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Recently, I’ve had a few Art students ask me for advice for what to do after they have
finished their studies and go out into the world with a degree tucked under their arms
- looking for a job.
Well, It’s a long time since I started and things have changed a lot. Back then there
was no internet - just the Artist’ and Writers Year book that contained a lot of addresses
and phone numbers. I made a list of all the companies I wanted to work for, phoned them
up and made appointments to see the art directors. Then I trudged around London showing my portfolio.
Sadly, it just doesn’t work that way anymore. Art Directors are under a lot of pressure
and pretty much rely on Agents to do the sifting and sorting for them.
There didn’t used to be illustrator websites either - I don’t subscribe to them. Little
pictures of your work on a site like that, look just like everyone else’s. The only
calls I ever got from illustrator sites were from other illustrator sites wanting me to
show my work there too - and pay for it!
I asked an influential Art Director last week just how much has changed, and this is what
she said”
“The sad thing is, there are so many 100’s of budding artists all trying to get their
work seen these days that I could employ someone, full time, just to see portfollios or answer
illustrators’ emails. It feels so harsh to say it, but in these tough times, we simply
don’t have the resources to see illustrators unless their work shows a unique commercial
promise. Artists can certainly email or send in samples to Art Directors and Publishers
and, in my experience, they all get looked at. Sadly, the majority will get a “thanks
but no thanks” reply, but if the work looks exceptionally promising they’ll either get
a request for more samples or be invited to show their work, in person. The key words
here are UNIQUE and COMMERCIAL PROMISE if they want to be seen. ?
And there you have it. If you want to work as an artist, making work to sell or to be
commissioned, you have to be commercial. I’m afraid your degree is not going to help you,
unless you are going into art management or other full-time jobs where qualifications
may be taken into account.
Your degree has bought you three or four years to experiment and find your true purpose in
life. A degree in art is pretty much a certificate of attendance. It is your work and your portfolio
that really counts.
I’m not saying that degree is worthless - you need the time, guidance and the companionship
of like-minded people that a degree offers to develop you skills and ideas. But please
don’t think the world owes you work and riches just because you have that piece of
paper in your hand.
If you are still at college, the best thing you can do is to learn about marketing and
and start planning your final degree show.
A final degree show is not just a nice exhibition to show your parents what you’ve been doing
for three or four years, it’s a serious show case. You can’t rely on your teachers
or professors to do it for you either.
Start planning a humdinger of a show. If you are miles away from the centre of the art
world, hire a place near where the buyers are and start targeting them to make sure
they come and see your work.
You may be in a sleepy backwater university town that has been lovely and delightful for
the past few years, but Art buyers and commissioners are not going to go out of their way to come
and see your show!
You need agents to see your show too. They probably all live somewhere fancy too! Are
you getting my drift?
Go and read about how Damien Hurst organised the Freeze exhibition when he left College.
I’ll put a link below. It rocketed him and his college friends to almost instant stardom.
He and his friends are really successful now. It would be hard to repeat what he did, but
you can learn a lot from his tactics.
While you have college or university facilities available start producing business cards and
posters to send to people.
Start getting in touch with agents or, if you are a bit of an entrepreneur, start to
learn something about business and marketing. It is not rocket science, and you are allowed
to be the master of your future success. There is no law that says you must have a gallery
or an agent.
Starving artists starve because they don’t make work that people want to buy. Successful
artists make stuff that people want and they learn how to market it and sell it.
Do not get seduced by the starving artist in the garret idea. This fantasy was dreamed
up by the writers of romantic operas whose audiences loved to wallow in stories about
bohemian failures dying of TB in rat infested attics. This is romantic nonsense.
Artists are allowed to earn a living as much as anyone else and they do not have to suffer
for it. Like anyone else trying to make a success of their lives, you may have to make
a few sacrifices but you don’t have to wallow in artistic pain - this is a lie devised by
devious agents and gallery owners to keep artists on a tight leash.
More than anything else keep making the work and keep making it better. Know who you are
- know who you are making it for and make your work for them - they are the ones who
are going to buy it and make your future the success you so desire.
I’ll talk more about marketing in another video because I don’t think people really
understand what that term means.
Until then, keep drawing drawing drawing, practice practice practice - keep making the
work - keep making it better and I’ll see you next time.
You take care now, bye bye.