”My work is my adventure.“
Lilo Rasch-Naegele
So you want to make art and make a living doing it. These days if you look at the employment ads for Graphic Designers, for example, you will realize GD jobs often demand hours of sitting at a computer, working with design software, photography, and even required knowledge of HTML and coding. You can still be very creative using these tools, and a steady paycheck is highly attractive. This is not the only road, though.
I loved drawing and painting so much that my first practical decision when I started out to make a living with art was to become an illustrator. (With photography at the forefront now, in print magazine work, this is not the easy road to finding lots of work. But keep reading…)
After I earned a degree with a Graphic Design/Painting combo, I discovered that visual design crosses all fields and an artist can find great satisfaction in designing a magazine layout just as much as making a painting. In fact, I learned most about design from a photography teacher I had for a year.
Before computer illustration was on the scene, with pen, ink and paint, I illustrated children’s Sunday School stories and workbooks, cookbooks, maps and anything else I could find as a freelance artist. Jobs in publishing later provided a steady paycheck, and I found a wonderful niche working for quilt making magazines. This was perfect, since I make art quilts and love color, as you can see from reading many of these over 400 entries within this blog.
My first love, however, was painting, and to become a really good fine arts painter was always a main goal of mine. A lot of exploration went into this effort, both of media and subject matter. After some success with traditional realism, I discovered my true heart desired to work with my own imagination, and these images looked very different, but more “me.”
I met an architect who was opening her own art gallery in town, and when she saw my cityscape paintings, asked me to join her to display my work. I previously operated my own gallery for 2 years, but found it was very time consuming to manage with little time left for painting. So this was a welcome new idea for selling art. I have a great relationship with them, that I don’t take for granted! I have had home art shows too that were successful, and explored showing in Denver and Santa Fe galleries with mixed success.
What follows now is a showing of my work in illustration, typography treatment and fine arts painting. It is truly a mix of my artwork over the past few years, since I have enjoyed so many projects. Somehow I believe it all shows a connection in terms of color and imagination. Maybe it will inspire you to seek and find your own niche, wherever your heart and hands lead you.
See below for the links to my Etsy shop, and main website, and please comment here on the blog or email me with questions at kgillistaylor@gmail.com. Thanks for reading and looking at this page!
-Karen
I feel fortunate that my art career has allowed me to create in so many areas: drawing, painting, graphic design, layout, photography, Photoshop work, teaching and working to inspire other artists, students and quilt makers. Some years I’ve made a good income and some leaner years as well. But income growth does not equal creative satisfaction and progress. The two are very different to me. Still, it’s nice when you can see a check come in. That means you can keep making more art!
Website:
http://www.karengillistaylor.net
Etsy art sales site:
http://www.etsy.com/shop/KarenGillisTaylor
email karen at:
kgillistaylor.com