Showing posts with label 2nd job. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2nd job. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 27, 2018

Professional or "on the side" artist


In college I was desperate to figure out what it was I was going to do. I remember feeling so much pressure to figure it to and make a choice and “decide”. I however was at a total loss. I felt a lot of pressure from my parents to pick business, but in my soft idealistic brain, I wanted to be an artist and go to art school. As freshman and sophomore year drew to a close, time got short and classes were super expensive.  I decided to go with a business degree, a decision which in the end I am thankful for, but there is more…. 

I finished college, moved back home  and took classes at SVA (which I was in love with at the time).  When I took my first animation class, I realized it was a monumental pain in the a$$.  Imagine drawing and drawing and drawing for hours only to have 2 to 3 seconds* of animation. WTF. Nope. So I hit a brick wall and decided to hang it up for a while and get a job and save money.

As I got my first job, I picked up and put down the artwork for a long long while . Then one day I picked up a digital arts magazine and (I think it was Imagine EFX) and was floored. It was like seeing an old girlfriend and reconnecting with her again. I was taken by the desire to start creating and I did just that. I looked at all the art blogs and artist sites and, read magazines, and tried to dissect “how” they made such amazing art work. I bought a Wacom tablet and practiced continuously and slowly improved.  

One day while watching an artist being interviewed I heard a quote that really stuck and resonated with me. It went something like “You can still be a great artist, and don’t have to be a professional or try to make a living off of it. It’s not for everyone.”  I finally** realized I didn’t want to be a professional artist anymore, but I still loved the art form and creating work. You can get the biggest answer from the smallest moments sometimes. I was finally let off some large massive hook that’d been following me around for years. I didn’t have to study art and** build a business etc.  Because being a professional artist means just that, you are spending a lot of time building infrastructure to market and promote yourself. I can just make art and become really great at it.

It took a long road to get to that learning moment. Had I done it the other way I might have come to the same decision but had a much rougher time figuring that out. If I did go to art school, I would have [possibly] burned out, and not* put in as much hard work into honing my craft. The work in building a business would have taken away from the love of creating. This is not something that I could have seen at the time. 

Sometimes in life you take the long way around to get the lessons that you need to move forward.  


So no I am not a professional freelancer nor do I want to be one anymore, not really. I do* want to be a great artist, and the balance I have discovered gives me the freedom to pursue that joyfully. Whatever you decide to do I wish you the same fruitful discovery.

Instagram: Moebocop
Vero: Moebocop

Tuesday, March 13, 2018

Treat our Day Job (9 to 5) As Your Second Job


For years I was always referring to my day job as my first job and my after work pursuits as my second job.  Recently I had a conversation with a friend of mine and who mentioned to me that for the longest time we have been thinking about this the wrong way. The day job can actually be thought of as the supplementary one. The day job is the thing that funds your other exploits (if you choose to think of it that way). This one is actually your second job. The things that you do outside of your day job exploits are the real work. 
Those are the things that drive you and give you passion and pleasure and purpose (to me it does).

The trick is to find a day job that does not overtake your real* job. The jobs that really give you passion and purpose. 
For the longest time I had it so wrong. Its’ such an old world inflexible way of thinking about how you spend your time leading towards your goals.
I am at the point now where I no longer think that way. It’s the things that give you passion that are your real career. Think if it as your passion career or your spirit career.  Everything else is just a job.

Now for some people their 9 to 5 is* their passion and that’s great. It has never been that way for me. We now are able to reframe our world the way that you want to and I am glad to be living in it.
Too bad that it took me this long to figure it out.

Instagram: Moebocop
Vero: Moebocop