Los Angeles Times

Giving a hand to artists

- By Ronald D. White ron. white@ latimes. com Twitter:@ Ronwlatime­s

The gig: Roberto Milk, 40, is chief executive and a co- founder of Novica, which searches the globe for artists unknown outside their local areas. The Santa Monica company gives them an online sales platform and a forum for their stories. “We have introduced people all over theworld to crafts people and artists in the Andes— such as Peru— in Brazil, Central America, Mexico, India, Thailand, Bali and West Africa.” Novica employs132 people, and Milk expects the privately held company to reach more than $ 20 million in revenue this year.

Enabling art careers: Novica says it has delivered $ 50 million in payments to nearly17,600 artists. Products include 400 kinds of jewelry boxes, more than 1,300 styles of handbags andmore than 900 oil paintings, just to name a few of the categories. Prices, which are set by the artists, frequently range from$ 17 to $ 250, but can rise as high as several thousand dollars. Novica is co- owned by National Geographic Ventures, the investment arm of the National Geographic Society. The company has partnershi­ps with UNICEF, the online lending nonprofit Kiva, EBay Inc., Amazon. com Inc. and National Public Radio. Investors include Lions Gate Entertainm­ent Corp. Vice Chairman Michael Burns, Scripps Ventures and the Grassroots Business Fund.

All in the family: Novica’s co- founders are Milk’s actress wife, Mila Olivera, younger brother Andy Milk, childhood friend Charles Hachtmann and Olivera’s mother, Armenia Nercessian de Oliveira, who gave up a long career at the United Nations to help with the business. One of Novica’s first artisans was Milk’s Peruvian grandmothe­r, Angelica Larnia Estratti, who knits botines, or slippers. Olivera often models the products and acts as spokeswoma­n. Milk often doubles as the company photograph­er.

Bred to help: Roberto Milk’s grandmothe­r Juliet Milk served as a Methodist missionary. His grandfathe­r Richard Milk was an agricultur­al engineer who used his expertise to aid impoverish­ed people in pre- revolution­Cuba. Milk’s parents met in Peru; his father, Robert, worked in the Peace Corps, and his mother, Rosa Maria, was a schoolteac­her. “Theywere a big influence,” Milk said. “Instead of teaching us to observe poverty, theywould ask us, ‘ How could you change this? How could they make more money?’ ”

Formative ventures: Milk, who grew up in California and Texas, said his family often traveled to Mexico and Europe but always on a shoestring budget.“We were doing everything on a teacher’s salary. We would drive around in a rented VWvan.” Milk’s family gave him an early awareness of the difference­s between rich and poor not only abroad but also in America. When his family lived in San Antonio, where his parents worked as teachers, Milk wrote an opinion piece for the local newspaper on the poor conditions at schools attended primarily by the town’s Latino students. Hewas a freshman in high school at the time.

Art appreciati­on: While his friends were collecting Star Wars figures, Roberto and his younger brother were developing a taste for unusual art. During their travels, they assembled a collection of preserved stuffed frogs from Guadalajar­a, outfitted as a mariachi band, complete with miniature instrument­s. “Itwas really fun. Our room was filled with handcrafte­d stuff of questionab­le quality and taste.”

The light bulb: Milk, studying internatio­nal relations at Stanford University, took a Portuguese class in his senior year. The language professor told the class about her experience buying some expensive Brazilian art. “I remember her saying, ‘ The internatio­nal market is willing to pay these artists waymore for their work, but the system doesn’t work,’ ” Milk said. “Itwas like shewas looking at me when she said, ‘ Someone needs to do something about this.’ ”

Think huge: Novica was dreamed up in 1998 but didn’t really get going until the next year. The first offices were the laundry room of Milk’s Santa Monica homeand garages in four foreign countries. Its name comes from the Latin word “novus,” meaning new, because it would be easily pronounced inmany languages.“We started small, but almost immediatel­y we knewwe had to go to National Geographic with this” to give the start- up greater financial muscle and a wider reach, Milk said.

The inventory challenge: Novica avoids brokers who want a commission, instead going straight to the artisans, Milk said. “Sometimes you go door to door.... It’s discovery at its greatest.” Milk said he has been interrogat­ed at gunpoint, chased by irritated middlemen and has traveled to some of the world’s worst slums. “If you believe in what you are doing, you have to be willing to take risks,” he said.“Wewere in a neighborho­od in Lima, Peru, where the police are afraid to patrol,” looking for the maker of ceramic good- luck dolls called ekekos. “Wewere traveling along narrow mountain passes where dozens of crosses mark where people died running off the road. And that was just last month.”

Personal: Milk and Olivera live in Los Angeles with their four children, 8- yearold twins Lucas and Ana Luiza, 2-yearoldMat­teo and 6-month- oldMarcelo. The family often travels together in search of things to sell through Novica. The children specialize in spotting products for young people, Milk said, and are learning howto barter.

 ?? Jay L. Clendenin
Los Angeles Times ?? ROBERTO MILK is CEO of Novica, a Santa Monica company that puts works of little- known artists around the world for sale online.
Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times ROBERTO MILK is CEO of Novica, a Santa Monica company that puts works of little- known artists around the world for sale online.

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