7 Essential Tools to Empower Artists as Entrepreneurs

7 Essential Tools to Empower Artists as Entrepreneurs

*This blog post has been featured on the Americans for the Arts ARTSBLOG.

Note: Because artists – in many cases – are entrepreneurs, I will be using the two interchangeably throughout this reading.

Individual artists invest considerable time and money to fuel their passion, gain expertise, and strive for a sustainable career as part of a $764 billion arts ecosystem in America. Though demonstrating a clear market demand and contributing to our vibrant communities, many individual artists lack the technical assistance needed in creating viable business ideas, structures, and growth strategies. Arts organizations can help individual artists succeed by providing professional development opportunities that build artists’ sustainability and capacity, thereby boosting our nation’s overall creative economy.

 

1. Writing workshops

It’s true that you never get a second chance to make a first impression. To this end, every artist has necessary materials that can help a career take off or stay stagnant.

  • Bio: Communicating an interesting background rather than a chronicle of a life history.
  • Artist statement: Demonstrating a clear mission. Why are you unique
  • Resume: Impressive achievements and relevant work history.
  • Business idea: Innovative solution to a target customer’s unmet need.
  • Business plan: Formal statement defining your business goals, the reasons you think they can be achieved, and how you are going to achieve them.

Business plans can take the form of an elevator pitch, powerpoint presentation, or a written proposal, especially for self-managed artists seeking to pitch their innovative program for selection in a presenter’s season or a curator’s exhibition.

 

2. Legal Workshops

Arts organizations can partner with Volunteer Lawyers for the Arts organizations that provide access to education, advocacy, and legal services through workshops and seminars, legal clinics, and pro-bono referral services for creatives and cultural organizations. Topics can include:

  • Business Entities
  • Contracts
  • Copyright Laws
  • Insurance
  • Taxes
  • Negotiation Strategies

Understanding these topics empowers to artists to create, distribute, and profit from their work. Another legal services assistance option for entrepreneurs is LegalZoom.

2019 Maryland Arts Summit Funding Workshop in Baltimore, MD, photo by Ceylon Mitchell

2019 Maryland Arts Summit Funding Workshop in Baltimore, MD, photo by Ceylon Mitchell

3. Website Workshops

With a clearly defined message and mission, artists especially need assistance building content, or owned media. Any entrepreneur should have a website but knowing how to create one can feel daunting and confusing. To cultivate a network of connections and a fan base, artists need to learn the process of obtaining a domain name, web hosting platform, and a website builder. A dedicated workshop will help artists consider design, user experience, and monitor with analytics.

In our visually oriented culture, publicity photos are powerful communication tools. Besides a workshop, arts organizations can help artists book a local photography studio. For example, in Washington D.C., the 202Creates Photography Studio is open to all DC residents. With a bio and professional photos assembled, artists now have a basic promo kit, known as an electronic promo kit (EPK) on a website. This compilation comes in handy for grant applications, teaching jobs, auditions, networking, and media outlet engagement.

 

4. Digital Marketing Workshops

With a great-looking site established, the goals should be driving traffic to a website and cultivating fans or prospective customers. This process, known as lead generation, can be achieved with blog articles, social media posts, email campaigns, podcasts, and other content marketing tools. When entrepreneurs generate valuable content via a blog, video, contributed article, or any other medium, people will want to hear what these emerging thought leaders have to say. Alicia Morga, General Assembly Digital Marketing instructor, says, “Content marketing encompasses the creation, editing, and distribution of content to help a specific target customer along in their journey toward a business.” Since many entrepreneurs use social media, or shared media, as their main source of communications, artists should know how to create meaningful engagement and market strategically.

 

5. Media & Public Relations Workshops

Once artists have compiled the essential promotional materials to tell their story and cultivated a loyal audience, it’s time to attract media attention to further grow their business. However, in order to increase community awareness and obtain press coverage, which is a form of earned media, artists need to learn local arts issues, assemble the appropriate journalists in a media list, cultivate relationships with a mutually beneficial approach, and pitch effectively.

KTUU Channel 2 news station in Anchorage, Alaska, photo by Ceylon Mitchell

KTUU Channel 2 news station in Anchorage, Alaska, photo by Ceylon Mitchell

6. Fundraising & Grant Writing Workshops

Artists often have great plans and ideas for projects, but often lack the funds to complete them. There are ways to raise money but it takes more time and effort than most people realize. Arts organizations can educate artists with the many forms of philanthropic support available to them from funders such as grantmakers, public agencies, and foundations. Grant writing workshops help prospective grantees map their project goals, activities, timelines, budgets, and impact. Another option for fundraising involves crowdfunding, an online and social fundraising method. One such example of fiscal sponsorship is Fractured Atlas.

