A Site for Emerging Artists
Posts tagged Painting
Fine Art becomes Rug Design/Interview with Danielle David Grinnen
Mar 2nd
By Carolyn Edlund
AS: You started out as a painter. How did you get involved with rug design?
DG: A common thread in my life has been an innate love for color, texture and balance. I have always enjoyed vivid color combinations, creative use of texture and an intrinsic sense of balance in all of nature.
In college, as I took painting, design and art history classes I began to consciously realize that I saw the world with an artist’s eye. I began to find the use of painting with texture an intuitive and vibrant, unexpected colors together essential to my work as an artist.
This love for balance, color and texture translated into my design work for Randall J. Kipp Architecture in Irvington, Virginia. All throughout working in interior design, I continued pursuing my own creativity. Having sourced many area rugs for clients, I was intrigued by the way that the color and texture of rugs lent itself to painting. So in 2004, I began researching having area rugs made.
AS: Could you tell us about the rug weaving industry in South East Asia, and why you work with the GoodWeave organization?
DG: I wanted my rugs to be beautifully handmade of quality materials. As I researched, I found there was a lot of corruption in the rug industry with exploitative child labor. Essential to my work was that people were treated fairly and the making of each rug was done with integrity from start to finish. I found out about the RugMark USA foundation that certifies rugs with the GoodWeave label and its quest to end child labor in the rug industry of South East Asia. GoodWeave offers a holistic approach to the problem of child labor.
In the summer of 2005, I began Deliante Designs LLC and proudly became a licensee of RugMark so each of my rugs carries the Good Weave certification label. Thus began my work with a wonderful carpet mill in Kathmandu, Nepal and started the making of my paintings into hand knotted carpets in the Tibetan weave.
AS: How does the process of ordering custom rugs work?
DG: Modern design meets ancient craft. The collaborative process of creating a custom rug begins with a simple conversation about the space that the rug will reside-color, size, style, and concept. I may go to your space for inspiration or just receive images from you if the place is far away. Then I will go back to my studio and create design ideas by painting and drawing; this usually takes two to three weeks.
The designs are presented and together we can tweak design ideas. We choose colors, materials, pile height, size and knot count. Deliante Designs rugs are created of beautiful materials such as Tibetan wool, Chinese Silk, hemp, nettle, Pashmina wool and New Zealand Wool. A strike off, usually a 2’ x 2’ foot section of the rug, can be made to be sure that the color and design is exactly right.
After the final design is confirmed, a contract is signed. The design is sent to my carpet mill in Nepal where the materials have been hand carded, hand spun and are ready to be hand dyed to the colors we have chosen. The rug is hand knotted on the loom by expert adult artisans. I keep you apprised during this entire process all the way to its arrival to your space.
AS: How have you marketed your work?
DG: Though the business side of the art world is notoriously elusive for artists, the intuitive, problem-solving aspects of the creative mind make
having an artist-run business a real possibility. Every marketing attempt has been a constant learning process to make the entire business work.
I have participated in trade shows on the East and West coasts. My rugs appear in major home magazines such as “Dwell” and “Architectural Digest” and in more regional magazines like “Virginia Living”. Recently, I have found making phone calls and sending emails to architectural and design firms has given me inroads, getting opportunities to present my rugs to groups of architects and designers and in smaller one-on-one settings. When people actually see, walk on and touch the rugs, they sell themselves.
AS: What resources have you used that helped take your business to the next level?
DG: One of the most helpful and recent resources that I have found is the Right Brain Business Plan (RBBP) by Jennifer Lee of Artizen Coaching. Click here to visit Artizen Coaching. In spring 2009, I took the eight-week RBBP
teleclass put on by Jennifer Lee and Ariane of SmARTtist. Previously, I created a very left-brained business plan by talking to friends, accountants, bankers and working with the Small Business Association in my area. This initial plan was helpful at the time to acquire funds to have sample rugs made and other start up costs, but I was in dire need of a refreshed look at Deliante Designs. RBBP was exactly what I needed to allow me to work from my creative, intuitive strengths to create a visual business plan that really spoke to where my business is headed now. Click here to view more details
A few other blogs that I have found particularly helpful:
The Art of Nonconformity by Chris Guillebeau inspires me to live in a way that allows for creativity, business and caring for other people.
White Hot Truth by Danielle LaPorte pushes me to unashamedly promote myself and my business.
Rug Materials and Vocabulary:
- Tibetan wool has extremely high lanolin content because the wool comes from sheep that reside in the high altitude of the Himalayan Mountains making it incredibly lustrous, naturally stain resistant and highly durable because of its high lanolin content.
