Showing posts with label Art Inventory. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Art Inventory. Show all posts

Friday, February 9, 2024

Post 429: Artist Documents - What Do I Need?

Artist Documents - What Do I Need?

The day and the life of an artist consists of many things besides the joy of throwing paint around and washing their paint brushes, although that might be our favorite part. (The painting!) Some time must also be spent documenting what we do in some fashion, so some time is spent doing some office work, and promoting said art that is in the studio drying. Let's take a look at the documents that help organize, track and promote our art.

List of Artist's Documents

For some time now, the business side of creating art is both online and offline - for most artists. Having business documents that reflect your ART BUSINESS with a consistent message is an important part of your presentation. Some of the documents listed here are for the sharing, promotion and marketing of the art, some are for the record keeping and organizing (storage) of the art, and other documents are to simply track where and what happened to the art.

One of the most important aspects of your documentation is your consistency in branding for those documents viewed by the public. Your logo, colors, image(s), artist name, font, slogan - all of your marketing materials set your recognizable brand. Your presentation should always be consistent and professional - or "professionally artistic" and unique in your own way.

Typical Length of some of these documents is whatever the requestor specifies, so when submitting your documents for Calls for Art, Gallery requests, or applying for art jobs, be sure to note what they are asking for and in the format the guidelines that each opportunity specifies.

For Further Reading about Marketing and Documents:

lindsy-brown-RayksY1fReY-unsplash

Artist Resume - Short and Long Versions

All of the About the Artist details. Have several different variations of your Artist Resume on hand, you will need them depending on what the requestor needs. I like having a compact version and a longer version. Character limitations can vary greatly so ensure the most pertinent info is in the first sentence or two or paragraph, is keyword friendly for searches, and is not too "wordy". As the KISS rule goes - Keep It Simple, Silly - on target and to the point. 

Typical Length: 1 to 3 pages

Header: Your brand identifiers includes your logo, colors, font, your artist name
 
Artist Name
Contact Info 
Professional Summary/Statement
Work Experience
Education - Year, What, Where
Grants/Awards
Exhibitions - selected list
Gallery Affiliations
Collaborative Projects
Commissions
Collections
Publications: Media - Print, Radio, Television, Periodicals
Website Publications, Blogs
Residencies 

For Further Reading about Resumes:
 

Artist Statement/ Bio - Short and Long Versions

An artist statement is a short, very general "about you, what you make, and why you make it" in a "personal voice and message". Typically the statement is 3-4 paragraphs. A statement is something that many galleries request to include on a label, but is also what you can organically use when someone directly asks you what you do. Thus, this script could be memorized and recited as needed, as in an elevator pitch. Include:

Header: Your brand identifiers includes your logo, colors, font, your artist name (printed materials)
 
Say your artist name
What mediums you work with
Confidently explain why you are excited about what you do
How your unique creation process is important for what you make - if it is

Art Business Card

Typically 3.5x2 inches rectangle. A very important document for an artist is their business card, although it is usually the smallest document. I've been at galleries and someone wanted to contact an artist for something they admired and perhaps want to buy or commission a new piece. And sometimes there is a card and sometimes not for that artist. It not only allows you to hand them out for networking and followup, but represents you when you are not there physically.

Header: Your brand identifiers includes your logo, colors, font, your artist name

Your Name, Art Name
Mailing Address (optional)
Email
Phone 
Social Media Handles (optional)
Website Address
Options: Logo, Tagline, QR Code, Art Sample(s), Business Mission

Artist Postcard and Flyers

Larger than a business card, it is usually 4.25x6 inches and printed on the front and back and mail-able. Text should be short, sweet and to the point. The Postcard would work well for show announcements, notifications, reminders, handouts and of course, mailing.

Header: Your brand identifiers includes your logo, colors, font, your artist name
 
An exceptional image of your work
Artist Name, Painting Title, Medium
Website
Email Address
Phone Number
Photo of you, Artist Bio 
Postal Section (Mail To)
Stamp Area
 

Artist Curriculum Vitae

This document, also called a CV, is a formal, all inclusive professional record of the artist's experiences and artistic achievements. It is a key part of the artist's portfolio, especially if your destiny includes academia.
 
