Alright, so here's what happened. To be clear, in the screenshots below, I'm communicating with Anita, who is the art show director for The Artisans Loft, and she is an angel. It is the owner, however, who has behaved so unprofessionally that I will NEVER exhibit work with them again.
I reached out to The Artisan's Loft at the beginning of this month to ask if they had any interest in my new body of work: My abstract flower sculptures. Anita replied very excitedly that she'd like to see them, so I took time off in the middle of my work day to bring them downtown.
She was overjoyed with my work and said she thought they'd be perfect for the show and that she was happy because they'd never had anything like them in the gallery before.
Then this week, I received the first email below letting me know that though she had accepted my work, the owner (Ellen Boden) had overruled her and decided that my work was not fine art but "craft," and if I wanted to be in the show, I needed to swap out my work for paintings or photography.
If you're not familiar with the "art vs. craft" debate, you're living in a beautiful paradise and should stay there, but the summary is that "craft" has been used by art critics and gallery owners to consistently devalue certain art forms. This is very prevalent in the fiber arts community because "it's craft not art" is very often wielded against practioners of art made via traditionally feminine skills like sewing, though here, it's just being used more broadly to avoid coming out and saying that Ellen doesn't recognize my sculptures as fine art.
There is a definitive answer to the "art vs. craft" debate and that is that "craft" is a what people call art forms they don't respect as fine art when they want their personal opinions to sound like they carry institutional weight.
I'm okay with people not liking my art. I'm okay with being rejected from galleries; I'm not entitled to space in anybody's venue. What I'm absolutely NOT okay with is being kicked out of a show and asked to take my work back a week before the opening because apparently Ellen thinks my work is so subpar that she'd rather burn a bridge with a local artist than honor the decision of her art director or the venue's agreement with me (I signed their paper with the descriptions of my pieces, prices for my works, and agreement to their sales terms, which they are calling "an application" but which I disagree with given that I filled it out *after* I was told my work had been accepted).
The fourth image below is the invite I had already sent to 50+ friends, family, and coworkers and had posted on social media weeks ago. There's at least a dozen people who were expecting to see my work this weekend. If you were planning to go, there will still be an opportunity to see my work this, but it is now by private invite, so please send me a DM if you're interested.
P.S. I have it from another artist who is also no longer a fan of The Artisan's Loft that this show has already been delayed twice, and yet the gallery owner still thinks nothing of kicking an artist a week before the show.
I have never been so disrespected, and it will not happen again. I sent $300+ of these to a buyer in California in March. There's nothing I need from a place that would waste so much of my time and disappoint supporters of my work.
"Sincere apology" rejected.