Don't give up the day job –
how artists make a living
As
they await their big break, today's young artists are having to make ends meet
with day jobs. How are they coping?
- guardian.co.uk, Sunday 24 January 2010 21.35 GMT
But none of these scenarios will ring true for the average artist – who is more likely to be stacking supermarket shelves, waiting tables or writing advertising copy by day, and acting, dancing or sculpting by night.
Right now, the economic climate for artists in this country looks particularly bleak. There's the innate financial instability of most artistic careers (low earnings, and sometimes none at all; little job security; no pension or other benefits), together with the recession. Then there's the fact that – unlike some European and Scandinavian countries – the British government makes no specific social provision for artists, unless through the publicly funded regional arts councils.
In
But in this country, for artists without a lucky early break, rich parents or benefactors, a day job is often the only way to survive. It needn't mean that fame and fortune aren't just around the corner: Joy Division's Ian Curtis worked in an unemployment office until 1979, well after the band had released their debut EP. Van Morrison immortalised his old job as a window cleaner in the 1982 song Cleaning Windows; composer Philip Glass wasn't able to quit his jobs as a plumber and a taxi-driver until the age of 41.
What a day job inevitably means, of course, is spending the majority of your waking hours not doing the thing you love: making art. This is something Lainy Scott, a 28-year-old actor from
A recent waitressing shift at the Houses of Parliament didn't go quite so well: "It was one of the most horrendous days of my life – everyone treated you as if you were scum. I wanted to cry, and on my way out I said, 'I'm afraid I can't make tomorrow's shift.' On days like that, you sit there and go: why don't I want to do something else with my life?"
For the last four years, Scott has been working at RSVP, a call centre in east
But Scott remains focused, and is allowed to read scripts or apply for acting jobs online when the phones are quiet (though those moments, she says, are rare). "There are people who get very bogged down by having to do non-acting stuff," Scott says. "They tend to eventually just eat themselves up. Staying positive becomes a personal mentality. I sit there and think: any day now I could go to an audition that eventually gets me out of here." There is also one unexpected upside: "You get some of the most bizarre calls in the world. They come in handy when you're working on a character."
At the Harrods perfume counter
Christina Gusthart, a 23-year-old hip-hop dancer from
To make ends meet, she is currently working at Dance Base in
Even if they do make it to auditions, performers might find they are asked to work for free. Unpaid work is the elephant in the room when it comes to the performing arts. Equity advises its members to avoid taking unpaid jobs, but recognises that experimental fringe productions might make it a necessity. Both Scott and Gusthart say they have seen the number of unpaid acting and dance jobs shoot up in recent years. Neither of them can afford to work for free, but the very fact that they are being asked to undermines the professions they have spent thousands of pounds training for, not to mention several years of their lives. "The money has dropped out of this industry," says Scott. "So many people are jumping on the bandwagon of being an actor now that companies are going, 'Oh well, if we can't get somebody who's trained who will do it for free, we'll be able to get someone.'"
On the plus side, a day job offers a chance to meet other artists in a similar position. Gusthart hears about auditions and teaching opportunities first hand at Dance Base; many of her co-workers at Harrods were also dancers, and shared information about castings. At RSVP, the actors go to each other's shows and share contacts: Scott landed a Dove commercial this way.
For a visual artist such as 30-year-old Adam Bridgland, whose practice usually involves spending long periods alone in a studio, a day job is a way of getting out into the world. Bridgland sells his bright, primary-coloured screenprints through the
Many of the handlers Bridgland works with at the Tate are also artists, and he says he finds inspiration in their work, as well as in the art he installs. "Being an artist is quite a lonely business; the Tate provides me with a network of friends and fellow technicians. You're surrounded by the work of amazing artists, and you don't want to be lesser than that."
If the pressure to keep a steady income is great when an artist is single, how much worse is it when they have children? Bridgland says his perspective has changed since the birth of his son, Oram, last year. "A lot of people try to lead a life where they concentrate solely on their art," he says. "But I just found it very, very difficult – when you've got dependents, you have to take that responsibility."
Singer Harriet Goodwin, 40, agrees. She trained as a mezzo-soprano at the Royal Northern College of Music, and had the first of her four children just after she graduated. When her eldest children were small, she continued performing, working with the Monteverdi choir and Opera North. But the pressure became too much – not so much financially, but because she didn't want to leave her children. "I remember going away on a tour to
All thanks to Exit 43
So Goodwin cut back on touring – and then stumbled on her second career, as a children's writer: she woke up one morning, convinced that a dream she'd had was the plot for a novel. "I dreamed," she says, "that a boy crashed through the surface of the earth into this ghostly underworld. " She began writing for 10 minutes a day, when her children were napping or at school.
