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This year is different – so different.
Many many art fairs have been canceled or postponed since March, when states and countries began closing down to protect individuals from COVID-19. Mint Artists Guild artists are not able to sell at the Palmer Park Art Fair and others are in jeopardy this summer.
Our artists have missed out on at least four pop ups, including one in the historic Alger Theater on Detroit’s East Side.
And yet we knew that our artists had been making art during their shelter at home time. They have worked hard – and some of them are working peacefully to confront racism and unfair treatment. Many face big bills ahead as they prepare to head to the University of Michigan, Georgia State University, College for Creative Studies and elsewhere in the fall.
So Mint Artists Guild is jumping into the unknown by creating its first ever Virtual Art Fair this Saturday, June 6. Please register here, and invite your friends. Plan to buy something for your Dad, your grad or yourself. Or plan a brunch and invite in three friends and munch and watch and buy. The Virtual Art Fair will stream live on our Facebook page and also on our YouTube channel.
We knew little about virtual art events before we started, though our project director Kelly O’Neill had participated in one planned by The Guild. She is on Mint’s board of directors and creates beautiful sculpture and other pieces from recycled metals.
We want our young artists to sell their work on Saturday – or through the next week. Yet we know that times are tight and so we need to seek other benefits and possibilities from creating this new event. Here are three of them.
Connect. This new online format gives us wider reach well beyond the Michigan border. With a virtual fair, buyers may live in Dallas or the Mississippi Delta, Queens or Quebec. Our Mint greeting cards could end up in a gallery in San Francisco or Sanabel Island and so could artists Michael Johnson or Omari June Norman. We think this is important for all artists to grow their audience and connect in new cities.
Learn. We knew our artists could learn a lot by preparing for the Mint Virtual Art Fair. So we created a workshop that taught them to create an artist studio tour video and to share some of their tricks and techquines. Their videos are an integral part of the fair – and will be valuable to them for future events too. We are helping them refine their pricing of their art. They are learning too how to focus on and manage multiple priorities: school, their creative work, family needs and for some, Black Lives Matter and other peaceful campaigns.
“I always want to stay focused on who I am, even as I’m discovering who I am,” singer Alicia Keys has said. She’s not performing on Saturday but we have two other amazing musicians who will: Sky Covington and Mahogany Jones.
Pivot. We want Mint to model adaptability and an entrepreneurial ability to seek out new and different opportunities. We may not know as much about the digital world as Microsoft, Netflix or Quicken Loans, but we can develop an online sales platform and create new ways of connecting with people through art and storytelling.
You will meet them all the artists on Saturday, so today I will just tell you that they are wonderful and creative and work in a wide variety of mediums: duct tape, oil paint, photography, mixed media, sterling silver wire and acrylic paint. Every day we are adding new pieces of their work to the Mint Shop. Yes, everything already is for sale – and our seven artists and alumni receive almost all the proceeds. Mint takes a 20 percent commission, one of the lowest among nonprofits in Michigan, and charges no fees to join our programs.
“The pessimist seems difficulty in every opportunity. The optimist sees opportunity in every difficulty,” British Prime Minister Winston Churchill one said. We are the optimists who know that this time, so difficult and horrifying and uncertain, will open doors and create new paths for Mint and for our artists.
Join us on Saturday as we open a beautiful new door.
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