Expectations versus Reality - Illustrator edition - By Cat Scully
Becoming a pro from something creative that starts off as a
hobby or passion project is a dream job for every artist. Art rides the line of
something that is purely for yourself and something that you create to be
shared with others. It's met with a lot of expectation, primarily because art
is so deeply personal. It's a stress relief, an itch you must constantly
scratch to feel sane again, and it would be the best thing ever to get paid to
do what you love.
The trouble is there is often a steep learning curve when it
comes from transitioning from passion to pro, and there aren’t as many
resources for illustration as there are for making it as a writer. Since this
month’s theme is “expectations versus reality,” I wanted to share some things
about what it’s like to make that switch for drawing.
To start, I’ve done about seven world maps for clients, a
job I got simply by drawing what I loved and posting online. I’ve illustrated
for corporate, freelance, and ad agency clients – big and small – since before
I graduated college, almost ten years of experience.
Here’s what I’ve learned about going pro:
Your Art is Not Yours
Rights are a big thing to consider –
it’s part of why I looked for an agent who would represent me for both art and
writing (and he’s been a rockstar at helping me keep my rights to my work too!)
Why care about rights? Say you illustrate something for a book or commercial,
you spend days even weeks drawing and creating something gorgeous for your
client, you’d want to sell prints right? Technically, you can’t. The rights to
your work are no longer yours, not to mention, you are drawing someone else’s
idea or character. You don’t own their characters/maps just because you drew
them. What you should retain rights to is your physical artwork that you drew,
but you can’t always keep it. If you draw art for a book, it belongs to that
publisher in order for them to publish it – they should buy the rights from you
or they ask you to sign an agreement that you work for x rate to draw for said
book. Do you get to turn around and sell prints? Not unless you get permission.
It’s extremely important to learn about rights and have an agent well versed in
art negotiation to protect yourself, but you must also enter into working with
someone else with the knowledge that, at the end of the day, if you want the
work, you may end up doing it for the money/because it’s a great opportunity
and not because you want to sell prints.
You Don’t Always Dictate The End Result – The Client
Does
Change is inevitable, Mr. Anderson. When a
client hires you, you will change the original idea you had about a hundred
dozen times and you have to be okay with that. As an artist for hire, you’re
paid to draw what the client wants. Sure you can speak up and suggest something
better, that’s why your knowledge is valuable (as the client is not usually an
artist themselves), BUT at the end of the day they are paying you to draw what
THEY want, not what YOU want or feel like drawing that day. You feel like
drawing trees, but the client wants you on eight hours of automobiles? You’re
drawing automobiles. Have an idea for a book cover but the client wants it a
different way that you don’t agree with? If you want to be paid, guess what you’re
drawing – the client’s idea. This is where you face why you
Fan Art is Great for Practice, Not So Much for
Selling (Unless You’re Known)
As an art fan, how many physical fan art
pieces do you buy? How many are on your walls at home, t-shirts you own,
stickers, or buttons? How many independent artists do you support on a monthly,
weekly basis with your budget? How do you find them, learn about who they are?
Now reverse all of that back on yourself as the artist who draws fan art and
you can see how that would be a money problem. I draw lots of fan art, but as
practice for lighting or inking. I study styles and try to get better for my
client pieces. Have I gotten work from the fan art pieces? Certainly. People are
more likely to look up their favorite fandoms and stumble on your art just by a
quick Tumblr search, but the biggest piece that has changed my portfolio is
that I should have about 90 percent original art or client work in my portfolio
when looking for jobs. They are going to ask to see what you like to do, what
you like to imagine.
Take Time to Draw Just For You
With all the pressure to create
five, sometimes and more likely seven days a week, for someone else it’s
important to take time to draw what you want to. It’s easy to burn out real
fast when the act of drawing because exclusively for someone else. Take time to
do it just for you, no pressure, or it will end up just being a chore.
You’re Only As Good As You Are Right Now
If you want to go pro, you have to
seek constantly to improve. Not getting work is a combination of several
factors, usually:
· You aren’t pushing out the best art you can possibly achieve in the final piece
· You aren’t networking
· You aren’t posting your art consistently enough
· You aren’t seeking to constantly improve
· You don’t show anyone your work
· You aren’t willing to compromise
There are other factors, but these
are the main ones I see over and over, primarily the first one on the list.
These things don’t guarantee you work, but they help you get out there enough
that’s it’s more likely you will get asked.
Find People that Know More than You
Find people that tell you honestly
when you suck. I used to get hurt when I drew something and someone would
correct me. Now that I’m out of college, I’m always happy when I find these
people because I don’t always know what’s wrong with my own work. Just because
I’ve gotten jobs doesn’t mean I should stop learning or that I know everything.
I can’t tell you how invaluable it’s been to me lately to have someone with
tons more experience than me look at my anatomy and tell me to try again and do
it better. My weaknesses are anatomy and digital painting, among others, and so
I found someone and just asked them to teach me. I’ve shot forward in my work
so much faster than I would have on my own. It can be as simple as asking
someone at a con or signing up for a portfolio critique, but ask at every
opportunity you can. Your work will improve when you ask for help.
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That’s all for now! I hope this list helps some of you that
are interesting in doing art as a pro. If you have other tips, please share
them in the comments below! I’d love to learn from you readers too!
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