
The Independent Artist Podcast
Visual Artists! You are not alone! IAP gives voice to the working artist. Inspirational and entertaining conversations with successful road show artists. Every story delves into the process of self-discovery behind the work and the career path that creates financial success. Douglas Sigwarth is a glassblower, and Will Armstrong is a mixed-media artist. Both have been working as independent artists for over 20 years on the art fair circuit. As cohosts, their contrasting experiences and styles make for comical and relatable talks that affect today’s contemporary artists.
The Independent Artist Podcast
Cancer Connection/ Cat Tesla
Working Artists! You are not alone!! When Cat Tesla https://www.artbycat.com/, heard her doctor say the words " you have cancer," her world was turned on its head. Cat describes her physical and emotional journey through a double mastectomy and how she handled stepping back from a thriving art career as an abstract painter only to come back with a renewed focus. Her revelation was that through public transparency of her diagnosis within her art business, she encountered a magnitude of empathy and meaningful experiences of connection. To inquire about Cat's painting workshops or her "Business of Art" seminars, go to https://www.artsmartworkshops.net/
Visual artists Douglas Sigwarth https://www.sigwarthglass.com/ and Will Armstrong http://www.willarmstrongart.com/, co-host and talk about topics affecting working artists. Each episode is a deep dive into a conversation with a guest who shares their unique experiences as professional independent artists. This week's preamble topics include making work on a large scale, reactions from our last show, and a tribute to Vicki Munn.
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foreign
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welcome to the independent artist podcast sponsored by the National Association of Independent Artists also
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sponsored by zapplication I'm will Armstrong and I'm a mixed media artist I'm Douglas sigworth glassblower join
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our conversations with professional working artists
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Douglas sigworth I'm back and ready for the podcast are you ready for more nauseating banter oh nauseating
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nauseating banter Jesus turn the stomachs of all of our fellow artists
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here on the podcast okay come on give a little background as to why you're saying that conversation is nauseating
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while you're at it we've been doing this a while now wow and I feel pretty pretty
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good about the fact that this is our first bad review yeah we got our first bad review and not even actually you
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it's like a letter to the editor like I want to speak to your manager they got their full Karen on
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um I I've been told that that is uh that I shouldn't talk about Karen's that's one way that the world silences the
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voice of women so I've been listening to that and okay but um this woman was a total Karen well you were a little crude
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I think I even called you out on that one I was nauseating nauseating shall we yes we have no plans to change my ways
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my my Wicked Ways here's the thing this is a volunteer project that you and I are just like kind of having fun with
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and if somebody isn't enjoying us I mean that you know I'm sorry right uh like
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George Carlin said it's like the radio has two knobs and I can understand her being uncomfortable with something with
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the knobs but uh let's move on shall we shall move on so
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we are back from the last show it was good seeing you out there I really appreciate you coming down the hill and
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seeing some of the new work that meant a lot I know it wasn't super easy on your your poor club feet you know coming to
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see you was not the problem it was the going back up oh God you needed a lift I
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swear they had a lift going the other direction I was like man if they only had that no but it was fun I really
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enjoyed seeing that huge piece that you made last week it's awesome that is totally awesome you know I did not sell
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it there talking about new work I did this one giant nine foot by six foot pain and I did not sell it at the last
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show and it's it's too heavy to take it was kind of a gamble you know this whole
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business as a gamble it is it didn't sell at that one I'm like I don't know like I had to take a trailer to in order
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to move it and all the stuff so I'm not discouraged but I don't know if I'm taking it everywhere until I get a new
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vehicle I so I totally hear you on that because we have a pretty huge and
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involved glass sculpture piece that we do select which shows it's going to until you know kind of picking the
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market for one but also picking the logistics is another part of it too and it'll make a big uh nice backdrop for my
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huge wall in my studio down in Santa Fe so sure it was almost like Mike roushafenko piece because I had
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um I had people stand in front of it all weekend and take pictures so that was really cool I got a lot of a lot of hits
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on Instagram with that and a lot of people tagging me so that was fun and definitely some different kinds of
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conversations different designers and things like that so it opens the door anytime you do something new it's fun to
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it's fun to talk about it but I don't know if you're like me I don't quite I feel like I don't know how to talk
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about certain things yet I don't have my Spiel yet yeah there is a little bit of finding your legs I mean definitely yeah
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I don't know Douglas I feel like when you get new work sometimes you have the dialogue and you're really excited to to
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talk about it but then you just start kind of tripping over your own words because you've never spoken about this
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story or this influence or where this is coming from or going so it's it's it's a
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different thing and it's good to keep us fresh well I know just walking down the hill it caught my attention from like I
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don't know eight booths away because it is that big of a scale and you had the same conversation with Dolan and Ali
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Marie several weeks back where you say that's like a branding it's like you know you know that was their work well I
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felt that way with you yeah and I actually stopped looking at what was next to me because I was from like that
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far away was like tunnel vision until I got closer to that piece so I mean that
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piece really working on in that way I think is kind of a cool direction thank
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you thank you I have some some more ideas uh in that same kind of series The the trick now is going to be how to do
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it lighter later yeah because right now I'm like I'm at I'm beholden to whoever
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my neighbor is and or if I've hired somebody to help me but it was yeah it's nine feet and 85 pounds there's no way
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I'm my wingspan is even that yeah I didn't even think of that for sure yeah well I will admit that morning coming to
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saying Hey to you and checking out your booth we're having a conversation and then all of a sudden everyone's gonna
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appreciate this my face drops and I'm like oh he's shoving breakfast in
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his mouth and I'm talking to him you ruined my breakfast how dare you talk to me while I eat I you know I mean
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nobody's nobody's begrudging you that one it was flattering that you made your way down the hill but I did I did I did
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hear her in my ear as I'm realizing I'm like don't talk to artists who are fill in their mouth with food I did text Ty
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after that really you'll never guess who just came to talk to me while I was eating anyway okay well we both have big
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weekends coming up here I wanna first of all send out a shout out it's probably it's already would have happened when
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this airs but our good friend okay Clifton is tying it out this weekend tying a knot this weekend so huge
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congratulations to the good friend of the show Clifton Henry he and his lovely fiance cat will be wed by the time this
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airs it'll it'll have happened uh yesterday so they're getting married on a Sunday and so huge congratulations and
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and thank you for the the contributions that he's given to the show yeah good friend and good episode he had last year
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talking about his work and getting seen by Halle Berry and going viral and
