I know I'm making the same mistake
I know I'm making the same mistake
greyhoundman said:
I knew better than to join this thread.
An image that has value is________.
You fill in the blank.
I am a classically trained painter, as was my father. I can kick out illustrations that would pass for Norman Rockwell. Imagery is a fad and can be an anachronism overnight. Today, images aren't consumed at the rate of each issue of the Satruday Evening Post, but by every image needed for any application at every second. Sadly, there is no market for my skills where I could even get close to union wages for my time.
Even the best song writers only get 1 penny an air play or 5 cents a song as a hard copy.
In this situation one has to have a 'hit' in order to make real money.
In our era of photography this can only be accomplished by making a name for one's self or by creating a memorable image (Like John Jr. at his dad's funeral).
Everyone is a photographer today, very few are trained and imagery is expected to be free to the common citizen. 99% of those with an experience paying for a photgrapher is for services like graduation pictures and weddings.
Photography is too easy, too cheap and the bar for what passes for professional has been lowered so low that its value as a commodity has become next to worthless.
I love to see those new to the craft buy into darkrooms (and all the smelly adventures that go on there) get inspired by an image emerging in a tray, but even that won't make an image more legitmate or have more artistic value.
Selling reproduction rights is where the money is, and if one is heady enough to think he is an artist, it's all in the fist (a.k.a. signature).