Swan Lake performed in 27 bathtubs! - For the last time :)

Published: Wed, 06/01/22



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T8PLkd2VAnc
 
The quarantine has created a challenge for artists, especially performers to do the impossible -  to keep performing.

Anyway, do you know what this video reminds me of?

Something I’ve been hearing a lot in conversations with curators lately.

Curators and art directors were bored out of their minds during the quarantine too.  

They MISS studio visits, they miss the excitement of discovering new art, they miss interacting with the creative energy of artists...

So guess what?

This is the perfect opportunity to reach out to curators and invite them for a virtual studio visit. Getting them to say “yes” is easier now than it has ever been - even if you don’t know the curator personally. 

Check this out: 

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Testimonial 1

“I just took the plunge and asked the curator of the Bluecoat in Liverpool if he would like to do a zoom studio visit and he said he’d love to! He really missed studio visits! We’re booked in next week.” - Margaret (Praxis Center student) 

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And she didn’t even know this curator well before she approached him:

Testimonial 2

So I encourage you to take the plunge and reach out to curators.

And if you need help with that - with setting up the kind of studio visit that leads to solo shows, and press, and sales, then come join me for the free masterclass I’m teaching next week:
 
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VIRTUAL STUDIO VISITS FOR ARTISTS:

Get a powerful curator to do a Zoom studio visit with you (even if your studio is your kitchen table)

6th June at 1:00 pm EST

Click here to register for the workshop

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You will discover the exact same method Matthew Barney used to conduct his studio visit with Guggenheim’s Chief Curator Nancy Spector (and learn how to adapt it to your virtual visit). 

Want to have multiple virtual visits per month from powerful curators? 

Then the insider information you’ll discover on this workshop is the next best thing to having a relative in the Serpentine Galleries. 

And a relative inside the Guggenheim’s Board of Directors.

And a relative inside Tate Modern’s Board of Trustees.

And a relative inside the National Council on the Arts.

Short of having Hans Ulrich Obrist as a father or  brother  (🤷‍♂️), or being the love child of celebrity, it is the easiest way to stack the deck in your favour. 

Register for the workshop (it’s free) and see why... 

I hope to see you on Monday.

Best,

Brainard