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This article was reproduced with the kind permission of Sylvia White and ArtAdvice.com
Almost everyone has experienced loss in one form or another at some point in their
lives. After the tragedy on September 11th, most of us don't
have to look very far to find someone who has been touched by
loss. For artists, learning how to recognize and cope with loss
will help them in understanding the common phenomenon known as
post exhibition blues.
It is normal to experience the
sense of loss that accompanies grief when we are confronted with
the death of a relative, friend or even a pet but, artists need
to learn how to recognize the importance of grieving, when
confronted with loss of an expectation or fantasy. Regardless of
how unrealistic we may acknowledge it to be.
I realized after receiving a
post-exhibition phone call from a distraught, depressed artist,
that what she was experiencing was very similar to the crash I
felt 10 days after losing a dear friend. After all, for most
artists, an exhibition represents years of hard work, an
investment in not only time and money, but tremendous emotional
commitment. Most importantly, to the educated viewer, it
provides a glimpse into who you are as a person. This is a
pretty scary concept to most people who spend their lives trying
to orchestrate the way they are viewed by the world. Whether you
are aware of it or not, you carry with you certain expectations
in mounting an exhibition. These expectations can range from
hoping your mother is proud of you, to getting a good review in
the New York Times. Your job, as a mature artist, is to figure
out what these expectations are for yourself, how realistic they
are to achieve, and what you can do to help yourself get through
the mourning process with as little damage as possible.
For me, loss starts with
denial. A period of time when I refuse to believe that whatever
it is I have lost is really, really gone permanently. Next,
comes the anger looking at everyone and everything to blame.
Then, one day, without notice, I find myself so depressed I am
limp. Next thing I know I'm crying uncontrollably. All I want to
do is curl up in bed and disappear. Then, as if some miracle has
occurred, after I have given myself the luxury to grieve, (which
is really another way of saying "reflect on my loss")
I can get up feeling refreshed, whole and healed. These are not
secret strategies that I have invented. These are common sense
strategies to help deal with your loss by acknowledging it and
confronting it. Applying this strategy to artists, during the
culmination of an exciting and stressful time in their career,
provides a positive way to identify and understand this very
common phenomenon.
Artists who are driven to make
art are wired differently than the rest of us. Their need for
survival is based on food, shelter and their need to create .For
many artists I meet, to deprive them of art making would be the
equivalent of depriving them of oxygen. Nothing made this quite
so evident, as the movie Quills, when the Marquis de Sade was
deprived of a writing utensil. His drive to create was so
strong; he pierced his fingers and used his own blood to write.
When we learn to recognize that an artist's creative product is
borne from such a powerful inner drive, the huge significance of
the creative product becomes somewhat easier to understand.
Frequently, during the preparations for an exhibition, all the
emphasis remains on the product the painting, the book, the
play, whatever. Often times the enormous effect mounting an
exhibition has on the psyche of the artist is often ignored.
But, when an artist's work is held up to public scrutiny, it is
in essence, a major loss. The studio is empty, the artwork now
out of your control, strangers eyeing it, talking about it maybe
even taking it home! It is virtually impossible not to have
fantasies and expectations about people's reactions to the work,
as well as the possibility of "getting discovered." It
is the part of human nature that makes everyone who buys a
lottery ticket feel convinced that they are going to be the next
winner. And regardless of whether the exhibition is considered a
"success" or not, many artists may experience post
exhibition blues and should learn to prepare for it.
This phenomenon becomes even
more complicated as we look at how each individual artist
defines success. Take a good hard look at your expectations. A
good exercise for artists preparing for an exhibition is to
create a list of the long term and short-term goals they wish to
achieve by having this show. You need to write these down.
Writing them and reading them will give you a more accurate
sense of reality. You can fantasize about wanting a show at the
Whitney Museum and know intellectually that you don't really
expect it to come as a result of this show but forcing yourself
to write it on your list of long-term goals will give you a more
accurate pulse of how realistic your goals really are. These
will help you to understand the terms by which you define
success for yourself. Allow yourself to go the full spectrum
from humble to grandiose. I firmly believe that it is impossible
to achieve your goals, if you are unable to visualize them go
for the gold! The trick is, keeping everything in perspective.
Examples of some common goals may include:
- Seeing your work in a
public, professional context
- Pride at having friends and
relatives acknowledge an important part of who you are
- Hearing strangers talk about
your work (for better or for worse)
- Getting a review
- Having sales, how many?
- Getting important
collectors, critics and curators to see the show
- Getting recognized by
another gallery
Now, evaluate your list and
assign a number value 1-5 that reflects how realistic these
goals are for you. 1 being the most realistic, 5 being your
best-case scenario. Don't forget to distinguish between those
goals that are within your control i.e., sending out press
packets to 40 writers and those things, which are out of your
control getting a review published. Only those things that are
within your control can be 1's. Doing this exercise will help
you develop a sense of what is both realistic and within your
control. Although it will help you to understand the underlying
cause of the blues, it may not help to prevent them.
Lots of artists have developed
different strategies for dealing with the blues you will need to
identify your expectations first, then work on finding the tools
to deal with them.
Here are a few suggestions that
other artists have used. Feel free to use these, or develop your
own strategies.
- Hold back the very last
painting you have finished. Keep it in your studio as a
springboard to future work instead of including it in the
show.
- Take a trip/vacation
immediately after the opening.
- Schedule meeting times at
the gallery with friends, during the course of the
exhibition, to allow yourself the opportunity to talk about
the work with a receptive listener.
- Put out a guest book and
encourage comments
- Start a new series of work
before the work for the show is removed from your studio
In any case, your best defense
against "Post Exhibition Blues" is your willingness to
recognize and accept this very natural step in the creative
process.
ArtAdvice.com, founded in 1979 by Sylvia White, in Los Angeles, is one of the few management consulting firms specializing in the career development of visual artists. They advise artists on all matters related to business, exhibitions, and marketing. In 1986 they expanded their consulting services to represent selected artists. In addition to their Los Angeles gallery space, they utilize associates in San Francisco, Chicago and New York to help us familiarize galleries, museums, collectors, critics, and curators with the work of emerging, mid-career, and established artists, their artists have participated in hundreds of exhibitions, nationally and internationally. Sylvia White currently serves on the advisory boards for ArtfulStyle.com, NowCulture.com and Guild.com.
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