Typical Length: 3-4 pages

Header: Your brand identifiers includes your logo, colors, font, your artist name
 
Artist Name
Contact Details
    Address (optional)
    Phone
    Email
    Website
Education
Profession Experience
    Teaching Experience
Awards/Fellowships/Grants
Exhibition Record - solo, two-person and/or group
Commissions
Bibliography
Media - Print, Radio, Television, online, website, Blog
Author Publications
Workshops, Presentations, Lectures, Critiques
Collections
Other - Residencies, Services, Technical, Consulting, Organizations (memberships), Juried Exhibitions, Curated, Travel and Foreign Languages
Gallery Affiliations - client list
References
 

Artist Labels

The labeling of your art an important check list item that is often overlooked by artists when delivering art to the gallery. The information shown on a label at various galleries and art shows can differ in size and detail. The label helps to identify who the art belongs to, not only for the art visitors to read but when the gallery volunteers are hanging the art - to identify it. Sometimes art signatures on the face of the painting does not easily ID the owner, for instance when initials or a logo of some sort are used.

Labels can be business card size and up. Back labels can be customized by the artist, while Front labels are usually standardized for the art event.

Header: Your brand identifiers includes your logo, colors, font, your artist name
 
Artist Name
Nationality (Location)
Birth Date (optional)
Painting (Artwork) Title
Year Created - date of completion
Medium, Surface
Size (in inches, USA)
Price
Website
Contact

Label Notes: 
  1. Depending on where the art piece will be hung, the details to include and the order of the information is subject to change. Read the directions.
  2. "Mixed Media" is NOT a Medium! State what you created it with - type of paint and materials used.
  3. Label on the Back of the artwork is typically a MUST (and may be customized by you). A Label on the Front of the artwork is usually created by the gallery from the information you submitted for consistency throughout the art space.
  4. See Inventory Notes on Artwork Titles

 

Artist Certificate of Authenticity

A Certificate of Authenticity is a short statement of declaration by you that you ARE the creator of the art and is copyrighted by you. Many resources state to have a COA for every piece of artwork you have created.

Header: Your brand identifiers includes your logo, colors, font, your artist name

Artist Signature (hand signed)
Artwork Title
Date Created
Dimensions
Medium Details
Number of Prints, Edition Number
Contact Details (optional) 

Artist Press Release/ Press Kit

The Artist Press Release is how the artist shares (online and offline) newsworthy info about local art events or projects for themselves, their art group, or their art venue. The info is typically time sensitive with dates and times that are important announcements about exhibitions, art shows, new and exciting debuts, openings, art receptions, achievements and more.

Typical size: 300-500 words on one page
 
Header: Your brand identifiers includes your logo, colors, font, your artist name
 
Headline
Dateline - opening, duration, closing time
Artist/Art Show/Art Group Name
Title of Show
Location of Show
Any curator, supporters? - logos to include?
Price of Admittance? Free? 
Who to Contact for more information
 

The Press Release MUST include ALL of the who, what, when, where, why's and double and triple check EVERYTHING is correct before you submit the release.

 
For Further Reading on Press Releases:

Art Invoice/ Bill of Sale

The Artist Invoice documents the transaction purchase and payment between the Art Buyer and the Artist that created it. Artwork in hand is considered personal property with value - important for filing taxes and insurance.

Header: Your brand identifiers includes your logo, colors, font, your artist name
 
Dates
Contact Details
Invoice Number, Invoice Date, Invoice Due Date
From: Name, Address, Phone, Email
To: Name, Address, Email
Artwork Item Details
Description of Art or Art Service
Price (for each), Sub Totals, and Totals
Shipping Costs
Installation?
Tax
Terms and Conditions
    Method of Payment
    Payment Terms
Thumbnail of Work 
Followup and Next Steps


Art Commission and Other Contracts and Agreements

A commission is taken by a gallery or art group when art sells (typically 25-50% of the sale price) OR an art commission is when a potential art client requests an artist to create a special customized work for themselves. Here we are referring to the buyer wanting to hire and purchase an art piece from an artist. Of all our documents, this is the more complicated as it is for your protection as well as the client, and is a contract for the work.

