Posts Tagged ‘career’

CSU photo Alum’s Real Estate Photos Featured in New York Times

March 27, 2019

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New York Times, our newspaper of record, recently published an article comparing what you get in residential real estate for under $250,000 in three states, including Ohio.

The Ohio house is located in Shaker Heights. Recent CSU photo graduate Austin Cupach made the photographs of the house featured in the article. Austin did an internship with VNTG Home while at CSU. He is now employed as a Marketing/Real Estate Photographer there. He did an amazing job.

Check out Austin’s images at nytimes.com here.

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Who Pays Photographers (And How Much)

February 23, 2016
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Alex Lau for Bon Appétit Magazine

From magazines to agencies, this is the ultimate resource for discovering how much, or how little, top publications will pay for your photography.

When it comes to pricing your photography, publications can be a stumbling block. Newspapers, magazines and online publications rarely advertise their rates and furthermore, those rates can vary based on assignments. Have you been published before? Is your work very exclusive and highly desirable? Are you willing to sell your work for less if it’s a prestigious publishing credit?

Read format.com’s actual answers – with dollar amounts from anonymous photographers working for named publications.

Commercial Photography – Fall 2016

February 12, 2016

commercial-photo

ART 334:
Special Topics: Commercial Photography

Part studio course, part professional practices. This class will prepare you for several different photography career options:

  • Event and wedding photography
  • Fashion and glamour
  • Product and catalog photography
  • Headshots and portraits
  • Food and still life photography
  • Editorial photography
  • Stock photography
  • Freelance
  • …and professional practices for photographers

ART334 will meet Tue & Thu 3:15-5:45pm in Fall 2016
Questions: m.slankard@csuohio.edu

Arts & Culture Career Day

November 14, 2014

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Arts & Culture Career Day
Cleveland Museum of Art
November 17, 2014, 3-6pm

Please plan to attend NEOintern’s Linking Talent to Opportunity fair at its Arts & Culture Career Day from 3 to 6:00 p.m. on Monday, November 17, 2014, at The Cleveland Museum of Art, 11150 East Boulevard, Cleveland, OH 44106.  WALK-INS WELCOME!!

This career fair and networking event will provide a free forum for students, graduates, and young professionals to meet face-to-face with local arts and culture organizations to learn about career patways into the industry and get information about internships, jobs, and volunteer opportunities. All majors and professional backgrounds are welcome and encouraged to participate. There is no cost to attend. Walk-ins are welcome on event day, but it is preferred that you register in advance and upload your resume.

Be prepared to impress!  Dress professionally and bring plenty of resumes to the event.

This Year’s Exhibitors Will Include: (check often for updates)

  • Cleveland Museum of Art
  • Rock & Roll Hall of Fame and Museum
  • Prelude2Cinema
  • ideastream
  • Great Lakes Science Center
  • Maltz Museum of Jewish Heritage
  • Karamu House
  • SPACES Gallery
  • Great Lakes Publishing
  • Shaker Historical Society
  • Dancing Wheels Company & School
  • Lake Erie Ink
  • Porthouse Theatre
  • Dru Christine Fabric & Design
  • Esperanza, Inc.
  • YMCA of Greater Cleveland
  • Contempo Communications
  • The Cleveland Orchestra
  • Mercury Summer Stock
  • Cleveland Play House
  • Art House, Inc.
  • ESPN Cleveland
  • The Children’s Museum of Cleveland
  • Broadway School of Music & the Arts
  • Western Reserve Historical Society
  • 3D Digital Design & Manufacturing Technology Program – Cuyahoga Community College
  • Shore Cultural Center
  • NEOintern

What Does an Art Degree Get You? Ask the WSJ

November 12, 2013

PHOTO studio lights

Think that art school dooms graduates to a life of unemployment? The numbers paint a very different picture.

“Artists can have good careers, earning a middle-class income,” says Anthony Carnevale, director of Georgetown University’s Center on Education and the Workforce. “And, just as important and maybe more, artists tend to be happy with their choices and lives.”

Read the complete article on the Wall Street Journal Online.