4:45 There was an article about the division of Black Americans and should we call ourselves Black artist or just artist. It's something I've struggled with myself on whether to call myself an artist or a Black artist
@@thespitefulartist for sure. I know many artist that have struggled with that. Unfortunately, the only artist that aren’t segmented by race are white straight male artist. Latin artist are segmented, Hispanic artist are, queer artist are, women, etc. And not just segmented analytically, often segmented thematically for exhibitions. You are an artist undoubtedly, but you’re also black, which puts you In this marginalized category. Unfortunately.
I try to call myself a Pop artist or Pop surrealism Artist when I'm doing my regular artwork.But I feel when I do my cultural art, I have to add that its coming from a Tex-Mex artist or a Tejano artist so it feels more authentic. So I would say, it depends on your artwork.
When you interview artists, I find it very interesting. Just adds to my knowledge of today’s artists or artists that are coming up. Maybe it helps me to hear their story, as an artist myself. BUT I really like the breakdown of the art market. I find it “super helpful for an insider to share there there thoughts and insights. Art Agents, Galleries, Collectors, etc… Brilliant
Thank you so much for sharing! I have a few videos lined up I think you may like. 1. Exhibition Planning 2. 5 Must Know Artist 3. The Artist / Collector Relationship 4. Navigating your art career, and the different career paths. 5. Explanation of different types of galleries! All in progress. I can’t wait for you to see those over the next few weeks. Would love to know which you’d be more excited about!
@@DearGlorywithMoriahAlise Thank You, The art world is full of gate keepers, and any insight helps. I'm busy building up my inventor, so "navigating your art career"
🫧💖Thank you for such valuable content. I was trying to register for the art exhibition webinar however both links in the description lead to the collectors webinar. If you are still having the exhibition webinar I would appreciate attending and being informed with any updates on it. Thank you!🩵 Also, I appreciate how you addressed the concern of you featuring black artist as "balancing" things out. That's a fair response.
This is such a complex topic…and I wish it wasn’t. The art can speak for itself and find its owner, regardless of the socially assigned race of the artist. It’s amazing and wonderful to spotlight Black artists. One of the issues is that many artists want their work recognized more so than their race. The work will either resonate with a collector or not. If a famous department store added to their name “purple owned and operated,” for whatever reason, green, magenta and aqua people will psychologically (at least slightly) either be more or less curious and intrigued to engage with the store, or avoid it altogether due to feeling there’s no real place for them there, or the store is indirectly saying “wink, wink, this place is only for purple people.” That’s a far-out example, but my point is highlighting race before the artistic piece can have an impact or influence in either direction. Continue to spotlight the art you believe deserves it. Again, the work will find its owner.
Please keep focusing on black artists. I remember when I used to visit galleries in the 1990's here in Chicago. There were no black artist's work available in any of the galleries in the Art district except at Nicole Gallery and N'Midi both of which focused on artists of the African Diaspora. In the last ten or so years that has changed a little. Yet, we have hundreds of years of history to draw from in this country and since the best predictor of future behavior is past behavior its seriously naive to expect that the art world is going to include us permanently. Your second commenter simply does not understand the US or worse is willfully ignoring reality here..
4:45 There was an article about the division of Black Americans and should we call ourselves Black artist or just artist. It's something I've struggled with myself on whether to call myself an artist or a Black artist
@@thespitefulartist for sure. I know many artist that have struggled with that. Unfortunately, the only artist that aren’t segmented by race are white straight male artist. Latin artist are segmented, Hispanic artist are, queer artist are, women, etc. And not just segmented analytically, often segmented thematically for exhibitions. You are an artist undoubtedly, but you’re also black, which puts you In this marginalized category. Unfortunately.
I try to call myself a Pop artist or Pop surrealism Artist when I'm doing my regular artwork.But I feel when I do my cultural art, I have to add that its coming from a Tex-Mex artist or a Tejano artist so it feels more authentic. So I would say, it depends on your artwork.
When you interview artists, I find it very interesting. Just adds to my knowledge of today’s artists or artists that are coming up. Maybe it helps me to hear their story, as an artist myself. BUT I really like the breakdown of the art market. I find it “super helpful for an insider to share there there thoughts and insights. Art Agents, Galleries, Collectors, etc… Brilliant
Thank you so much for sharing! I have a few videos lined up I think you may like.
1. Exhibition Planning
2. 5 Must Know Artist
3. The Artist / Collector Relationship
4. Navigating your art career, and the different career paths.
5. Explanation of different types of galleries!
All in progress. I can’t wait for you to see those over the next few weeks. Would love to know which you’d be more excited about!
@@DearGlorywithMoriahAlise Thank You, The art world is full of gate keepers, and any insight helps. I'm busy building up my inventor, so "navigating your art career"
@@fireproofart5526 awesome!
I love this channel, I love that you are an educator and I love this a platform for learning and growing ✨
Thank you so much!!
🫧💖Thank you for such valuable content. I was trying to register for the art exhibition webinar however both links in the description lead to the collectors webinar. If you are still having the exhibition webinar I would appreciate attending and being informed with any updates on it. Thank you!🩵 Also, I appreciate how you addressed the concern of you featuring black artist as "balancing" things out. That's a fair response.
This is such a complex topic…and I wish it wasn’t. The art can speak for itself and find its owner, regardless of the socially assigned race of the artist. It’s amazing and wonderful to spotlight Black artists. One of the issues is that many artists want their work recognized more so than their race. The work will either resonate with a collector or not. If a famous department store added to their name “purple owned and operated,” for whatever reason, green, magenta and aqua people will psychologically (at least slightly) either be more or less curious and intrigued to engage with the store, or avoid it altogether due to feeling there’s no real place for them there, or the store is indirectly saying “wink, wink, this place is only for purple people.” That’s a far-out example, but my point is highlighting race before the artistic piece can have an impact or influence in either direction. Continue to spotlight the art you believe deserves it. Again, the work will find its owner.
Intresting video💯🔥🔥
Thank you!!
I love this format and will be there to celebrate Beyoncé with you 😊
@@ealons3378 thank you E!! 🩷
How can I reach out to u?
Please keep focusing on black artists. I remember when I used to visit galleries in the 1990's here in Chicago. There were no black artist's work available in any of the galleries in the Art district except at Nicole Gallery and N'Midi both of which focused on artists of the African Diaspora. In the last ten or so years that has changed a little. Yet, we have hundreds of years of history to draw from in this country and since the best predictor of future behavior is past behavior its seriously naive to expect that the art world is going to include us permanently. Your second commenter simply does not understand the US or worse is willfully ignoring reality here..