It is important to remember that although a rough idea might be laid out when first contacted by a potential buyer, no work, listen to me...NO WORK should begin until an agreement is in hand, agreed upon, signed AND more importantly, 1/3 to 1/2 of the non-refundable quote is PAID. Paypal has the money and its being transferred to you, you have the deposit in your POS system, or the check has cleared. Do not turn over the commissioned artwork until PAID IN FULL.

Other Contracts and Agreements

    Licensing
    Loan
    Consignment

Header: Your brand identifiers includes your logo, colors, font, your artist name

For Further Reading about Commissions:


Your Artist Show, Competition and Exhibition Listing

Over time, an artist is not going to remember everything about every single art piece. Keep track of what shows you have entered, if you won something, feedback and notes. It is a chronological list of each show the artist has entered, whether it is juried or non-juried. The details should include the number of pieces and the art titles that were submitted, whether each was selected or not, and definitely the results of whether it sold or not.

Having artwork that has placed in an art show gives that piece bragging rights that should be noted. Celebrate every milestone! Being juried into prestigious art galleries and shows is something to celebrate as well. Press release, social posts, and some of your other documents on this blog post can all be updated with any of your accomplishments.

Some art shows do not want art resubmitted, so you will need to track this. Other art shows only want you to answer their Call for Art submissions with recently created work, from the last 2-3 years. So the artist needs to know what was shown where and when to avoid resubmitting a work or mistakenly entering older works.

Your Art Inventory

This is mostly for the artist, but really you do want to list out your complete works for many reasons. Think about all of the artwork you have created after a lifetime of being an artist - do you remember the details of every one of them? Where it is, what became of it, did I sell it, which one of this series is someone asking about? Things can start getting complicated rather quickly.
 
Header: Your brand identifiers includes your logo, colors, font, your artist name
 
Artwork Title
Inventory Number
Category - genre
Tags/Keywords - being seen starts with being found on the internet as an artist with art to show. What keywords will help that art be found?
Date Created
Medium - include any unique materials
Art Size - height, width and depth dimensions; art weight - with and without frame
Edition
Status - available, unavailable, gifted, destroyed, sold
Condition
Description
Expenses - cost of materials used
Price
Shipping Price
Location - sold, stored, or where its currently being shown, where it is currently stored.
Collection
Commission?
Framed - frame cost
Exhibition History
Notes

Inventory Notes:
  1. Lines do not get deleted from the Art Inventory list. If you created it, its on the list whether sold or not, destroyed or not. It is an ongoing record of all your work.
  2. Artwork Name - several gallery folks have noted that long artwork names are very difficult to add to the gallery labels for the artwork. Remember that business sized art label? You may want to consider to encapsulate the Artwork Name to a shorter version when submitting the piece to a show. 
  3. Occasionally artwork is gifted, donated, or destroyed. Some artwork may be not for sale (NFS), perhaps because the artist cannot part with it. Make those notes too and be sure you ALWAYS have quality photographs of all artwork.
For Further Reading about Inventory:
Artwork Inventory


Your Art Sales Register

In addition to the Art Inventory List, the Sales Register helps the artist know for tax purposes and tracks what happened to that art piece. Of course, the artist still has the copyrights to the image - prints can still be made and sold.

Header: Your brand identifiers includes your logo, colors, font, your artist name
 
Artwork Title
Inventory Number
Category - genre
Date Sold
Medium - include any unique materials
Art Size - height, width and depth dimensions, art weight
Status - sold
Condition
Description
Expenses - cost of materials used
Price - list price, sale price
Shipping Price
Location - where it was sold, how it was sold
Buyer
Buyer Address
Notes 


Other Documentation

Ensure that any of your printed or digital materials and online documents are consistently branded when they need to be.

Letterhead
Email Signature
Envelopes
Announcements
Notifications 
Budgets
Applications, Grant Applications, Awards
Bill of Sale/Appraisal - Artwork Valuation
Tax Records
Financial Records
Legal Documents
Business Planning
Press, Press Releases
Correspondence
Contact List - customers, agents, gallery owners, show producers, art festivals, art dealers
    Email Marketing List of Contacts
Art Suppliers, Vendors, Shippers Lists 
Personal Notes and Records of your creative processes and procedures
Scripts - often used talking points, email notifications
 
Image Files, Digital Images
Recordings, Slides, Tapes, DVDs, CDs 
Documentation of Your Studio (photo or video)

For Further Reading on Art Business:

And Some Final Thoughts on Documents

The best place to start? Usually at the beginning of your art career. Could you imagine trying to build an inventory list of your art after you have created hundreds or even thousands of art pieces?

