How Can I Be a Featured Artist?

October 29th, 2009 Leave a comment Go to comments

It’s easy!

And it’s a great way to share your work with friends, family, and creative people you haven’t even met yet. What’s great about The Storymatic is that it’s not just a prompt, a game, a tool, and a toy… it’s also a community.

So don’t be shy– share what you’ve made with a bunch of supportive, creative folks and make some new friends.

1. Just send an email to Brian@TheStorymatic.com. Put “Featured Artist” in the subject of the email.

You can send stories, poems, essays, photographs, paintings, drawings, songs, jams, spoken word, video… you name it. If you made it with The Storymatic, we want to help you share it with other people.

2. Send a profile picture of yourself– the kind of thing you’d post as a profile picture on Facebook.

3. Include a short bio. Two or three sentences is great.

4. Say what Storymatic cards helped you create your piece.

That’s all there is to it!

We’ll even help you get the word out that you’re a Featured Artist by posting to Facebook and Twitter.

I’m gonna get me one of these here Storymatics!

  1. Noah Watson
    April 29th, 2011 at 04:25 | #1

    Mysterious Happenings

    Ken Klack was beginning to write a new series. He was planning on it being a big hit. Ken is the writer of a romance novel Flashback. The book later became a world-wide phenomenon. He also had other books, but were not as successful. He was searching in the town library reading some other romance novels. That’s when he was getting one off the shelf and one hit his head. It had an unusual leather cover and fabric spine. He opened it up and there were hundreds of pages of words. No indentations, everything was single spaced. Then he noticed it had no barcode. All it had was the initials: E.S.B.. He found that very interesting so he quickly put it in his bag. When he got home he started reading it and taking notes about many interesting things he has read. Then he decides it is distracting him from his book. Then he started writing. He wasn’t in the mood to be writing about romance. He decided that romance has became too boring. He would rather be reading that diary. The diary was all about unusual things that seemed to be unnoticed to the world except to very few humble people. For example one time the FBI had ordered two test-tubes full of experimental chemicals. When it was open only one was there. Still, no one acknowledged it was missing. Ken was so intrigued he deleted all of his files, and started researching. Researching the most bizarre things. Once he got all of the things together he started typing, typing all night and all day. He barely got four hours of sleep. Then after the third year of typing he was finished. He was very proud of his book, even though it wasn’t nearly as successful as his worst selling book. He only sold his book to just over fifty people, even though they all were returned.

    Cards: Stranger’s Diary; Writer of romance novels

  1. No trackbacks yet.