Okay, the intrawebs mysteriously gobbled up my response to you just as I was about to finish it. *sighs* So I guess this will be the truncated version of something that was once upon a time... longer. :steam:
*insert statement of I-come-in-peace/did-not-wish-to-offend-by-isolating-your-previous-response, etc. here*
You do bring up some valid concerns regarding a career in art, though:
1) pursue a career as art, which I saw as undesirable because:
-it made art into work instead of fun
*insert response along the lines of "I love what I do, therefore I'm doing it all the time anyway." here* Beats the hell outta having a boss too.
-forced art into a schedule instead of something done when I'm in the mood
I don't find this to be the case. When I feel like working, I work; I don't when I don't. *insert playful pointing out of detailed schedule in your blog, here*
-mainly self-motivated/self-promoted employment, which I would be miserable at
[Unfortunately this was the meatier portion of my post which has now vanished]. Basically, yes. This is the major bugbear I come up against the most often. However, there are ways around it -- including setting up freelance opportunities for yourself online, which still offers a fair degree of autonomy without having to do all of the annoying song and dance of self promotion. Basically you post a resume or examples of your work, and wait to see if someone contacts you. I've set up a shop on cafepress.com, for an itty bitty monthly fee -- I upload some images, slap them on stuff [or leave them as just a plain ol' print] and then get mailed a check as the orders roll in.
Meh, but I'm blathering on about how I avoid the unwashed hordes -- I don't want sound like I'm trying to convert you, because I'd never be so presumptuous. I'm just tossing out my methods for how I bypass the shittier part of being an artist, in hopes that someone else could use the information [or even add to it!]
-low but more importantly, irregular income in the field I would do (classical illustration) as a result of low demand and high competition
Call me biased, but I think illustrators have far more chances of making a living over just plain painters. So do ceramicists, actually [to vaguely address FineLine's point]. The public tends to gravitate more readily to things that seem pretty concrete. [Ceramic coffee cups are used for coffee, a drawing of X is used to illustrate concept X, etc. this Makes Sense to the public] I'm not trying to be demeaning here at all -- it's just that professionally I've noticed this trend. *shrugs*
2) find another career I like (currently biological research), and do art on the side as a hobby
-higher income, more secure, less uncertainty
-I don't run the risk of getting tired of art because I do it for fun
-oh and I get attached to my art and don't like the idea of selling something I really like
-as much as I like art, I don't have a passion for it like I do for nature...I know I'm heading in the right direction, at least roughly
3) combine the two fields with some job like medical illustration, which I still consider, though not that seriously
I didn't, and still don't see any downside to choosing the second option.
Oddly enough, I was perhaps on a similar path -- honors bio student in college up until my junior year, with an eye toward med school and becoming a surgeon. I simply made the call in reverse, I suppose -- I had more passion for art than I did for biology.
And FWIW, I considered medical illustration as well, but found it too stodgy for my tastes. Although that didn't stop me from making a small fortune in college by selling copies of my lab drawings before practicals.