For some of your art documents you will need keep a master copy with ALL relevant information and for all of you documents, compile a shorter version and save them clearly identifying Master and Shorter versions. It is also recommended to save a Word (quick updates) and a PDF Files.

Remember to back up your computers and save any online records keeping a separate storage option in case of computer failure. In other words, be aware of the need for multiple record keeping options and safe storage of your documents.

Depending on where you are in your artistic career - beginner to more advanced, you will be continually updating any of these documents to best reflect where you are and presumably, your growing artist inventory. So when you take a much needed break from throwing some paint at a canvas that day, head for your office and work on some updates for your art business documents as well.

What do you think, did I miss anything? Drop a comment below.


Author: Donna Liguria
Artistry Spin Blogmaster and an artist member of PWAS in Woodbridge, VA, specializing in acrylic painting. She paints landscapes, seascapes, animals and many subjects. Visit her Website at DonnaLiguriaArt.com, her Donna's Esty site and her Blog at Donna’s Cave Paintings.


Local Art: The Prince William Art Society is a 50+-year-old non-profit art group in PWC for the appreciation of fine art throughout the county and Northern Virginia. Visit us at any of our local art shows or join us for our monthly meetings - held on the 4th Monday of the month at the Tall Oaks Community Center at 12298 Cotton Mill Dr, Woodbridge, VA at 7:30pm

Want to join PWAS? Go to https://www.princewilliamartsociety.com/membership

Have an idea for a blog post? Are you a writer and want to help with the blog? Let me know! Thank you for visiting, and remember to Share, Follow, and Comment!

Friday, October 28, 2022

Post 251: Keep an Art Inventory and Tips

Art Inventory and Tips

How long have you been an artist? All of your long life or have you only been at it a few years now? Are you steadily cranking out some artwork every year? Do you keep an inventory of your artwork - on paper or on your computer?

Keep a Record of Your Body of Work

Do you know where to find your artwork if you are spread out at several art shows and galleries? Can you remember the size of a particular piece, what year it was created, or where you last saw it? Or goodness gracious, what if you forgot a piece was sold when you were trying to find it for some reason. 

It is just plain professional to keep track of your artwork life.

Photo by Bianca Fazacas on Unsplash 

The longer you wait to start, the harder the task will be. And you may not have a full list at some point if you do the "I'll get to it later" method.

I've found that Excel is one handy tool to have on your PC. And save your database of work in various places, even printed just in case of device failure. Google spreadsheets is another way to save your inventory or in the cloud. 

There is software you can pay for to inventory your artwork, which often has added perks but not everyone can afford that. Or just create your own system and log your own artwork as much as you have time to. Nonetheless, there is definitely some data that is mandatory to track.

What you will need to list:

Inventory ID
Photo
Artist(s) - just in case
Title
Size, Dimensions
Medium(s) - everything used on the piece
Techniques
Status - what's sold, gifted, donated, destroyed, not for sale (NFS), and what's available
Location
Price
 

Some additions could be:

Framed or unframed?
Commissioned? 
Certifications
Publications
Invoices
Condition, Edition, Category, Expenses/Costs
Who purchased it, when
What was the shipping costs?
Where did you sell it? At an art show, a gallery, on Etsy, or from your website?
Has the piece been in a competition, has it been juried? Did it win or was it accepted?

You will want to know the history behind the artwork, if it is sold or not, if possible who it is sold to, where it is now, and so much more. I would want to know the art shows I have had it at and when because you may not be able to resubmit it at all or for a period of time.

How important is it to inventory your art

I don't have a photographic memory and most of you do not either. If you are a hobbyist only, it may not be as important but there are people that started as a "hobby artist" then moved up from there. You may need to create a database of your artwork for press releases, galleries/museums, your website, social media, preparing for an exhibition of any sort or quite frankly, for your will.

If a gallery or collector contacts you for more information on your body or a series of work, you will need to have that information available.

Another reason to inventory your body of work is for you to see how far you have come. You shouldn't compare your artwork to someone else's, but you should see the improvements and changes you have made to improve.

