Whoa.
It has been a BUSY month. Ok, it's been a busy FOUR months, but who's counting?
Let's see...
The Clowes show was a fantastic success! I sold four paintings, and take down was October 10th. I had a blast doing it, would do it again in a heartbeat and learned so much in my preps for it. I mean, I can frame stuff now! All by myself! (I'll frame your stuff too, and cut mats, for a fee of course, just email me). It was a great experience, and I look forward to the Scholastic Art Awards in March (something I have in common with Andy Warhol: We're both Gold Key winners!). Clowes is the host of the Indiana...let's call it state contest, the winners (Gold Key holders) go on to show in New York, then Washington, D.C.). Also, capping off the year, next spring, is Freddie Kelvin's show. He's an amazing photographer, and worth checking out! (That and his nature-inspired works will go well with the dawn of spring!)
I haven't had a chance to do much painting in the last month. Just kind of shoring up and completing stuff that I had been working on for various other projects. Clearing the backlog.
I built this:
It has been a BUSY month. Ok, it's been a busy FOUR months, but who's counting?
Let's see...
The Clowes show was a fantastic success! I sold four paintings, and take down was October 10th. I had a blast doing it, would do it again in a heartbeat and learned so much in my preps for it. I mean, I can frame stuff now! All by myself! (I'll frame your stuff too, and cut mats, for a fee of course, just email me). It was a great experience, and I look forward to the Scholastic Art Awards in March (something I have in common with Andy Warhol: We're both Gold Key winners!). Clowes is the host of the Indiana...let's call it state contest, the winners (Gold Key holders) go on to show in New York, then Washington, D.C.). Also, capping off the year, next spring, is Freddie Kelvin's show. He's an amazing photographer, and worth checking out! (That and his nature-inspired works will go well with the dawn of spring!)
I haven't had a chance to do much painting in the last month. Just kind of shoring up and completing stuff that I had been working on for various other projects. Clearing the backlog.
I built this:

It's my birthday present from my mommy. It's actually a (really freakin heavy) pine workbench that I put together for a kitchen counter. I'm going to paint the legs blue, and then sand them to give them an aged look, and seal the surfaces. It's gonna be rad. I'm just really proud of it because it's the most complicated thing I've ever built. I mean, it came in a kit, but there were 90 screws involved and the thing was so heavy I can't lift it by myself.
I also finished up some comic lid boxes. See, the BF and I collect comics. I'm X-Men oriented, I just spray paint my box lids different colors as a way to remember what is in which. He took it a step beyond, and has me paint the lids a basic color, then the logo of whatever the box contains. From back to front, we have Marvel (for the miscellaneous), Green Lantern, Hulk, Spider-Man, Thor, Thunderbolts, and two Avengers. The Hulk and Spider-Man lids are the latest, and fresh off the recently cleaned slate. I'm happy with the detail on the lids, especially the Spider-Man one. You get one pass at that, because the paint is hard to cover up on those lids, so I'm glad I got it right on first go. The Avengers one is the hardest, next time, if he needs a third one, he's getting the Avengers "A" logo and that's it!
I made these:
Announcing: JOY HERNANDEZ ART GREETING CARDS!!
Yeah, I've been blowing up Facebook lately about these things, but I think they're pretty neat! Here's the deal: All of my artwork are available as lil prints on nice greeting cards. Even the images of the paintings I've already sold. There's a nice white space inside for whatever message you'd like to send and envelopes are included. I picked brown cards because I think they provide a nice neutral background for all the zany colors in my artwork. Somehow, they all 'go' with brown. Anyway, I'm offering them as "custom" packs of 6 images of your choosing. Just pick 6 images and I'll whip them up into cards. You can get as many packs as you want, its just that price is based on the pack of 6 model: $5 per pack. For odd numbers beyond that, I'll price them at $1 per card. Also, at art shows and events, I'll have "theme" packs premade, the theme kind of being how I group them. For example, the 5 windmills and another nature based painting would make a "theme" pack of 6. Shipping will be based on how many are ordered and how far they will be sent. Email me for more details!
Phew. I gotta come up with a more concise way of explaining all that. I made a bunch of those bundles in preparation for...my latest event!
Sheek Treasures For You at the Earth House. It was this last Saturday, November 6th. The Earth House is a building that used to be a church. I think it still is, sometimes, in some capacity, but the first floor is now a cafe, and the second floor has a sound set-up and such for seminars and concerts (apparently Ok-Go played there a while back). Traffic was much slower than anticipated, so that left plenty of time for chit-chat with my artist neighbors. We bartered amongst ourselves, and I got a cool fused-glass necklace pendant and a set of hand made ceramic salt shakers. I also hosted Green Glam jewelry and Stuff from the Bunker mosaics from my artist pals in Muncie but, save for the sale of a pack of cards, the day was kind of a bust. Oh well, can't win them all.
As you can see in my booth set up, I have a grey, three-panel set-up in the background. This was expanded on my set-up for the Wilson Wineries event last June. That one was outdoor, I had a tent and just hooked those things onto the tent. This time, no tent, so, with the help of my pal Rocket, we made feet for the panels out of cement poured into kiddy sand castle buckets. It held up awesome! Not even a wobble! So here's the recipe: Those panels are PVC pipes, strategically glued so I just put the top and bottoms onto the side bars and they're good to go. A big grey "pillow case" for a covering, fence post hook things with wire and "s" hooks to hang the artwork. All finished up with sand bucket feet! This whole thing collapses into easy pieces that fit nicely into an already packed Toyota Yaris hatchback.
(PS Debra: Your jewelry was very visible, but I moved that black art stand thing in closer for the picture, just letting you know. :) )
It kinda sucked that it was such a slow day, but good things came out of it all. We each had to contribute to a raffle (yay for greeting cards!) and I actually won the first draw. That NEVER happens. I got a cool orange glass vase from the same artist that made the pendant. I'm happy with the idea to include the greeting cards, because, it seems, at alot of those events, people are looking for small things now, big thing later. If you have a booth full of mostly big things, having a few small things drives some traffic, small sales, and ways to get awareness out there. A good business decision. Warhol would be proud.
Next time: Big News, unfortunately, out of Muncie. Yeah.