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February 5, 2016 by Kat

A Key Skill for the Artist

  
My #30edits series is on display! Less than a month after finishing, I get to share this fun project with my community. It will be on display at the Art in the Valley Gallery through March 5. Reception is Thursday, February 18, 4-8pm during the Corvallis Arts Walk. I hope you will stop by.

It is always fun to get my work into the world, but I won’t deny, it takes a lot of work and advance planning. Getting your art into the world is not just a matter of creating and framing the artwork. It takes effort to seek out opportunities to share the art, apply for them, prepare for them, create required marketing materials (artist statement, show statement, bio), and promote the exhibition/event/fair/workshop/book through my channels (blog, social media, newsletter). And you can’t do this one time and call it good. You have to do it constantly.

Honestly, I think one of the most important skills required to be a successful artist (if you define “successful” as getting your art out into the world) is the “advance planning” piece. At least it is for me, with a full time corporate job and a teenager in high school, I’m always looking at my calendar… To next week, to see what art events I can squeeze in to build my network. To next month to see what I need to prepare, and what time I have to prepare it in. To a couple months out, to see what’s coming that requires a longer lead time. To six or eight months out, to see what I want to have on my calendar, what I need to apply for. This doesn’t happen by magic. It happens by intention. 

And I don’t do enough. I can see, if I spent MORE time on this advance planning piece, I could have even more opportunities to share my work. I limit my options by the time I’m willing and able to spend.

I hope, if you are an artist who wants to share your work, this doesn’t discourage you. I hope, instead, it encourages you. You have a lot of power in creating opportunities to share your art. It starts by looking at the future, and planning ahead.

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: artistic journey, Corvallis, exhibition

June 5, 2015 by Kat

My iPhone Photography Book is Available for Preorder!

Pond Lily Pad Green Painting Photography Kat Sloma iPhone Photography Singapore

“Lily Pond,” Featured on the Cover

No matter how far you are going on any journey, there are points where you have to pause and take in the view. This is definitely one of them for me: My book, Art with an iPhone: A Photographer’s Guide to Creating Altered Realities, is now available for preorder on Amazon!

Is that not the coolest thing? Let’s just pause and absorb that a little bit. I wrote a book. A book that is on Amazon.

I know I’ve talked about it for a good long while. I know I spent hours developing the material, organizing it, and sitting at the computer writing it. I know that I sent the manuscript off to meet the deadline several months ago… Even so, this makes it all the more real!

There is still a lot of work to do. There is editing and layout and distribution and marketing. The release date is not until January 2016. It seems so far away, but when I look at it objectively, it’s less time to go than it’s been since I started this whole adventure. And at the end there will be a real, printed book filled with my art and words I can hold in my hands. That you can hold in your hands.

Awesome!

And now, here’s where you come in… Run on over to Amazon and preorder it now, pretty please! That will help its search rankings which will help more people find it which will help me spread the love for this wonderful art form.

We all have the capability of creating art. I want to show you how with the phone in your pocket.

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: Amazon.com, Art with an iPhone, artistic journey, book, creative journey

June 2, 2015 by Kat

The Power of the Porfolio

You know that feeling, of having something in the back of your mind that you need to do? It’s not a priority so you write it down, you put it off, and it sits there, waiting to be done. Sometimes for a very long time. But when you finally get to the project and finish it, it feels sooooo good, doesn’t it?

Spring Tree Blossom Blue White Oregon Kat Sloma iPhone Mobile Phtoography

That happened to me this weekend, as I finally got around to updating the Portfolio section of my website. Ever since I updated website themes early last year, I haven’t been happy with the way the porfolio worked. It just didn’t allow you to scroll through images easily or show off the work nicely. Add to that, most of what was in the portfolio was old work from my dSLR days, not even close to the style I’m currently creating with the iPhone. But it wasn’t a priority between art fairs and writing a book and living life, so I didn’t do anything with it other than write it down on a “do someday” list. Getting it updated felt like a lifting of a weight, or the relief of a low level tension that I’ve been carrying around with me. I didn’t even know that tension was there!

You know what I felt on top of that relief? Pride. There is something wonderful about choosing my best work, pulling it together in one place, and presenting it beautifully. Whether it’s an exhibition or an art fair booth or a portfolio on my website, it’s my opportunity to say to the world, “This is who I am as an artist.” And I feel really good about it when I look at my work that way. Strong and confident in who I am and what I’m doing. That’s an awesome feeling.

I’m especially happy with the Transitions portfolio. I’ve been working on these images of trees in transition for two years now with this series in mind, and it’s the first time I’ve pulled them together in this way. It is so exciting to see it as a whole! I love many images in this series but seeing them as a body of work, I love them even more.

