The dissimilarities between professional and amateur
A couple of days ago I mentioned, in passing, being a professional graphite artist and a amateur photographer.
This led to: how do I draw the distinction between
being a professional artist and an amateur photographer?
Now this turns out be a question laden with serious food for thought (and a rather long blog post)!
A pro is paid an amateur is not.
Rubbish answer.
After another quick head rummage, it became clear that this question had a
mass of tangents to get lost down and that no straight forward answer would be
possible.
Let’s go back to the question: how do I draw the distinction between
being a professional and an amateur?
Let’s see.
· As a professional
artist I draw for money as well as enjoyment.
As an amateur photographer for enjoyment alone.
· Success, customer
satisfaction and results are how I judge my graphite work whereas when I
photograph participating is more important than the actual result.
· I draw full-time,
spend long hours in the studio; as an amateur photographer I shoot in my spare
time.
· I have to draw
when commissioned but choose to shoot when I feel like it.
· Drawing is my work,
photography my hobby.
Where then does the line dividing being a professional and being an amateur lie?
Being a professional graphite artist has meant I have become more pragmatic, learned to have better
perspective with a more systematic approach.
As an amateur photographer I still get easily lost in being over perfectionistic; sometimes overworking
to the point where these improvements would not be worth the time and effort in
the professional world.
As a pro I have also learned to make deadlines a priority. For many amateurs submitting work on time is
far less important than perfectionism.
Being professional has also taught me how to accept criticism and how crucial this criticism actually is for my
artistic growth.
I know many an amateur hostile to it.
As a professional a certain skill
level is expected, not true for the amateur: there are no expectations.
Once you start accepting money to draw you have to maintain high standards.
You have to stay in the game.
This means keeping up to scratch, constantly improving and honing on
skills be it by following workshops, self-teaching, reading, experimenting or
interaction with other professionals. Never resting on your laurels.
Turning professional is one side of the coin, remaining professional the
other.
You have to grow up, surpass mediocrity and stay focused.
You have to mature in both
your work and as a person, deal with the lows just the same as with the highs, do the boring jobs as well as the fun ones.
Producing work with a “wow” factor
is important, a passion that goes
well beyond reason fundamental, but having the maturity to keep aiming for that end goal is crucial.
The line between being professional and amateur is complex, not as clear cut as I initially thought.
It's a line that underlines a whole series of points aside from skill level (maturity,
pragmatism, focus, resolve, integrity …)
In my case, I have drawn this division between my drawings and photographs simply because I am not ready to inflict the cold side of business, the performance pressure, the workload stress, encountered in my artistic career, onto my photography.
I don’t yet feel strong enough and consistent enough in my photography work to bring it into the professional world.
Sheltering, it behind the “amateur” shield gives me freedom and nonchalance never affordable as a professional.
"Past to Present"
Graphite on Paper
Sheona Hamilton-Grant. All rights reserved
While choosing to keep my photography on an amateur stand overindulging
in the hunt for that perfect shot; it has to be underlined that I adore being a
professional graphite artist.
For over 15 years, my scribble friends and I have worked hard, grown
strong, learned to take the pressure and thrive under scrutiny.
We are still chomping at the bit, ready to carry on up the sinuous
twists and turns that make up the realities of our professional world.
p.s: for all of you now wondering what my photos look like here's a link that can help :D
Comments
You mention never having had the confidence to push the boundary from amateur to professional. It takes courage and oodles of hard work. COuld it be that your feeling of frustration stems from a belief deep down you that knows you can do it... Playing the devil's advocate with the best intentions in mind.
Best