Posts Tagged ‘advertising’

The Power of Networks

Monday, November 23rd, 2009

I used to think that work came about by talent alone. As if getting a gig were as simple as sending off a few resumes and portfolios and waiting for the phone to ring off the hook with offers. Clearly I knew how good my work was, so of course anyone who saw the work would think the same. While there is some objectivity and I have received a handful of gigs from the aforementioned method the vast majority of work I have had over the years came from my network of friends and colleagues. In fact, I can only think of two instances where I merely sent my resume and portfolio and was offered work.

Right out of NYU I took a job as the lighting assistant at San Francisco Opera. I got the job through one of my mentors. There I met several directors who I have since worked with. Numerous projects I did in the first few years came through classmates of mine or other people I met through school. Of course as projects occur there is a whole new group to interact with. The director, for example, hires me for a show. Then the producers of that show enjoy my work enough to hire me for another project with them. The director on that show likes the work enough to bring me on to a third project. And so it goes.

I have seen many incredibly talented people sit by without work because they felt, as I once did, that it will suddenly appear. It might, but more than likely the next gig will come from a friend or colleague or mentor. Speaking with numerous freelancers across disciplines I have found this to be true although especially in collaborative art forms like theater, opera and dance. There are many mistakes that one could make but one of the most important things to do is simply get out there.

I often joke about how my job really breaks down to hanging out with people all day. While I say this in jest, there is a degree of truth to it. The social dynamic that goes into a work of performance is as important as the work itself. The relationships between the various artists forge insights into the piece at hand that makes the work itself stronger. The lunches and dinners between technical rehearsals are as vital as those rehearsals themselves.

Opening night parties, fundraisers, and so forth, all serve to bring people together and form relationships which thus create a kind of emotional shorthand that allows you, as artists, to cut past the superficialities and dive more fully into the piece at hand.

I know numerous people in the tech industries who swear by LinkedIn, Twitter and the like for networking for jobs. Perhaps that works in the performing arts, although I must say, as connected as I am on-line, by and large I have not known that to be the case. What I do know is that by maintaining and continually building relationships with my friends work comes my way. Networking is not a matter of asking everyone you know for work. It is simply a matter of spending time with people whose company you enjoy.

Perhaps networking as a verb is a misnomer. The network exists. We are simply actors within a preexisting network who, through our socializing, increase and expand that network. Occasionally the network drives work from one person to another within it.

Working in the arts is never easy and the money is rarely good. Just as doing work that you are not invested in is a waste of your, and everyone else’s, time, so too is working with people you do not enjoy. Because so much of the product is the process, to ignore that is to miss a major component of creating the work itself.

I hear people often speak in terms like “exploiting your social network” and other such things. My experience is much different. In fact if you feed your relationships and friendships your network will end up exploiting your talents and keep you busy with engaging and interesting projects. Nurturing those relationships is the key to a healthy career. But once you have the gig you need to prove your worth. That is where the talent comes in.

I am in a curious position right now. After building up my network for 7+ years in New York I suddenly found myself without it. Having relocated from one part of the country to another my network had to be rebuilt. It did not take long to notice its absence and begin working to fill that void.

While it could be said that I am networking, more to the point, I am finding interesting people to spend my time with. I am going out to look at work that appeals to and engages me artistically. While some projects have come my way through this of greater import is making new friends, deepening relationships, and finding interesting and engaging new art.

Rebranding

Wednesday, January 2nd, 2008

New Year, New Design.

I have substantially changed the color scheme and overall design of my lighting design portfolio as well as this blog. I think it shows off the images to much greater effect as well as making the reading of text easier by avoiding eye fatigue from all those bright colors.

In addition to the cosmetic stuff, I did a lot of cleanup “under the hood” as it were. I think the whole thing from form to function is a lot cleaner and easier to use.

I hope you enjoy. And please take a moment to look through my portfolio, I have had essentially the same design on that site for three years and it is such an improvement I am just pleased as punch.

The background image is from the lightplot for the Dracula\Driving Miss Daisy rep I did down in Virginia this past fall. The previous background came from my Dance Department lightplot from NYU. I figure I have been out of grad school for three and a half years now, it is time to move on.

The Future is Advertising

Friday, August 10th, 2007

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Move over Scarlett Johansson! Mikhail Gorbachev is the new face of Louis Vuitton.

The former Soviet leader is to appear in an ad campaign for the French luxury label, along with Steffi Graf and her husband, Andre Agassi, and Catherine Deneuve, said a statement Thursday from Vuitton, a division of the LVMH group, Moet Hennessy Louis Vuitton SA.

Shot by photographer Annie Leibovitz, the ads focus on travel — a “core value” for the company that started in 1854 as a trunk-maker, the statement said.

