Money
A fun quote:
"Money frees you from doing things you dislike. Since I dislike doing nearly everything, money is handy." Groucho Marx
A fun quote:
"Money frees you from doing things you dislike. Since I dislike doing nearly everything, money is handy." Groucho Marx
27 April, Icograda's anniversary, was designated World Graphics Day in 1995. It is an opportunity to recognise communication design and its role in the world.
On this occasion, designers reflect and hope that our international network can contribute to a greater understanding between people and can help to build bridges where divides and inequities exist.
Join Icograda this year in promoting what it means to 'lead creatively' in our global community.
Art and Progaganda by Milton Glaser. There is nothing else for me to say except read it for yourself. Found via icograda.
The art industry has, in the past, been quite slow to jump aboard the Internet bandwagon. Once considering it too pedestrian, many museums and galleries are now embracing new media and are seeing the positive results of opening up their artistic arms to the greater public. Museums, galleries and artists alike are now all agreeing that a website is not a fad and is a major component in their business collateral. You will not likely find a museum that hasn't spent several thousands dollars on a website and online marketing/advertising. In doing so, these organizations are clearly finding the investment is justified.
Yet, there are many who simply resist participating in what can be a very valuable and powerful outreach tool. I must admit, I really don't understand this mindset. A recent conversation with a client once again causes me to reflect on what exactly is the value of new media in the art industry and how is it best harnessed to bring about a favorable ROI.
Now I could talk here until I'm blue in the face about all the benefits of new media for the art industry.... or any business for that matter. As a person who deals on a daily basis with artists, galleries and art organizations, I frequently find myself in the mist of conversation debating the value of online marketing. I could tell you that there are buyers and collectors of fine art that actually have "monthly Internet purchasing budgets." I could tell you that gallery directors regularly search the Internet for art news, exhibition reviews and art work. Museums not only are investing in websites but they are also taking innovative approaches at using the Internet to build their in-person attendance. Let's take a look at the facts and figures.
News24.com, published on article on March 28, 2008, Web Boost for Museums. The article talks about how museums are finding that sculpture and art once stored away, is now finding a new audience online. Now able to show these works on their websites, the museums are finding "that rather than diminishing the number of museum visits, the web is actually boosting in-person attendance."
Offering more than just information on museum hours and driving directions, these institutions are now seeing the beauty of providing their inventory to visitors who may never be able to actually get to the museum. The person in Connecticut can now access the wonderful works and resources of a museum in London....or Sydney... or Cleveland. A gallery in London can pursue the work of an artist in New York. News24.com reports via The Institute of Museum and Library Sciences, that Internet users actually go visit the museum 2.6 times more than those who don't. The ILMS further reports on Feb 28, 2008:
But you can't just build a website and hope the people will come. You can't bemoan the value of the Internet if you are not willing to take the time and effort to build your online business collateral. It sounds strange but this wonderful online marketing tool known as your website or blog, must be marketed as well. Submitting your URL to third party sites, utilizing email campaigns, advertising your domain name and offering quality content is what will create a successful online presence. It takes time, money and creativity. This is a journey not a sprint.
BizReport's Kristina Knight, and The US Email Marketing Forecast, reports that email marketing is expected to rise by 75% by 2012 and to reach $1.2B. That's a pretty impressive number. Email marketing, while it still has its issues, works because it's quick and results can be tracked and analyzed within hours. Its geographic outreach is vast. And instead of waiting days for a postal direct mail campaign to deliver results, galleries, artists and museums can reach out to recipients immediately. Additionally, it's cost effective. The price of postage and postcard or brochure printing for every announcement can get pretty costly.
Setting up and participating in a blog is a very effective way to drive Internet traffic to your website and thus increase sales and recognition. The effect of a blog is cumulative because the posts you create are published online immediately (via RSS) and stay online FORVER. Jim Spadaccini at Ideum reports that museum blogging is now mainstream. In a post dated October 18th, 2007, Jim discusses the findings he compiled for a conference at the Association of Science-Technology Center. His findings showed 211 blogs were listed in the Museums Blogs directory. By the time he returned from the conference he was surprised to find that 20 new museums had submitted to Museum Blogs. His findings were already (only 10 days later) quite dated.