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Alicia finding your voice yeah finding your voice that's a big thing uh for him too so that's a good reason to dig back
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into season one one of our first handful of episodes that we're both real proud
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of definitely so that's a big thing going on this weekend and we've ourselves have kind of
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a big trip planned Renee and I are heading off to New York not to do a show
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but to drop off a piece and to scope out a project that were in negotiations with
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with somebody so this is kind of a new thing to drive cross-country to work on
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a project so it's kind of a fancy I feel a little excited about it heck yeah go
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to Manhattan big lights big city that's great I know well we all wish you uh big luck on that trip I hope it is
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successful I hope you can close a bigger deal out of it too yeah so that'll be a fun trip but it is different we we kind
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of get our head around hopping in the van and stuffing it full of everything we've got in our studio to go set up a
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show and to just like kind of get in the van and not have like you're you're cramped together you know filled to the
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kills yeah I'm going away for the weekend and um we actually have a funeral to go to on Saturday
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unfortunately but um we're hopping in a car a car what the hell is this car
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we're gonna get in my wife's car for driving around town not for going anywhere far well yeah I mean she's a
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jeweler she could go to a show in her car and run a tent and do all that stuff but we're gonna hop in her little Volvo
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and man it's gonna be so nice to just sit there as a passenger and and not worry about setting up you know nobody's
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gonna it's like going to an Archer like do you kind of like going to something that's not art show related I feel like
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I'm gonna get there they're gonna ask me to bury the body I'm like okay get to work
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let's see I'm going to funeral and you bring my shovel I need to bring my tarp so they're gonna mess up the grass
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um anyway I'm not that makes it sound like I bury bodies for a living but maybe you do maybe you don't yeah watch
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your p's and q's Douglas so hey so one of the conversations we
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were having at the last show we were talking about sometimes we we find as artists that we're making work that
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might seem kind of like super specific or or be like a niche for a certain type of person and it might not necessarily
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appeal to both members of a partnership and how do you navigate your way through that
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I mean this this may be a side note to that but I always feel like I I make something and I think it's going to
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appeal to one person and it always appeals to somebody else okay so it's that's a that's a weird thing for me I
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feel like I'm trying to to make it for uh maybe a certain group or or a certain
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room of a house or home and and it kind of I don't know it always ends up kind
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of going somewhere else how do you deal with that I I just remember when we were talking about it and I was like yeah I
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told I totally get what you're saying and you looked at me and you said no you don't well
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you know what it was uh what we were talking about is I was telling a very
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specific story and in order to like like with those portrait pieces that I've
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done not only do you have to like the portrait and like the work you have to like the person I painted and you have
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to like the saying that I wrote underneath it so it's a very very specific market and I was feeling
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jealous of you at the time and because you were like well that's like glass and I was like the it is like glass
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here you just have shiny you just have to have like it's like this thing and it's not saying a story or anything
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that's that's like s honed in and I just was feeling a little uh I guess uh I was
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a bit sure because when I was big I guess it was a big shock uh okay so I
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get that point I I get that and I I do feel like there's an aspect of our business of of any artist business Where
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We Are we're kind of making something that we that we love that we have a deep
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connection to somebody might see it and go well I would like it if it was a little different and then there's a part
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of us that does that shift and say well I'm going to do what really excites me
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but I it'll still fit within your range of the pie like you talk about what can
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I still tolerate making that fits into my aesthetic and my and my thing even if it's let's say a different color you
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know right I mean you're you're probably dealing with the fact that you've got like well if it was a little different blue than it could then it would match
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the couch there is definitely an element of home interior kind of architectural kind of
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stuff going on are you dropping your Spiel on me is that I hear you kicking into the Spiel The Shield I'm trying to
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sell you right now well I've got some glass I want you to definitely I like those art words I mean the architectural
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and yeah good good good yeah I am like what are we we're looking at like middle
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August by the time this thing airs and I've noticed this impending feeling of
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dread like for I don't know how long this thing lasts Doug but like that two-week like middle of the
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cheeseburger sweet spot that we have as art show artists yeah for everything for
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the year is set up and applications aren't open yet for the next year and
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it's like well I've already gotten into everything that I'm going to get into there's no gnashing of the teeth there's
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no worry there's no check your email every 15 minutes the dye has been cast it's like you just have to show up and
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be a worker three shows left I'm just gonna go do them and instead I'm like ah man this is
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so great and then all of a sudden this week I started getting the emails our application is open oh and it's like oh
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I heard it I don't wanna like I get the dread of applying I'm like oh I gotta
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get my new my new zaps and I gotta go go format my images I gotta go do this and I gotta like I gotta go look at my thing
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again and and see exactly I gotta go start okay Armstrong stop now you're putting me into a huge panic attack for
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crying out loud I I I literally last night thinking about finishing this year
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and scheduling a surgery and then next you're thinking about what I'm gonna do next year and when I can get back on the
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road is open what Florida is open I know that's what I thought
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I can't even deal with it right now so okay I hope you get into Winter Park okay enough of that that can be tabled
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for another time I have I I just have that inner dialogue all the time it's like did you apply to the Grove yet did
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you apply to Winter Park are you going to do Florida yeah let's put this back on you are you doing
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Florida you want to talk to Howard
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okay yep that's amazing yeah yeah you know who is not panic inducing Douglas
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who is that the lovely cat Tesla she's got her on the show she is so cool and level-headed
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and I really appreciate her sharing with us this week the struggles that she went
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through this year a very vulnerable way it's just an inspiring story it is an
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inspiring story and the way she kind of handled it with Grace and she is such a
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lovely human and it's really nice to see her and her husband back out there I think of her as kind of a Powerhouse in
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in our industry and and I've always thought of her as this person of kind of like you know just like a strong