You can visit all of my portfolios by clicking the Portfolio link on the top menu bar of my website. From there, click on any portfolio to view the artist statement/explanation and images. Be sure to click on the thumbnail images to see them larger and scroll through the entire portfolio. It’s all mobile responsive too, and looks great on any device. Can you see why I’m so excited?? Come visit and let me know what you think!

PS – If you have a WordPress site I highly recommend the gallery plugin I’m using for my portfolio. It’s called NextGen Gallery. Easy to use and very functional!

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: artistic journey, portfolio, transitions, website

May 22, 2015 by Kat

How to become “known” as an artist

Last week, my son said to me, “Mom, I want my art to become known. How do I do that?” I laughed and then told him to keep creating his art, that’s the start. But it got me thinking, how and why do we become “known” as artists? I came up with three steps. These are the basic steps, but don’t start thinking they are easy ones.

 
1. Find your own style.

You have to figure out your voice, what you are going to say and how you are going to say it, in your art. It has to be unique and authentic. That takes time. It takes a lot of experimentation. It takes risk and openness and a willingness to go in unconventional directions. 

Ultimately, what other people resonate with in art is something at a primal level. You have to bring YOU to the process, wholeheartedly. It takes a lot of time and effort to figure out how to do that, so keep working and be patient.

Oh, and once you feel like you’ve gotten there, that you have a style, remember that feeling, because it lasts about two nanoseconds. Then it’s time to evolve again. But as you evolve, you will have some thread that stays constant throughout your work. That’s your style. That’s what you become “known” for.

2. Sustain your creation over time.
Keep creating, because you have to develop a body of work. That’s not ten images that work together. It’s piece after piece, some finding a place within a larger group and some just experimentation. Maybe some are created with intention and some come out unplanned. But you need to have enough that work together to show you have committed yourself to the process.

You can’t create one or two good pieces, no matter how unique the voice, and become “known.” It takes sustained creation of good work. Something that people can connect with and rely on, over time. They want someone they can trust and build a relationship with. 

3. Put your work out there.

Here’s where things get sticky. There is no one-size-fits-all way to get your work out there, and there is no ready made audience waiting to receive your work. You can exhibit in galleries, go to art fairs, blog, use social media (so many options there!), join local or online groups, have a newsletter, etsy shop, enter contests… Shall I go on? I probably don’t even know all of the ways to get art out into the world. 

You have to choose the right venue to share your work, or you won’t connect in the right way for you. So before you decide how to put your art out there, answer these three questions. I’ll use myself as an example in the answers, so you can see what I mean. 

What do you want to become “known” for?

I want to be known for create simple, compelling work that evokes a pause in the viewer. I want both my imagery and my words to connect with others and bring something positive into their life.

Who do you want to become “known” by?

I want to be known by two groups: People who want a piece of my art in their life and this homes, and people who want to learn how to create similar art. These groups may have some overlap, but they are not fully the same.

Why do you want to become “known?”

I want to become known because it helps me achieve my goal of connecting with others through my art. It helps me to fill my classes, it helps me to reach more people with a message that creativity is beneficial in everyone’s life, it helps me find other kindred spirits in this wide world. 

This last question, if you haven’t already guessed, is really the biggest one of all. It should probably come first, but we aren’t always ready to examine our motivations when we start something. It’s only later, when we’ve discovered some confidence in ourselves and our work, that we can ask and honestly answer whether we are working from internal motivations or looking for external validation.

Because the thing about wanting to become “known” is that you can get tricked into using numbers of followers, or sales, or exhibition acceptances, or contest wins, as an external proxy for confidence. We can use it to tell ourselves, “I am an artist, because all of these people believe I am an artist.” 

That’s a house of cards, because all it takes is one change — either to your art or an algorithm a social media platform uses to share your work or to the interests of your biggest patron — and your whole foundation crumbles. But if you know why you are putting your work out there, and you know who your audience is, you will find ways to reach them. 

It’s been a long road, filled with lots of experimentation, for me to finally discover what feel like the right venues to get my art out there. To discover the right connections and interactions, for me and my art. Yours will be different.

Where to start?

After all of this thought, the answer I gave my son stays the same: Keep creating your art, that’s the start. Everything springs from there. And while you are creating, start to share, experiment with methods, try things on for size. Ask yourself the three questions above. As your style develops, so will your understanding of how and why you want to connect around you art. Along the way, you might become “known” to a group of people. 

If the connections are genuine, based on a give and take of heartfelt expression, it doesn’t matter if that group is large or small. It will be the right one for you.

Thanks for being here, for reading my words, enjoying my art, and being part of my little pocket of being “known.” I appreciate the connection with you.

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: artist, artistic journey

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