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  • Artists Struggle To Set Prices

    Albuquerque Journal (New Mexico)
    July 8, 2005 Friday

    Artists Struggle To Set Prices

    by Kathaleen Roberts Journal Staff Writer

    U.S. Market Is a Challenge

    At last year's Santa Fe International Folk Art Market, prices ranged
    from $10 for a South African beaded doll to $60,000 for Panamanian
    baskets.

    After 14,000 visitors swarmed the Museum of International Folk Art
    plaza for the inaugural event, the artists asked organizers for
    workshops to help them better understand U.S. marketing and pricing.
    On Thursday, about 100 got their wish in sessions held at St. John's
    College, sponsored by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and
    Cultural Organization.

    But as this weekend's market approached, many artists still were
    unsure how much to ask for their work.

    Armenia's Noushik Mikayelian brought artists making woven cloth
    dolls, embroidery and wood carvings.

    She wondered how to price similar objects when the costs to make them
    might vary from country to country.

    "They say we must say the materials are more expensive or cheaper,"
    she said.

    Mikayelian owns an art gallery representing artists throughout
    Armenia. The Folk Art Market is his first foray into the United
    States.

    "The U.S. market is more free to put the right prices and to value
    the work," she said. "It's lower in Armenia than it will be in the
    U.S."

    One of her artists, Anahit Karapetian, makes silk and
    gold-embroidered christening shirts. The designs date from 900 to
    1,000 years ago, when monastics wove and embroidered their own Mass
    costumes. Decorated with white crosses, angels and life trees, the
    shirts cost $250 to $300 and are said to give health and protection
    to their wearer.

    France's Agnes Paul-Depasse makes straw marquetry in an inlay
    technique. She applies thousands of ribbons of wheat or rye to a wood
    base. She said she wasn't sure how to price her work, which is based
    on the technique of one of France's most celebrated cabinetmaker of
    the 1930s. She spends as long as two days on a single piece.

    In the end, she set her price based on the exchange rate of euros to
    dollars, charging $300 for a framed marquetry mirror.

    Shamula Dudeja brought hand-embroidered silks from a women's
    cooperative in India. Known as kantha stitch, the technique dates
    back hundreds of years when women made quilts for babies and
    bridegrooms.

    Dudeja revived the technique after being diagnosed with cancer 22
    years ago. Forced by her illness to leave her job as a teacher, she
    met some village girls who were stitching tiny quilts from old
    fabric.

    "I had done it in school as a running stitch," she said.

    The women started making saris, then skirts and ponchos. They added
    more color to make their designs more stylish.

    "We started making it for the urban elite so we could market it," she
    said.

    Dudeja launched Self Help Enterprise, which now helps 500 rural women
    retain a tradition while earning extra pocket money. She designs the
    patterns with four colleagues.

    "In 22 years, we've made maybe 5,000 designs," she said.

    In India, the ponchos sell for $120. More intricate patterns may take
    200 to 300 hours to complete.

    "I would like to pay these girls higher wages," Dudeja said. "But we
    are not making enough money in India for these products. In America,
    I would like to sell it for $500 because of the amount of work that
    has gone into it. The entire economy of rural Bengal could change
    because of it."

    Realistically, Dudeja said she will probably ask $200 to $250 for the
    work.

    "If you can have jeans in India, why can't you have kantha in
    America?" she said.

    Flocking to folk

    International Folk Art Market prepared for crowds this year S1
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