The time between Thanksgiving and New Year's Day is the most difficult time of the year. For a freelancer that is. From my experience one year ago, unless you have established contracts or a large project to work on, businesses slow down during the holidays. Holiday campaigns were started months ago to be ready to launch live right before or on Thanksgiving. Retail companies stay ahead by three or four months of the current calendar. How do you think all those new holiday store graphics get in the windows so fast after Halloween? It's because they were approved back in July, went into production in August, and then were shipped to the stores for display by October. For freelancers that didn't come on board until the fall, the holiday season can be difficult to find long term work. It does, however, allow some time to get your ducks in a row that you might have been neglecting for a few weeks. Or if you're like me, a few months.
This year I already know money will be tight and my friends and family aren't expecting a barrage of gifts. I'm relying on my crafting skills to make gifts for people on a very tight budget. It's a hand craft skill I've been itching to get back into and it gets me away from the computer screen for a few hours a day. I'm also using this time to organize my old artwork files and get everything ready for a yearly "dump" on to my back-up drive. My laptop only has so much storage space and moving all things 2015 and older off will only help it run faster.
I also use the month of December to get my tax documents in order. I have several W2's and 1099's coming in January, so I have to get all my invoices and deductibles organized. An organized shoe box of papers is better than missing something important. Taxes are never fun for me, even when I had a full time job.
I'm also sending out holiday cards to my business clients. It's another expense that seems unnecessary during a time of thinner income, but it's a gesture that means so much more. I want to keep in good relations with my clients and most of them are wonderful to work with. Family and friends know how much they mean to me, I want my clients to feel just as important. Without their faith in my abilities to produce work they love, I wouldn't be doing any of this. And that really means something to me. Their continued flow of projects means they want to work with me and know what I do is worth the expense. They allow me to set my own hours, have creative freedom, and do what I love for a living. A card is the smallest gesture I could do for them. Of course I designed something unique for this. Sending a store-bought card would be an insult to my profession. It's always a good idea to think like the retailers and have something ready months ahead.
With all the free time I'll have from a down turn of project work, I'll be hunting for short term projects. This gives me time to go through all those job links I've marked over the year and see which ones I want to keep and pursue. I bookmark so many pages then forget if they were worth looking into. December has become my digital cleaning month. I want to start January with a faster computer and less cluttered list of bookmarks on my browser.
So to all freelancers out there, don't fret. The holidays are a trying time for work but it will pick back up in January. Take it easy and get ready to hit the ground running on New Year's Day.
My first art gallery show since college had its opening last Friday. Even now I still can't believe it happened. With the show up through December, I still feel like I still need to create more work for it. The work that is hanging is for sale, but I won't assume I'll make a sale on anything at this point. It was all very surreal during the last few weeks leading up to the opening night. Thankfully, with all the support from my friends, I didn't go completely insane during the final stretch before I had to hang my pieces.
I'm sharing the gallery show with a good friend, and phenomenal artist, Melissa McClanahan of Liminal Works. After I twisted her arm into showing together with me, we opened a bottle of wine and came up with our show title and theme. As we're both ladies, we decided to look at the subject of women in various points of transformation or times in life. Melissa went for a personal reflection and introspective view. Her pieces were women intertwined with nature or symbols of goddesses or animals. Her painterly approach worked perfectly with a metaphysical and more psychological perspective.
My style is much more graphical and on a satirical ilk. I pulled inspiration from propaganda posters of the World War II, with the message that women should be afraid in order to be safe. All the messages were engrained into my everyday behavior by the mature women and society in my youth. Now that I'm older, I don't believe a word of any of these archaic notions that women need to be alert 24/7. There has been a shift into active feminism and demand for gender equality. I wanted to shine a light on the not so distant past on how women where taught to behave and how maddening it really is. I'm not always out to make political statements, but I couldn't bring myself to be gentle with a message. Plus I'm a huge fan of making people laugh but then stop and feel bad for laughing. If nothing else, I hope to start a dialog.
It was a great labor of love for both of us. I know I want to have another show next year if possible. This might be a start of something dangerous!
If you're in the Cincinnati area, feel free to drop by the Sharonville Fine Arts Center during their gallery hours. The show is up all December.