Come to this, ok?
Originally posted on www.notawigshop.com...

Tomorrow evening, you are invited to 17th Street Studios' Open Studio Night. Come and see the spaces where local artists (designers, movie producers, sculptors, painters, ceramicists) work.























There will be food and drinks to enjoy, whether you quietly peruse artwork or intensely interrogate each artist. Some work will also be for sale.
















This is a great opportunity to support the work of 13 Knoxville artists. We'd love for you to stop by.



17th Street Studios OPEN STUDIO NIGHT
Wednesday, November 30, 2011
7-9pm
1642 Highland Avenue in Fort Sanders
on the corner of 17th and Highland in Redeemer Church

Thanksgiving in Four Parts
One

This past Sunday, I sat around a dining room table in a large West Knoxville home with three Chinese women and three Chinese children. The girl to my left is studying at the University of Tennessee. Her plate was full of every type of Thanksgiving cuisine you could imagine, and she tried each one.

The two women that sat on my right are visiting scholars at UT. Their plates were full of fruit, and they meticulously peeled grapes, placing the skins on a napkin. As they talked to me, courageously using their broken English, they had the brightest smiles on their faces.

After we finished eating, we went in to the den to join the other international students there, their spouses and children, and the handful of Americans. Lee, the facilitator of the gathering explained the first Thanksgiving and then asked if anyone wanted to share something for which they were thankful. One after one, people from across the world stood up and gave thanks for their families and for Americans who have shown them hospitality.

I'm thankful for my mother who has instilled in me the beauty and wonder of volunteering.

Two

Monday evening, I went on a walk with my best friend, up Glenwood, down Scott Avenue and back down Oklahoma. It was dark and chilly and we marveled at the homes all ready adorned in Christmas lights.

I'm thankful for Amelia, for being the most patient listener and the most gracious friend.

Three

It took me four hours to reach Nashville from Knoxville on Wednesday because of traffic and rain. When I pulled off the interstate, I called Amanda. She stayed on the phone with me, giving me step by step directions to her house.

"Are all of my friends there waiting for me?" I asked.

"Mark is here. Everyone else must be on their way," she replied.

I arrived to see ALL of their cars parked along the street. Hmmmm, I thought to myself.

The front door opened and out came Amanda. No one else was in the front room, but I heard whispering and then...

"SURPRISE!"

I was showered with Craisins-turned-confetti and a room full of dear friends.

In the midst of the solitude I've felt in Knoxville for quite some time, I'm thankful to have experienced a moment of sheer warmth, fuzziness, and laughter.

Four

Last night, my sisters and I baked in our parents' kitchen. My dad came home from work, delighted to see us all there together. It was dinnertime and instead of sitting, we opened a bottle of wine and stood and grazed and baked together while Christmas music played in the background.

I'm thankful that love can grow between messed up, crazy people.
Shpoon Me


I don't like this because I spoon with Juicy. I love it because I spoon with Juicy, and I wish I could spoon with her til I'm old and gray. (sob)

By the way, I made a painting about spooning. I don't have an image on this computer, but you can see it here. It's called I Love You (Let's Spoon).

Fun fact: It is the ONLY painting I've sold during an art opening. I think it's because spooning is a universal love language. A lady bought it for her brother as a wedding gift.
About the Painting: Pool at Night
This is pretty interesting (to me).

I was perusing this month's Vogue and came across this photo.






















What is interesting about it? Well, I made this painting back in 2010.

Pool at Night, acrylic on canvas, 2010, 32" x 52"

The chairs, the shape of the pool, the grass, the hedge, the walls... the similarities surprise me.

***

The painting was based on fond memories of swimming at night in my grandparents' pools. Yes, both sets had one. I may have spent just as much of my childhood immersed in water as I did on dry land. I loved when my sisters, friends, and I could swim at night with the pool light on. Pool-light-at-night is still one of my most favorite colors.

Oddly enough, the painting was also inspired by something far less innocent- the movie The Graduate, specifically the scenes in the Robinson's house, with the green filling the windows. I wanted to convey the glamor of that movie, to show someone rich lived there. Without knowing it at the time, I also conveyed the emptiness and sadness of the story as well.





Also, there was the pool.

Happy Birthday, With Bear Hands!!!
My Etsy shop, also known as With Bear Hands, is one year old TODAY. So sweet!

my shop banner by the illustrious Heidi Gruner


To celebrate, I'm giving a 15% discount on all items listed November 15 through November 18. Just use the coupon code HBWBH upon check out.

