Carla M Fox Metalsmith

The jewelry and metalwork of Carla M Fox
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Man Jewelry…..

Carla | May 28, 2009

What do guys like, want, wish for in jewelry?

I currently have a friend, P, who is bugging me for Man Jewelry. I’d love to accommodate him and the other men who have stared wistfully in my case and asked….”Do you have anything for men?” No…..I don’t, but I should.

What is it guys want in jewelry? Cuff links, quirky lapel pins, bracelets, pendents, single earrings, manly rings?

P is now pondering this question. He hasn’t answered me yet. But for all the other men who feel left out of the jewelry game, the question is now yours too. What would you like to see me make for men? Write me, let me know. The first Manly piece I make will be named for the Man who gives me the best answer.

Carla cmf-head-avatar

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Art Ruminations, Making Jewelry
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cuff links, lapel pins, man jewelry, manly rings
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Channeling Sally Fields…reallyReallyreally.

Carla | May 17, 2009

I don’t squeal. I don’t repeat myself. I carry myself with dignity and grace at all times.

So what was I doing squealing in a microphone at a city mayor and show director in front of hundreds of people. “ME? You really liked my work? Really?” The show director looked decidely puzzled at this remark and I plopped my mouth shut as I realized what I was saying. I tried again,”Thank you so much, I really appreciate this, I’m just surprised.” and with that I staggered back to my seat to the amused faces of my fellow artists and the husband.

I had won much to my astonishment “Best of Jewelry” in the La Quinta Art Show last year. Its not that I don’t think my work is la-qunita-awardgood, GREAT! and deserving of an award, but fabricated jewelers who don’t use a lot of gems, rarely win these awards. Or so I tell myself when I don’t win. Plus I don’t really like Best of….prizes as deep down I don’t feel art should be competitive. And I have too much admiration for my fellow jewelers to think I am the “Best of them” for any given time or show. But the little girl in me loved winning…..really-a-lots.

I received a chance to be more eloquent again this year when I won 2nd place in jewelry at Scottsdale Art Show, 2009. Oh, I do like winning. But again, I look at my very talented fellow jewelers and wonder, me?

The public seems to like to see the ribbons in one’s booth. Kids usually spot the ribbons first and nudge their parents into noticing. They congratulate them & I duck my head with proper humility and say “Thanks.” But the kindergartener in me is doing the Snoopy Dance and squealing.

Carla


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Art shows
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awards, La Quinta, sally fields
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Booth photos…arghhh

Carla | May 14, 2009

The room sounded like it was full of pirates. Another booth photo had come up on the screen and jurors groaned…..arghhh.

Artists understand what I am about to talk about, for my non-artist readers, an explanation is due. When we artists want to be in a show we just can’t add our names to the list. We must apply and be juried in. The application process usually involves answering a few questions, sending images of one’s work, and a booth photo of how one’s booth looks. Once the applications are all in a jury will review and score them. The highest scoring artists are accepted in the show.

It sounds so simple, but continues to mystify us artists as we apply to shows with our great work and don’t get it. WHY!? is always the question. Part of the answer is Booth Photo!

Jurying circa 2008

Jurying circa 2008


I recently had the opportunity to sit through a jurying for a show. I was not a juror but an observer.

What struck me and everyone else in the room was the poor quality of many of the booth photos. Many artists booth photos were just plain awful. Why did they waste their application fee by using such a poor quality booth image?

Well, actually many of us know.

Booth photos are a pain to get. We artists realize we need one in the dead of winter, as we are starting to fill out applications. Our booths are packed away and we try to figure out if we even took a photo of our booth last summer. Or do we have a decent shot from a few years ago, hopefully after we changed to our new work or redesigned our booth. Yeah, I have one…I remembered to take one…now where is it?

This wasn’t a fussy jury. A simple shot of the booth as it would look at this show was all they wanted. It didn’t have to be professionally shot. For emerging artists or non-show artists images of their work as a grouping was acceptable.

Artists without a good booth image had handicapped themselves and their application. As artists we never want to give the jury a reason to say NO to our application. In many cases the artists had done just that with their poor booth image.

The Don’ts:
Images that did not show the artist’s work in situ. Booth images shot with camera phones, shot with the sun coming directly into the camera lens, out of focus, with a turned over coffee cup and other debris in the booth. Images of booths with art work totally unrelated to the work the artist was jurying. (What would they show up with if accepted or is that even their booth?) Booths with the side walls pulled back so only the blue porta potties show, not the artwork. A particular irritant to this group of jurors was the booth images with the names of the artists on the booth, despite the show’s prospectus asking that NO names be visible. Images with people in them, more often then not the artist, happily selling his/her work. Or so many people that one can’t see the booth. The jury saw one side of a booths, a partial corner, the grass and roof of the booth, while the artwork was hard to discern. Heavily photoshopped booth images, were commented on, and disparaged a bit for being too overworked. A screen capture of the home page of a website with an explanation to the jury why no booth photo, was not well-received. Neither were scanned images of photographs or slides, that looked dirty, dusty, and out of focus.

The Do’s:
The booth had been cleaned up of misc debris, people, signage, names. The shot was clear, in focus, correctly exposed, and showed the jury how the artist’s work would present at the show. The photos shot at a shows were just as well received as those shot in a photog studio. The jury saw no need to set-up a special shot in a studio setting. The best ones showed similar work in the booth as was being juried.

Moral of this story:
We artists need to be out there shooting our booths all summer long to get the best booth image we can for next year’s round of applications. It is must, so juries can say YES to our applications.

Click for more info on booth photos from Larry Berman…

sm-booth-photo-composite

cmf-head-avatar Carla

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Art shows, Business of Art
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booth photos, jurors, jurying
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“Every time I wear my Carla Fox jewelry, people enthusiastically compliment my gorgeous earrings/bracelet and ask where they might purchase their own. I tell them, CarlaMFox.com”
  D.P.

Previously on the blog…

  • Life is a river and other corny ruminations
  • Zoa Donut Ring
  • And while I have your attention:

Blogroll

  • Art in the High Desert, Bend Oregon

Artist Blogs

  • Marla Baggetta
  • Shelia Evans
  • Cynthia Morgan
  • Hamilton/Roberts Designs
  • Luall Udell
  • Bonnie Blandford

Business of art

  • Art in the High Desert, Bend Oregon

Interesting Links

  • Sarah's Felted Jewelry
  • Zaffiro Jewelry
  • Fox Glassworks
  • Trisha Hassler mixed media
  • Tom Hassler-great photog
All content on this website is the property of Carla M. Fox and is protected under U.S. and International copyright laws.
The images may not be reproduced, stored or manipulated without written permission of the artist.

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