
Ellen,
please tell us a little bit about yourself. What was your process in
becoming an artist?
I live, and grew up,
in Alaska - and that defines a lot about me. I'm independent and
self-entertaining, and I am inspired by the beauty of the land around
me. I have been drawing since I was very young, and have always been
interested in creative arts like writing, music, drama and design. I've
been carrying a sketchbook around with me since I was in middle school,
constantly doodling and drawing and outlining stories.
My art style is mostly
romantic and magical, with lots of natural and spiritual influence. I
work in a range of medias, including graphite, oils, watercolors,
digital and mixed media. Ink remains my first medium of choice.
I started my own art
business when I was 17, and have expanded it to include more than a
hundred other artists. In a sentence: I love to create. I have more
projects than common sense.
When did you decide
that you wanted to become an artist?
It
wasn't so much a decision as a force of nature. Given five minutes with
the back of an envelope and a ballpoint pen, I was either drafting the
outline for a story, or doodling an illustration, or creating a
civilization. It wasn't something I ever chose, quite the opposite! I
chose a nice, safe degree in engineering at college. Art, however,
had other ideas, and had settled itself quite irreversibly in my heart.
Eventually, I just gave in, quit my day job, and let the muse have me.
I've been ridiculously happy since then.
Have you had any
particular training to do what you do?
I got a minor in art
while I was in college, and I took every art elective I could in high
school. Perhaps most importantly, I have years and years of practice.
I've been posting archives at my
webpage that show a cross-section of the work that I've slaved over
for the past 15+ years. It's mostly laughably bad, but the practice
itself is invaluable.
Who would you say
has been the most influential person in your life, as
far as getting you
involved in your art?
I can't point any
specific fingers! There have been so many people who have been so
supportive of me. Every person who validated my art by saying it was
good, or offered a helpful critique has made an enormous difference in
my confidence and discipline. There are dozens of artists I have drawn
inspiration and learned from Robin Wood, Michael Whelan and Arthur
Rackman are just a few.
What
led you in the direction of fantasy art?
This, I can solidly
blame on my parents. I was five or six when they first read the Hobbit
to me, and books and trips to the library were a pivot point in our
lives. They instilled a love of reading and imagination that has never
faded.
The other major
turning point was the discovery of the illustrated color fairy tale
books edited by Andrew Lang. I fell in love with the classical black and
white pieces in those books, and the stories influenced me just as
strongly.
You have an online
business called Ellen Million Graphics, which seems to be a rather
unique type of business. Could you please tell us a little bit about it
and how other artists might become involved?
Currently, EMG has
four major branches: The Storefront, Portrait Adoption, Print Services
and EMG-Zine. The Storefront hosts works by over 100 artists on products
that I make myself. I have top quality printers, a professional heat
press, punches, laminators and a lot of crafty experience by now. The
artists (and myself!) provide the designs, and I do all the sales,
advertising, bookkeeping, printing, quality control, packaging, shipping
and customer service. They get a fee every time something with their
design sells. It works out well for everyone most artists couldn't
afford the setup costs to be able to make the things that I do, and most
have no desire to do all the gritty back-end details that I take care
of. I have very little overhead or upfront costs, because, except for a
few yearly shows, I only make what I've already sold. As a whole, we're
a much, much stronger group than we would be strung out on individual
sites. Artists trust that another artist is in control of their work
I'm not going to squish their designs, or send out shoddy products! This
area of EMG accepts new work and new artists about twice a year it's
still a bit of work for me to add new artists, and I just can't quite
handle the workload of having submissions open all
of the time. There are guidelines here:
http://www.ellenmilliongraphics.com/fantasyart/artists.php.
The
Print Services area is for artists who might not want to enter a
contract, or don't have work that fits in the fantasy art theme of EMG,
or maybe they just want products for themselves. These are the same high
quality products that the storefront sells, just custom printed to
order. I also do drop-shipping for artists I'll ship directly to their
customers. That way, they don't need to keep a lot of unnecessary
inventory, or pay to ship something to them, and then to a customer.
Print Services are just about always open for more clients, and I'm
working on a new site that will allow artists to open their own little
storefronts, independent of the EMG storefront, and manage sales of
their products, which would then be drop-shipped by me. I'm crossing my
fingers that this service will become available in June.
EMG-Zine is the newest
of my projects! In January, I started a little e-zine, closely linked
with EMG, to keep my artists up to date on what was happening around the
site, as well as share information and articles on the business of art.
We update monthly, and each issue is free, though archives are for paid
subscribers only. We have a gallery of artwork for the theme of the
month, reviews, and a collection of fiction and we're always looking
for new contributors! New non-fiction is paid in EMG credit, to any
branch. I am greatly assisted in this endeavor by editors
Megan Myers and
Georgette Tan.
Portrait Adoption
(more on that below!) is currently accepting new artists, but no new
portraits are going up right now while our new site is being re-designed
from the base up. Guidelines are here:
http://portraitadoption.com/members/
What
gave you the idea to start your business?