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presence and and big strong paintings and well she's the whole package the whole package the business and I mean
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they're big and they're strong but they're feminine but they're also she's got a voice you know and to kind
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of bring that to the show and share her strength as well as her vulnerabilities is a pretty huge gift so thank you to
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her yeah yep great talk and let's just roll right into it shall we uh this is cat Tesla from Northport Florida
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this episode of The Independent artist podcast is brought to you by zap the digital application service where
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artists and art festivals connect no Doug I was sitting down and talking with my wife yesterday she had just come in
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from her studio and she was complaining one of the big shows they decided to do a do-it-yourself reinvent the wheel
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application I hate that hate that so much seriously I mean it's like typically an application that would take
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you two minutes on zap all of a sudden it's going to take you an hour and a half to reformat all of your images to
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their specifications it just made me think about how easy applying with zap
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is you just click a few buttons you've got your 1920s all formatted and you are
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good to go exactly so I personally appreciate what zap is doing and thanks for not making us reinvent the wheel
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every single week like we used to have to do cat Welcome to the independent artist podcast it's so great to see you
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and I'm glad you could join us I'm thrilled to be here Douglas we met for the first time in Des Moines this year
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but I knew of you from your online presence I mean you've got a huge online presence and I'm zooming by your booth
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on my knee scooter and I'm like wait a minute that's cat Tesla I gotta make the introduction
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well I think we've both had quite a year of health issues
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and I do want to get into that but before we start delving into the most recent speed bumps we've been going
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through I kind of want to lay the groundwork and get to know the broader story of you I kind of feel like when I
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started looking at your social and looking at your bio and stuff online you are someone who has a very strong sense
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of both sides of your brain it seems like you work very left and right side is that true uh yeah that's most
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definitely true my short story is that when I grew up I didn't think I could be
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an artist you know like any kid I loved painting and drawing I sewed I sculpted
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and in high school when I was getting ready to graduate I was a super nerd I
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also equally loved Math and Science oh okay so I was awarded a one-year
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scholarship to the Kansas City Art Institute that I declined and I had academic scholarships
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I know I know the audience probably just gasped you were you're like identified
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for having excellence in your creative abilities and you're like that's not really what what we we don't go on to be
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artists or what was that kind of the Practical thing well you know we didn't know anybody who was an artist and I
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remember clearly my dad saying he got the first year covered good luck with that also the scholarship but it's like
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after that you know what I mean you're on your own kind of thing yes yes so you know him saying that sent me down a
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20-year career in science so I ended up getting a bachelor's
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degree in biology and a master's degree in human genetics and I was on faculty at Emory University in Atlanta as a
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genetic counselor genetic counselors see people through the lifespan I worked in high risk OB so I saw people who might
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be doing IVF and having pre-implantation genetic diagnosis or somebody who was
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having an amniocentesis or there was an abnormal ultrasound or whatever I would be the person that they would see and
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then when the results were abnormal I was the person that called them to tell them so genetic counselors have you know
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really kind of specialized training in both counseling and science so our job
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is to translate complex information into layman's terms so psychology played a
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big part of it too because you have to cushion the blow and transition people into like a game plan when they've been
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maybe given information that's hard to process that's exactly right so yeah you
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have to get them you know kind of back where they can hear you back from the
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breakdown so I could hear you back from the brink but yeah I have to say I owe my art career to art festivals because
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my friends and I were going to these art festivals oh that was like your weekend entertainment pretty much yeah yeah
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and I couldn't believe what I was seeing because I was walking through like the
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Piedmont Art Festival in Atlanta when it was going on and the Virginia Highlands Art Festival and the Dogwood Arts
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Festival and I I was like oh my God they're doing it they're doing it
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they're making their living as an artist and it was at that moment that I was
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like I can do this you know we've had this story before from some other of our guests Clifton Andre talked about in his
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photography and graphic design background when he'd go to art fairs he'd be like I could do what these
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people are doing I mean did you feel like your work would fit right in or was it just that there was a model out there
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a sales model for you that you could do that it was really the model which you
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know it just it just hit me like a two by four it was like this is now a possibility because I had put it on the
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Shelf you know so was it like the hobby yes you know what I mean that you could express yourself but it wasn't a
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lifestyle it wasn't a way to make a living absolutely yeah so I entered the
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Virginia Highlands Art Festival in Atlanta in 1997 and I got in the show I
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won best in my category and I sold almost everything I brought only because I had no idea what I was doing with
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regards to pricing so everything was very cheap well don't sell yourself for it there I mean I mean I understand that
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but no matter what the price if there wasn't something that resonated with the audience they're not going to spend ten
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dollars let alone you know thousand dollars or you know five hundred dollars whatever you you entered the market with
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but I understand what you're saying yeah but that's such a a welcoming entry
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that's the response was like off the charts accepting and you sell everything and all that good stuff no I I couldn't
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believe it and then my um call me and invite me to presented by them so literally the next
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week I went part-time in my genetics job wow that fast I mean that almost seems
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like an overnight thing well I was so cute okay so how did that transition
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from the professional Science World into the art world how did that work well
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about four years later in 2001 things were going really well so I was planning
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to quit at that time I was having some medical problems I had to have a
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hysterectomy in December of 2001. so I was going to come back to work for a
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couple weeks in end of January and then I was gonna you know give my resignation letter
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sure so a month after my hysterectomy my husband was diagnosed with colon cancer
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I was 38 he was 41 and it was like the
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rug of Fate had yanked out from under us well and that's a time when a lot of us
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worked in jobs for health care because Health Care was just an impossible thing
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to count on as an independent oh and and that's the so what happened what happens I stayed at my job for five more years
