ellenmillion: (let down hair)
ellenmillion ([personal profile] ellenmillion) wrote2009-01-09 09:12 am

Artist pay all calculated.

I want to lie.

My intentions are good - I want to lie and tell people that their work sold like bubblegum monkeys, report huge sales to them and reassure them that their artwork has tangible value. When I get to the .02 pay reports, I find my fingers reluctant to hit post. Maybe I could tack on a dollar. I wouldn't miss a dollar. $1.02 is a helluva a lot better than just $0.02.

In the end, I don't. They might ask me, "what sold?" and I'd either have to extend the lie, or backpedal, and then they'd probably feel worse, knowing I felt sorry for them.

Of 189 artists, only 19 made $10 or more. A few of them significantly more.

Those artists who do the strongest are the most technically skilled (though there are some baffling exceptions of spectacular artists who were totally overlooked), who use brilliant colors, have a large selection at EMG, folks who work large enough and give permissions for large prints, those who have prominent links from their (often already popular) galleries and homepages, and those who have been around a year or more so that I'm more likely to have their work in stock for in-person sales.

Wholesale was up a lot this year, percentage-wise to total sales, which meant more work for less pay for all of us.

There are bright spots in artist pay. A few folks were 'found,' and got decent royalties. Not, you know, rent-paying royalties, but enough that I don't feel embarrassed handing over their totals.

The bulk of the task is done, now (the database and notification stuff), and I'm glad.

I'm ready to move on to final-proofing the anthology and working on the print services webpage.

[identity profile] flasher.livejournal.com 2009-01-09 09:10 pm (UTC)(link)
Ellen, you should never feel embarrassed for reporting sales to the artists. I'm always thrilled when I get my yearly notice and I don't sell all that well through EMG. Know why? Because those are sales that I didn't have to really work for. I didn't have to print it and fight with the colors. I didn't have to package it up. I didn't have to fill out registration paperwork or make oddles of little price stickers for it. I didn't have to worry that the post office would mangle it in shipping. All I had to do was spend a little time on the computer and *magic*, there is money in my account (I know its is no where near that simple from your point of view ...)

Compared to all the other ways my art makes money, EMG is a cinch.