The gallery (which I shall refer to as Gallery #1 because there will be others) didn’t get back to me within a week so I decided to give them a call. I asked to speak to the owner (whom I named – I didn’t just say "may I speak with the owner" – the typical cold-calling approach!) but was told he was not in. I then started having a chat with the man who answered the phone. I said to him that I just wanted to make sure the owner had received my email – in this day-and-age of junk mail there was a good chance that he didn’t. The gentleman asked my name and said that the gallery receives maybe a dozen approaches from artists a day, that the owner generally checks all the mail, and if he hadn’t got back to me then the chances are he would not.
The gentleman said that the gallery doesn’t have enough time in their calendar or space in their gallery to show all the work of their existing artists – let alone taking on new ones. He apologised and said that that was just the reality of the situation. I thanked him and that was the end of the conversation.
I just feel that with a gallery owner making his living from hard-working artists – that at least he would have the decency to reply to a prospective artist who has approached him for representation. Suppose the situation was reversed: I was a famous artist, he was setting up a new gallery aiming for the big time, and he approached me… Did he ever stop to think how he might feel if I completely ignored him?
He may live to regret it – who knows? The search goes on…


3 comments
Comments feed for this article
July 30, 2007 at 2:33 pm
lifecreativitycoach
I love your site. Keep going and you will find the right gallery. You are good and I enjoyed your paintings.
July 30, 2007 at 3:10 pm
Michael Autumn
Thanks for your support.
August 24, 2007 at 9:47 am
roastporkbun
You might want to check this out — “The Gallery Scene”, written by gallery owners themselves.
http://www.slowart.com/limner/htm/york.htm
:)
Cammy