The resulting novel, The Boy Who Fell Down Exit 43, became a book of the month in Borders last year, and was shortlisted for last year's Blue Peter award; Goodwin is now working on a second book in a shed at the bottom of her garden. She still gives concerts, and finds that the writing complements her singing. "They fit beautifully," she says. "I might be in my shed for four hours and then think, eurgh, my brain's stiff. So I'll go downstairs to the piano and sing some Schubert or Handel, and find it a fantastic release."
Goodwin is, of course, one of the lucky ones; her day job fits around the rest of her life, and is creative. Most artists are not so lucky; one suspects Philip Glass does not miss his
The fact remains that these are tough times for legions of arts graduates; the chances of making a living through dance, music or acting are slim – and could be slimmer yet if the government cuts funding. But Scott, Gusthart and Bridgland are all determined the day job won't, ultimately, get in the way of their artistic ambitions. They're staying focused on the positives.
Top artists on their best and worst jobs
Tamara Rojo, dancer
I once had to dance in a beige, skintight, all-in-one costume with a bald cap. It was to make me look like a newborn baby – but it made me look like a condom. It would hardly have mattered what the choreography was like, so hideous did I look. But it wasn't very good either.
My current position at the Royal Ballet is the best job. There's the prestige, plus all the amazing dancers and teachers I work with. The best performance I ever gave was at the farewell for Julio Bocca in
Arthur Smith, comedian
I've been a road-sweeper, a toilet cleaner and a Tefl teacher. I spent several days in supermarkets on the south coast dressed as a fox, too. My role was to detain shoppers long enough so they could watch my lady colleague prepare a tasty new brand of chicken burger, and then buy it. The costume was 8ft tall and terrifying: wherever I walked, you could hear small children crying.
Bob and Roberta Smith, artist
The worst was also in some ways the most rewarding. I was caring for a man with severe cerebral palsy. He was courageous, but could do nothing much for himself. He had a powerful sexual appetite, which meant taking him to visit prostitutes. I had to wait on the corner while the car gently rocked back and forth. I felt I had hit rock bottom – but my difficulties were nothing compared to his.
In artworld terms, probably the most horrid job is working for companies who ship other artists' work around. Often the more successful artists are beastly to the kids who are just starting out.
Billy Bragg, musician
Working in an all-night petrol station was my worst job. The hours were long, the wages low and the management were skimming off money claiming you pilfered Rolos. Awful. My best job? Come off it – I get paid to do the thing that I always wanted to do.
Gillian Wearing, artist
My worst job was telephone market research. I hated cold calling – although occasionally you got remarkably interesting answers: One old lady didn't realise cinemas still existed. My favourite job was temping for Virgin Records in the late 80s . Everyone was sweet and laid back, and they had contemporary art on the walls.
Kwame Kwei-Armah, playwright
I worked at a telesales company that was like David Mamet's Glengarry Glen Ross, with the manager standing over you shouting. My best day job was teaching drama to young people at the black arts centre Yaa Asantewaa, in
Interviews by Laura Barnett and Sarah Phillips
Price of fame: what artists earn
Actors
Minimum Equity rate for an actor in a
Minimum Equity rate for an actor in regional repertory: £350 p/w (plus £124 relocation allowance).
Daily pay for a "supporting artist" in a BBC TV show: £85.50.
Amount an actor can make for an advert: £5,000-£15,000+ for a TV commercial (2-3 days work).
Dancers
Minimum Equity rate for a touring cabaret dancer: £340 p/w and £177 expenses.
Minimum Equity rate for a ballet dancer performing regularly with a company: £400 p/w.
Musicians
PPL, the music licensing company that collects royalties on behalf of 42,000 performers, says 90% of them earn less than £15,000 a year.
The Performing Rights Society, which processes payments for songwriters and composers, says 90% of the people on their books earn less than £5,000 a year.
Visual artists
Average weekly income for a visual artist: £521 (average figure based on highest and lowest earnings. Source: ONS, 2009).
Amount paid for works sold at the annual Affordable Art Fair in
Compiled by Guardian Research
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