
2009: It's ON!

"Don’t be afraid to create new paradigms for how you can exist and function as an artist. A lot of the old paradigms were never meant to serve artists well in the first place. I don’t know any other field in which you can bear the full expense of production, then give someone 50% to sell the object or product, then pay the IRS the requisite 33% tax rate, and say you are doing "good business." This is the “normal” paradigm of the commercial art world, and at a certain level it does work, particularly at the mid to upper levels. It doesn't mean its the only way, and in the early stages your work will not be priced high enough to cover your costs of production, let alone pay your rent every month, under this structure at any rate. Other paradigms and strategies are possible. Much the way that musicians are finding ways to profitably get their work into the hands of their audiences without label support, so should other artists be devising ways of getting their work out there and truly supporting themselves. There are artists doing this with real success. Find out what they are doing and how they are doing it."
Advice to a Young Artist
At a time when the career prospects of graduates are especially dismal and desultory -- according to CAA data, last year there were only 46 teaching vacancies in "film, video, or photography -- why are hundreds of young people applying to M.F.A. programs in photography?
...
At RISD, Fessler has observed significant changes in student expectations: "Up until three or four years ago most graduate students thought they could get a teaching job. Now students have fewer illusions about getting such a job; they're coming in with their eyes open. This year only two of the six students requested a teaching assistantship."
...
Because the traditional occupational tracks have withered away, the main benefits of graduate photography education appear to be cognitive, such as "art making," "critical thinking" and "personal development." If graduate photography education has become an expensive consumer good with significant cognitive rewards -- a good like psychotherapy or trekking in Nepal -- then we need to change the way we rank, evaluate and otherwise assess the M.F.A. in photography.