- Hemp and Nettle are derived from plants and very durable.
- Pile Height- length of the material from the knot to the where it is cut. 4mm, 6mm, 8mm and 10 mm are common pile heights
- Materials- Tibetan wool, Chinese silk, Hemp, Nettle, Pashmina wool, New Zealand wool, banana silk, etc.
- Knot count- number of knots per square inch. 60, 80, 100, 150+ per square inch.
- Vegetable Dyes- Eco-Friendly dyes have been used for thousands of years to create beautiful colors. These dyes create variation in the color allowing each rug to be unique. Expect a 5% variation in the color.
- Swiss Chemical Dyes- Metal free dyes that create very precise color.
- Color Choices – POM boxes with hundreds of colors to choose from as well as the opportunity to match any fabric or paint swatch.
Superb Branding and Strategies/Interview with Calligrapher Ken Brown
Feb 27th
By Carolyn Edlund
Artsy Shark recently had the privilege of speaking with Ken Brown, a native Oklahoman with a delightful drawl and easy manner. He is a humble man, yet the name “Ken Brown” is a powerhouse in the art market. Ken Brown calligraphy sets and instruction books have sold for many years, and his series of televised calligraphy instruction classes have been shown around the world. Ken and his wife Gail (a watercolor artist) have partnered on creating prints which have sold many millions of copies.
AS: Ken, you started out with a passion for calligraphy and a lot of determination. Could you give a short history of how you began your business?
KB: In the third grade, I learned cursive writing.I felt it was a curse. Hated every minute at first. From there on, my appreciation for pretty penmanship grew. In college, a lettering assignment in architectural design got a grade of B minus. It became a defining moment in my life. It was SO defining, I flunked out of college; all my studies suffered while I practiced calligraphy. After 11 years in various jobs and moonlighting calligraphy, I went full time out of a spare bedroom. From that gutsy move, I hustled and found that I could earn more by lettering a poem and selling copies.
AS: What is a “distribution source” and how has it catapulted your business into a highly successful venture?
KB: It began with a small crafts shop near our home. The owner bought
copies of my lettered poems, quotes, etc., that I had produced at a local commercial printer. I then purchased a small ad in a national trade magazine going to similar stores nationwide. That exposure brought responses and orders from distributors of crafts materials. They purchased larger quantities and resold to retailers. Within a year we were selling many, many thousands of prints monthly and shipping to stores all over the U.S.
Six years later, after exhibiting our prints in art shows across the country, the nation’s major manufacturer of calligraphy pens, inks, and papers offered a lucrative proposal for me to write an instruction book for them. I wrote the book for the company, Hunt Manufacturing in Philadelphia, PA, became their spokesperson in 1977, and then had instant distribution of my name and products internationally. For the next 18 years I sold books to Hunt and traveled widely for the company. In 1985 they sent my wife and me to Norway on a two week teaching junket. The Norway distributor for Hunt products set up 12 teaching and demonstration sessions at schools and professional graphics firms in five Norwegian cities.
AS: You keep moving with your product lines and your methods as you develop your business. Could you talk about how this has enhanced your career, and why it’s important?
KB: More business facets equal more customers. From the beginning, I’ve tried to take calligraphy in many directions and uses. In 1974 I wrote a poem, printed copies, and sold them with an item, as a gift for baby showers. We sold them briskly through specialty magazine ads and that, later, brought new customers to awareness of my calligraphy prints and supplies. At the same time, we were creating decals for china painters, self-adhesive decals with sayings for decoupage and rub-on transfers of entire poems and quotes for framing. Several years later, through Plaid Enterprises in Atlanta, GA, we developed a line of rubber stamps, a line of Ken Brown calligraphy markers, a layout template, and numerous other calligraphy-related products.
AS: What advice on branding would you give to others starting in business?
KB: Just after the pen manufacturer published my first book, I developed a beginner’s kit with an instruction booklet. That spawned opportunities to broaden the product line. It was necessary to get my name connected with as many products and promotions as possible. I’ve never been shy about putting a ‘face’ on my work. It makes the customer and prospect feel they are dealing with a real human being. There was never a real Betty Crocker, yet the name and an image has appeared on zillions of products and cookbooks for decades, and still does. Often I’ll visit a website of an artist or specialist and never see a photo of the person. I’m always amazed. You’ll find that branding yourself in your own way with your own products and promotional materials will pay great dividends.
