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Industry Information
: One Rep's Opinion |
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True Confessions
Allen Comport
One important task of an artist's representative is to support and inspire
good business and marketing decisions for our talent. So after taking
to heart the challenge to find new avenues of income for my illustrators
that didn't require drastic price increases or overwhelming numbers of
assignments, the idea of selling stock seemed like a beautiful thing.
The year was 1993 and we had just heard about The Stock Illustration Source
and the concept seemed like a win/win deal. The first illustrator from
my group to jump in was my wife, Sally Wern Comport. We had hundreds of
images filed away and SIS could make these images available to companies
that previously might not have been able to buy art because of time, money
or expertise constraints. The stock company would handle everything, the
transparencies, the billing, collection, even getting printed samples.
We would simply receive the residual income. We thought that this would
make higher quality illustration available to new buyers, after all, there
were many great illustrators and images showing up in the early catalogues.
We felt it wouldn't hurt assignment illustration, it would enhance it.
More art to more people would open up new markets.
On several occasions we met personally with the owners of SIS and found
them to be gracious and very good business people. I believe that there
has never been any malicious intent on their part. To the contrary I think
that they were visionary with their service and the demand for their product
and services are evidence. Sally has made a good return on her stock images,
but it became increasingly clear that there were larger issues involved.
The effect of stock houses, that is, illustrators relinquishing control
over copyright, pricing and use of their images, has been unhealthy for
illustration as a whole. It has hurt business, creativity and most of
all it has damaged the value of art, in both the eyes of the artist and
the client.
Over the past several years, we have begun to see disturbingly large
numbers of our former clients now buying Sally's images from SIS. And
why not? We used to joke with clients about the three things we could
offer: quality, timeliness, and cost. Which one were they interested in?
But the way stock is being offered, a client can have it all. So many
of our best and consistent clients, across all areas of editorial
institutional and advertising, were buying from the stock agency for
less, a lot less. We have received a check for as low as $21.36 for an
image.
But it took an article written by Michael Gibbs for SKETCHES, a
publication of The Illustrators Club of Washington DC/Maryland/Virginia
in the spring of 1999 to finally wake me up from my sloth and greed.
I owe Michael a great deal of the credit in laying out his argument
clear enough to penetrate even my stubborn mind. I had become romanced
by the checks. Even though we are no longer adding images to the SIS bank,
we must wait years to recover the copyrights we signed away. This turn
of events is our doing, we created it. The lesson for me is that there
are no shortcuts to excellence. Artists who want to sell stock need to
control price, usage and terms of the transactions. There is value in
stock and it should be priced accordingly. Doesn't having the perfect
image, already done and ready to use, and being able to deliver it instantly
or overnight to a client have value? The pricing should reflect that convenience.
We also need to remember the value of creativity, spontaneity and innovation.
The process of illustration is often the very thing that makes it so fun
and exciting, both for the illustrator and client. Clients can once again
choose illustrators, not simply an image to plug a hole. It's time for
illustrators to dictate the prices and value of their work, not the prevailing
whims of stock houses. I don't believe that the existing stock house/RFCD's
model can be modified to give artists the appropriate rights and control.
It's too late for that. This is our responsibility, our business. There,
that's my confession, now its back to the pew to continue my penance.
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