Another aspect of your artwork tracking is to ID when it would be time to increase your pricing. If you are selling out too fast, there is your sign.

Artwork Photographs of Your Body of Work

You know you need high quality, high resolution photos of your artwork. You need them for prints, for your website(s), for submitting to galleries, for Calls for Art.

Important! Saving Your Photographs 

Now, STOP right there and pay attention. You need to SAVE the photographs so do it right from the start for each photo. When you are in the process of saving the File Name, format them properly. Get in the habit of saving for Jotforms and Calls for Art according to the art shows instructions. I've seen it listed both ways here:

Title of Painting_LastName-FirstInitial.jpg

LastName-FirstInitial_Title of Painting.jpg

Save yourself and any future JotForms (art submissions) and the people that have to sort your art entries some steps here. If I just save my photos without doing anything to the File Name, I will get something like this:

20220621_074025

The most you will understand from that "name" is that the Year is 2022, the month was June (06), the day was the 21st, and then it shows a long number. If you send that as an art submission, life is NOT easy for that person and you run the risk of rejection right out of the gate. There are times that it is much more helpful if this is the Title of the Painting followed by You Are the Artist so that your piece is labeled in an understandable way.

An alternative is to save them as LastName-FirstInitial_Title of Painting_Medium_Size for your own records. Example:

Liguria-D_No One Can Teach Riding So Well As A Horse_Acrylic_18x24.jpg

Much better right? I am the (1) artist, see the (2) name of the painting and niiiice, the (3) medium and (4) size, although the last 2 are not always necessary.

Liguria-D_No One Can Teach Riding So Well As A Horse.jpg

By the way, some folks hate it when a painting has a long name, they have to fit that on a label or list somewhere, but what can I say? Better than "Untitled", right? 

Your File System

Also of note is saving it on your computer. In speaking with other artists in our group, their ideas could be implemented as well.

  • Save high resolution, perfectly cropped and edited photos for Calls for Art and Prints to a separate folder and label the folder clearly.
  • Save lesser resolution photos for social media, and put a Watermark on them.
  • Save quality photos that are ready for printing in folders by size for printing
  • Keep your "Paintings in Progress" (PIP) separate from the better photos.

Create a Numbering System

Create your own method or look for suggestions, but this is how I do it. And I only just started in late 2020, inventorying my artwork. Good thing my mom still has some of my original stuff (oh my).

09A20AC - 09 is September, A is the first painting, 20 is the year, AC is Acrylic.

At the beginning of each year I restart the numbering system as 01A21AC and 01A22AC. I am currently up to:

10EC22ACM - 10 is October, EC is alphabetically how many I have created so far this year, 22 is the year, AC is Acrylic, M is Mini 

When I get to Z, the next painting is AA, AB, AC, etc. So you see, you can do it whichever way makes sense for you and your body of work. 

If you create invoices for your work, a numbering system comes in handy too.

There are plenty of options and ways to track your work, but the point is, get started. I would love to hear how you do it too.


REFERENCES

https://www.artworkarchive.com/blog/how-to-inventory-your-artwork

https://www.artworkarchive.com/blog/artist-how-to-do-a-studio-inventory

https://cerfplus.org/studio-protector/resources/how-to-take-an-inventory-of-your-art-studio/


Author: Donna Liguria
An artist member of PWAS in Woodbridge, VA specializing in acrylic painting. She paints landscapes, seascapes, animals and many subjects. Visit her Website at https://DonnaLiguriaArt.com & her Blog at https://donnascavepainting.blogspot.com/.

Local Art: Visit us at Stonebridge Open Space Arts at 15000 Potomac Town Center, Woodbridge, VA - Open Wed to Sat 12-7 and Sun 12-5
The Prince William Art Society is a 50-year-old non-profit art group in PWC for the appreciation of fine art throughout the county and Northern Virginia.

Want to know how to get involved at OSA? If you are an artist (18 or older) living in Prince William County, or a are a member of a PWC art group, you are welcome to get on our next art show's emailing list. Send it to us, OR come by the gallery to find out more.

Want to join PWAS? Go to https://www.princewilliamartsociety.com/membership

Thank you for visiting, and remember to Share, Follow, and Comment!