Free Advice:
Because I don’t really have the time/resources/energy to be spreading the seeds of my limited wisdom around while take my GRE, apply to grad schools, recharge my creative juices in general, manage MANY bi-costal relationships, and search for flatware as the East Coast Maid Of Honor in Nel’s wedding, I’ve decided to just drop in some advice on curating that I recently shared with inquiring minds for you to decipher…
Later I may also share some other helpful things as I think of it so I can just refer people here and stop writing lengthy emails and doing other people’s research.
Here it goes…
::SITUATION A::
HER:
::SITUATION B::
HER:
I just talked to you last week! Sorry it has taken me a while to get back
to you! My boss is going to be sending me more information tomorrow about
the artists, and I will send you the link so you can look at the art!
I’ll just tell you a little bit about myself and what I am doing! I just
graduated from … and I studied International Relief and Development. I
recently just got an internship with … as a part of the
fundraising team. I am going to be planning different events at
universities and I will also be doing fundraising with corporations as
well as private parties. I will also be displaying art in a few studios as
well.
My goal is to raise $50,000 by April. All of the funds will be going
towards Wells in Niger in West Africa. Niger is the poorest country in the
world and also has the largest water drought. It cost $12500 for one well
but it sustains a community for 1,000-2,000 and it also lasts for 20
years. World Vision is the largest NGO. It is a Christian Relief and
Development Humanitarian organization and works in 98 countries.
ME:
Thank you for getting in touch with me again.
Let me just say that I think your goal is a great one. Using art as an attractive and focused mode of fund raising is a natural thing, however, from experience, I would say that… (a) you need a charismatic speaker to work with you as a spokes person for the issues at hand. and (b) you should have supplemental fund raising items as most people wont bid on art work for financial or spacial or taste reasons. and finally (c) you need someone, and this may be you, to focus primarily on the finances, both raising money and keeping track of it.
These sorts of things can never be done alone. Know who your friends are that will help you and try not to exhaust those resources.
I also went to … . I studied Fine Art and Graphic Design. Working with designers I understand that Marketing helps these sorts of events, and working with artists, I know that partnering with volunteers and artists requires a lot of energy on relationships.
Good luck. Talk more soon,
::SITUATION C::
HER:
hope you’re doing well!
Although I have no expectations because this is super super last minute. (33 hours left on the countdown.) I’m looking for 1 last reference letter required for an artist residency application. If you would be open to doing this on such short notice I can send you the project proposal I’m finishing up if you’d like to see it and will send the online application invite where you submit the letter to. I’d just need to know the best email address to send to, your title and organization as you’d like it to be and it can be uploaded straight to the … Foundation which I’m applying to.
ME:
email me and I will do it tonight which should still be in time.
HER:
I sent you the invitation. I was not sure what to say your title is. I put Curator, if you would like it differently I can see if I’m able to go in and update it on my end. Tonight will be fine.
Thanks so much!!!
ME:
(She fills me in and I look at the website for residency.)
To Whom it may concern:
I am pleased to recommend … for your residency program. She and I have worked creatively, crossing paths periodically, since our undergraduate work at …. Her video and installation work pushed past what many of our piers would have thought of at the time, and her approach to her work was always professional.
That professionalism is why I have exhibited her work as I have gone on to curate a verity of spaces since our time in school. Her sense of movement, structure, rich texture, and composition is highly developed in her still photographs as well as her motion installation. She has proved to be a stickler for detail and quality.
Her interests go beyond that of her craft and extend also to the viewer, and even further into the community. She has a skill to reflect her own ideas, but is also apt to aid others in their creative development. She has shown consideration for her fellow artists by her involvement in founding mentorship opportunities while we were in school. She has shown her interest in her viewers by attaining a high level of craft, leaving no flaw to distract. She has also exhibited a high capacity for creative conceptualization and the facility of materialization of those ideas.
Overall I believe that she could greatly benefit from the opportunity of this temporary community for the natural beauty of it’s geography, as well as the magnetism of it’s cultural relevance. … manages to include many layers of her life experience into her work, and I believe that this would deepen future work created by her, as she also would contribute to the environment shared with the other elect fellows.
::ONE MORE EXAMPLE::
Here is one more example of a recommendation letter – some details omitted…
To Whom it may concern:
I am pleased to recommend … for acceptance into … . I first met … when we were working on our undergraduate studies at …. I believe we both gained much inspiration from professors … and …, whose careers remain active (respectively) in interdisciplinary projects, sculpture and performance. Undergraduate work sparked my interest in curatorial studies and collaboration. Since then, a fellowship at … brought me to the east coast. This allowed me to work again with … as well as artists …. I am now on the board for W< ("Wunderkammer", founded by Swartz) and continue to enjoy dialogue with artists working in all media, but particularly new media and installation. In my experience working with ... she has always been exhaustive in her approach to new projects. Looking for smart ways to refine craft and effectively communicate concept. She has always been able to verbalize her ideas at a superior level of intellect and comprehension, while acknowledging the dynamic picture of her work in the context of the cannon of art history, as well as contemporary art culture, and the world in general. Personally, I enjoy her work for both the depth of her thoughts as well as the qualities of her materials - which, I believe, interface cohesively. Recently ... has been teaching art at an elementary level as she builds up her body of work. Though she has excelled in this experience with creativity, bringing nuance to her class room when the bar was set at basic craft, I believe she is meant to create work and teach at a level of higher dynamism and academia. Earning a higher degree is not only critical for her to accomplish what she must, but it is a very natural next step that I believe she is prime for. Last August she withdrew before attending ... because she believed there was a better situation in which to develop her graduate body of work. Observing her dedication to the mind and the arts in practice and research I have no doubt that she would be an asset to the landscape of your program, as she advances herself through it. Her view of art making as a serious intellectual pursuit and her desire to be in a rigorously challenging program allows me to state with confidence that acceptance into your program would be mutually beneficial and honoring to the work she has already accomplished.