I’m the first to admit, I’m not the best calligrapher….by a long shot. But I’ll also admit, my name is probably the best known in the field of calligraphy because I’ve strived to achieve recognition for good work and to be known for it. I’m often still recognized by strangers who purchased my books long ago . . . even though my hair is a bit thinner now. Certainly, I was fortunate to have caught the attention of the Hunt company when I did. I worked hard for years to be recognized in all my efforts and that paid off. Without that branding and my photo on my products from the very beginning, I’d be among the world’s ‘good calligraphers’ struggling to get myself known and wondering why it doesn’t happen.
AS: Please tell us about your newest technique of engraving, who you are working with and how you are marketing.
KB: In 1992 I was teaching calligraphy at a California art symposium. I met a dentist who told me I should get a dental drill and learn to do calligraphy with it. Sounded strange but I got one and taught myself. It became the biggest change yet in using my calligraphy. Doing calligraphy with a dental drill has broadened my “palette” enormously. No longer tethered to paper and parchment, now I can apply my calligraphy to hundred of items and surfaces. I’m marketing my skills at www.kenbrown.com and through exposure like Artsy Shark.
AS: You have a teaching program for people who want to learn calligraphic engraving. How does this work?
KB: Prospective students, who have visited our site, call us for additional
info. When they enroll, they receive a packet of laminated sheets with the letters to practice and learn. With soft lead pencil and tracing paper, they learn the strokes before coming to class to learn them with the drill. We do several projects on various surfaces. They learn layout and all is totally hands-on. I teach with a digital camera and projector so students see everything on a large screen in the workshop room.
AS: How do people proceed if they want to learn your unique skill?
KB: They call (214) 250-6958 and enroll with a credit card. Seminars are usually held in McKinney, Texas, near Dallas but if there are at least 10 students in any other U.S. location, we’ll take the Seminar there. Published prices will change depending upon location and number of students.
AS: Why would anyone want to learn hand-engraving? Aren’t there engraving services in many stores?
KB: About 80% of my day-to-day business comes from engraving stores who cannot engrave what people bring them; they give the customer my card. There are so many items that traditional engravers, even those with laser systems, cannot fit into their machines. The items must be hand-engraved. Also, at the many in-store events where I engrave wine bottles, fragrance bottles, knives, guns, crystal, and other items, ONLY a hand-engraver could accomplish the task of personalizing several hundred items in an 8 hour event. And, finally, day rates range from $600.00 to $1500.00 per 8 hour event for those of us who hand-engrave in stores. That’s probably the biggest reason, for the few of us who do, we wanted to learn hand-engraving.
Want to Rock Your Online Art Sales?
Feb 26th
By Carolyn Edlund
Want to sell more of your artwork online? Check out Artybuzz, a UK-based website which lets you offer your images as prints, posters or . . . . wallpaper? Yes! Imagine transforming a room with your artwork floor to ceiling. Artybuzz founder Richard Wilde gives details.
AS: What do you offer, and how do you do it?
RW: Artybuzz.com is an online artists community where we offer a simple and hassle free service to all our customers. Artists simply upload the image of the work they want to sell, set their price and then we handle the rest. Artists can choose to sell their work as giclee art prints, mounted prints, canvas art prints, t shirts and more. Once a piece of art is purchased, we handle payment, manufacture and distribute the products. We then send our artists their earnings based on the price they set to sell at.
It’s a very simple system and means that any artist looking to get started with selling their work can have a great online platform to do it on, especially if they don’t have a website.
Anyone who wants to take advantage of this service simply needs to go to www.artybuzz.com to create their own free profile.
AS: How do you make Artybuzz a user-friendly site?
RW: Artybuzz is very easy to use. We have tested and tested it, and have also made changes and modifications to the website as people bring up issues or suggestions they have. This means our website is constantly improving and getting better each week.
We also have a good search system. Unlike other websites doing a similar thing, we split our genres of art up. So paintings, photography, illustration and others are separate from each other, which means people can find exactly what they want to view and buy. This also stops photography from taking over as it often does on other websites.
AS: What other features can artists use on your site?
RW: Artybuzz has many other features, including the ability to comment on work and have their work commented on, meaning valuable feedback can be given and received.
Artists can also follow and favorite other artist’s work, and have the same done to their own. This means a large online following can be created.
Another great feature is the ability to create and add work to groups. Anyone can create or add work to a specific group, for example, ‘landscape photography’ and ‘coastal paintings’ are two groups. Anyone can create a group which gives them increased exposure, as well as allowing a place to be created that highlights the kind of work they love. Finally, artists can advertise their events and exhibitions for free on Artybuzz.
AS: Tell us about the mural wallpaper that you produce.
