful of snapshots. Sending Biography and Visuals Research and Make Appointments Pop in regularly to your local galleries, or research on the internet, to get an idea of the kind of designers they display, and the style and quality of work on show. Keep in Touch It is especially important that the gallery can see how serious you are about your work, how it develops in style and that you are still exhibiting and producing work 2-5 years later. Make sure your work is unique and difficult to duplicate. Keep your own dated designs and patterns and own the copyright to them. Don't give up. There's someone out there who will like your work. When you find gallery owners who are crazy about your work, stick with them. When you have an offer of a show Check on the gallery/artist percentage agreement when calling each gallery. Your price to the public must be calculated based on this. Charge what the work is worth! Check around with other artists represented by the gallery, asking them about promptness of payment by the gallery. Be businesslike in all dealings. Prepare a contract, if the gallery does not have one, to cover mutual expectations. It should include who does what, e.g., mounting of the work, invitations to the opening, opening night, payment terms, artist's residual and resale rights, etc. Don't be a pain to the gallery owner. Don't pester. If you have to be anxious about the show, do it privately. Enjoy the opening night! |