***

As my shop and I embark on year two together, I'd like to share some thoughts about Etsy.

When I first started my shop, I heard there are people out there who make six digits a year selling their wares on Etsy. A year later, I am nowhere near being one of them.

In the past year, Etsy records that I have made 26 sales. As sad as that sounds, thankfully, that number does not represent the actual number of sales I've had in real life.

Etsy is a wild and wonderful place. It is also complex, confusing, and sometimes a drag.

For me, it has been a constant reminder of my failures as I endeavor to be a business woman. I say this as a compliment to Etsy, as it has kept pushing me to work harder and hone in on what I'm good at selling. This journey of marketing artwork isn't easy. By nature, artists are not salespeople and should not have to be, but Etsy helps in providing a mask for artists to hide behind. We can project what we want on our shop; no one has to know if we are reclusive, awkward, crazy, shy, pretentious, what have you.

***

My shop actually did pretty well when I first started it. People were ordering my mason jar paintings left and right from all over the country. One of those people was the Senior Vice President of Retail Development at Polo Ralph Lauren in NYC. He told me through a message, that he bought it while eating a bowl of soup during his lunch break. Somewhere on Madison Avenue, a man I don't know liked a painting of mine enough to buy it. That's freaking exciting.

It didn't take long to learn that my success was a result of poor attention to details on my part. In other words, I wasn't charging enough and therefore making no money.

Once I raised my prices, business slowed, and as a result, my shop sat dormant for a while.

Then, I sold nine paintings to one woman in one day.

Then dormant.

***

While Etsy is about selling a good product first and foremost, that's not enough. It's also about the work you put into it. It's the type of thing you should chip away at everyday, not once a month like me. A successful shop owner spends their time everyday listing items, trolling Etsy for other shops and items they like, corresponding with other shop owners, and they are aware of the best times do all of these things.

The best thing for me has been to talk to other shop owners I know, asking questions and getting their advice. We can work through our hardships together. It's a difficult thing, putting yourself out there, selling work you've made, but knowing someone else is doing the same thing helps.

So here is some more concrete advice for Etsy beginners, some I've learned and actually go by and some I'd like to go by as I enter year two with With Bear Hands:

1) Focus on one or two types of items to sell. It helps you not get overwhelmed and it helps the customer to know what you're about. I'm still working on this one.

2) Find a successful shop and copy them. Yes, I said it: Copy them- Not their products, but their techniques. The shop I go back to is The Black Apple. She has all ready paved the way, so I can use her shop and blog as a resource on prices, aesthetics, etc..

3) Quit selling things that don't sell. Figure out what people buy from you often and stick to that. This goes hand in hand with number one. At the same time, give items a chance. Some things that sit for a while may still sell- they're just waiting for the right person.

4) Offer different price points for products- have things under $10, under $20, and so on. People who like your stuff may buy something small in the beginning and come back for higher priced items later. I finally started making more affordable prints of my paintings and it's turned out to be a great decision.

5) Sell outside of Etsy- sell at markets, consignment shops, fairs, festivals, gift shops, art openings, anywhere you can. You have to get your name out there. If I hadn't done this in the past year, I probably would have given up on Etsy.

6) Always have a business card on you that links people to your Etsy shop.

7) Someone told me I should list 3 items a day. That's not going to happen, but one item a day would be a good goal.

8) Take the best photos you can and have five photos for each listing.

9) Blog about your items. The more presence you have on the web, the better.

10) Be patient. You won't become rich and famous overnight. And if you do, I don't want to hear about it.

Happy Birthday, With Bear Hands. I am proud of your humble beginnings.
"art business", "etsy", "gift"BComment
November Events at the Birdhouse
My paintings will be up the month of November at the Birdhouse. Because they don't have regular hours, I'll post their events here so you'll know when they're open. You can attend their events and see my work. Hooray!

They will be open this Saturday from 11-3 for the Mama's Market. I'm unable to go then, but it sounds like a good time.

They'll also be open next Monday night, November 14, for the Walk-In Theater where they are screening Alfred Hitchcock's The 39 Steps at 7pm.






















In other news, I'm heading to Jonesborough, the oldest town in Tennessee, this evening for the East Tennessee Preservation Conference. Don't be jealous.

The Birdhouse
800 N 4th Avenue
Knoxville 37917
"art", "exhibit", "film", "market"BComment