As we are coming to the end of the final year it is a good time to look back and reflect on the time. At the start of the year I wrote about some of the hopes and fears I had for the year and beyond it and about the opportunities I felt would be most beneficial to me through the year. I'm now going to reflect on these and the final year of the course.
To start with I feel that my style of working have developed a great deal since the beginning of the year. I have finally had the confidence to mix my collage work with my ink drawings, something I've wanted to do for a while without much success. I think my work is a lot more polished and professional looking than it was at the start and if I continue in this style and become more confident using it I could really improve the quality of my work. This process of finding a new, potentially stronger way of working has also helped me with another hope I had, gaining more confidence in my own work. Although I still feel I need to produce a lot more in the style to get used to working in it, I feel comfortable with it and my work and am happy for people (such as the industry visitors) to see my work. My last hope for the year was to graduate. I don't know if Ive succeed in this but I hope I have!
When thinking of what worried me in the coming year I stated that the potentially heavy workload on the course and the prospect of becoming more independent in my learning where top of my list. I believe that although through the first half of the year I seemed to work rather slowly in my collage based style after developing the mix with collage and ink this quicken considerable and the amount of work I produced picked up pace, making it easier to finish all I had to to graduate. The confidence I feel I have gained in my own work has made the act of becoming more independent a lot easier and I have made decisions about my work which I'm glad I did and changed the direction of it for the better. Although I still need a little reassurance in my new working style I think I trust my own opinion a great deal more than at the start of the year.
Lastly the opportunities that I have been given this year have greatly helped me in my future goals. The advice given on promotion such as business cards, postcards, website, portfolios etc have been invaluable to me and has brought in to focus the reality of trying to get work in the industry and the effort and dedication in all areas it takes to do it. The portfolio reviews, talks and visits to people currently working in the industry helped me a great deal, not only in advice and guidance but to have the confidence to see that this is something I can do if I commit to it and work hard. The final opportunity I was looking forward to was to work on a project of my choosing. I have enjoyed this a great deal and have really found what sort of illustrator I want to be in the future.
Lucy Gilligan Illustration
Sunday, 3 May 2015
Wednesday, 29 April 2015
Practitioner Visit & Portfolio Feedback 5: Gina Cross
Gina Cross, a former Guardian Art Editor, Designer, Educator, Gallery/Agency Owner, came in to give us all a talk on portfolios and promotions. Her extensive experience in commissioning illustration gives her a broad knowledge in how to be successful in the industry. She told us that there many ways that a portfolio can be interpreted within different markets. When she graduated an illustrator stayed working in illustration, didm;t branch out and try working in of areas. This has changed, the boundaries are broader. Many are now seen as 'Image-makers' who crossover the mediums and disciplines in their work.
After looking through my portfolio she had a few points of advice for me:
Style:
- Postcards- example of promotion, keep sending stuff out to potential clients, 2 or 3 pieces or updated work very few months.
- My work would fit well in Food/Home/Lifestyle magazines - the textures in my collage would work well in them
- My inked buildings from mu customs/traditions remaindered her of work in in-flight magazines
- Editorial/Packaging could also be an area my style would fit in to.
In regards to the presentation of my work:
- Try to put similar pieces/styles together. My circus work and the customs/traditions together.
- Other pieces in my portfolio are different, more exploratory, they feel different.
- My work is strong but I need to find direction
- Advised us all to build a strong presence on social media - lets you see how people react to the work.
Tuesday, 28 April 2015
Future Self: Part 2 Progress
I have developed my original idea into the set of promotional postcards that I had hoped for at the start of Part 2. These are a few of my final designs for my circus postcards inspired by polish poster art. These and my other designs will be professionally printed by the deadline.
Sunday, 5 April 2015
Business Card Design 2
I needed to develop my original designs from Future Self part 1 and get them professional printing in time for the deadline. I have made a few different changes on the side which holds my information but have decided to keep my main image of my collaged stones as I like the image and think it works well as a simple pattern which will represent me.
I have decided to keep the inked name but change the smaller info to a digital font so that its clearer. I also like the stones continued on to the front of the card, I think they work well on the white background and will be quite striking when printed.
The back of my business card will be kept as the stones, as shown above.
Wednesday, 1 April 2015
Practitioner Visit & Portfolio Feedback 4: Fig Taylor
We had a visit last week from Fig Taylor, a portfolio consultant from the AOI who talked through with us the key do's and don't's of portfolios and promotion, along with other general advice on getting work in the industry. She has experience of working as a designer and an agent so has knowledge of how it is on both sides of the table.
The main areas she discussed:
The main areas she discussed:
- To start she emphasised the point many visiting industry people have, not to include work in my portfolio that I don't like myself and that I don't want to do or can't finish in the time ill be give by a client.
- Try to get a face to face appointment with potential clients. These will be difficult to get but important as the conversation and connections that can arise from meetings will happen more than with a simple email conversation.
- The clients are lazy, they will need to be spoon fed. Show who you are and your style clearly in the small body of work in the portfolio, no red herrings to confuse them.
- Digital portfolios can be presented as a PDF, blog or website. Make sure the way in which these are shown to the client during interviews is smooth and organised.
- PDF portfolios shouldn't have the same amount of images as the website, a small concise selection only. The website is where multiple finished projects can be seen. A blog will be less formal and show the creative process involved in the work shown in the portfolio.
- With self promotion, writing to a client is important but in a letter rather than an email.
- Research the kind of work I want before making contact with potential clients. See what type of illustration they commission - is this like my work?
- First thing to do after graduation- get my portfolio to a good standard, business cards and website completed and professional before I start contacting clients for interviews.
Next she looked at our portfolios and gave her opinion on the areas within the industry that would be best for us to research. With my work she felt Lifestyle/Home Magazines, Food/Beauty Mags/packaging, Gardening/Wildlife mags Magazines would suit my collage/ink work best as they are rather decorative. This needs to be researched and work made specifically for it, to show clients my work could be used in their publication. Next she pointed out Many of my piece could be linked to children. This is a hard area to get into and I would need to think about the age range I'd be focusing on and the subject matter.
Future Self Pt 2: Research
For my circus inspired designs I have decided to stick with the layout of the polish poster designs for the circus made throughout the 1960s, 70s and 80s. Many of these consist of one simple striking image on a bright single colour background. The only information is the word "Cyrk", Polish for Circus. This simple layout is what I am going to try to emulate in my own postcard designs and I hope I will end up with something as distinctive and strong as these old posters.
Examples I've been looking at:


Images from: www.contemporaryposters.com
Examples I've been looking at:


Images from: www.contemporaryposters.com
Labels:
Future Self,
hello world,
Research
Tuesday, 31 March 2015
Website Design Workshop
As part of the course I will need to set up and maintain my own website. Having a strong online presence, which will include my website with further links to social media platforms, will be very important in my potential future success as an illustrator. I will need to invest time and effort into maintaining my website and develop it into a lively and easy to use tool of self promotion.
Website: www.lucygilligan.com
Website: www.lucygilligan.com
Labels:
Future Self,
Research,
Review,
Website
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