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$urvivingFebruary 16, 2006
Penelope Dullaghan I think that leading a creative life is both rewarding and really really hard. It's not just creative painting and being messy all the time. It is a real business, like any other. (Well, maybe not like any other. I think this is way more fun.) To manage a creative life, I think first and foremost you need to be a good planner. You are not guaranteed a paycheck or steady income, so sometimes it gets really thin and you have to adjust accordingly. If you have a bad month, you better have some money left over from a good month to float through it. The people who work at the phone company and the power company have steady jobs and will not understand if you tell them you've had a bad month. :) So you need to budget! But planning goes beyond financial. Time is also yours to plan. A good balance of work and gathering inspiration and personal time is important (I struggle with this a lot). Being an entrepreneur is hard. No one makes the rules for you and no one is there to tell you to work (or to stop working). If you decide to take time off and accidentally miss a deadline, you're in trouble. At the same time, if you work around the clock and burn out, that's no good either. Balance is in planning. Secondly, I think it takes faith. Faith that the next job will eventually come, even if it sometimes feels like no one will ever call again. If no client has called with a new job or assignment, it can be really scary. Self doubt creeps in and you start to wonder if you're really cut out for this. Working at the mall starts looking really appealing. But this is something to be waited out...and not sitting down. If you are bored, you're doing it wrong. If no paid work is coming in, do something for your business. Start working on a new image for self-promotion. Update your website. Write some thoughts down about avenues to get your name out there. Work on personal work for yourself, while at the same time, bettering your skills. Give yourself an assignment...challenge yourself to think conceptually. Read a business book to hone that side of things. There's always something you can work on. Always room for improvement. Or, if you are a workaholic like me, try to relax and take some downtime. Go to a movie (a matinee to save money) or go for a walk in the park. Fill your well. By the time a client calls again (and they will!), you'll be ready and inspired to do the project at hand. And thirdly, it takes a lot of plain, hard work. I have a lot of things going on all the time (maybe too much) to help me pay my bills as well as keep the creative fire burning (for both me and others). But it's work I enjoy doing. I get a lot out of having fun little contests (just finished up a "Draw a Witch" contest for Halloween) and doing free things like Paper Doll Mix n Match to help promote my new tshirts. I have an online store to sell prints and stuff to help financially and just for fun (I like thinking up new tees and postcards to print). I also started Illustration Friday as a way to challenge myself...to grow my portfolio and force myself to think conceptually. Then I opened it up to others because I figured they would like the challenge too. And now it's a huge, fun thing that many people participate in each week. I love seeing all the new names pop up in the column and checking their illustrations to see how their minds work. It's also become a great form of self-promotion... even though that's not why I created it (I think of it as a perk for running it!). The site was recently named a HOW Top Ten Website, which I thought was cool not only because it's good promotion for the site, but because it kind of speaks to the creative community at large... maybe we're not all isolated artists, but we seek to be a part of something bigger by supporting each other and talking to each other. Illustration Friday helps with that. I'm also a part of a local illustrators group. I look forward to getting together with them once a month to chat about the industry, ask questions, give answers and just be with like-minded people. Part of a community, again... I'm going to be honest and say that it is sometimes really hard to have so much going on. I get stressed out and unbalanced. Keeping up with my normal workload, Illustration Friday, doing self-promo, creative-community things, running an online store, gallery shows and trying to maintain a personal life... can be a bit much. I sometimes miss having a regular job with regular hours and regular paychecks. But I really can't imagine giving it up. I feel like it's kind of built itself...each thing I do is a part of me. It's good for my creative spirit and hopefully feeds my business, too. More on Penelope here, here and here. Alana Machnicki As a creative I've always found it important not to put all my eggs in one basket, so to speak. I like to have a little going on in different aspects. I have a tendency to get bored really easily and having a cornucopia of outlets to choose from keeps me happy. |
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A record of my exploration into all aspects of drawing, illustrated journaling, creativity, and the inspiring aspects of art. By the author of "Everyday Matters," "The Creative License", and "An Illustrated Life" and other books.
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Comments
Hi Danny, I don't necessarily mean for this to be a public post but I was wondering if you have ever read this interesting manifesto on Creativity.
Money jobs etc.
Here is a link:
http://www.gapingvoid.com/
Moveable_Type/archives/
000876.html
Posted by: Lydia Velarde | February 16, 2006 01:06 PM
HA! I was owndering why my website was getting so many hits this week! I featured Penny right about the time she was making the LEAP! I have made the leap with her-I noticed she has revamped her look and stylized her art but the REAL Peneolpe who love is still shining through! I would add...make sure you invest in advertising, no one will hire you if they don't know you are there! I am just in the process of reading your book, it is making me HAPPY! Thanks!
Posted by: monicalee | February 16, 2006 03:10 PM
Thank you Danny for adding on your TCL-"Interviews"!
So good, you posted both views of THE artists way - where there isn't one perfect for everyone! Encouraging descriptons on both POVs.
Looking forward, to reading more of your colleague's words ,I wish you a nice Skethcrawl in NYC!
Posted by: Thorsten
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February 17, 2006 09:13 AM
danny, i'll read the story later (when my boss leaves)but i must say-nice doodle of the $20. check out the money art and philosophy of j.s.g. boggs (if you haven't already). two summers ago i drew a bunch of custom twenty dollars bills with various restaurant and business logos supplanting jackson's face. i was able to spend these as cash much of the time ( a la boggs)-it was fun for both parties and it was good practice too. a cursory glance tells me that my comment isn't really related to the story but so what. draw money and see if you can spend it as money, for j.s.g. boggs
Posted by: brian dilorenzo | February 17, 2006 10:18 AM
i was so just struggling with this very concept...
this has helped shed yet a little more light...
thank you
:)
Posted by: gkgirl | February 17, 2006 01:00 PM
thank you for this. i recently quit my government job to go to art school full time and even now, it's already a money struggle. we live on one income (my husband's) and if this is an indication of things to come, it sure is scary. but i feel that i made the right decision (i'm sane without my crazy boss and crazy clients, hence, i'm a little bit more creative these days). but i know sometimes it's really hard to think that way, especially when you're trying to figure out how to pay the next mortgage bill. i guess that's where faith comes in.
Posted by: yvette claire | February 18, 2006 07:24 PM
very nice drawing!
Alina
http://alinanimation.blogspot.com/
Posted by: Alina | February 19, 2006 01:13 AM
Wow great post. I think every artist struggles with this. And for me, if the money side of it over-shadows my love for it, then I no longer have a love for it. Very delicate balance.
Posted by: G-Man | February 19, 2006 10:23 AM