A host of links to art and artists around the world. Search under a selection of interesting categories including galleries, museums and theatres.

Archive for the ‘Artists’ Category

Best Jobs for Artists

Friday, March 25th, 2011

Earnings for artist that go it alone are unstable at best. They range from abject poverty to great wealth. As a matter of fact a few of the self-employed artist command monetary figures that far surpass their salaried counterparts. Artist are categorized in the following manner: An Art Director, Craft Artist, Fine Artist, Multimedia Artist, Performing Artist

Jobs in each category are numerous and varied. The Art director for instance has the top jobs in fields like publishing and printing. They are the ones who get to control the overall direction of any project.

Craft Artist makes things, some useful, some not so much. This sector holds all of the artist that work in the mediums of glass, clay, wood, canvas and even candles. When you visit a craft fair the people you meet there are not just dabblers they are often times highly regarded in their fields. There have been quilts that have sold for hundreds of thousand’s of dollars.

Fine Artist generally works on commission or by having gallery shows. They also get commissions from museums to support their work. The sad facts for fine artist are that not many of them can support themselves. The best of the best fine fame and fortune, others only find it posthumously.

Multimedia includes illustrators of a sort as well as animators work primarily in motion picture and video industries. They also are prevalent in advertising, and designing computer systems services. They perform what we call free-hand drawing that is refined by computers to create a series of pictures. This is the foundation that forms the animated images or special effects seen by millions in movies, animated flicks. Without these artist we would not have ” The Simpson’s”.

Performing artist are you actors, singers and musicians. This is not just about the artists that make the top 10 weekly countdowns. True performing artist study for years to compete for a place in ballets, symphony orchestra’s and the theatre. There are colleges for clowns, acrobats and even lion taming. These all fall into the category of performing arts.

There are so many jobs that fall under the heading Artist, defined as ” a person having superior skill or ability, or who are capable of producing superior work. An artisan is engaged in a craft or applied art”, that it would take days to list them all.

Art Design Courses

Friday, December 18th, 2009

Art design is not simply about what you see, it is about what you can make someone else see. Find courses that start with the exploration of art design fundamentals, ones that provide the experience suitable for beginning as well as advanced artists. Once you gain a basic understanding of how to see and describe something in visual terms, you can investigate expressive and experimental directions in your art designs.

Working with the dynamics of color has significant implications in the work of artists, illustrators, craftspeople and designers. The course you choose should explore the issue of color by developing creative exercises, look at studies from nature, the human environment using collage, paint and other art media. Look for or request projects that will facilitate in-depth exploration of the role of light, the psychological impact of color on the brain, and how such factors as hue, value and intensity affect artistic design. Historical background should be provided via lectures and power point presentations.

As an artist you should be constantly researching new materials and inventing new creative processes to for a new piece. Find a multi-disciplinary course which will allow you to experiment with a lot of different media types in reaction to a specific site or location, for example, sound-based, sculptural, a drawing or a painting.

As for great artistic figurative sculpturing it must not be left untouched and let me say it does not just simply copy nature, indeed no, it takes the essential qualities that it needs from nature turning them into the beautiful visual language of three dimensional form. The artist’s visual language is how the sculptor conceives of the figure and interprets anatomy. You must learn to think of the human body as an interconnected system full of layered forms. You will want to learn how to about combining close perceptual study of a posing model with a conceptual understanding of the human body’s shapes and proportions, finally learning how to create your visualizations of the human figure. You really should include in your art design course studies critical thinking about what it means to represent the human body in your art.