RW: The mural wallpaper is a unique product that we produce at Artybuzz.com. No other print-on-demand service in the world does this as far as we know. This service basically means that anyone who uploads an image to Artybuzz (as long as it is big enough) can both sell and buy their work as wallpaper, or as a huge mural wallpaper piece. We’re very excited about this product as it is new on the market and extremely sought after. We use real wallpaper which is both fire resistant and wipe proof.
Artists, have you used Artybuzz? Let us know your experience!
Blue Ocean Strategy for Artists/Interview with Ann Rea
Feb 18th
By Carolyn Edlund
Ann Rea paints vibrant and light-filled canvases depicting the California Wine Country. Her artwork and her success are far from ordinary, and she has planned it that way. With a background in both art and business, Ann used smart strategies and marketing skill to launch a very profitable career. She continues to develop her business and has decided to write a book on marketing fine art. Ann coaches and consults with selected artists from across the globe, some of whom will be profiled in her book, which you can see at ArtistsWhoTHRIVE.com. Ann spoke with us recently about how she achieved her success, and offers her insights.
AS: What is a “blue ocean strategy” and how did you use this as an artist?
AR: Blue Ocean Strategy: How to Create Uncontested Market Space and Make Competition Irrelevant is a business book written by W.
Chan Kim and Renée Mauborgne. It promotes creating new market space or “Blue Ocean” rather than competing in an existing industry. By creating unique value one eliminates the competition and swims in a blue ocean versus competing and swimming with the sharks in a red ocean of blood. I didn’t even know that what I had created had a name until about three years after I started my business.
What I did know was that marketing and sales 101 tells us that it’s not about you, it’s all about your customer. So I created a business model that helps wineries leverage their largest asset, the unique beauty of their vineyards. I maintain creative control so I decide how and what to paint. I’m not an illustrator.
AS: How do you create value in an overcrowded, saturated art market?
AR: You have to be crystal clear about the market you’re targeting and the unique value you are offering that market. It’s different for everyone, as it should be. This is what I help artists identify and target. I help them identify their market and communicate their unique value. Andy Warhol, Michelangelo, and Sargent businesses are excellent examples of offering clear value to a defined market.
Most artists think it’s about finding an audience that will appreciate them. That’s nice but that’s just not how business works.
AS: Why do you not license your work?
AR: I don’t license my work because I’m building my own brand, Ann Rea, Inc., and catalog of fine art merchandise. There’s some short-term gain in licensing but long term it would be a bad move. In fact, my first wine label sold a ton of wine, and this was a new brand we made up at the Winemaker’s kitchen table. But I wasn’t paid much and the winemaker was extremely unprofessional. So I decided that the next wine label that I design with be for my wine, not someone else’s wine.
Imagine if Led Zeppelin licensed their music to Cadillac early in their career. Their brand and image is so solid now that they can do this and it doesn’t dilute their brand. Although some might argue this point.
AS: How did you appeal to collectors and take your business to the next level?
AR: These are two different questions. I appeal to my collectors by connecting with them and nurturing genuine relationships. I also really like my collectors. They are lovely people. My goal is to be accessible and friendly. And to make their experience enjoyable and memorable.
The more collectors I appeal to, the more my base will grow and my sales will increase.
AS: What are the biggest mistakes you see artists make in planning their careers?
AR: That’s easy to answer. The biggest mistake that I see an artist making early, and sometimes too late, in their career is that they do not recognize, and or respect the fact they are indeed “in business”.
They need to be savvy entrepreneurs. But they are trying, often without much success, to follow a prescribed model of working solely with galleries and keeping their fingers crossed that one day that this tired formula will work. The problem is that 99.9% of the time, it doesn’t. And if it does, too many art galleries fold.
Part of this mindset is ingrained by a cultural stereotype that artists should not, or could not, be concerned with money and or business. I can’t tell you how much I hear this disrespectful assumption.
The good news is that there is a lot of money changing hands in the art industry, and artists can get their piece of the pie.
I’ll remind artists that I consult with that no one is going to “discover” them, no one is coming to save them. But once an artist recognizes, respects, and embraces their business, we’re ready to work together.
AS: What do you have planned next in your business?
AR: I’m targeting certain high net worth collectors for custom commissioned paintings. This is a narrow luxury market segment that requires a high degree of service and who wants a unique experience. I’m currently completing intense sales training that will help me better target this market.
Visit Ann’s site and see more of her paintings at www.annrea.com.
Art and Heart Transform a School
Feb 15th
By Carolyn Edlund
In her own words, Jacqueline Edelberg describes herself as “a professional artist who led eight moms in a Chicago diner . . . neighborhood painters and artists transformed our school, top to bottom, and in so doing, transformed our entire community.” She spoke about this amazing project and it’s national effect.
