Claiming creative work: Creativity is inherent in the human being, but designers, architects and artists still continue to give explanations to get clients to recognize our work.
Art is Work
«Art is Work» is the phrase that welcomes the great graphic designer in the Manhattan studio (NYC) Milton Glaser (1929-2020)
I remember that in 1987 he went to the University where I had just started my Graphic Design career, to give a keynote talk together with Jean Michel Folon , on the occasion of an exhibition both held at the National Museum of Fine Arts in Buenos Aires, which I was also able to attend.
It was there that Milton Glaser, showing a first projected image, pronounced that phrase: "Art is work" , and told the students that we were taking our first steps in the career, that we never give away our work , that being an artist was a profession and not just a hobby or entertainment, that the fact of loving and enjoying our work does not take away its status as such, that there are people who need our "art" and they must be willing to pay for it.
Remembering again
In 2018 I traveled to New York City and of course the city was filled with its iconic "I LOVE NY" design in all the gift shops, and it occurred to me to think if I would still have his studio in Manhattan, I looked it up on my cell phone's GPS and finally found it, a few blocks from the Chrysler Building.
And there I found 31 years later with that phrase that I had forgotten: "Art is work" and I started to think about the number of times that our "artistic" profession is underestimated or undervalued when it comes to set a price for our work.
What got me thinking is why Milton Glaser chose to put that phrase at his studio entrance over any other, when anyone would expect at least a logo, for one of New York's most prestigious design studios.
But it was not so, the first thing that this great graphic designer wanted you to understand "in three words" is that if you go to his studio and intend to hire his services, you must pay!
Claiming the creative professional
This is the first of a series of blogs that I am going to write on my website and in the first person, told from my own experience and perception in almost 30 years of profession.
The mission of all of them, in addition to informing about design-related topics, is to vindicate the creative professional work of the graphic designer through everyday topics such as visual image design , web design, etc.
Through my articles, I intend for clients to know a little more about the aspects that are often not seen in the jobs that designers entrust to us, in addition to making them know a basic language necessary to understand us.
But above all things, they understand that designing is a creative process, which takes time and requires a professional perspective that allows the client's idea to be carried out effectively.
Studies, knowledge, education, training, professional ethics, and above all "experience", are some of the factors that validate that "professional sight" that designers are willing to provide.
When a client decides to hire a professional it is that they need to solve an identity or communication problem of their own, and that is not found in video tutorials or on the web.
Competing with incompetents
Graphic design has some "negative" factors for the professional's role, and that is that many of its digital tools are available to anyone and free of charge, and its basic use may seem very simple and intuitive to encourage a person or company. to dispense with the services of a professional.
There are countless pages on the internet that encourage people to create their free logo, their website without programming knowledge, their online store, or simply their posts on social networks, using predesigned templates that will look "professional" without being an expert.
And so it is that anyone can make visually acceptable “designs”, but conceptually wrong.
Los diseñadores muchas veces nos vemos obligados a competir con esto en cuanto a los presupuestos, y realmente no se puede, ya que se trata de universos totalmente distintos.
No se tiene en cuenta la experiencia del diseñador, ni la visión ni la calidad… solamente el precio y todo se reduce a un número sin ningún tipo de valor agregado.
Things by their name
A brand or logo is not a cartoon, a website is not a Facebook or Instagram profile, and those are not solid structures to insert into a competent commercial market, they are just complements to a much more strategic and complex structure.
Alguna vez leí un meme que decía una gran verdad: “El que cree que cuesta caro un profesional, no sabe lo caro que cuesta un incompetente”
Hacer las cosas mal lleva tiempo y dinero y no logra los objetivos planteados. ¿Por qué no hacer las cosas bien desde el principio de la mano de un profesional capacitado?
Many times clients call me to "help" them to fix something that they themselves tried to do with little knowledge of design, claiming that they do not have a budget ...
“No puedes correr una maratón en ojotas, y pretender ganarla”, es una de mis frases siempre listas para la ocasión.
Every start-up of a business, however small, requires strategic planning and prior economic investment, otherwise it will be doomed to failure.
What is the price of an idea?
Creatives sell products and services that are often intangible, subjective, unreal ... but necessary!
As necessary as an idea itself, which is not seen, but is heard and felt, and above all, it solves communication problems in people's daily lives.
That is what the creative process is about, generating ideas that serve, that inspire, that communicate, that transcend, that catch on, that transcend, that arrive ...
An idea is the first step to start the engine, and if that idea is creative, coherent, logical and successful, the journey will be more fluid and enjoyable, and the most optimal results.
"Art is work" ... I invite you to work together making art an accurate path to achieve your goals.
Take this humble tribute to the teacher Milton Glaser who passed recently, precisely on the day of his 91st birthday.
Muy buenas tus reflexiones colega.
A muchos nos atraviesa la dificultad de poner en valor nuestro trabajo creativo como profesionales del diseño, y eso de «competir con incompetentes» es absolutamente cierto… y lamentable!!!
Yo también estuve en es clase magistral de Glaser y Folon en la FADU y fue monumental, creo que yo estaba cursando el segundo año de la carrera.
¡Art is work!, no lo olvidemos nunca.
Éxitos y muchas gracias nos hacerme recordar y reflexionar
Gracias Ricardo
Así es la realidad de los que realizamos trabajos creativos, pero lo importante es no olvidad nunca que el arte es trabajo, ¡y del bueno!
What motivated the author to initiate a series of blog posts related to their professional experience?
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