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Art Career Paths
Art directors develop design concepts
and review material that is to appear in periodicals, newspapers,
and other printed or digital media. They decide how best to
present the information visually, so that it is eye catching,
appealing, and organized. Art directors decide which photographs
or artwork to use and oversee the layout design and production
of the printed material. They may direct workers engaged in
artwork, layout design, and copywriting.
Fine artists typically display their work
in museums, commercial art galleries, corporate collections,
and private homes. Some of their artwork may be commissioned
(done on request from clients), but most is sold by the artist
or through private art galleries or dealers. The gallery and
the artist predetermine how much each will earn from the sale.
Only the most successful fine artists are able to support themselves
solely through the sale of their works. Most fine artists must
work in an unrelated field to support their art careers. Some
work in museums or art galleries as fine-arts directors or as
curators, planning and setting up art exhibits. Others work
as art critics for newspapers or magazines or as consultants
to foundations or institutional collectors.
Usually, fine artists specialize in one or two art forms, such
as painting, illustrating, sketching, sculpting, printmaking,
and restoring. Painters, illustrators, cartoonists, and sketch
artists work with two-dimensional art forms, using shading,
perspective, and color to produce realistic scenes or abstractions.
Illustrators typically create pictures for
books, magazines, and other publications, and for commercial
products such as textiles, wrapping paper, stationery, greeting
cards, and calendars. Increasingly, illustrators work in digital
format, preparing work directly on a computer.
Medical and scientific illustrators combine
drawing skills with knowledge of biology or other sciences.
Medical illustrators draw illustrations of human anatomy and
surgical procedures. Scientific illustrators draw illustrations
of animal and plant life, atomic and molecular structures, and
geologic and planetary formations. The illustrations are used
in medical and scientific publications and in audiovisual presentations
for teaching purposes. Medical illustrators also work for lawyers,
producing exhibits for court cases.
Cartoonists draw political, advertising, social,
and sports cartoons. Some cartoonists work with others who create
the idea or story and write the captions. Most cartoonists have
comic, critical, or dramatic talents in addition to drawing
skills.
Sketch artists create likenesses of subjects
using pencil, charcoal, or pastels. Sketches are used by law
enforcement agencies to assist in identifying suspects, by the
news media to depict courtroom scenes, and by individual patrons
for their own enjoyment.
Sculptors design three-dimensional artworks, either by molding
and joining materials such as clay, glass, wire, plastic, fabric,
or metal or by cutting and carving forms from a block of plaster,
wood, or stone. Some sculptors combine various materials to
create mixed-media installations. Some incorporate light, sound,
and motion into their works.
Printmakers create printed images from designs
cut or etched into wood, stone, or metal. After creating the
design, the artist inks the surface of the woodblock, stone,
or plate and uses a printing press to roll the image onto paper
or fabric. Some make prints by pressing the inked surface onto
paper by hand or by graphically encoding and processing data,
using a computer. The digitized images are then printed on paper
with the use of a computer printer.
Painting restorers preserve and restore damaged
and faded paintings. They apply solvents and cleaning agents
to clean the surfaces of the paintings, they reconstruct or
retouch damaged areas, and they apply preservatives to protect
the paintings. All this is highly detailed work and usually
is reserved for experts in the field.
Multi-media artists and animators work primarily
in motion picture and video industries, advertising, and computer
systems design services. They draw by hand and use computers
to create the large series of pictures that form the animated
images or special effects seen in movies, television programs,
and computer games. Some draw storyboards for television commercials,
movies, and animated features. Storyboards present television
commercials in a series of scenes similar to a comic strip and
allow an advertising agency to evaluate proposed commercials
with the company doing the advertising. Storyboards also serve
as guides to placing actors and cameras on the television or
motion picture set and to other details that need to be taken
care of during the production of commercials.
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