 

7. Personal Wellness & Network Workshops

Last but not least, let’s discuss personal wellness! Artists dream big, present their vulnerabilities, and produce work that is deeply personal. What if a performance doesn’t go well, an exhibition is poorly received, a grant application is rejected yet again? Throughout the artistic journey, it’s important to know how to approach failure, whether big or small. Acknowledging the emotional effect, ditching the shame, and seeing failure for learning opportunities is vital for continued growth. Other areas of personal wellness include time management, managing stress (it’s a marathon, not a sprint), healthy nutrition, and adequate sleep. Finally, in my humble opinion, it’s important to maintain connections with the people who love you, whether your artistic endeavors are successful or not.

Angélique Kidjo: Color of Noize Orchestra

Angélique Kidjo: Color of Noize Orchestra

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Global icon and five-time Grammy Award winner Angélique Kidjo returns to Carnegie Hall in celebration of her incomparable 40-year (and counting!) career, including selections from her latest project, African Symphony, as well as performances with her band of songs that have defined her career. With arrangements by Derrick Hodge, known for his work with Robert Glasper and Common, the evening features hits from legends like Miriam Makeba, Fela Kuti, and more, plus special appearances by leading artists from across the African diaspora and beyond. Experience this extraordinary evening with Kidjo, who continues to inspire a new generation of artists and audiences worldwide.

Performers
Angélique Kidjo

with the Color of Noize Orchestra
Derrick Hodge, Conductor
Additional artists to be announced

Raíces Negras Trio – Village Trip Festival

Raíces Negras Trio – Village Trip Festival

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Members of the Raíces Negras chamber music collective celebrate innovative and prominent American women composers of the 20th and 21st centuries. Spotlighting the flute, cello, and piano, each work explores an element of nature and the spirits that dwell within, ranging from the Negro spirituals in Undine Smith Moore’s “Afro-American Suite,” the motions and gestures of the beach in Tania León’s “Sands of Time,” a day in the life of the Papua New Guinean rainforest in Elisenda Fábregas’s “Voices of the Rainforest,” or the avant-garde timbral illusions and mythical imagery of Clarice Assad’s world-premiere commission entitled “Flight of the Fairies.” Within these musical works, audiences will discover and enjoy the worldly and otherworldly soundscapes these composers can elicit.

Les Amorces: Ingleside at Rock Creek

Les Amorces: Ingleside at Rock Creek

Dr. Ceylon Mitchell II – flute
Amanda Densmoor – soprano
Dr, Yejin Lee – piano

Join Les Amorces as we celebrate the legacy of women composers, featuring a program that includes both their works and those of their male counterparts. This concert blends the voices of piano, flute, and soprano to highlight the creativity and influence of women in music.

J.S. Bach: Ricetti gramezza e pavento
Eva Dell’acqua: Villanelle
Lili Boulanger: Nocturne for Flute and Piano
Cécile Chaminade: Portrait
Cécile Chaminade: Sérénade aux étoiles
John Corigliano: Three Irish Folk Songs
Michael Head: Bird Song
Amy Beach: Wir Drei and Je demande à l’oiseau
Ah vous dirais-je maman (Adolphe Adam)

Levine Presents | Brazilian Choro: The Musical World of Pixinguinha

Levine Presents | Brazilian Choro: The Musical World of Pixinguinha

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Explore the imaginative and intriguing melodies of Brazilian choro with an evening celebrating the genre’s most influential composer, Alfredo da Rocha Viana Filho, also known as Pixinguinha. Alongside a remarkable guest ensemble, faculty member Ceylon Mitchell guides us through this Afro-Brazilian genre as we sample some of the most famous choros composed by Pixinguinha and his contemporaries.

Location: Levine Music DC Campus: NW + Online
Free for Levine Students

About Brazilian Choro
Choro emerged as a distinct musical genre around the middle of the 19th Century in Rio de Janeiro as a blend of Afrodiasporic and European musical styles in newly independent Brazil. Syncopated rhythms from Africa and popular dance forms from Europe (the polka, habanera, and more) melded together to create a unique new style, which often gives the lead and highly ornamented melody to the flute, harmonically supported by guitar and cavaquinho. Percussive accompaniment often comes from the pandeiro, a Brazilian frame drum similar to a tambourine. Though choros are frequently instrumental and improvisatory, they do feature lyrics from time to time.

  • Ceylon Mitchell, flute
  • Seth Kibel, sax
  • Pablo Regis de Oliveira, cavaquinho
  • Felipe Garibaldi, guitar
  • Lucas Ashby, percussion
  • André Coelho, percussion
Arts Club of Washington: Homage to Brazil

Arts Club of Washington: Homage to Brazil

Dr. Ceylon Mitchell (flute) and Dr. Felipe Garibaldi (guitar) perform duo works by Brazilian composers, including Clarice Assad, a Grammy nominated composer renowned for her evocative colors, rich textures, and diverse stylistic range. “Tríptico (Triptych)” is a three-movement suite inspired by popular Brazilian rhythmic concepts such as frevo, choro, and canção. “As Cores de Tomie” is a collection of four songs inspired by works and concepts of Japanese-Brazilian artist Tomie Ohtake (1913-2015).