It's always tough to
point at one single event that put me on my path. I drew, a lot, and
became interested in small press and fanzines while I was still in
school. These publications were always looking for border art and little
fillers to go with stories and news. So, I drew lots of borders! I also
had penpals and this is back when penpals were via snail mail with
real letters on real paper. I was way too cheap to buy printed
stationery, but I was sure willing to get a few copies out of the
library copy machine at school to make myself xeroxed stationery from
the borders I'd drawn. My penpals ate it up, and inflated my ego to the
point where, when one of them said casually, 'you should sell this
stuff!' it didn't seem all that crazy.
So, I xeroxed up a
one-page flyer with five designs on it and mailed it to all my penpals.
From there, it was a
snowball downhill, gathering new products, new customers, new designs,
even new artists. I put it online, and I upgraded equipment so I could
print things myself. In little fits and starts, it grew out of a little
hobby-on-the-side-for-fun and turned into... well, EMG.
I notice that one
of the areas that your business specializes is
Portrait Adoption.
Could you please explain what that is?
Portrait
Adoption grew out of increasing frustration with commissions.
Commissions doing artwork to a description for a single client - are a
great way for an artist to make money, but oh man, can they be a hassle.
On the other hand, I loved to draw portraits. I had sketchbooks full of
portraits, and nothing to do with them! They don't sell well as prints,
they don't make great products... but wouldn't they make someone a nice
character portrait? If only I could connect those poor, unloved
portraits with the people that were looking for them!
Portrait Adoption is a
home for those portraits. Any kind of character fantasy, science
fiction, modern, horror can be submitted. Provided they meet our basic
quality guidelines (nothing *too* rough or unskilled, nothing poorly
scanned, PG-13 rating), they get watermarked and put on-line with a
price that the artist decides. When some lucky client browses through
and finds the perfect character for their needs, they can adopt it.
There are two kinds of adoption web and standard. Standard adoption
comes with a print, a certificate signed by the artist stating that no
other prints will ever be made, and an unwatermarked image for the
client to post exclusively at their webpage or use as an avatar. Web
adoption skips the print and certificate, for a slightly lower cost. The
artist doesn't have to do anything except keep certificates on file at
Portrait Adoption and submit the print files EMG does the printing and
all customer interaction.
With about 500
portraits on-line now, chances are good a customer will find something
like their character, but in case they don't, there are two additional
options:
Many artists allow
customization. They are willing to change an eye color or hair color or
add details to make a character more like a client had in mind. There's
usually an extra charge for this that's up to the artist!
There's also a
submitted description service. If a client doesn't want to commission a
specific artist to do something from scratch, they can throw the
description to the wolves er, artists. The description gets posted for
everyone in Portrait Adoption to work on, if they want to. Artists sign
up, complete portraits, and let the client pick one or more of the
finished pieces. The client has no obligation to buy, but agrees to
allow un-purchased art to be available through general adoption.
Where
do you see yourself going with your art and your business? What
are your future
goals?
I have some fun
projects coming up in the very near future!
One of the things I
have in the works is an on-demand Tarot service, EMGTarot.com. Much like
EMG or Portrait Adoption, artists would submit artwork to the service. A
client will be able to login, and build themselves a custom deck of
Tarot cards, choosing a back design, a border design, and every image
for every card individually. Each deck will be one-of-a-kind, and
customers can buy one card, two cards, a whole suit, a whole deck, or
however many they want. They can save their decks to their accounts, and
build on them at their leisure. New artwork will be added continuously.
I'm also producing
several books this year! I am putting together collections of artwork by
Ursula Vernon and
Maria van Bruggen, hopefully
for release by September 1 of this year. I am bringing
Keepers of the Forest
into print as well, and I've got two more coloring books in a Gothic
theme to be released this summer.
I haven't abandoned my
own projects, though I am working on a novel about a shapeshifting
bear and an artist in Alaska, I have the storyboards started for a
webcomic and graphic novel of my snow-unicorn creatures. I have a list
of art pieces I want to do that will keep me busy for years.
Long-term, I would
like to continue to expand EMG, to the point where it can hire someone
to do most of the busywork so that I can do more of my own art and
writing! I would also love to host an artists camp someday. I live on 36
acres of birch forest, and wish to build several yurts so that people
can come for a 2 or 3 week stay, learn how to make products and produce
prints, attend art and marketing classes and enjoy Alaska in a more
rural, artist-friendly manner than they'd get taking a standard tour.
Taking over the world
fits in there somewhere, too, I think.
Do
you have any parting words of advice for all those "starving" artists
out there?
Love what you do,
and do it with love. It's not an easy field in fact, it's a darn hard
field, and it's chock full of nay-sayers and cheapskates. But remember
that what you are doing is something real and lasting. Artwork, in all
of its forms, is the connection of our souls to our world as real and
tangible as our bodies, and it takes discipline and inspiration in equal
measure to achieve it. Don't ever lose sight of the beauty of what you
do, or lose the sense of your own value.
Thank you Ellen for your insightful
and encouraging words. I hope this doesn't sound too
clichι
but "you're one in a million." Best of luck to you in all of your
artistic pursuits!
To view more of Ellen Million's
beautiful
artwork, please visit her website:
http://www.ellenmilliongraphics.com. If you would like to send her an email, her
address is: Ellen Million Graphics
emillion@ellenmilliongraphics.com.
All works are copyright.
Permission to use these images in any way must be obtained from the
artist.