Gorbachev is featured in a car, a Vuitton bag at his side and the Berlin Wall in the background. Graf and Agassi are shown snuggling in a hotel room bed. A vampy Deneuve sits perched on a Vuitton suitcase in a foggy train station — or is it a movie set?

Vuitton said it was making donations to former Vice President Al Gore’s The Climate Project to fight global warming and Green Cross International, founded by Gorbachev to promote sustained development. The company didn’t disclose the amount of the donations.

Where I'll be for the Next Few Days

Wednesday, April 18th, 2007

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Clean Advertising

Sunday, April 15th, 2007

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Come the new year, this city of 11 million, overwhelmed by what the authorities call visual pollution, plans to press the “delete all” button and offer its residents unimpeded views of their surroundings.

But in proposing to transform the landscape, officials have unleashed debate and brought into conflict sharply differing concepts of what this city, South America’s largest and most prosperous, should be.

City planners, architects and environmental advocates have argued enthusiastically that the prohibition, through a new “clean city” law, brings São Paulo a welcome step closer to an imagined urban ideal.

The law is “a rare victory of the public interest over private, of order over disorder, aesthetics over ugliness, of cleanliness over trash,” Roberto Pompeu de Toledo, a columnist and author of a history of São Paulo, wrote in the weekly newsmagazine Veja. “For once in life, all that is accustomed to coming out on top in Brazil has lost.”

But advertising and business groups regard the legislation as injurious to society and an affront to their professions. They say that free expression will be inhibited, jobs will be lost and consumers will have less information on which to base purchasing decisions. They also argue that streets will be less safe at night with the loss of lighting from outdoor advertising.

“This is a radical law that damages the rules of a market economy and respect for the rule of law,” said Marcel Solimeo, chief economist of the Commercial Association of São Paulo, which has 32,000 members. “We live in a consumer society and the essence of capitalism is the availability of information about products.”

Accidental Music

Friday, March 9th, 2007

I was working yesterday and put on some music to listen to. I hit shuffle on my “Unplayed” smart playlist in iTunes and a track came up but no sound came out. I realized the speakers were turned off so I went to turn them on. The tune that came out was this intense fractured jungle track with “Hey Jude” by the Beatles being played on top of it. It was wild. One of the best songs I had heard in a long time. I could not concentrate on the work as the music was so good, so I took a little break.

Then something strange happened to the music, a really odd and awkward transition. I looked at iTunes and knew the song that was on and knew it was wrong. It turned out that Pandora had been playing a DJ Spooky track in the background and what I had been listening to was that and the remix of “Hey Jude” from the Love album played on top of each other.

Getting those two tracks to play in sync like that would be difficult to repeat. In a way that is too bad as it would be wonderful to expose other people to this fantastic aural experience. On the other hand there was something profoundly beautiful about getting to experience an unrepeatable situation.

This is some of why sunsets are so amazing to me. They are wholly unrepeatable aesthetic experiences. Second to second they are something wholly other than they were just moments before. This idea can be extrapolated to all kinds of performance. There is something unique and unrepeatable about it. At least for anything short of the Rockettes.

Most of the time our experience with life and the world is chaotic and unorganized. Sounds appear out of nowhere. We find ourselves immersed in a massive John Cage experimental theatre piece. But then out of that chaos there are moments of order. When the random car horn syncs up with the child crying and a musician in the distance plays perfect counterpoint to the couple arguing down the street.

Chaos and order, it seems, are much more closely knit than we often give credit for. The two are aspects of the same phenomena rather than the discreet and opposing forces we so regularly take them for. Life is just combinations of music. Sometimes chaotic, but often quite beautiful.

So You Want to See a Show

Friday, February 23rd, 2007

Manhattan, NY
Artfuckers
Operation Ajax
The Last Word . . .

Delray Beach, FL
New York Theatre Ballet

Artfuckers is Open

Friday, February 16th, 2007

Artfuckers is open. Ticket information here.

Written by Michael Domitrovich
Directed by Eduardo Machado

Scenery by Mikiko Suzuki
Costumes by Oana Botez-Ban
Sound by David Lawson

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Operation Ajax Opens Today

Wednesday, February 14th, 2007

Directed by Noel Salzman
Scenery and Costumes by Arnulfo Maldonado
Sound by Duncan Cutler

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Click here for more info.

Becoming Adele is Open

Saturday, December 16th, 2006

Becoming Adele had its first preview today. The show is now open. It plays at the Clurman.

Tickets available at TicketCentral

Written by Eric Houston
Directed by Victor Maog
Featuring Kimberly Stern

Scenery by Antje Ellerman
Costumes by Myrna Colley-Lee
Sound by Elizabeth Rhodes


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