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Will Paint for Food While there are always exceptions, like Pablo
Picasso and American pop artist Andy Warhol,
who enjoyed the spoils of monetary success
and fame while still alive, the fact remains that
most creative souls aren’t so lucky.
Just ask A 16-year veteran of the Jacksonville art
scene, George is having a record business year
in terms of sales. But business wasn’t always so
good. In the first year since he moved to the
Riverside area in 1991, he sold six paintings George attributes a friendlier market, in part, to a thriving community of artists that has grown over the past ten years. “The art crowd kind of flocked to [Riverside],” he says, because of the new homes and businesses springing up. George, 36, paints on transparent corrugated
roofing material. His jagged-edged works are
meant to look like “found” pieces of pop culture
from bygone days—a George says the influx of artists to town does not directly threaten his business. On the contrary, “It’s always nice to see what someone else is doing,” he says. “It definitely makes things more intriguing.” Plus, he says, if anartist finds true competition, he’s doing something wrong. “You should have your own style. If you don’t have that style, what do you have?” Patrons at several art spots, such as Jane Gray Gallery and The Gallery at Screen Arts in St. Augustine, have embraced his pop art with open arms. Today, George’s favorite exhibitions are at
“lowbrow” venues, places where the public may
not expect it. In addition to more traditional
galleries, his work has appeared in the San
Marco Theatre, the Fox Restaurant in Avondale
and several bars around town. “You’re showing Exposure is great, but the name of the game
is sales. “You get used to not selling a lot of work,”
George says of his career. “After a while, it can
get pretty daunting. You start to question yourself,
am I doing the right thing, especially as
you get older.”Another struggle was to resist counting your
chickens before they hatch when it came to Waiting around for customers does not pay for new paintbrushes. Thus, he has washed dishes,printed signs, and even run a landscaping service from the back of his Honda Civic to supplement his income. Today, he enjoys working as a graphic designer at a San Marco sign shop. George suspects he’s not alone in seeing brighter days ahead for Jacksonville artists. “It’s gonna be easier for people to get a fresh start than it was ten years or 20 years ago,” he says. Amy Crane, deputy director of the Cultural
Council of Greater Jacksonville, says the region
is experiencing a cultural renaissance of sorts,
due to programs like Art in Public Places made
possible by the Better Jacksonville Plan. “The
Jacksonville community is experiencing a Leigh Fogle, who has run Fogle Fine Art and
Accessories for 13 years, acts as a liaison
between artists and customers looking to
purchase art for their businesses Courtney Donnell Vickery, a painter with six months of professional experience, says the North Florida market is better than she could have imagined. “It’s been fantastic,” she says. “I was expecting a slow start, but I’ve been very pleasantly surprised.” Vickery, a 24-year-old Orange Park native,
discovered her artistic talent at St. Johns
Country Day School and later honed it as a Fine
Arts major at Clemson University. Her Floridian
nature scenes, still lifes, and abstract landscapes
have attracted an audience at festivals She may not struggle to find customers or to pay her bills, but Vickery faces plenty of challenges as an artist. “Finding inspiration has been the hardest part,” she says. “The main thing is having faith in yourself.” What started as an experiment with a two year time limit has allowed her to cut back working her other job at Stellers Gallery to two days per week, and she plans to keep it that way. “You get one life,” she says, explaining why she can’t just settle on another job. Vickery says her dreams are to see her work
added to the collection of a prestigious museum
and to be represented by well-known and
respected galleries. George has his sights set on
international acclaim. After conquering the George’s dream may not be out of reach, as
other First Coast artists have demonstrated.
Graphic artist and Jacksonville native R. Land
achieved commercial success after moving to
Atlanta in the mid-‘90s. Land’s “Loss Cat” “We’re a gateway to other cities,” George says of the Jacksonville art scene. “It’s refreshing to see people who have worked hard and have made it.” These inspirations come in handy as a pickme-up when the cash isn’t flowing in. But for
now, George says he’s just enjoying exposing
new audiences to art. “It’s been really rewarding
to see young people, two-year-old kids, hanging
onto an art flier. It’s kind of a beautiful thing… |

