Your web site is classy, and your work is amazing (but we knew that). And your support in three languages is far beyond anything I have attempted.
Unfortunately your web site is what I call a "grandmother's" web site... one that your grandmother will look at with pride. But it is not likely to have a lot of visitors nor sell anything. My first web site was like that, and only had a couple hundred visitors over the first 6 months, until I rebuilt it.
Think about what people might be looking for (via Google). Your grandmother and other friends will search for your name, but someone looking for a coffee table doesn't know your name. Make a web page with your coffee table (and information about coffee tables, etc.) so Google will send people to your site who are searching for coffee tables. That is called the landing page, and you need to respond to the visitor with information to catch their interest in under 2 seconds, preferably under 1 second. Someone else may be searching for a dresser, need a different landing page. Searching for a relief carving or wood art or display stand or .... think of all the things you could offer, and have a landing page for each.
I decided to put prices (I could reproduce something exactly like this for $xxx) on my web site - to keep people who are looking for a $20 coffee table from bothering me, and to reassure customers that my coffee tables are not $10,000 museum pieces. When I first started, I wanted to talk to everyone, but soon I realized that 90% of the contacts were wasted effort.
Web experts say to sell your product on the landing page, but I don't have a product - I have a service. Therefore each page has links to other pages, and practically every customer has told me, I found a coffee table (or whatever I was looking for) and then browsed your web site, [which convinced me that] you do good work.
After I rebuilt my furniture web site with lots of landing pages, I average 8,000 to 12,000 visitors per month, and have gotten practically all my work from the site (or from repeat business that started on the web site).