![]() Dorothy Gauvin |
Articles of Interest for Artists by Dorothy Gauvin Art Gallery Gauvin To contact Dorothy, click on her photo, which will take you to her web site and e-mail |
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Gallery Browsers
Enjoying Your Visit
Many people seem to feel a bit intimidated by art galleries. The private (commercial)
kind, that is. Sure, in a big public art museum, you know to speak softly. You
know you can't eat, drink, or use a camera with a flash bulb. You musn't touch
the paintings. You shouldn't get close enough to breathe on them. Still, you can
feel safely un-noticed among the crowd. Even the museum guards seem benign, there
simply to tell you how to find the elevators or the nearest restroom.
But a private gallery seems to raise all kinds of nervousness. Some people lurk
in the doorway, ready to bolt if the gallery staff make a move in their direction.
Some answer the gallery person's Good Morning smile with an apologetic "I'm only
looking." Sometimes the refrain is uttered in a defensive tone that clearly
translates as "Don't think you can pressure me into buying anything." Some folk,
bless their hearts, ask "Is there an admission charge?"
You wouldn't do any of those things in any other kind of shop. And no matter how
lavish its furnishings, how celebrated its artists or rarefied their price tags,
however chic and haughty its staff may seem - it is only a shop. Its business is
to sell artworks, and you are a potential customer. If not today, then perhaps
some future day. So, just relax and enjoy your visit. Looking costs you nothing.
And any gallery person who comes on like The Dragon Lady is a fool, as well as rude.
Let me tell you a true story, with a happy ending, that shows the wisdom of the
old saying: "You can't judge a book by its cover." It happened on a Friday when
a friend was visiting me at the gallery. We watched a chap hesitate in the doorway.
I called out to let him know he was welcome to come in.
"I'm a bit grubby. Been working in the yard." He gestured at his clothing: battered
baseball cap, well-worn tee shirt over mud-splattered denim shorts, rubber thongs.
I told him that the paintings wouldn't even notice, then left him to browse until
he made it clear he had some queries. For nearly an hour, I answered his intelligent
questions, told him the stories behind each painting, and enjoyed discussing our
shared interest in Australian history.
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A bit miffed, I countered that if I had to calculate whether a visitor was "worth" my spending time on, I'd never be able to enjoy my day in the gallery. "Anyway," I snapped, "in my experience, artists could starve if they relied on the people who look as if they were buyers." In fact, they were the reason I stopped giving opening night galas in the days when I exhibited other artists. They used to arrive loaded with gold chains and flashing their diamonds - and that's only the men! - breathlessly announcing the Volvo or Beamer (it was never just "the car") was double- parked outside. They'd stay long enough to make sure that the press photographer had snapped them and got their names right. Then they'd be off. To the next party, no doubt. I'd found my real collectors are solid, self-made people who'd earned their wealth and feel no need to impress others. They want quality and know it when they see it. So, as you can imagine, it was hard for me to resist being smug when my friend returned later that day, to hear I'd received a phone call from the "grubby" visitor's wife. She said he'd come home "raving" about one of the paintings and she wanted to buy it as a surprise for him. He'd be flying out on business the next day, so the earliest she could come in to the gallery was 10am Monday, after she'd seen him off. Was there any way I would hold the painting for her? I promised to put a red sticker on it right away. At exactly 10am Monday, she was there with cheque book in hand. Only then did we discover that this unpretentious pair owned a multi-million dollar business that made headlines in the local newspaper when they'd recently sold it.
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