I would go farther:
1) Don't even approach a gallery until you have a complete, consistent body of work. By complete I mean at least 40 photographs with a portfolio of 20 or so for introductory showing to galleries. By consistent I mean all the work in your portfolio must display the same style which identifies you. Not having a credible body of work before approaching a gallery is a deadly mistake that almost every aspiring artist seeking gallery representation makes. Don't make it even once.
2) ALWAYS put your best foot forward. Have your portfolio mounted, matted and ready to show. If you can do a piece better, don't put it in. Do it better and then put it in. Show only the absolutely best you can do. Pretend you're putting together a one man show for the MOMA every time you add a print to your portfolio, and one day you might be. As lightwisps said, no excuses.
3) Galleries love themes (think Shelby Lee Adams). Artists hate them. Deal with it.
4) You are known by the company you keep. If you want a gallery owner like this guy to let you in the door, don't let him even suspect that your work has ever been on the wall at Starbuck's or Barnes & Noble.
Just as you would not go to a job interview not wearing a suit,
4) You are known by the company you keep. If you want a gallery owner like this guy to let you in the door, don't let him even suspect that your work has ever been on the wall at Starbuck's or Barnes & Noble.
Does this mean that, if I go to interviews "suitless" I may show images unmounted(I'm working in IT, and got my best job without wearing a suit)
Sorry, couldn't resist....
If the work were good, of course he wouldn't. I exaggerated a bit. But it's still important to network with people whose artistic vision parallels your own.I doubt he'd look down on a photographer who had shown work at Starbucks, he knows you have to start somewhere.
Must be nice. I too work in IT, and every IT job I've gotten I wore a suit to the interview (I've never had to wear one at work with the occasional exception of meetings with clients).
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