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because there was no Affordable Care Act so every insurance company said look
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we're not going to touch you until your husband is five years cancer free and it was just
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I it was one of the hardest times I got to tell you because you had the enthusiasm just to to move into that
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next world yeah you were being held back yeah and and so
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you remember in high school the groups like there were the jocks and the burnouts and the Nerds and the uh you
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know whatever I was in the nerd group I think I was there too
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it's okay so so I knew I had
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that I had to wait because we got our medical insurance through my job oh yeah I started reading marketing books and
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business books my husband and I took courses on body language so that we would understand better how to sell we
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took courses on negotiation after that five years was up we were ready well you
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are approaching the art World from a real business focus that's an intense
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planning for this creative field I mean I feel like a lot of us artists jump
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into the fun part of it the part where we can access our creativity and express our ideas and our feelings
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and they don't teach in school or not many schools I I didn't have this experience in in my school where they
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teach you to create a marketing or business plan or anything like that right so you were doing that on your own without anyone kind of guiding you
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mm-hmm yeah because I I had to be successful I wanted to leave
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my day job and not look back so you had a plan and and then you were able to
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execute that plan when the time frame happened right so I left my genetics job it was in 2006 and my husband also he
24:00
was running a renovation company kind of Boutique Renovations for very wealthy
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homeowners like you know creating a wine cellar or uh you know whatever they wanted a spa room or that kind of thing
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yeah you know during that five years I was still doing my art just wasn't full
24:18
time and so things just started to really get busy and I needed his help so
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first he started helping me in the studio with varnishing all the work photographing it wiring it then he
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started helping me with the website then I couldn't keep up with QuickBooks so
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you know I taught them how to do QuickBooks so you know so there were more holes in the dam that he was able
24:41
to fill right right and so you know we both decided that we'd rather work for
24:47
ourselves than somebody else so he folded his company and that was that was
24:53
kind of it and we forged ahead on the road of art festivals
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we just talked to Dolan and Ali Marie guyman a couple episodes ago and they
25:04
have that kind of perfect partnership where they've got Dolan as the artist and Ali Marie's the business side and to
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have that partnership it really kind of covers all your bases it's really cool
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and you have that yeah thanks yeah we we definitely do and I have to say my
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husband is very active in selling the work at the shows he's he's really good with people because he had to you know
25:29
in his previous job he was doing quotes and working with people with a lot of
25:35
disposable income so it was kind of good training for you know that dream art collector that
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we all hope walks into our booth right right right it seems like all of those components of our past play such a
25:48
beautiful place in our present and in our future you know it's it fits in so nicely yeah I I think so but I think
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that's true for every artist you know you're putting your whole life experience into your artwork whether
26:03
it's glass blowing or painting or photography I think I think the artist is their art
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that's such a good point because one of the things that I struggle with and it
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kind of brings me to the Crux of our conversation today is that where does that line I mean it's different for
26:22
everybody of course but we are artists who connect with what we make to sell it
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so then how do we have a line of what's personal and what's public
26:35
I'm saying it seems like that line gets pretty blurry sometimes yeah that can be
26:41
a little tricky I would say it's hard for our kids I mean our kids grew up on the road with us at shows and
26:47
we treat a lot of our collectors like family you know they come in and we hug them and say how's the kids and how's
26:52
this and the kids then when we establish appropriate boundaries with I have a
27:00
story that I've told on the podcast about somebody who wanted my daughter to come walk with them to the car and we're
27:06
like uh no that's not gonna happen but a writer had no didn't know any difference like this is like Uncle so and soar and
27:13
blah blah blah we can trust them because whatever it's just a whole weird phenomenon out there oh yeah most
27:19
definitely yeah no we have collectors that we you know stay with at shows you
27:24
know we have so many collectors that we call friends and happily so yeah yeah so
27:30
you've been in this full-time artist mode done for 20 some years now right
27:37
where that that professional genetic Science World was is in the past right
27:43
and then your most recent kind of speed bump that comes along is this diagnosis
27:49
that you had right so in February I had an abnormal mammogram it was a routine
27:57
mammogram I'm doing all the Florida shows I don't
28:02
even remember what was in February it's it's that kind of experience and then right
28:07
um a few weeks after that I have a breast biopsy that is right before Vero
28:13
Beach okay then my last show is downtown Naples so we're waiting for the results
28:20
and my husband and I are debating do we even go to that show and we had to go
28:27
because we we weren't sleeping we couldn't really stand to just be in the
28:32
house the not knowing yeah the not knowing that's yeah it's all you're thinking about you know I think just
28:37
about every family out there when a woman has an abnormal mammogram every
28:44
step along the way there is that worry of what are they going to find is it
28:49
nothing or is it something and so you go on to the biopsy part I mean that's an even more invasive kind of like well
28:56
we've definitely have something that we need to probe and look into so I'm sure that that anxiety was quite High yeah it
29:04
was it was awful and not to get too gory on this on the air but oh get gory
29:10
people like gory a breast biopsy I think is probably like
29:16
having prostate biopsy so I had four abnormal areas in one breast and they
29:22
took 24 samples over four hours oh my gosh and I was icing my chest from every
29:32
moment after that procedure so we do the downtown Naples show I
29:39
don't even really remember it we drive back to Atlanta okay so it's about nine hours we take our luggage out of the van
29:46
and I get the call that no woman wants to get which is the radiologist calling
29:52
me to say you have breast cancer I mean
29:58
I'm sure there's so many emotions going on and so much but it's got to feel like
30:05
this weird kind of Full Circle moment like you are now the person getting the
30:11
news that you were having to talk through and give the news you know in your previous life all those years ago
30:18
so how did you manage that when the roles are reversed well worse at first it was it was a really a
30:25
hard day that particular Monday so I I just fell apart at first you know the
30:31
next day my husband and I talked and he's like well you know we've done this before and we got through it he got
30:38
through it you were there for him right you know so it's almost like
30:43
here we are yeah for yeah pretty much so yeah run and hide from it
30:49
like you can't just just pretend it's not happening so that's uh the reality
30:54
is just probably sinking in pretty deep what you're going to be dealing with right yeah I knew what all the
31:01
possibilities were but it just so happened that three days later we were closing on our home in Atlanta to move
31:08
to Florida okay oh so you already are planning a big life change
31:14
and now you've got this and you've got doctors so did you do your treatment in
31:20
Florida or did you stay put so what we did was I had to have you know a breast
31:25
MRI I had to see surgical oncologists nurse oncologists
31:31
um a plastic surgeon if I wanted reconstruction so we managed to get all those visits in
31:39
before we moved and we negotiated that we could stay in our house in Atlanta to the middle of April in order to get all
31:46
the appointments in and the young couple that bought our house she's pregnant and
31:53
she's due the first week of May so she's like I I feel for you but we've
31:59
got our own stuff going on here that's right so so we knew it was a big
32:07
ask because they were like uh we gotta get in here yes right right so we
32:14
managed to get those initial appointments done and then we had a surgery date in May so we moved to
32:20
Florida and we were just frantically unpacking and we weren't sleeping because it was all
32:28
about waiting for a double mastectomy so that is probably the longest month of your life I would assume
32:33
yes most definitely so then there was the question of
32:38
well how do I handle this um I have shows I have galleries that are talking to me
32:46
about commissions I have people from shows talking to me about commissions
32:52
I teach artists online workshops I coach some individual artists so then the
32:58
