Look Mum, I’m Networking!

We hear this term so much, the creative industry, among others, seems to run quite a bit on networking. However in practice, networking for students like us felt very new and elusive. What do you talk about? How will one conversation grow into any work relationship or opportunity? In the last few months, I think I am beginning to get a grasp on what it means.

Screening of ‘Queer as F**k’ programme at Brighton International Animation Festival

One of the highlights of this term was being able to attend Brighton Animation Festival in April. It was an achievement to be able to get a festival selection for our sting and it is quite a different experience than visiting as a spectator. After our home screening for our one minute films in February, I now knew some of the Guildhall composers in person and I met them again at Brighton. Having known faces in the crowd made it feel less nerve wracking. The film screenings were incredible and I met some more new filmmakers and animators behind the films. Turns out its really easy to talk to someone when you are talking to them about their film, everyone appreciates their hard work and ideas being seen and validated. I approached someone because their outfit was cool and turns out they are studying filmmaking in my home city, we became online friends and I got to see her film later even though I missed her screening. 

Also being at the festival also gave me a context as to how selections probably work and what it is like having an audience react to your film. 

In the easter break, the lovely Xiaoyu had organised a studio visit to BlinkInk for some enthusiastic people in the class who had been to Nexus instead at the start of last term. We were joined by some more animation students from Middlesex University and we attended the talk and the tour together. Nicola Strinas and Jac Clinch hosted the introduction session and took us through some of latest projects and the wide host of departments under the production house. It was partly amazing to see the studio and see familiar names and projects on their house project board, at the same time it felt a little hopeless hearing them say they want applications to ‘stand out’ even referring to someone sending them a mug with their contact details on it. It is hard to play the game when you don’t know what the rules are anymore.

I also had a chance to attend the UAL graduate career fair in January and met studio founders and talent representatives from studios like DNEG and Sliced Bread Animation. I also had a chance to get a portfolio review as a part of the fair. It was a little overwhelming and while I had some valuable conversations, I felt very lost and confused as to what I am supposed to be doing.

However, I found a little bit more faith in the process when I had posted online looking for volunteers to help with the grad film, four people reached out enthusiastically and I happened to know one of them from my Indian college, and another artist I had met at last year’s The Line showcase. 

Attending the NFTS Animation Showcase, I worked briefly on An Opening Night by Rebecca Heath

The more artists and animators I encounter, meet and talk to, the less intimidating it seems to get. Hopefully soon ‘the industry’ will be more and more familiar faces and I will feel like I am a part of it.

Building a career in the animation industry: Where, What and How III

Part 3: How

Now we come to the hardest question of all, how do we get there?

Reality is that it is incredibly hard to land a first project, get your foot in the door so to say, but now in recent years the road ahead from there also seems quite challenging.

In the previous post, I mentioned I spoke to two professionals specifically about their roles and how to make it in the industry, Gaurav Wakankar and Bianca Ansems. Bianca mentioned how it is hard for even seniors to find work right now with less opportunities overall in storyboarding. In my recent visit to Inmotion, I had met and spoken with several graduates who were trying to find jobs in animation, and most of them had day jobs in unrelated industries, some moving to digital marketing or software coding entirely. Since animation jobs have become elusive and take so much time to come by, our alumni and us, we are all competing for the exact same jobs and entry level opportunities. If global recession was not bad enough, really powerful AI tools are now also competing in the same race. Not to be dramatic, but things seem really hopeless.

So what can we do now?

The answer seems to be trying anyway. 

Both Gaurav and Bianca advised that there is no linear path and if you keep working and developing your skills, opportunities come from unpredictable places. I had the opportunity to speak to Wesley Louis from The Line at their showcase recently and he also happened to iterate how unexpected the journey can be. He also mentioned things are harder now, but we have to keep trying and keep making things simply because we are here because we are passionate about animation. So I will have to simply keep drawing, keep watching movies, making things to build my skills, and keep approaching people in the industry to connect and share work with.

