Good point...but there are folk artists who are professionals as well. This can get pretty convoluted.
Gopher had a some good points about understanding the basics of "the game" and working it from that angle. The ratio thing - hmmm, interesting, but I couldn't figure out my own ratio for two reasons: one, I love this stuff so much that I'd do it even if I didn't make a red cent from it, and two, it happens to be the majority of my income right now due to a lot of outside factors. So, I'm not sure how to figure that ratio out. But then again I'm a lousy mathematician, that's why I hand the hard stuff off to my wife.
When I was coming to the end of getting my art degree at the U of U, one of the required classes was called "Portfolio" and it was of course dedicated to helping you get your portfolio together for your job search. That was all well and good, but years later I wish the program (as well as the music school) required some courses that dealt with the business end of those professions. You know, give the outgoing students some training in the arts of accounting and managing their own careers. As far as I know they are STILL not offering courses like this as part of the curriculae and I think that's really cheating their students.
Cranking people through art and music schools and then booting their asses out the door with a "good luck now get out of our faces" attitude is contributing to the all to often heard phrase "great artist - lousy businessman".
Gopher had a some good points about understanding the basics of "the game" and working it from that angle. The ratio thing - hmmm, interesting, but I couldn't figure out my own ratio for two reasons: one, I love this stuff so much that I'd do it even if I didn't make a red cent from it, and two, it happens to be the majority of my income right now due to a lot of outside factors. So, I'm not sure how to figure that ratio out. But then again I'm a lousy mathematician, that's why I hand the hard stuff off to my wife.
When I was coming to the end of getting my art degree at the U of U, one of the required classes was called "Portfolio" and it was of course dedicated to helping you get your portfolio together for your job search. That was all well and good, but years later I wish the program (as well as the music school) required some courses that dealt with the business end of those professions. You know, give the outgoing students some training in the arts of accounting and managing their own careers. As far as I know they are STILL not offering courses like this as part of the curriculae and I think that's really cheating their students.
Cranking people through art and music schools and then booting their asses out the door with a "good luck now get out of our faces" attitude is contributing to the all to often heard phrase "great artist - lousy businessman".