My Photo

Get New Posts by Email

Links

May 2008

Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
        1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30 31

Art Print Issues Newsletter Archives 2005-2006

Blogs & Sites

Reading Matters - Art Matters

Creative Commons

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

Powered by FeedBurner

Blog powered by TypePad
Member since 09/2005

Personal Notes

April 25, 2008

On Being 60

Birthdayboy The blessing I get from penning this blog comes from artists who let me know it helps improve their knowledge, and sometimes provides inspiration and steers them to wise informed career choices.

The mission for this blog is not to be about me. However, since this post comes on the occasion of my 60th birthday this week, I'm using it to muse on being 60 and offer witticisms such as, "Any day I wake on the right side of the dirt is a good day".

Not too old to rock n' roll

All in all, for one a decade past AARP age requirements, I feel pretty good and happy. I have not joined AARP as I am far from retired and look upon most of what the organization offers as self-serving marketing hype. But then I'm a cynic who doesn't need 10% discounts at Denny's or Best Western. On being 60, I may not be quite as happy to enjoy a birthday as little Eli pictured here on his first, but I'm darn close and pleased to report only one of us is wearing diapers and it ain't me.

0 - 60 in the blink of an eye

Becoming 60 is much like life in that it sneaks up on you and has you wondering just how one got there there so fast. Or, in my case and more pointedly, how I got there at all. Looking back, in my younger days I tempted fate more than I should have and I am grateful to more fully grasp the saying, "There but for fortune go I."

Now, being older and wiser, I'm thrilled to have ridden our earthly sphere 60 turns around the sun, and looking forward to many more. It's humbling to know my life has been lived in relative ease. Whatever quirk of fate blessed me to come forth under favorable circumstances is nothing short of astonishing. Sure, I could have taller, better looking, smarter, funnier with an abundance of wealth and unlimited talent. But in comparison to suffering from poor health or abject poverty anywhere, being a desperate parentless HIV positive child in Africa, or an average citizen of Baghdad praying for an end to violence, I have no complaints.

Sometimers is not age specific

When I couldn't recall something the other day, I remarked to a young clerk in a store waiting on me despite my gray hair I was not suffering from "Oldtimers." She told me I just had "Sometimers." I asked what that was and she said, "You know, it's like sometimes you just can't remember shit." Sounded good to me... now if my car keys just turn up sometime soon.;>)

My best friend and dear sweet wife, Mary, gave me a lively fun puppy named Maggie Mae for my birthday. It's hard to imagine a better present, but the Mint Chocolate Chip Ice Cream cake from Baskin-Robbins was a close second. The best gift anyone who enjoys reading this blog could give me is to let others know about it. When you are so moved, please tell the world about it, or at least your friends and acquaintances. I will be forever grateful when you do.

February 28, 2008

Sad News and Bitter Irony - Paul Karel Remembered - Tradeshows Canceled

There was sad news received today. Paul Karel, former Decor Expo (nee ABC) show manager, unexpectedly passed away over the past weekend due to complications from routine surgery. He was one of the last to retire from Commerce Publishing Company before it sold itself to Pfingsten Publishing LLC, which is now owned by Summit Business Media LLC.

We Stand On His Shoulders

Sometimes, you don't have to know someone, or even anything about them to have an appreciation for what they accomplished, and for how you benefit from those accomplishments or stand on their shoulders. Such could be said of Paul Karel. As the Show Manager for more than a decade of what were then known as Art Buyers Caravan shows, he was instrumental in helping the art print and retail framing markets to blossom at a time of tremendous growth within the industry. With his steady guidance, the shows grew and the industry around them flourished. The art and framing industry is a better place today because of those shows. He would be the first to tell you it wasn't just his efforts, but he wouldn't have been shy about admitting his talent was a major factor either.

Paul was brought in by Decor management to oversee the ABC shows as they started to grow from humble beginnings in hotel ballrooms in a couple of locations to larger venues and more locations. The success eventually led to the New York shows becoming a huge international draw and the Atlanta Decor Expo show becoming one of the largest 200 tradeshows in the country for a brief time after his departure.

His Leadership Helped Foster the Growth of an Industry

Anyone who has tried to manage a tradeshow will testify it requires a remarkable range of talent and ability to juggle multiple tasks well. A mind boggling number of tasks have to be managed to come off on time. Buyers and exhibitors need to be pacified for the myriad of issues they confront when large tradeshows convene. Away from the shows, the promotional activities to get both buyers and attendees to participate never ends and neither does the endless negotiation with vendors of all sorts.

