Art marketing 101
Suzie Harrison
Yesterday marked the official summer opening of Gallery 821.
The gallery is an off-campus exhibition center for the Laguna College
of Art & Design, exhibiting paintings, sculptures, drawings and animation
cells created by the students.
“It is a juried process by the faculty of the students’ submissions to
ensure quality and consistency of work,” said the school’s President Alan
Barkley.
Faculty advisors Michael Jacques and Betty Shelton said that the goal
was to give students a real-world learning tool.
Teaching students to move more in the direction of real life, the
artist’s can gain experience on selling their work and the emotional part
of letting it go.
“It’s always a dilemma. They’ve learned plenty about creating but the
hard part is for them to learn to let go, see themselves as sellers and
patrons as clients,” said Jacques.
Most of the students aren’t taught how to sell their own work and are
used to gaining praise and good grades as opposed to money.
“Price determination is part of the learning process, encouraging
students to add how much they have put into framing, materials, time,”
said Shelton.
The students come in with a lot of talent and grow through their
education, while being immersed with different gifted students.
Sophomore student Geanna Anstey is helping with the exhibition through
administration, designing and printing information postcards about the
gallery and contacting students to bring in their work.
“It’s been a very good experience because I have a background in
business and tend to be very organized,” Anstey said. “Now I get to apply
real world functions combining my business world with my newfound art
world.”
The students do rotations for eight weeks of the summer and as the
pieces are sold new art is added. Barkley believes that the students will
be pretty busy during the summer replacing pieces of already sold work.
“It gives them the confidence to sell their work, if they are good
they realize their work will sell,” Barkley said.
“The collectors really make a difference in the artist’s life. They’re
the audience and without the audience they have nothing,” said Jacques.
FYI
Gallery 821 WHERE: 891 Laguna Canyon Road in Festival Center, between the Sawdust
Festival and Art-a-Fair.
PHONE: 376-1714.
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