Making the Most of Your Web Galleries and Shops
Over the years, I've met quite a few aspiring artists who keep on-line art galleries or art shops like I do and want a few tips on how they can get more people to pay attention to their art, and possibly get to a point where they actually sell prints on a regular basis or land commission jobs every so often. I always give them more or less the same few pieces of basic advice, so I figured a blog article on the subject might prove helpful to others in the future.
Evaluate Your Skills
Get serious about what you're doing. Take art classes. Study tutorials and practice, practice, practice. Ask other artists to critique your work, listen to their feedback, and follow their advice. Develop a personal style that makes your artwork distinctively yours and helps it stand out in its own way. Then once you get really good? Keep working and try to get even better. Artists who are really passionate about what they're doing never stop trying to improve.
Sites Where You Can Sell Your Work
- Deviant Art
- A community of artists and those devoted to art. Digital art, skin art, themes, wallpaper art, traditional art, photography, poetry / prose. Art prints.
- Imagekind
- An online art community for selling originals, limited edition prints of fine art and art uploaded by the member community.
- Lulu
- Lulu lets you publish, sell and print on demand books, e-books, online music, images, custom calendars and photo books.
- Zazzle
- Design and purchase custom t-shirts, custom mugs, posters, prints, cards, and postage online.
- Cafe Press
- Buy custom t-shirts, sweatshirts, bumper stickers and unique gifts from the CafePress.com Marketplace or create and sell your own designs on over 80 products in a free online store.
Books On Becoming and Staying Creative and Productive
Make A Statement
Introduce the viewer to your piece. You don't necessarily have to spell out the entire story behind it in minute detail, but many art lovers do like to hear what inspired you or read a few words about the mood you were trying to achieve. In many cases, the artist's statement has literally made the difference for me between connecting with a piece, and perhaps buying a print of it or recommending it to a friend, and simply shrugging and clicking on to the next one. Write something that will make people fall in love with your work.
However, you should never apologize for the quality of your work or imply that you don't think it's very good in an attempt to be humble. It's hard to really love a piece that you know even the artist himself doesn't love. If you aren't happy with your piece, don't post it until you are. If you are happy with it, introduce it with pride. You worked hard on it, it's a piece of you, and that's a really big deal.
Maximize Your On-Line Presence
Most people these days maintain some kind of on-line profile or blog on a social networking site like My Space or Live Journal anyway. Why not add a snazzy banner linked to your shop or a few clickable thumbnails of your work to yours? Perhaps devote a section of your profile to your art that includes a few blurbs about your inspiration or explains to people that you sell your work or take commissions. People who are interested will certainly click through and take a look.
Do you ever post to any on-line discussion forums? Include a link to your shop in your signature. People already interested in your contribution to the discussions may want to know more about you and follow it out of genuine interest in what you do.
Blog about your art on occasion the same as you would anything else you were interested in, and share new pieces that you are proud of. Your readers are there because they are interested in you and your life, so they will be glad to see it, and you never know who might decide it's exactly what they wanted for their living room wall. You win... they win... everyone's happy!
Books On Selling and Marketing Your Art and Ideas
Charge For Your Work
While it's completely up to you whether or not you want to give out prints as the occasional gift to your customers or lend your services to a specific project that you want to be part of for its own sake, the sooner you start to think of your artwork as a product that should be worth money to those interested in owning a piece of it, the better. You work hard on your art, and you pour a lot of effort and energy into it. You are just as entitled to expect people to pay you for your time and labor as anyone else, so charge for your work, and charge consistently. Why would people expect to pay for something when they know they can probably convince you to just give it to them for free?
Take It Into Real Life
If you've ever purchased any of your own prints, you are probably well aware that an image on a computer screen doesn't do justice to the quality and detail involved in your artwork. Giving people the opportunity to see your work in living color right in front of them will allow them to see it in all its glory and increase its chances of selling. Plus, there's just something about getting to actually hold an object in your hands and be able to take it home with you right then if you fall in love with it. You never know who might fall in love with one of your creations.
Keep Growing
Software and Equipment for Digital Artists
Fun Stuff For Artists On Cafe Press
Reader Feedback
|
SusanR
I like the you have written this lens, its very helpful, practical and well put together. Posted June 02, 2008 |
|
PennyEverhart
Thank you for sharing the information. It was helpful and informative. Posted April 23, 2008 |
|
ThomasC
I like the work you have put into this lens! Great Job, I gave you 5 stars and favorite it as well! Posted April 10, 2008 |
|
flicker
Excellent lens! Lots of good advice here. Posted January 20, 2008 |
![The Artist's Way: A Spiritual Path to Higher Creativity [10th Anniversary Edition]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51CHAK9ASCL._SL75_.jpg)









![Corel Paint Shop Pro X [OLD VERSION]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51GWB0QBFNL._SL75_.jpg)
![Corel Painter Essentials 3 Win/Mac [Old Version]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/516VGY0G6FL._SL75_.jpg)
![Adobe Photoshop CS3 [OLD VERSION]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/41Yn29U8lYL._SL75_.jpg)


