I was wondering if my
portfolio was ready for a freelance junior character artist position (if such a thing exists) or a low end freelance character artist job?
I really want to make a nice complete character but I'm very short on time due to certain personal and financial happenings in my life. Is there anything I can revise or a reasonably small asset I can make that might be more convincing to a potential client?
Also, if its not too off-topic, any personal tips and tricks to quickly finding that first freelance job ( that you might be willing to share)?
Thanks.
Replies
With the two faces and clothing set you've rendered, it looks pretty solid but not QUITE done for a junior artist. I appreciate the way it's rendered and the quality of the work with where it's at, but there's definitely more to do to bring it to polish.
The hand and anatomy study are weakest. The time they've receieved doeesn't seem enough to justify them as portfolio pieces. They would survive if there were significantly more other final pieces, but right now, they stick out as sore thumbs.
You definitely have potential and a solid base (almost reminds me of a super early Mike Steele), but you definitely need more work to prove you can stretch to hard surface focused assets, or other artistic styles. I can imagine you being picked up for basic freelance work if you're comfortable with doing non-hero assets.
If you want small and fast(er) and charatcers still, make busts as an initial idea. But that might involve the same amount of work as a full character might.
My fiirst freelance job came from an internship, and half of the future ones came from word of mouth from friends.
Online wise, you can mine some non obvious sites like Polycount.com, TIGsource, Orca-HQ, r/gamedevclassifieds, and others for those contracts.
The critique and advice helps so much. I'll start work on a full, non-hero character asap.