lxdude
Member
I Could Have Done That ...
Or at least 've, 've, 've!
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Neil Peart of Rush speaks of wearing very light shoes when drumming because it allows him the ease of lifting his feet very fast and effortlessly , who'd of thunk...
It was an honest-to-goodness-made-a-career-of-it artist (painter), who set me straight.
We were in a museum, looking at Peit Mondrian. And (so help me) I said exactly that: "I could have done that!"
She wheeled around, looked me square in the eye and said: "Yes. But you didn't!"
huh?
there is very little of what you have described that can not relate to film and paper as well .. ?
there is a lot of stuff that is poorly thought and executed no matter the medium
It is part of the artistic process to make what is very difficult appear to be very simple. This tempts people to say "I could have done that" when in reality they can't. To take an example from music, it is much harder to correctly play a piece like the Bach Prelude in C major from the Well Tempered Clavicord or the Sarabande from the Goldberg variations than some fast and loud piece. The slightest mistake will be glaringly obvious with the Bach.
Not a fair example... one mistake while playing Bach and your fingers end up tangled together, lol.
people that whine about the art scene are spending too much time being experts and not enough time actively believing in themselves and pushing their work in front of the right people.
To the question who is the right person to get that work in front of... I think that would be someone like Maris.
I think you are confusing excellence and marketing.
Yes, yes, yes. And IMO that confusion exists in the photographic industry on an epic scale.
They say hindsight is 20/20. The biggest mistake I made when I got into the photo/studio business was spending way to much time and effort on being good at "the craft". What I learned the hard way is that that is what hobbyists do. It is also why IMO many hobbyists do technically better photography that many pros.
What pros who are serious about making a living the business of photography do (actually what people in any business that requires active sales does) is spend most of their time and effort schmoozing/doing marketing/finding new work. They are almost always in marketing and sales mode.
By most here I mean somewhere close to 80%, number comes from business coaches not me. When I applied this rule I was successful, when I didn't I wasn't.
Successful photographers/sales people will spend 7-8 hours a day talking with clients, calling galleries, going to openings, wedding shows, asking for referrals, following up leads, blah, blah, blah. The other 2-3 hours a day would be spent doing the books, the banking, the bills, and getting in a bit of shooting and printing.
So for a guy that goes out for a weekend and spends say 16 hours traipsing around shooting landscapes then spends another 16 hours the next weekend making some really nice prints it is not unreasonable to think or expect that is should take another 128 hours of work (the next 8 weekends at 16 hours per weekend) marketing to actually get those prints sold.
That's the number one lesson to be learned in photography. Does this incredible street shot, landscape, slice of life picture, have a market.
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