question was who do we tell the first shock is is really internal and it's
33:04
like how am I going to deal with what's happening to me physically the bubble starts going outward it's like this
33:10
affects how I make a living so I'm sure that as those ripples go outward how do
33:15
we manage this life we've crafted because as artists we have to hustle oh absolutely and so we panicked for a few
33:22
days and then in in our heads we weren't going to be able to keep straight who we
33:28
had told and who we didn't tell we it got down to that so I very nervously made a public
33:37
announcement on my Instagram and Facebook pages and right before I did that I emailed all my Galleries and art
33:44
consulting firms I work with and just said hey this is what's going on you know nothing until September pretty
33:51
much and you know blah blah blah and so right it's like I'm telling you first before
33:57
you kind of just read about it online right before the breaking news right
34:03
right of course and if you know we had already talked with all our family and friends and our friends rallied around
34:09
us in Atlanta they were they had been so upset we were moving because I had lived in Atlanta for 32 years okay and so
34:17
you're leaving your support system just when you kind of need it right yes such
34:22
weird timing yeah I mean it's never a good time yeah so I decided to make it public I had no no idea what the
34:31
response was going to be and I had just so much support on social media I
34:37
had women artists from just name a country they were writing to me saying
34:44
thank you for telling us your story because I'm dealing with some side
34:49
effects from my surgery nobody talks about this it affects half the population so this just isn't your
34:56
network of people you know this is now branched oh however they find you online
35:01
are connecting to your story right right and I had so many women also who
35:08
skipped their mammogram and the pandemic and that is why I could not get my
35:14
surgery very quickly it's because everybody's coming in with breast cancer
35:19
the day I had my surgery I was one of six that my surgeon set was doing one of
35:27
six six people having a double mastectomy on that day and you know they
35:33
they can't you know their people are just being diagnosed all the time you know so if you you know the the trick
35:40
with cancer the whole gig is you've gotta catch it as early as you can because then it's treatable
35:46
and and mine I just needed surgery because it was caught very early I'm super lucky
35:52
when people wait that's when you're gonna need you know chemo radiation you
35:59
know when you start ignoring your appointments or you skip you know so if you think if you skip your mammogram and
36:05
the pandemic then you have not had anybody check for two years that's more
36:11
than enough time for a tumor to grow for it to get to a stage where it's
36:16
beyond where you would anybody would want it to go right hmm wow so you put yourself out there
36:25
and you got love back you got overwhelming support from people you know people you don't know
36:31
and I mean there had to be this fear of
36:37
revealing the most vulnerable thing about yourself and what if there is no
36:42
reaction you know what I'm saying what if you don't get that love social media can be it is such a big
36:51
beast that scares people to death social media is a whole nother subject
36:58
but yeah that was the only place to put it you know like I couldn't add any more
37:03
artists to my coaching yeah so then everybody was like okay we're gonna reschedule everybody was so good about
37:08
it but there were just too many people to contact and I was in the middle of moving if somebody let's say on a social
37:16
media page writes how are you and something that's on something serious
37:22
it's like it can just it could be a lot of fires to put out I went through the same thing I'm I'm dealing with some
37:29
nothing like you nothing life-threatening but it is a bone deformity that I have to have surgery
37:36
with and so it's been a rough year because I'm just trying to get through
37:41
but I experienced that same feeling of like if I just tell a bubble all select
37:48
group and then they feel like well he didn't tell me what's going on with him and I forgot and there's somebody
37:53
important to me it it really messes with your head so I totally understand that dilemma you're talking about yeah yeah
38:00
no it's I think it's It's tricky because as artists we're an aging group those of
38:06
us who do art festivals so I don't know what the median age is I'm gonna guess
38:12
close to 50 or maybe mid 40s it's not just going to be me unfortunately no and
38:19
I mean the statistics for breast cancer among women is is growing isn't it I
38:24
mean how common is it it's one in eight is your lifetime risk but then it you know if you have a genetic
38:30
predisposition you know if you carry a mutation in one of the known breast cancer genes they're actually several
38:36
but the most well-known or the breast cancer one and two genes then your risk is like 85 percent it is something we
38:43
need to whatever Health stuff there's just a multitude of them were humans and
38:50
part of being alive on the planet is dealing with our health
38:55
so and choosing to put ourselves out there and being creative but then also
39:02
our work comes from us it's hard to maintain any sense of it's almost like we have to treat ourselves like
39:08
celebrities in a way which is kind of a sickening thought you know what I'm saying the ego and everything but we we
39:15
kind of have to I mean people fall in love with us they fall in love with our story they fall in love with our work
39:20
based on the experiences they have with us right yeah no I think that a lot of
39:26
the people that come to art festivals it's like the artists are Greek gods and goddesses you know they're yeah yeah
39:34
well how are you doing now how are you today I'm I'm pretty much back to normal I'm
39:41
going to physical therapy because one of the things that you learn is that when
39:47
they take out lymph nodes from underneath your arm it's a big cut right
39:52
and there are a ton of nerves under your arm and so you can have nerve
39:58
damage it can be temporary or permanent my doctor thinks mine is temporary but
40:05
it's in my painting arm which uh since my breast cancer was on the right side
40:11
and I'm right-handed so I have a great physical therapist down here in Florida who actually one of their Specialties as
40:18
women who have had double mastectomies and are having nerve pain so it's it's
40:24
phenomenal so I'm you know kind of learning a lot now about how to take
40:29
care of myself and recover fully but I'm I'm getting really close so thanks good that's really good news
40:36
okay so you put yourself out there online to let people know but then one thing I I see from your social media is
40:43
you allow the experience of cancer to also influence what you wanted to make
40:49
what you wanted to express not just like telling your story verbally but in your
40:55
work it kind of seems like it had an impact right so I did have you know that time
41:02
before my double mastectomy and you know we were unpacking things but I was also
41:08
painting because I was only sleeping like maybe four hours a night I just was reeling waiting for my surgery and still
41:17
getting used to the idea that oh my God I have breast cancer so I painted a lot and
41:25
one day I had a a pile of small canvases and I started writing like a drawing
41:32
medium Fu cancer on each one I started painting them and so I did an
41:38
Fu cancer series of small works and I sold them and I'm
41:45
still selling them but I raised three thousand dollars and donated it to breast cancer research
41:51
and then I had all these people contact me and say I want an Fu cancer painting
41:57
so I had to do more of them open it back up again it was great so I'm gonna
42:04
continue the series until the end of the year and I'm going to make another donation to breast cancer research
42:11
probably in November but it was a really great way for me to
42:17
kind of get my anxiety out by you know using painting as therapy and then uh selling
42:25
those paintings for breast cancer awareness and to raise money for research
42:31
so tell me more about that did you was the fu cancer written across the canvas
42:38
but then you painted an abstract on top of it um the words are underneath so I would I'd write a few cancer and then
42:45
I'd you know kind of erase it with a big brush stroke because I wanted it to feel
42:52
like I was you know mentally I was channeling that I was done with cancer and that I was
42:59
cancer free I was really just trying to think ahead and tell myself you know
43:05
there's going to be a day where i'm not going to feel like this I'm going to feel back to at least a new normal there
43:12
are some spiritual thinkers out there who believe that it isn't necessarily
43:17
fantasizing about it it is energetically creating it is that what you were kind
43:24
of doing too I mean were you mentally trying to heal before the doctors could
43:30
physically go in and take that cancer out of your body I don't think I was mentally trying to heal but I'm a big
43:38
believer in visualization so my husband and I plan out our year and
43:45
we put together something called a desire board and we do this every year
43:51
and I teach artists online to do this as well you know what do you desire maybe
43:57
you want a house in the mountains maybe you want your work in a museum maybe you want to laugh more maybe
44:04
you're too serious yeah we have our desire boards pinned on our wall where we can see them so I made a desire board
44:12
for my breast cancer you know what did I want to happen and I had a particular
44:18
surgeon that I wanted at Emory you know because I knew actually a lot of the oncologists because I helped start the
44:25
cancer genetics clinic so I got the surgeon I wanted okay probably just a
44:31
coincidence but it was on my desire board you know I wanted to heel in a particular number of months I
44:40
wanted to be able to go to Cherry Creek so I had you know a timeline in my mind
44:47
where I would be okay enough to do certain things and I had all of that written down these are super specific
44:54
it's not like a general thing it's like a specific show you want to be be at a
45:00
specific doctor and all that stuff so yeah absolutely so I think there is like you can you can search Dr Google and
45:08
find that there is a lot of science around manifestation there is like the science of manifestation is a thing yeah
45:16
I'm no expert on that but I think it's really good to focus on what you want and not spend
45:23
time on what you're worried about like the what if you know what if that
45:28
happens what if that happens well those are the things you don't want to happen well that's what I'm dealing with with
45:36
my situation because I'm waiting on a surgery uh to do some fusion of Bones
45:42