Paul managed as many as eight successive shows in one year with a very small staff of smart dedicated people. Usually two full-timers and some part-time help was all he needed. By comparison, look at the size of the staffs of the West Coast Art & Frame show or the Decor Expo Atlanta show or ArtExpo to get an idea of how incredible it was for him to efficiently and effectively manage those shows as he did.

Paul was a tough manager and negotiator who could not be conned, but he knew how to spot up and commers who needed a boost to bring them along. For them, he would find ways to bend the rules a little to help them stretch a budget to get more exposure at a show. His prices were sacrosanct. The rampant dealing you see on booth prices today were unheard of in his time. Whether the show was setting up to be a loser or runaway winner, he always stood firm. Those who had their differences with him, and there were plenty over the years, always knew that he was consistent. If he was an SOB at times, he was a consistent SOB. But, his shows always always ran on time.

The Art Print Market Grew as Baby Boomers Domiciled

The industry's growth spurt began in the mid-80s just as the art print and retail picture framing market began a meteoric rise in sales and popularity. The poster market was rocketing as Baby Boomers were growing out of college dorms into homes and apartments. They wanted to move from taped or tacked concerts posters on their walls to real art, but still affordable. Many of them jumped into the business either as artists, retailers, framers or publishers.

The offset limited edition print market also grew out of this same rise in popularity for fine art on the walls. The growth in the business was benefited by having a strong  publication to educate retailers how to manage their businesses and the trade shows that evolved out of them were an important component of stoking the growth.

The Sad News of Paul's Passing Coincides With the Baltimore Decor Expo Being Canceled

The bitter irony in the timing on the news of Paul's passing is it comes within days of the announcement of the canceling of the Baltimore Decor Expo, which had been rebranded Spring Decor Expo. That show had morphed from the once worldwide preeminent picture framing show, Frame-o-rama, and its sister art & poster show, Galeria into a disastrous downhill slide. What is left is the Fall (Atlanta) Decor Expo show as the last remaining from an annual tradeshow schedule that at one time included New York, Los Angeles, Orlando, Dallas, Chicago, Philadelphia, Louisville and other rotating sites such as Denver and Seattle. You might say with his death, the shows have come full circle. It is sad news to know we have reached this point. In case you hadn't noticed, the Art DC show recently was also canceled. It's not been a good year for news on the art and framing tradeshow front.

Seasons Come and Go - Nothing Wrong with a Bit of Nostalgia

Things change and seasons come and go, we all get older and nothing remains the same. To accommodate the changes, we look for new ways to make our businesses grow as those things that were once stalwarts in our marketing arsenal fall away. Still, no one can be faulted for having a bit of nostalgia for what once was. There was a camaraderie that grew out of the effect of frequently throughout the year bringing together the new and old players on the scene. We all learned from each other. We went to dinner together and often many came back to the hotel bar for a night cap to recap the goings on at the show and the state of the industry. Lifelong friendships and acquaintances grew out of those shows. Their passing, which was likely inevitable, has sadly left a void in the relationships and other intangible aspects they provided as well as the access to regional markets.

Share a Memory

In his day, you could reliably find Paul kibitzing and enjoying an after dinner drink, often in the company of Marcia, his devoted wife, there to commiserate with you, to buy you a drink to celebrate your good fortune, or to strategize about how to make the shows better. Even though the sign in his office read, "Be Reasonable, Do It My Way" he usually was approachable with new ideas. He liked to make money, to be successful and for others to enjoy their own successes with the shows he managed.

It is in fond memories of those moments after a good day and a good meal in a city somewhere that I choose to remember Paul when the pleasure of his company was at its best. If you knew Paul and have fond memory of your own, why not leave it here in a comment. I'll make sure his family receives them.

February 23, 2008

Take Five - Art Marketing Ain't Brain Surgery

Don't get me wrong. I love reading the blogs, magazine articles and other punditry on how to grow a successful art business. It's been a passion with me for years to help artists and I am amazed at how much there is to learn about the process. Sometimes though, I think the information overload, and not just from art blogs, but all sources, is enough to make anyone throw up their hands and say fuggedaboutit. This post is your unofficial sanction to goof off, get lost, daydream, go fishing, knit a beanie or anything that will let you get away from the pressure of working to catch you art career on fire.

I mean the news on tainted meat, crazed college killers, endless war and terrorism talk, not to forget the incessant blather about Obama, Clinton, McCain and Britney tends to take a toll on one's psyche. Who has time to absorb that and all the great stuff freely flowing about what you need to do to make it in the art business? I don't think you can without some balance. That requires Takin' Five, or Fifty or Five Days. Whatever you need to get away from it. For some escape might come by retreating into creating art purely for the purpose of creative release and expression with no thinking about how to make so it will sell smartly sell in a business-like manner. Nothing wrong with that. For others, it might be reruns of Seinfeld, The Golden Girls, or I Love Lucy, or some other sort of mental escape from the drumbeat of information modern technology puts at our fingertips.

