This was a REALLY interesting podcast on so many levels. I'm startled to the core regarding how similar the illustration field is to the theatre field and the presence of so many gatekeepers. I feel the pain. WOW do I really feel the pain. It is a slippery slope between "collaborating" and "deference." Feeling like you have a lack of agency to do anything is profoundly disheartening.
Listening to this has really made me step back and examine just exactly what it is that I think I'm doing. Jake's point regarding how much time a person has left to live really made an impact on me. I'm just a couple years younger than Will, and I really have to ponder what I'm putting out there in the world and what I want to do with the time I have left.
This was a good one, guys. I am going to have to listen to this a couple more times. Because the things that I thought were pipe dreams for the future can't be deferred much longer. And I am so very very tired of my own lack of agency in my own career field. Time to get down to it and just do it.
I would be very VERY interested in more classes and discussions around a wider variety of illustration fields, as we are all learning it is impossible to simply have one income stream and illustrators are often required to do a number of different tangential endeavors in order to survive in today's world. Lee's art fair and gallery experiences are incredibly interesting to me, and I would love to hear more about them. Will's conventions. Jake's non-children's-book work. These tertiary fields are becoming more and more braided into the central core of the life of a career illustrator (or even part-time hobbyists). I don't think a person can go into illustration anymore without assuming they are going to be a substantive part of their income. Professional actor training, for example, sometimes includes major discussions on the logistics of temp jobs, the ins-and-outs of living a spartan lifestyle, the variety of acting-related opportunities, and so forth. It feels like full-time illustration relying upon one particular thread to weave a tapestry is a thing of the past.
Thanks for doing all you do! It's really helpful to hear you all hash these things out!! You're really making an impact and a difference. Thank-you!!!