[QUOTE="
Isn't that how success in America ( and other places ) is judged ?
How can one be a "successful artist" while they are alive if they are completely ignored and unknown and die penniless? The old "starving artist" thing really isn't all its cracked up to be.[/QUOTE]
It all gets back to the question of "Does it matter how others judge you?" If you want to make money out of your "art" you are commercial, you are producing work for an audience and a market. Nothing wrong with that of course. But it needs to be stated that 0.0001% of people make money from their "art" For every Ansel Adams and Michael Kenna's there are 1000's of people that produce work for their own pleasure, that don't care if it sells or even if other people like their work. Success, IMHO, is not achieved by how many prints you sell or how much money you make. To many people, success is actually how many people validate their work. If you need that validation, fine, but some people don't need to have others validate their work. A true craftsperson knows if what they have produced is any good and don't need the applause of others. I was once married to a painter who thought she was the greatest undiscovered "artist" ever. She ruined her life trying to become a famous artist, instead of getting a real job she persisted with the delusion that one day people would recognise her for the great artist that she thought he was and would be able to live off the profits of her great art. Reality has a way of getting in the way of dreams. I drive trains, I take photos and print them. A few, a very few, of my photos are decent, that's enough for me.