Music Provides Relief

For me, if I want to truly escape, it's with music. I have great fun making mixes to match my moods. I used to spend time reading mindless escapist fare, but perhaps because I read so much now in connection with this blog and other planned projects, it's not so much these days. That's a shame, because I know there is a treasure trove of great literature, biography and historical novels ready for me to devour sometime when I am in a different place on a different pace.

As a pleasant productive pastime, I've lately have been copying several hundred cassettes that I never replaced with CDs. It's an enjoyable hobby with a trip down memory lane attached as I relisten to music I haven't heard in years. The software I use is called Honestech VHS to DVD 3.0. With it, you can rip cassettes onto your hard drive. The only drawback is it doesn't rip by song. But it works great if you don't mind listening to a whole side of a cassette as we did back in the last century. As you can likely tell by the name it also works to allow you to copy VHS tapes to your hard drive.

Art Print Issues celebrates one-year anniversary as a blog with post # 100

You might say I'm taking my own advice here in not proffering art marketing information with this post. Today is the one-year anniversary of Art Print Issues in blog format. This is the 100th post I've put up in the past year. For those long time readers, you know I have an archive of 8-page newsletters dating back to 2005 when I first published my book as well. You can peruse an article index list to the API archives here where you will find nearly 50 other items of interest.

Tough and tense as we seem to be these days, I wouldn't trade living in this time for some other in the past. I love being part of a worldwide community of artists and others interested in art marketing and to be able to easily communicate, share thoughts, collaborate and learn from them on subjects where I am absolutely passionate. What's possible now is so vastly superior to just a few years back it is hard to believe it's all happened in such a short period of time. I think things are only going to get more interesting, fun and challenging all at the same time.

Thanks for reading my blog and for participating for those of you who have commented or sent me emails. It is very gratifying to know the effort makes a difference. I'm looking forward to many more years of producing this blog and some other projects I think you'll be excited to learn about as 2008 progresses.  All the best!Barney_sig_200pix_2 

December 23, 2007

Peace On Earth - Happy Holidays!

Happy Holidays and Best Wishes for a Joyous Prosperous New Year!

Istock_000004678329xsmall_2

I trust Peace on Earth is not too much to ask for...?

November 20, 2007

Why I Am Thankful

Why I Am Thankful

From the moment of creation when each of us became the specific person we are, endowed with our own uniqueness and incredible special gifts, we are indeed a most lucky person. We have beaten the tremendous odds in nature's selection process to become a person, to be alive. Who cannot be thankful for the opportunity to be alive?

If you are reading this blog, you, as I am, are greatly blessed. For there are so many who, while lucky to be alive, will never glimpse much less experience the privileged lives we lead with our computers, cell phones, cars, warm homes, plentiful food and with an abundance never known by previous generations.

I am grateful for what I have and have been given. To me the greatest gift of any parent is the one I have known and possessed all my days, that is unconditional love from my parents, siblings, extended family and close friends. I will be in the company of many of them over this Thanksgiving holiday weekend. For that too, I am grateful and blessed and am eager to bask in the warmth of their love and friendship. No material gifts nor money can match such a magnanimous rewarding gift.

Reflecting on Thanksgiving and family brings to mind the powerful poignant lyrics of Tracy Chapman's "Heaven's Here On Earth" from her New Beginnings album.

I've seen and met angels wearing the disguise
Of ordinary people leading ordinary lives
Filled with love, compassion, forgiveness and sacrifice
Heaven's in our hearts

In our faith in humankind
In our respect for what is earthly
In our unfaltering belief in peace and love and understanding

Look around
Believe in what you see
The kingdom is at hand
The promised land is at your feet
We can and will become what we aspire to be
If Heaven's here on earth

Have a blessed safe holiday if you are celebrating Thanksgiving this weekend. Wherever you are, regardless if it is a place where it is a mere late fall weekend, take a moment to rejoice for your blessings, gifts and your little piece of heaven here on earth just the same.

Please know I also am thankful, humbled and honored to have you as a reader of my blog.

All the best for a Happy Thanksgiving!

Barney_sig_blu_100

Get Help - Make Informed Career Decisions

Search this blog

  • Google

Get Smart - Art Business Books & Magazines

  • Click the Books for Recommended Reading

AdSense

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Fave a Blogger :)

  • Add to Technorati Favorites

Art Print Marketing Teleseminar

Blog Rush - Create New Traffic on Your Blog