and will I after this surgery be able to walk like I'm used to I need to do that
45:48
because now with the year of struggling I chose to wait I'm kind of Lucky in the
45:56
sense that I got to plan how I do this recovery so I didn't have to stop my
46:01
entire world and put the income and and the shows on hold I could say I'm going
46:08
to do this on my timeline when I feel comfortable but it's been a challenge
46:13
it's been a physical challenge to to navigate but now I'm getting into that
46:19
kind of that dark thinking because I've been doing this for so long right of is
46:24
this my new normal what if it doesn't go the way I want it to I really appreciate that suggestion yeah so those are things
46:31
I would throw out the door and start writing down what you want to happen
46:37
and I would be as specific as you can and I know it sounds a little woo-woo
46:42
you know to talk about this stuff but I mean there is wool involved right
46:48
absolutely you know and and the thing is there are a lot of corporate people on
46:55
the planet who do this kind of thing there are a zillion books on it I have other things on my desire board for the
47:02
year like like I want to have hair like Cher okay so so
47:09
it's not gonna happen but you know like I grew up watching sunny and Cher and I
47:16
I always wanted to have her hair obviously I see it's not at all but I have but I mean you can kind of put
47:22
anything on there but I have to tell you Douglas that my husband and I have a number we put on
47:28
our desire board at the beginning of the year of what we want to achieve that year a number for like gross sales
47:35
income whatever is that what you're talking about manifesting your income okay yeah a number for gross sales and
47:41
we always exceed it we've done that too for years in fact if anyone walks into
47:47
my grinding room as I stare at it while I'm grinding these which I hate to do that's the least favorite part of of the
47:54
process for me is the cold working aspect of glass and I stare at that number and and then the new number goes
48:01
down below it and down below it and that's that's my non-intentional way of doing what you're talking about
48:08
well you're but that's the same that's exactly the same idea focusing on it
48:13
it's the same exact thing okay wow so something that I thought was interesting
48:20
when you got into the art business stepping out of your corporate sciency world there was a lot of planning in the
48:28
artwork kind of like how you planned that transition and you you know what I'm saying you you had a plan for
48:35
yourself and that's how you your work was and you've evolved to a place where
48:40
you start at a at a starting point and you allow the work now to evolve into something you hadn't anticipated when
48:47
you made that first stroke right yeah yeah started the first few years were
48:53
very mixed media with handmade paper and pieces of clay that I was making and
49:00
then I segued into painting Landscapes and seascapes
49:06
so now I'm just doing non-objective work and the way that I work is I view myself
49:15
as having a conversation with the canvas so you know one stroke is made then I'm
49:20
responding to that or maybe I've tinted the canvas a particular color and I'm responding to that so I'm not forcing an
49:28
outcome it's more exploratory it's more I don't know it's it's interesting it
49:34
you know I think painters are just artists in general we're creative problem solvers so you have a you have a
49:42
canvas in front of you or you have a hunk of glass or you have a hunk of clay
49:47
you need to do something with it you know so how are you going to solve the various problems along the way I can't
49:55
speak to Glass making but I'm sure you could tell us like well there's this one part where if you don't get that right
50:01
then the next thing doesn't flow and so it's it's very appropriate to how we
50:07
work we work in kind of loose abstracts in our glass with how we apply the color
50:12
and colors have different expansion rates so the form gets dictated as the
50:19
color is stretching in certain areas of the glass and then it's a reaction to
50:25
what the vessel is doing so it never gets out of our control it's not like
50:30
you know you'll have somebody walk in your booth who don't know the material and maybe as an abstract painter they'll
50:37
say this to you too it's like you just have no idea how it's going to turn out right as if we walk into the session
50:43
without a plan in mind or without a road map but what I'm describing is we have a
50:51
plan but then we have to react to what the materials are doing from our
50:56
experience of well if this is stretching here then we're gonna we're gonna do this over here to get a desired outcome
51:04
and it sounds like that's what you're experiencing with with reacting to the canvas and reacting to The Strokes that
51:10
you make absolutely yeah yours sounds a little bit more you know like you have
51:16
to have some knowledge of chemistry and how the glass is going to react it's a
51:21
little it's more physical yeah it's definitely more physical like a I always say it's like a soccer match
51:30
absolutely yeah but for you when you did the the fu cancer series oh I know you
51:36
had this vision of being cancer free but still was it delving in that unknown and
51:41
saying that you were bringing Beauty out of something that was underneath of it which was that sentiment of I'm really
51:48
angry with what I'm faced with the cool creation of that series was me
51:56
getting out anger and anxiety about the diagnosis but I I was very surprised
52:04
that I picked all bright colors they ended up being really pretty and
52:09
uplifting is what people told me and I don't know if that was the
52:15
subconscious thinking about you know I just want to be well right well
52:22
so I noticed when I go through your Instagram that we talked about that you're very open on
52:29
your social media but I notice you've really built a following and an audience
52:35
it's almost like a daily practice of putting out a post it's a very personal
52:42
post I mean they're not all about cancer but they're also about like there might be words involved about what you're
52:49
feeling that day or a revelation that you have and then it gives the work even
52:54
more meaning yeah I I said it interesting to talk about our work I
53:01
love to hear artists tell me about their work I want to know more because you're
53:07
really learning a little bit about them you're learning a little bit about technique you're learning about what
53:12
they're thinking when they create it I don't know if you want to get into the business of art but it's always good to
53:19
have an intention and a goal behind what you're doing on social media so I'm not
53:26
really posting just on a whim I have a little bit of a plan I'm I see you know
53:33
I'm nurturing my current collectors and artists who might want to take one of my
53:39
workshops or who need help with their art business okay and so I feel like if
53:45
I can be transparent that that's helpful in nurturing both of those audiences it's a genuine kind of authentic way of
53:54
communicating with people and also like you said nurturing that that business
54:01
model you'll get work from social media you might not sell
54:06
your work on social media people will start following you and it's because
54:12
they're interested in your story they're interested in you you know when an
54:17
artist sells their work The Collector is buying of course the art but they're
54:22
buying the artist well it's super hard to do that online on these channels you
54:29
know you put me face to face with somebody and we have a wonderful
54:34
connection but then to post it on a worldwide Network like that there is a
54:41
struggle with that but you do it so beautifully it feels effortless I know it's not because there is like you said
54:49
there is a methodology there's a plan there's a there's a strategy with how you do things thank you it's it's
54:56
something I'm passionate about I want to let people into my world art is about
55:02
connection right so where I have stood in front of a canvas for weeks or months
55:09
or however long it took me to finish it then the potential collector is going to
55:16
stand right where I was standing and they're going to be pacing back and forth looking at the details examining
55:24
the work making a decision and they're going to be feeling whatever I have put
55:29
there but they're going to be walking the same steps essentially as I did okay
55:35
so that is an extension of meeting them in the booth or seeing it at a gallery
55:40
right that this is their way to to touch into the creation and the Inception of
55:46
the birth of the piece right so just like if you have a person walk into your booth they're not going to look at the
55:52
glass from a distance they're going to get up close they're going to want to maybe touch it they're going to look at
55:58
it from different angles and it's going to kind of mirror how you created it
56:04
you of course were touching the glass and looking at it from different angles I find that art collectors and artists
56:13
actually have a very intimate connection when somebody buys your work that's
56:18
because they both like the work but there's something about you in the work that they're connecting to right this
56:25
mentoring and this teaching that you're currently doing is that something that you've been doing for a while or did
56:31
this come about with the pandemic it stemmed out of the pandemic in 2019 I
56:37
had taught workshops in Santa Fe with a friend of mine named Julie Schumer we
56:42
taught painting workshops and we had an idea for teaching both painting
56:49
workshops and The Business of art workshops in 2020
56:54
we had them actually scheduled and loaded with artists our bank account was
57:00
full and then we had to cancel all that and
57:06
refund everybody's money and we were really devastated like everybody was
57:12
when the coronavirus pandemic began so Julie called me up one day maybe a month
57:19
later and she said we're taking this operation online we formed a company
57:25
and we began filming so we each teach our own painting
57:32
workshops on our own we teach one together but we started teaching a course called
57:38
The Business of Art Online I see and can artists take your classes by going to
57:45
your website is that something that's available that way is that how they get in touch with you for that yeah so the
57:51
um the business course is actually on the website that Julie and I our business created it's called Art
57:59
smartworkshops.net gotcha okay and then what happened was the people who took
58:04
the business of art course wanted more help so we started a business of art
58:10
membership and you have access to a library of information we add new
58:16
content every Tuesday we have a a monthly business call on Zoom that we do
58:22
with any artist in the membership who wants to be at it and we help each other
58:27