While this article focuses mainly on Museums and the Internet, these findings should provide a basis for establishing the Value of the Internet in the Arts Industry. Artists and galleries should not only follow this lead but also apply the principals of online marketing and promotion to their own businesses. In December 2004, Pew Internet published a report "Artists, Musicians and The Internet." The report states that artists and musicians "have embraced the Internet as a tool that helps them create, promote, and sell their work." The report goes on to say "Artists and musicians on all points of the spectrum from superstars to starving singers have embraced the internet as a tool to improve how they make, market, and sell their creative works. They use the internet to gain inspiration, build community with fans and fellow artists, and pursue new commercial activity." Of those participating in the Pew report, 23% of all online artists and 41% of Paid Online Artists say the internet has helped them in their creative pursuits and careers.
It is my hope, that this post in some way encourages the art community to take better advantage of the Internet for marketing and promotion. It just seems to make perfect common sense to me. Additionally there are great resources for inspiration, creativity, learning, outreach and community. While I deeply understand that artists really just want to do what they are most compelled to do, create art, to simply dismiss the power of the Internet and its benefits to the arts would be a grave mistake.
At this time, Jim Spadaccini is requesting museum feedback on a survey he is conducting at Ideum. The folks at Ideum are in the process of writing their first National Science Foundation grant proposal to fund Open Exhibits, a project that will allow them to develop, test, and disseminate three open source software templates that will allow museum professionals’ to assemble electronic exhibits for the museum floor. If you are a museum professional, please take a few minutes to complete the survey — and please help spread the word about it. It will take about 20 minutes and Ideum will share the results with everyone who participates. They will also keep you updated about the status of Open Exhibits.
Useful Links:
Museums and The Web - The international conference for culture and heritage online
Musematic
MuseumBlogs.org
Being involved in the day to day routines of running our business, we often forget how many valuable resources there are online that can help us out, network us, or educate us. Some of these are so obvious that we take them for granted.
This month I purchased a new MAC and updated my software so I'm on the receiving end of numerous Adobe and Apple newsletters. Having most likely unsubscribed to these in years past (I was just too darn busy to read newsletters, right?) I realize what a mistake that was.
2008, as readers here might remember, I declared as the year to expand my business and my skill sets. So I've been reading the newsletters and here is one resource I've found really helpful:
Adobe Online Seminars: OnDemand. You'll find valuable audio/visual seminars on all the Adobe products and information on how to best use them. The seminars are also topic oriented and will provide visual step by step instruction on topics such as CSS, HTML, Spry, Flash, Developing mobile content, Photoshop etc. Samples of seminars are: Photoshop CS3 and Dreamweaver to Design Websites, Flash 101 for Video Professionals, Independent Filmmaking, Sustainability and Printing, Quark to InDesign, Adobe Bridge for Print Professionals, InDesign In Depth, Color Management, and literally hundreds of others. The Design Center also offers an RSS on seminar events. eSeminars are also provided live and offer the ability to interact with the instructor. I've taken a few of these tutorials/seminars and they are excellent. Each one took about an hour. I sat at my desk, viewed the seminar on my computer screen and was still available to pause the thing if an important call came in. Best of all, I feel that every day I view a seminar I'm working toward my goals of developing my skill sets.
Hi All. It seems that whenever things get busy here at DFB the posts on ArtLOOK slow to a near halt. I'm sorry about that. Spring is the busiest time of year for not only the art business but for design as well. Despite the onslaught of work here at the studio, it was a priority to update and redesign my own design house.
Please meet the new Dragonfly Blu. DFB has a brand new ID and look. It is a bit more edgy and bold but also decidedly feminine and clean. New portfolios contain updates to recent work, photography, and the new Client and Designer Bill of Rights. Feedbacks from my recent email campaign has been great so thank you all for those comments and kind thoughts.
I've done some organizational work here at ArtLOOK as well. You will see that the blog has been divided into 3 columns. Recent posts and categories appear at the top of the page for easy reference. Websites, blogs and resources have been combined simply into Design Resources and Art Resources. Only the best resources appear here. Outdated or unmaintained sites and blogs will not appear in this list.
Lisamikulski.com has also been redefined. Expanded art management and marketing services for Artists and Galleries include:
Ok... This is the silliest thing I've seen in a long time! It had me laughing so hard I woke the kids up.
Found via Design Observer
Part of my responsibilities as an Art Manager is to ensure that my artistic clients are able to do what they do best... create art. So when one of my best clients calls me to say he's overwhelmed by incoming emails and can't focus on studio work... it's a problem. It's my problem.
Here are some of the actions I'll put in place to ease the onslaught on this artists inbox:
1. I inform the client that I will only send him 1 email per week. On a Friday. That email will summarize the weeks activities until the time the client and I meet face to face for a brain storming session. The once a week emails will also serve as an agenda for any upcoming meeting. I tell the client that should he receive an email from me on say...Tuesday, it is because I absolutely need a response to an issue.
