Start Me Up
It’s never too late to get started, is it?
I reread this book from the Artist’s Market Business Series hoping to prime my mind with marketing ideas and reminders of techniques for getting myself out there. While there’s some real value to what’s contained in this book, Nothing really grabbed me to take on as an action item, with the exception of joining an association like AIGA or the Graphic Artists Guild to get in to events and network and trade ideas with other people doing the same thing. Or at least hear some lectures.
One problem this book runs into is that illustration and design have been changing so rapidly that much of it is simply out of date. Much is timeless, but some of the advice about the kinds of jobs available from, for example, newspapers, is sadly out of date. Available technology has changed the illustration and design markets so profoundly that a book written seventeen years ago is bound to have some misleading information. In 1990 computers were becoming a big deal in the graphic arts, but trade magazines were still selling ads for X‑acto blades and markers. I’m sure real pasteup has disappeared and I doubt that very many people submit marker comps like they had me do in college (to prepare me for what I’d have to do at an agency).
The next quibble I have is with the book’s organization. It’s well-divided into topical chapters, but each chapter has one or more profiles of artists with their experiences relevant to the chapter. These are interesting and useful, but are each between one and three pages long, fragmenting the chapters and even finishing sentences pages after their start. What’s more, these profiles, which are essentially full-page sidebars, often have notes describing or relating anecdotes related to samples of the artist’s work. The sidebars have sidebars! This makes it difficult to maintain the flow of ideas.
Each chapter also finishes with a page of checklist items, basically recapping the points made in the chapter. I’ve seen that put to good use in other books, but here it seemed flat and useless. Perhaps some questions or suggestions for bringing the ideas into practice would have been more helpful.
I believe that there is a newer edition of this book out. If you’re at all interested in reading it, do make sure you get the newer edition.