I'm glad that my feedback didn't make ginga cry

-- I actually did look up some authentic quotes by H. L. Mencken, the incorrigible

curmudgeon of Baltimore, but actually he tended to be more

supportive of the person receiving

criticism (as he certainly did 24/7 throughout his career) than he was gratuitously

critical of others. (He was that, too, but mostly of politicians who thrived on promoting ignorance and hate, neither of which are especially widespread among animation art collectors.)
It was, I thought, a good chance to refocus attention on the gallery side of having an online gallery. We all tend to get focused on the contents of our collections, and if we don't stay vigilant, they turn into what I like to call "Smaug Wallows," rooms stuffed with stuff, like those of compulsive hoarders that show up on TV reality shows. Like having company over, it's a chance to run the mop over the floor
(Don't forget: you promised your wife you'd do this last weekend) and try to see our collections as others see them.
I was happy that people felt that visiting my gallery was, overall, a positive experience, and I paid attention to things that they specifically said they liked. But I'm concerned that the visible collection has gotten so broad and diverse that it is difficult to navigate. I've actually considered hiding up to a third of the items, just to make the home page more inviting. (Or else generating my own site, like Graymouser's, that has a simple, peaceful home page, then a series of doorways leading to a less intimidating list of gallery titles.)
That's why I asked where people went after they landed on my page. I was interested to see that about half mentioned the new "Quirky Tour" that called out 24 nice items from a variety of galleries. And I also liked similar sections in other galleries that I visited, in which curators had featured special items in a gallery. I especially liked animeobsessed's idea of linking this to the section in which the item's main page resided, so that if you liked the art, you could explore it more widely. So I'm thinking about making it a permanent section, perhaps adding a "CCS Gems" and "Tennimon Treasures" that would do the same thing for these big sections.
Most others went to the list of series and scanned it for recent updates, favorite sections, or unfamiliar titles. That, visitors tended to agree, was in danger of being too long and difficult to browse. Some observed that nice items or sections seen on a previous visit were not easy to relocate from the list. (The Quick Tour might help here, but that adds two extra clicks to the process.) I got some useful suggestions on simplifying this, which I'll keep in mind.
Also, some people found the amount of information at the top of section pages ran so long that they had to scroll down to find the images. That's a valid issue, and I've already been using the first item as a place to house general information about the series, its history, animators, personal significance, etc. etc. In the next remake I'll look for more places to do this, maybe in a "Series Tour" gallery like the ones I have for
Hyper Police and
Kamikaze Kaitou Jeanne, or in some other way that doesn't clutter the section page.
So I'm very happy with the feedback, and, on the other side, visiting so many galleries more fully than before and so intensively has (once again) impressed on me just how darn much anime art there is out there! So many titles that were totally unknown to me, and so many others that I knew "about" but had never finished. One curator asked which of the series s/he collected I'd watched to the end: and I had to admit,
none of them! (I'd seen a
lot of Inuyasha ... but at ... what? ... 200 episodes and six or seven movies, that still wasn't nearly "all of it.") That reinforced for me the need to give basic info on the series I collect, knowing that most visitors won't know it from "Captain Planet," and also kicked me into spending more time watching the anime I've got. (And reminded me that I never did finish "xxxHolic"!)
Could the Open House work better? Yeah, but I'll let some others chime in before I talk about the process itself. I'd say for now getting the tradition started again, even minimally, was in itself worth it.
Don't worry, dear, I'll mop the floor. I just gotta watch this next episode of xxxHolic first...