As I had mentioned in a previous post, I am here on a visa, the choices I make have to be very much rooted in the reality that I will need to make a certain income to continue to stay and build connections in this country. I have been keeping an eye on motion design roles as well, with some previous experience in the line, as a backup line which is related to animation and would allow me to still hone my skills and meet animators and producers. I am also expanding my search outside the UK.

In the last two years, I have been learning Maya and Blender alongside 2D to expand my toolset and be able to work in mixed-media projects as well. A few years earlier, 3D and 2D character animators were distinctly different roles, however motion design and gaming studios now also look for 2D/3D animators since they now extensively mix the mediums in their work.  I am also looking at learning popularly asked softwares from recruiters like Toon Boom Harmony or Storyboard Pro.

I intend to keep developing my own skills, sensibilities and gain more clarity on what kind of stories I would like to tell, as a personal practice alongside professional projects. An animator who has achieved this remarkably is Louie Zong who is a storyboard artist for Cartoon Network, and has his parallel set of short film productions, 3D illustrations and even several funktronica albums!

As you might have guessed in these posts, I have quite a lot of anxiety and uncertainty about my path ahead. In all this uncertainty, the only thing I can count on is to practice, make more work and not let my passion die out. At the end of the day, I am here for my love of animation and I have come far from where I started. I am constantly learning new skills and if resilience is another skill needed to be an animator today, I will have to learn it too.

Building a career in the animation industry: Where, What and How

Part 1: Where

I will have to honest on this subject, my ambitions and plans will be coloured by the fact that I am an international student on an education loan, in a time when the political climate in the country is not in my favour. 

I had moved to the UK because of its prominent animation industry, where they actively promote the industry and nurture the growth of new artists, and where so many talented animators and agencies are based, which I didn’t see back home.

Turns out there really are tons of talented people in animation here, even just in London. And they are all looking for jobs at the same time and at the same places. 

So many animators and artists I have met in the past year have to juggle day jobs to still be able to earn a livelihood alongside their practice.

As you may imagine, this is more discouraging news and also a reality marker for me. My abilities are not suited for independent film-making, and while I would like to become a director in the future, I don’t think I am there yet. Ideally I would want to get recruited at a studio here and work with them full-time, however that seems almost impossible today. My current goal is to be able to get freelance work with animation studios and keep improving my skills, hoping that I can get consistent projects and get to meet and work with more and more interesting and talented people.

I first looked at opportunities in film and television animation. From online interviews with the artists onboard, the format seems completely contract based, where you’re with the studio or the production house only for the duration of the process, and then move on to the next project. While I will be applying and aiming for these opportunities, there is again an incredible lot of competition, and consistently getting signed for projects enough to earn a living is difficult.

Coming to commercial studios, I have been a fan of The Line Animation for many years, and I find their positioning in the industry very exciting. I think it would be vey interesting to work with studios who make commercial films, music videos as well as develop original IP.  I am also aiming for studios like Golden Wolf, Blink Ink, Passion who make a mix of diverse projects across subjects and mediums.

I have also been looking at how international projects work and how animators get signed by big names like Titmouse, Netflix, Passion Pictures, Sony Animation and the like on contract basis for projects remotely. Applying for and getting work visas in foreign countries is becoming increasingly expensive and harder, so being able to work in this format would mean access to a larger pool of opportunities. A lot of production work also gets outsourced to smaller studios, which would also be a way to gain experience of working on larger scale projects.

I have also been looking at game industry roles as well, and the work portfolio requirement are different. Given the softwares and formats are different I would try and give it a shot, but it will be harder competing with animators who have tailored their practice toward gaming.

I have really enjoyed the privilege of being in the thick of things here in London, being able to attend animation events, attend screenings, visiting studios and meeting people in person, after being an admirer from afar for so long. As dreary as the odds are, I still want to be based in  a place that is a hub of film and animation. In the long term, I would like to feel in the thick of things without moving a continent away from home, but till then I am open to relocating to cities as long as I can adequately sustain myself.