2. I set up an alternative email address to filter all non specific emails coming in from our marketing efforts. This will eliminate spam, newsletters, and misc crap from his personal email inbox. As his webmaster I will review all these emails and alert him to only those which are relevant.
3. We set up special categories to filter and sort his inbox for art suppliers, membership organizations, buyers and personal. In this way, as his incoming email is downloaded to his local computer it is sorted and categorized and put in the appropriate folder. He is able to distinguish by an alert which emails are priority and which emails can wait a day (or two) for a reply.
4. I advise the client to check email only once a day... preferably either before he starts his studio time in the morning or after his studio work is done at the end of the day. This may sound obvious but even the best of us can fall into the trap of checking email several times a day.
I'm a bit puzzled. I've been reading A LOT in the last few weeks and of course I'm a big fan of graphic design publications, Taschen being one of my most favorite. While reading Graphic Design for the 21st Century and Contemporary Graphic Design, I noticed that many of the Designer's commentaries were all in attempt to define "What is Graphic Design?" There were, in fact, so many designers defining their idea of graphic design that I began to wonder if Taschen had specified this question in its request for materials in putting the publication together. I was a little disappointed because in buying these beautiful books I really wanted to read something more substantial from these designers. Ok... The work displayed is fantastic and inspirational but after all, I'm a graphic designer and I already know what it is I do for a living and what the mission and intent of graphic design is and why it is that I love graphic design. Charlotte and Peter Fiell do an excellent job in their introductions to both books but I really wanted to know more from the designers themselves. For instance: How did you solve a particular challenge? What are your thoughts on designing for a global audience? I guess I wanted a Debbie Milman interview!
Eric Kajaluoto wrote recently about style. His opening sentence reads "Design is such a multi-layered practice that it’s often difficult to define. That being said, I believe that the word “design” is increasingly confused with “style”. For example, to most “I like the way it’s designed” means that they like the way that something looks."
Veerle Pieters recently ran a "What is Graphic Design" poster contest. Her readers submitted some really great design work and Veerle did a marvelous job in sorting thru all those entries and setting up Flickr for submission.
Now, however, I have to ask... WHAT THE HELL IS UP WITH ALL THE DEFINING? Do we not have a clue what it is we are doing and therefore need to clarify it for ourselves? Perhaps our attempts at definition is to educate our clients or potential clients? Perhaps we are attempting to inform the general public? I don't know...
I am a graphic designer and I read mostly art and design magazines, blogs and publications. I read these things to get inspired, informed, to learn, to grow, and to become a better designer. I know this type of question comes up pretty frequently in art circles as well, "what is art?" and the old debate about "art for art sake" etc. But I don't think for instance construction workers, architects, concert pianists, musicians etc... regularly define their jobs or their career roles. What makes art and design different? What say you?
I woke up this morning in a "kick the cat" type of mood. Sure could have used some happiness in a bottle, but hey... I didn't know they actually sold the stuff. Sure enough, it seems they do. Check this out.
It would appear that our happy little :) now has it's own line of beauty care. Smiley has been made into a line of aromatherapy "anti stress perfumes." The Happy Therapy Center, refers to it's product as "a psycho-tonic" (psycho tonic??...boy these guys are gonna get rich!) resulting from advanced scientific research. Text on the site goes on to say:
"To conclude this new mission, smiley developed an active scent, able to give their smile back to the most stubborn... morose spirits breathe in deeply! This contagious good mood is on its way to conquer the world. No one knows who will be able to stop smiley in its exhilarating crusade! A smile for everyone."
"smiley contains monoaminated alkaloids having a pharmacodynamic action called phenylethylamine and theobromine. (huh? Whatever, if it makes me happy, I'll take it... and several more bottles for my friends, please!) Phenylethylamine is to passion what endorphin is to love. It sets off a feeling of joy, excitement and euphoria. (Cool...sign me up.) Theobromine blocks the receivers of adrenalin and thus decreases the effects of stress by a comfortable feeling of wellbeing. These two cardiotonics associated together dope vitality and sets up the moral. It's that simple!" (of course it is... why didn't someone think of this before?)
There is smiley eau de toilette, eau de parfum, deodorant, therapeutic bath, rubbing body friction, and body gel all designed to "activate happiness." Wow... I feel better already just writing about this stuff! :)
See the entire smiley brand collection at SmileyCollection.net
Buy your own bottle of happiness at Happy Therapy.
Smiles here provided by Josh Spear