troubleshoot issues that they're having in their art business cat you've got like the whole package I
58:34
don't I never feel like that I just feel like I'm trying like everybody else you
58:39
know you know one of the things that I have to say it's really wonderful to help other artists it's just so
58:45
gratifying I mean it's it's a kick just to help somebody else it's I don't know
58:51
it's it's hard to describe that feeling well that mentoring I mean that's really awesome I mean that is a a great way to
58:59
to put all of the things that you've learned and all of your skills into what
59:06
you know about this business and transfer that on to other people so other people have the access to what
59:13
you've learned I mean that's awesome that's really cool so in your teachings what are some of the the high points
59:19
that are most important to you or that you like to to talk to your students about well one thing is that the
59:27
business of our I think is a numbers game so to get to a particular amount of
59:33
money in a year you have to do a certain number of shows you have to sell a certain number of
59:39
works of art and there's a principle called the Pareto Principle which is the 80 20 rule
59:46
and in a nutshell the 80 20 rule states that 80 percent of your consequences
59:53
come from 20 of your causes so for example 80 percent of your art sales
1:00:00
come from 20 of your customers and that's a really important thing to
1:00:05
understand because people are always trying to get new collectors but the success rate of
1:00:12
selling to a collector you already have is 60 to 70 percent that's been
1:00:18
documented in a gajillion business studies this takes me back to the conversation that I had last year with
1:00:26
Eric Lee who has a very specific style he does back painted glass I know Eric
1:00:33
yeah so he started with wall pieces but then he started evolving his style his
1:00:39
look into functional pieces like furniture and he was saying that those collectors would acquire multiple pieces
1:00:47
because they liked him and his aesthetic and his look and so if he just stayed
1:00:53
with wall art he was gonna max out his his customers is that kind of what you're talking about yeah most
1:00:59
definitely I mean you have to evolve so that you continue to have new offerings
1:01:05
for your audience but to try to sell to a new customer your success rate is
1:01:11
maybe five to twenty percent it's harder but you've already got past collectors
1:01:16
of your work if you nurture that audience and by nurture I mean send them
1:01:21
some e-blasts talk about your work they want to know they want to know about you
1:01:28
I've had people opening my e-blasts for over 20 years
1:01:33
and they'll email me and say I love getting these and it's because an
1:01:40
artist's life is interesting right it's like what we said before like when you go to an art festival the audience
1:01:46
thinks that we're like Greek goddesses and Greek gods right it's uncomfortable for us to have that ego but that is
1:01:54
maybe what the collectors expect from us or want from us right so it's it's going
1:02:00
to be way easier to sell a second time or a third time or a tenth time to
1:02:07
somebody who's already qualified they've already bought from you you already know
1:02:12
they like your stuff so I find that a lot of artists don't
1:02:18
collect emails email marketing I think is one of the if not the most important
1:02:23
part of your business is collecting emails and you know because like my social media accounts yeah I have a lot
1:02:30
of followers and this and that but I don't own that Facebook or meta owns that right and
1:02:36
they drop in the audience drops in and finds you and then all you can control
1:02:42
is what you put out you can't control what actually shows up in their feed they control that right the emails we
1:02:49
can control what they see right and I can have those in a spreadsheet on my computer so I've got them it's not like
1:02:55
another company has them and is holding them hostage interesting cool are there
1:03:02
any other techniques or things you that are important to you when you for your teaching I know the word sales or
1:03:08
selling is super taboo to most people they cringe you know but selling is
1:03:16
educating that's all it is so if you can educate somebody about
1:03:22
what you do you're selling so think about it this way you go to buy a car
1:03:29
at a car dealership what does the sales person tell you they tell you about the car you know they
1:03:36
tell you they tell you about the radio knobs or whatever right the tires and
1:03:41
the is it fabric is it leather but I understand that discomfort because we
1:03:47
have to tell them what we were feeling and what we were thinking when we made this piece and it's more comfortable for
1:03:52
us just just to say here's the painting look at it what do you get from it but I
1:03:58
know that's harder to sell it if you don't talk about what's going on and other than their themes or whatever yeah
1:04:04
I I think that everybody wants to know your story your story
1:04:10
sells your work they're looking at you and your art and they kind of want to know how did this all happen how are you
1:04:17
here how did how did this work evolve and so if you're just able to talk about
1:04:23
your work and educate your audience that's it that's what selling is are there any points during the year where
1:04:31
cancer actually served as a distraction to selling the work I don't really bring
1:04:37
it up unless somebody else brings it up so I had a really nice pass collector came to Des
1:04:44
Moines and she brought me this diamond it's a pin that you like wear on your lapel
1:04:51
it's a heart with the breast cancer pink ribbon through it yeah and she just came
1:04:58
to give it to me and she said somebody gave this to me when I had breast cancer
1:05:04
and so I want you to wear it and I want you to keep it and then there'll come a
1:05:10
time where you're going to be able to give that to somebody else and so you know it was
1:05:15
just this incredible gift from her and it really is like a really nice piece of
1:05:21
jewelry okay right it was a piece of jewelry actual piece of jewelry what would you say looking back over
1:05:28
this year this this speed bump of cancer what do you think you've kind of learned
1:05:34
through that experience so many things so I would say one thing
1:05:40
is that most all people are really really nice even when you think they're
1:05:46
not yeah I heard from people that I was
1:05:52
not expecting to hear from people really care and they're very very kind and
1:05:58
generous so I think the generosity of people just blew me away I've really learned a lot
1:06:05
from the talks from brene Brown where she talks about connection and how we
1:06:11
form connections with people and I have learned in the past few years that where
1:06:16
we have true connection is being able to safely share vulnerabilities and have
1:06:22
somebody meet you on that level and share their vulnerabilities with you as
1:06:28
well and there it's a safe place of growth and so that's such a sweet and powerful
1:06:35
thing for you to be at your your low I mean that's that's like the bottom to have your mortality be on the table and
1:06:43
to have people come to you and support that and honor it yeah it was really
1:06:48
just mind-blowing and I think that's really the biggest lesson that at the end of the day most people are really
1:06:55
good you know the other thing was I I just can't even tell you how many emails I
1:07:01
got from collectors so the other thing that happened was everybody shared their story so I know all the people on the
1:07:08
planet now who have had cancer because they all tell you
1:07:15
well there's definitely an element of woundology where where we Bond over our
1:07:21
shared wounds right right right right but but I think also is that I guess the
1:07:29
thing that I've learned is when something bad happens you can always find just a kernel that
1:07:38
carries you through what kept you going was it the reaction from people around
1:07:43
you that kept you getting up and staying positive or is that just your nature what what kept you going
1:07:51
um probably a little bit of both I'm definitely a glass half full kind of person sure but this kind of thing
1:07:59
brings you to your knees so I would really say it was other people supporting me I was getting cards and
1:08:06
letters I I had calls from show directors I have cards from show directors one show director sent me
1:08:12
flowers I mean just stuff that oh my gosh you would never expect and I didn't even know they knew you know so I didn't
1:08:19
even know who saw my posts on social media where it came from how the
1:08:25
knowledge came to them right and so I think that the rallying of the art community
1:08:34
really kept me going and so many women were like look this is what happened to me and I'm still here okay and so that
1:08:41
kept you from getting too dark that's right knowing that there's a positive that they had a positive outcome there's
1:08:48
no reason I can't have that same positive outcome absolutely absolutely yeah
1:08:53
you know I think that's what happens you get to a particular point in your life like I I never dreamed I would get breast cancer but I never dreamed I'd be
1:09:00
talking about it ever you know like that you know and and like when you first get cancer and they tell you you
1:09:08
can't even say it like I was trembling you know talking to my mom to tell her and she was you know freaking out she
1:09:15
had to get off the phone because she was losing it you know she's 87 she hasn't had any health problems in her life
1:09:22
she's gonna live forever but she was just devastated that her daughter you
1:09:28
know had this and it's the fear that it's the thing people don't want to talk about it's the it's the worst case
1:09:34
scenario it's like oh my God now it's it like my sister-in-law was diagnosed a
1:09:40
couple of years ago and leading up to that my mother-in-law would tell anyone who
1:09:47
would listen we don't get cancer in our family and it's almost like really
1:09:53
well now you know it's almost like don't tempt fate because right right then it
1:10:00
touches your family and and it's the thing that my wife and my sister-in-law were like you know this is something we
1:10:07
think is not going to happen and it's not anybody's fault right right right I've also found with what I'm dealing
1:10:15
with my wife and I have we have an amazing partnership and I know you and your husband have an amazing partnership
1:10:22
too and it's in these moments where we really have to lean on our spouse and it's not easy for me because I'm a real
1:10:29
like I'm like a take charge I get a lot of my self-worth from my ability to be
1:10:35
doing things I mean doing things like I actually physically accomplishing stuff and that
1:10:42
kind of really messes with your head when you have to adjust what you're capable of doing oh yeah yeah for sure
1:10:48
