
Career Development for Artist
Seminar • Summer 2023 • Visible Records • Charlottesville, VA
Three Day Intensive Summer Seminar
-
Jul 21 - Deliverables
• Artist Statements
• Resumes vs CV
• Documentation
• Inventory
• Portfolio
• Deliverables
-
Jul 22 - Finances
• Requesting grants
• Applying to residencies
• Soft Income revenue streams
• Market Value
• Pricing your work
• Commissions
• Loans and contracts
-
July 23 - Strategy
• The Contemporary Art Ecosystem
• Sustainability
• Networking
• Marketing
• Gallery Representation
• From hello to exhibition
• Good Enough Syndrome
• Centering self-care
Seminar is to take place at
Visible / Records
1740 Broadway Street, Charlottesville, VA 22903
Session A • 12:00 - 2:00 PM
Individual 20min sessions 3:00-4:00 PM
Session B • 5:00 - 7:00 PM
Erika Hirugami, MA. MAAB
Seminar Instructor
Hirugami is a first-generation transnational Mexican-Japanese immigrant, formerly undocumented.
Founder and CEO of CuratorLove, Co-founder of the UNDOC+Collective, the ED at AHSC, a Professor at CBMArts and SMC, Arts for LA Fellow, NALAC NLI Fellow, and CCI Catalyst. As a Getty and Kress Foundation Fellow, she has developed curatorial statements at museums across Mexico and the United States. After being a Public Art Curator for the Department of Cultural Affairs in the City of Los Angeles, Hirugami became the Curatorial Director for the Ronald McDonald House Charities while leading various commercial galleries. She has curated over seventy exhibitions for galleries and museums across the globe and written over a dozen books.
She holds an MA in Art Business from the Sotheby’s Institute of Art, in conjunction with the Drucker School of Management and Getty Leadership Institute at Claremont Graduate University. Her most recent MA from Chicanx Studies at UCLA is entitled “ Political Art Action: The Aesthetics of Undocumentedness.” Hirugami also holds BAs in the fields of Art History, Chicano Studies, and Mexican Studies from UCLA, currently a lecturer and doctoral candidate at UCLA, where she epistemologically braids the aesthetics of undocumentedness to challenge immigration policy and politics.