Thank you!
Hi, it’s Jayrn.
If your site already uses — or is preparing to use — affiliate links, this will be relevant.
One issue I see constantly is that monetization is treated as something you “add later,” instead of something that’s designed into the site from the beginning.
That usually leads to:
random placement of links
unclear visitor intent
unpredictable income
It works, but never consistently.
I put together a short explanation of why this happens and what changes once monetization is structured properly:
https://marketersmentor.com/recurring-income-system.php?refer=asmasultana.com
You’ll know quickly whether this applies to your situation.
Jayrn
PS: And one quick note so you’re not wondering why you’re hearing from me:
I only reach out to website owners because they’re the ones actively building something online. I’m not blasting random emails.
I’m simply sharing a resource that has been helping a lot of people create predictable online income. If it resonates, great. If not, no worries.
Unsubscribe:
https://marketersmentor.com/unsubscribe.php?d=asmasultana.com
Invitation to participate in a Pickle Underground exhibition
Dear Asma,
My name is Roksolana, and I’m writing from Pickle Underground, a Ukrainian-led interdisciplinary arts studio based in Greater Vancouver. We create projects that bring together music, visual art, theatre, and performance through collaborations and curated encounters.
We are currently preparing a group exhibition planned for August 2026 – February 2027, and while researching artists for the project we came across your work and were really drawn to it. It feels like your practice could resonate with the ideas we are exploring in this project.
The exhibition explores hair as a material where intimacy, publicity, and control intersect. As part of the body, hair carries traces of lived experience and memory, yet it can also exist separately from it, provoking conflicting reactions — from tenderness to discomfort. Through hair, society reads gender, cultural belonging, and social status, making it both a form of self-expression and a site of social regulation. In different historical contexts, hair has also been used as a tool of discipline, humiliation, and the erasure of identity. The project invites artists to reflect on hair as a deeply personal yet widely legible material where bodily, social, and political meanings intersect. The program will also include a series of live musical presentations — including a short opera — extending the exhibition’s exploration of hair across different artistic forms.
The exhibition will take place at The Highbrow, an intimate salon-style space where we host performances, exhibitions, and interdisciplinary events. Rather than functioning as a traditional gallery with regular hours, the exhibition will unfold through a series of events, gatherings, and open studio moments throughout the season.
Before speaking about specific works, we wanted to ask whether you might be open to the idea of collaborating with us on this project.
To give you a transparent overview of how we usually work with artists:
• The exhibition will be covered by general artwork insurance during the display period.
• We will provide a formal exhibition agreement.
• Shipping or transportation of artworks can be covered by us if needed.
• We will document the exhibition and opening events, though we cannot guarantee professional photography.
• As a fairly new artist-run organization we currently do not have stable operating funding. We are applying for several grants. We are budgeting CARFAC rates, but what we are able to offer in terms of honorariums will ultimately depend on our success.
If this sounds interesting to you, we would be happy to schedule a short conversation to tell you more about the project and discuss whether there might be a good fit.
Thank you for your time and we hope to connect soon.
Warmly,
Roksolana Uhryniuk
Visual Curator
Pickle Underground
604-841-8430
Thank you. Roksolana.
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