Why don’t pros have portfolios?
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@mag Thanks for this thorough response! I do still find a lot of these sites confusing though. Renée Kurilla’s portfolio is odd to me because every illustration is just a square. I know for certain that one of the most important things we should have in a portfolio is variation in dimensions and format like spreads, spots, and vignettes.
I love Rebecca Green’s portfolio, but the self portrait she has seems strange to me. I feel like if that were in my portfolio people would say "why do you have a self portrait in a children’s book portfolio?".
Benji Davies portfolio is just book covers like Jake’s.
I think this gets back to what @ArtMelC artmelc was saying about how artists who have lot more going on in their careers have no need for a more traditional portfolio.@NessIllustration is right about me being a bit of a type A. I very much like to see a concrete answer but I realize the art industry does not have a lot of those. This might sound contradictory but that’s part of why I love it!
But when it’s so hard and so competitive to break in it’s easy to feel like there’s a lot more wrong choices to make than right ones so not having a concrete standard or answer can be frustrating at times.
I’d still like to know who the pros are we should be looking at like they mentioned on the podcast because if I were to follow that advice I might have a portfolio of just book covers, or one with video clips, sculptures, and posters, and that would not make for a good portfolio for someone starting out, right? -
@Griffin-McPherson You don't have to follow every advice you hear You can take inspiration from pros that are doing what you're trying to do, for instance those that work within your market and are hired by your dream clients. You can't appeal to all clients, but if you analyze what their artists are doing you might figure out what appeals to your dream clients.
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@NessIllustration thank you for these reminders that there’s flexibility. I can get very fixated on finding the "right" way to do things so I really appreciate it!
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@Griffin-McPherson Griffin, I've personally struggled with this contradiction since I started pondering a path toward children's illustration. The illustrators I admired did not stick to the "best practices" that so many people seemed to definitively advise. Some did, but far far more didn't. (And by "best practices" I mean a website with its own domain name and email for a specific segment of the children's illustration industry with no more than 18 images covering all manner of children's contexts and situations on a single page with a clear About/Contact info block. And nothing else.)
It seems to me that currently it's really really hard to make a living JUST as a children's illustrator. And some of the Art Directors that have spoken at my local SCBWI events have said that they don't mind seeing artists have websites that have lots of different sections and uses, because they want the artists they're working with to be successful and surviving. They know the struggle. They're not stupid. As long as menu sections are clearly labeled and they can find what they want easily and quickly they're okay with it. That's the priority: clarity of navigation. I think perhaps 15 years ago expectations may have been different, but today's ADs and Agents are much more web-savvy than they used to be.
You have to look at who is giving you the original advice. Did they experience the same path you're experiencing? Is it people who have the privilege of only working in one industry (which, to be honest, is getting more and more rare)? Is it well-meaning people repeating what they think is expertise because that's what they've heard? Is it pros who have moved beyond the children's illustration field after already achieving success in it?
I will admit it makes me incredibly frustrated (and sometimes even kind of angry) to hear so many people emphatically say that things need to be one definitive way but then turn around and see clearly and evidently with my own eyes complete contradictions to their wisdom by very successful professionals I admire. Even Illustration Agencies don't follow the "rules"--they sometimes have 30-50 images of the same artists's work in very different styles, and even have the same pieces listed under completely different industry categories even though they are seemingly contradictory--like children's illustration in commercial art and vice versa. It's exasperating.
In the end, you have to make the choices that you think will be best for your path and your situation and your capacity to have a career. Yes, consider what their needs are. But in the end, it's your website, not theirs. If it helps, make a specific website for only that particular potential income stream, and make sure you share it with people in that industry who need to know about it. It's a simple matter to make one nowadays. Put a clear link to it on your own more inclusive and generalized website just in case.
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@Coreyartus I think a lot of the "best practices", which I teach myself, are not the only way to succeed but rather make it easier to find success. Since illustration is hard as it is, we don't have to turn on hard mode on top of that!
I'm not sure if the pros who aren't following the "rules" became successful in spite of it, or have only begun doing what they want after they became successful because they can now get away with it... I don't have the answer to that, but it's interesting to ponder!
I also think that this field has become increasingly competitive. Just in the last few years, agencies went from receiving a few dozen submissions every month to a few thousands now. The selection criteria has shot up very quickly. Someone who was accepted in an agency even just 3-5 years ago could easily be passed over now. So pros who have started their careers before that do have an advantage and got away with more! That includes me - I was easily signed by 2 agents at the beginning of my career, but now I'm honestly not sure I could score one anymore.
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@NessIllustration I think this could make for a good 3pp episode, what rules do beginners need to follow that pros get to break?
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My question is how many "best work" should be in your portfolio?
- I've heard 3PP tell one person to do 3 projects, several pages of 2 books in your style and several pages of one of your own story ideas with original characters.
- I've also read through Will Terry's 100 list and even if you combine stuff, that's still easily over 20 illustrations.
- Then there's the list of types of illustrations: spot, vignette, one page, and two page (leaving room for potential text to go on top of the illustration).
- I even asked Anthony Wheeler in one of his twitch streams, and he said art directors or agents will know what to do with you by just seeing 6 two-page spreads of your work. And that you don't need 10, 15, 20, or however many pieces you think you need. That means not even book cover examples?!
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@kayleenartlover You can put 50 if you want, but the art directors don't need to see that much, and it's risky because in 50 there's bound to be some pieces that are not quite as good. Maybe the anatomy is slightly wonky, maybe the contrast just isn't popping, or maybe there's no storytelling at all so the piece is kind of bland and doesn't achieve much. Those pieces hurt you more than they help. That's why the general advice is to limit your selection more than you maybe even think you need, to force you to eliminate weaker pieces. However if you truly have 50 excellent pieces that have no weaknesses, I don't think it'll hurt you to show them all.
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@kayleenartlover
The 12 to 20 range is always what I’ve heard for how many pieces to have. If you have way more than that that you would consider your best pieces I would say narrow it down to the ones that best reflect that type of work you would like to do.Will’s list is what I’ve been using to guide my portfolio but I feel really disinterested in drawing a lot of the things on that list, they’re simply not the sorts of things that I would draw and when I look to my favorite children’s book illustrators they don’t draw those things either.
Like you said it would probably amount to about 20 pieces if you were to include all of those things in a portfolio and I don’t think I’ve ever seen a portfolio that includes even a quarter of what is on that list.
I think the way I’m going to go about using it now is more so as a guideline than a checklist. -
@Griffin-McPherson rules don't apply to you if you're famous I guess