Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeEntertainmentSharon and Karen share art business guidance

Sharon and Karen share art business guidance

After more than two decades working in Hong Kong as an international producer, Sharon Seyd knows a thing or two about making a living from arts.

Seyd worked on major projects across Asia from the cosmopolitan artistic heart of Hong Kong, collaborating with American network NBC, the BBC and other large organisations.

“I was used to often getting half a million dollars from a corporation to get a large-scale project up and running in a few months,” she told the Independent.

She and her colleague from Pop-Up Art, Karen Corr, plan to share their experience in a free online ArtsAction workshop series coming to Geelong for the first time next month.

Pop-Up Art began after Seyd moved back to Melbourne and read an amusing but hard-hitting critique on a Castlemaine festival from a local artist in 2008.

“We have a weekender in Castlemaine,” she explained.

“He wrote this very funny short piece on how everyone comes to Castlemaine for the prawns – Castlemaine is inland so the prawns aren’t even from there – and wine, and a free postcard photo at his gallery.

“They’re not buying his art, they’re just spending their money on prawns and wine. This was the seedling of Pop-Up Art.”

Over the past decade Pop-Up Art has organised events featuring hundreds of regional Victorian artists, including an exhibition of works hanging at stations along the Bendigo line.

But Seyd soon realised the local arts environment was very different to Hong Kong.

“I had this reality check that there’s very little money in the arts here in Australia,” she said.

“Even pre-COVID-19 there was not enough money to sustain our core organisations. Over the past decade we’ve slowly tried to chip away at how we can make a difference.”

Seyd and Corr, who has background in organising community groups, gradually turned their attention more toward helping individual artists “translate” their passion into a career path.

“It’s making the most of the little funding that’s out there, but also growing the voice of the creative sector,” Seyd said.

“Creatives deserve to have financially-viable careers, rather than having to keep their day job as a waiter, an administrator or whatever it may be.”

Seyd, who teaches arts business at the Victorian College of the Arts and Deakin University, plans to teach local creatives how to be market-ready, work together effectively and build digital communities.

She and Corr will collaborate with eight councils in one hit through the ArtsAction professional development program, which has had more than 200 creatives sign up so far in the week since registrations opened.

The program includes a six-part email resource pack and weekly Zoom workshops, with the first of four online series beginning next month.

Details: popupart.com.au/artsaction

Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

Tobacco license deadline approaching

The state government has issued a final call for tobacco retailers and wholesalers to secure a mandatory licence, with less than two weeks remaining...
More News

Chong connects with audiences

Playing the piano wasn’t always Kristian Chong’s dream, but little did his younger self know that he would become one of Australia’s leading musicians....

Embracing the ‘house’

The way locals have embraced everything on offer at Ocean Grove Neighbourhood House since its reopening shows just how important these spaces are for...

Fingers crossed for hoodies

The hooded plovers that inhabit the ‘dog beach’ at Ocean Grove between 6W and 7W are sitting on some eggs again. They hatched three...

Sealion 6 is impressive

BYD's Sealion 6 is one of the new breed of super hybrids. So called because they are plug-in hybrids with larger batteries that deliver...

From the archives

16 years ago 22 January, 2010 Thieves are targeting high-tech gadgets in an “alarming rise” in thefts from cars around Geelong, according to police. Favourite targets include...

Bowling for mental health

A signature Ocean Grove tournament will bring community members from across the region to help break the stigma of mental health. Bowl...

Mazda CX-60 in market for success

You have to hand it to Mazda, the Japanese automobile manufacturer never gives up in its quest to please, and thus, sell more product....

Holiday shopping

With the school holidays in full swing, Independent photographer Ivan Kemp was at The Terrace in Ocean Grove on Tuesday 20 January to see...

Winners crowned at Geelong Lawn tennis classics

While many people turn their attention to the Australian Open in January, tournaments across the country go into full swing ranging from Pro Tour...

Community calendar

Karneval Society Beer, bratwurst & barbecue with German and Aussie favourites. Karneval Society, 21/45 Arunga Ave, Norlane, Sunday January 25, noon-5pm. Free but register, beerbratwurstnbbqbash.eventbrite.com ■...