AS: What was the situation at your neighborhood school before the transformation, and how did you decide to act?
JE: When my daughter Maya was two, I consciously chose to ignore all the desperate park chatter about schools. Parents angled to get their kids into prestigious private schools, but in listening to the conversations, it became clear that most of these anxious parents were not social climbers seeking the perfect school. Rather, they were rational city-dwellers who, quite simply, found themselves with few academic options.
In Chicago, choice public schools admit students by lottery or testing, and the competition is fierce. The city’s entire five-year-old population is in frenzied competition for a few hundred spots. It’s statistically harder to get your kindergartener into a top public magnet school than it is to get your high school senior into Harvard.
Given the cost of private school, the uncertainty of admissions, the problems associated with public school, including budget cuts, high class sizes, low test scores, busing, concerns of violence, etc. it is no wonder that so many Chicago families decide to call it quits, and move to the suburbs.
My girlfriend and I ventured inside Nettelhorst, our neighborhood’s struggling public elementary school to see get how terrible the place was. The new principal, Susan Kurland asked “what it would take for us to enroll our children”. Stunned by her candor, we returned the next day armed with an extensive wish list. Susan read our list and said “Well, let’s get started, girls! It’s going to be a busy year…”
AS: There were many parts to the revitalization, and painting the school was one of them. What else did you tackle?
JE: What would it take to make a neighborhood return to its public school? We imagined what the ideal elementary school might look like, how it would feel, and what it might offer. We cobbled together an elaborate wish list: low teacher/student ratios, accelerated academic programming, foreign language instruction, conceptual math, unfettered parental access, beautiful classrooms and public spaces, stellar enrichment programs, and so on. If the school was going to be a real choice, it needed to deliver on all these fronts. Even the most risk-tolerant parents wouldn’t be willing to risk their children’s education, so we rolled up our sleeves.
Renovating the school was a huge piece of our mission. When we arrived on the scene, the school looked like a penitentiary, but the 120 year-old building had great bones. Parents, teachers, students, and business owners rolled up their sleeves and got to work, all with a budget of zero. Today, there isn’t an inch of the school that hasn’t been licked by a neighborhood artist. It’s pure magic.
AS: You’ve had great results, not only in boosting enrollment, but energizing a community. What happened?
JE: Library Journal said we did it because we had “right mix of parent-teacher patience, willpower, community involvement, pluck, creativity, collaboration, and ability to overcome adversity.” I think it came down to the fact that we asked. We asked people to become involved. We asked people to invest with the energy and their children. We asked people to help. And they did.
AS: This has led you to write your book, “How to Walk to School”. Tell us about the national implications of project and where you want to take this idea.
JE: When I wrote How to Walk to School: Blueprint for a Neighborhood Renaissance, I never envisioned the enthusiasm with which it would be received. I’ve found that creating wonderful schools for our children is not just a priority for parents nationwide — it’s a mission, a passion.
So many stars are in alignment right now. When I was in DC in September, I met with staff of all the democratic Senators on the Education Committee, and change is in the air: PBS just aired a documentary that follows two Chicago principals through the academic year. This Spring, “The Lottery,” a feature-length documentary airs that explores the struggles and dreams of four families from Harlem and the Bronx in the months leading up to the lottery for Harlem Success Academy, one of the most successful schools in New York. The call for universal preschool is getting louder as Jumpstart’s Read for the Record adds some real star power. Innovative empowerment zones, like the Harlem Children Zone, point to new willingness for policy makers to think outside the box. And, with backing from the Department of Education, Community Schools (of which Nettelhorst was Chicago’s first) are poised to become the national model. At long last, it seems as though our country is on the cusp of real school reform.
AS: All the hard work at your school involved a lot of volunteerism. Can you speak about how other artists can get involved in acting for the benefit of their own communities?
JE: There’s a ton of stuff we can do. One of the joys of needing everything is that anything you get is just perfect. Most public schools are unbelievably ugly. As an artist, our ugly duckling presented the most delicious canvas imaginable.
If you’re a creative type, gather up some artist pals, walk into a school, and ask the principal if there’s anything you can do to help. Don’t wait for an invitation. If you’re a painter, paint. If you’re a graphic designer, design a post card. A welder? Make a whimsical fence. Whatever you do, there is a public school nearby that desperately needs some love and affection.
If eight park moms could pull our little neighborhood school out of its twenty-five year nosedive, surely other driven parents could do the same thing. If we could spark a national grassroots school reform movement that would pull us all out of the giant mess we’re in, now wouldn’t that be something?

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