I'm I'm kind of like the ever ready bunny I I go you know I'm a hard worker
1:10:54
I like work I know another nerdy thing about me but um I like running a business so
1:11:03
it was really hard to be in pain curled up in a ball for weeks on end my husband
1:11:09
of course was a rock he was fantastic and like I said you know we knew what
1:11:16
the experience was going to be like a little bit because of his cancer but um I can tell you it's really really
1:11:23
different when it's you right I'm sure that when you were his
1:11:29
support in those moments it's like we will bend over backwards for somebody
1:11:34
else but it is hard to be the one to say okay
1:11:40
for my case will you bend down and take off my shoes and ankle braces it's just
1:11:45
like I feel I feel awful like who would want to do that but that's the blessing
1:11:51
in that relationship and that partnership that person truly has your back and so I hope you could take that
1:11:59
strength and that support and not feel bad about it you know to allow yourself
1:12:06
to be taken care of I didn't really have a choice you know my my husband had to
1:12:11
help me shower he had to wash my hair because you can't lift your arms after a double
1:12:17
mastectomy for almost a month it's impossible the pain is excruciating if you try I I tried by mistake and uh you
1:12:26
know you only make that mistake one time so and then after he washed my hair I was like
1:12:33
um you're gonna have to brush it
1:12:39
I guess no no dude with short hair really understands what's involved with
1:12:45
Clover through right right I'm like I need a comb or a brush through this wad
1:12:50
of you're like see why I want Cher's hair come on exactly
1:12:57
oh my gosh this has been so much fun and I really appreciate you being vulnerable
1:13:04
and sharing your story and and maybe just one last thing I'll ask you is is
1:13:10
if you going through this had any kind of like words of advice or words of
1:13:16
wisdom to somebody who's in your position what would you say to them say ask for help
1:13:22
you know I don't know why but like my mom's generation she was shocked that I
1:13:30
was telling people that I put it on social media because in her generation they didn't talk about that kind of
1:13:36
thing and I couldn't imagine going through this in some isolation bubble so
1:13:43
I would say ask for help don't need to bite any bullets and get through it right it's not it's not time to be
1:13:49
strong man it's you know it's time to just be real that's so great that's beautiful
1:13:55
cat I can't wait to see you in person and give you a big fat hug thanks for this talk thanks Douglas all right have
1:14:02
a good one great talk Douglas great talk with cat cat thank you again for sharing your
1:14:08
voice and and um everything you've got uh to give here to our little industry so oh and she was a pretty powerful word
1:14:14
she's such a support to me too I mean a lot of the stuff that she went through with cancer my situation isn't
1:14:20
life-threatening of course but she had so many comforting inspiring words that
1:14:27
are getting my head on straight with what I have to deal with well they're inspiring words for all of
1:14:33
us especially dealing with like I mean we're all God I still feel like I'm one of the younger people on the circuit I'm like
1:14:39
I'm in you know we're both the same age we're 51. um 52 here at the end of next month but
1:14:45
uh we are all going to be facing these little Health hiccups and hopefully there are things that we can get to the
1:14:51
other side of and if I could just get that cadmium brush out of my mouth while I'm working and uh you know it's just
1:14:59
the dangers that we all face but we're all going to be dealing with little little health things uh here on out
1:15:06
right yeah and her advice on how for me to not get into that dark thinking I know you and I talked about this last
1:15:12
year when you were experiencing your Achilles tear it's hard not to get dark it's hard not to feel like this is how
1:15:20
it is for me now this is this is my new normal and and then doing shows and
1:15:26
having like the last show I did it it really wiped the floor with me I mean I
1:15:31
could not function after the weekend and I had to to put in a cancel isolation for my next show I really wanted to go
1:15:38
do the show I needed to do the next show but I had to cancel yeah that's a huge bummer but I mean we
1:15:44
the only thing we can do is to kind of face it with whatever kind of Grace we have I I don't have any to be honest
1:15:51
um next time I go down I've already promised my wife I'm I'm going into therapy okay yeah uh no shame in the in
1:15:58
the mental health game I'll definitely go talk to somebody I I just I can't handle it myself and I realized that
1:16:04
last time I went down so yeah for sure in regards to canceling my last show I
1:16:09
do want to send out a thank you to the show for being like so gracious and
1:16:15
offering me you know my booth refund and you know I really believe that if a show
1:16:21
can if they can fill your spot and they can give you a hardship refund if you're
1:16:27
in crisis with your health or death in the family or something like that that
1:16:32
it should become an industry standard that that they take care of us like that you know another thing it's it's like
1:16:39
this double-edged sword I know a lot of art show folks out there are like well why should I tell them I'm canceling
1:16:46
when they're not going to give me my money back and that's kind of a dick move yeah uh honestly because somebody's
1:16:51
sitting there at home going oh my god I've got the mortgage coming up and I've got this and I don't have
1:16:57
enough here and I could really use it use a show or it's always the right thing to do to cancel when you know
1:17:02
you're going to cancel but I I know that the incentive sometimes is not there if people aren't going to pay him back yeah
1:17:08
yeah I can understand that side of it it's hard but I think to the Greater Community to all of us out there we're
1:17:15
all in this together and we can all say that we we know what it's like to be on that that last couple of dollars and
1:17:22
we're like where's the next windfall coming from and that show can turn things around so it's really important to to think of that put ourselves in
1:17:30
that you know situation and it's all been said before we are you know art Carneys we are truck drivers we are
1:17:37
gamblers right I mean we have that faith we put that Faith out there that that
1:17:42
things are going to come through for us even when things are looking a little bit Bleak either that or it's like or
1:17:48
like gamblers where we we think our lottery ticket is going to come in or something like that that's absolutely
1:17:53
you get that acceptance you know you're I'm only one more acceptance away from a successful year I just can't get that
1:18:00
show man I gotta get that show and after all of those yucks Douglas I
1:18:06
do feel like we need to end on kind of a somber note before we sign off for today's episode I just wanted to pay a
1:18:14
quick tribute to a dear friend who we lost yesterday Vicky Martin She's a
1:18:19
Roadshow artist she's been out there with with Lance for many many years out there she's a huge member of the tribe
1:18:26
Douglas and uh it's these kind of losses um we can't take easily and they're kind
1:18:33
of huge blows to our entire Community you knew her a lot better than I did and my heart's out to you and and all of her
1:18:40
friends all of us so special she's definitely the boss of of that operation
1:18:45
I I think back to your conversation we've talked about it a couple times this episode about Dolan and Ali Marie
1:18:52
she was the business part part of the landsman furniture company and she was a
1:18:59
driving force and Lance used to sing the Praises of what an amazing business
1:19:05
person she was for their their business and so we're all gathering around their Booth uh Saturday night five o'clock and
1:19:12
it was like a rain out weekend this was the Bayou City where I think 10 people came through the gate the entire weekend
1:19:18
I think they shut the show down early on Sunday anyway we're standing around at the end of the day long wet day having a
1:19:25
glass of wine and Lance turns to me and he says you know how good of a business person Vicki is over here you see these
1:19:32
wine chests that I make I make those so that this wine that we're drinking right here can be considered a tax deduction
1:19:42
it's beautiful okay I just have just one more story to tell about the first time Renee and I met Lance and Vicky at a
1:19:49
show yeah bring it this was years and years ago we were traveling to shows with little kids and I don't know if any
1:19:55
other art show artist feels this way but I feel sometimes like when we would show up to a show in those early days it was
1:20:00
like we were a disaster definitely yeah you open up the back door to the van and even now it happens you know all your
1:20:06
falls out onto the ground and you open up the side door to the van and you're your Spazzy 7 and 10 year old
1:20:14
come running out like Similac and dirty diapers that's right kept in a cage for two days to get to our show all this
1:20:22
happened right in front of Lance and Vicki's booth that year and I was just
1:20:27
like these people are probably thinking what is going on sure but they met us
1:20:34
with such kindness and warmth they welcomed us they told us all about their
1:20:40
years on the road raising their kids how their son was the Gopher he would go
1:20:46
down the line and Booth sit for people up and down the way so they could run to the van and take a lunch break I just
1:20:52
feel like it just set the stage it just left us with a lifetime of great
1:20:59
experiences with them out here on the road yeah I'm really sorry for your loss and and really again like I said before
1:21:06
for all of our losses whether you knewer or knew of her I had just met her she
1:21:12
was kind of a shining light on our industry so yeah thanks again for those good words so to all our friends out
1:21:18
there who are close to Vicki to her family Lance I I feel for you man and
1:21:25
their children Brian and Kelly and their beautiful granddaughter Piper I just I offer you our deepest condolences she
1:21:32
really left her Mark out here on the road and she will not be forgotten yeah there really is no way she could be forgotten it's it's a huge Mark and a
1:21:40
huge void that she's she's left behind so we're all gonna have to tighten up be a little kinder to each other out there
1:21:46
folks and we'll see you next time all right take care everyone
1:21:52
this podcast is brought to you by the National Association of Independent Artists the website is
1:21:58
naiaartists.org also sponsored by zapplication that's zapplication.org and while you're at it
1:22:05
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1:22:11
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1:22:22
thank you foreign