Q&A: GIF Illustrator, Rebecca Mock
REBECCA MOCK is an illustrator and comic artist in New York. Her work has appeared in the New York Times, The New Yorker, Medium and PCMag and it is gorgeous, full of bright colors, intimacy and layered scenes. They’re pretty cool.
News outlets have been using illustrations forever, of course, but Rebecca takes it to the next level: GIFs. Who knew you could grow up to make animated GIFs for a living? She even has an agent for such things. In addition to one-off illustrations, she also illustrates novels. Follow @RebeccaMock.
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ReportHers: What percentage of your work is making illustrations for news organizations versus ad agencies and -- I’m afraid to ask it but -- are the rates really different?
Rebecca Mock: I suppose it’s about half-and-half. Lately more ad work, but I think that’s just coincidence. Advertising work does tend to pay more, as I’m dealing more with big-name clients while editorial work is often for non-profit news publications or limited-run magazines. While the pay is less, the circulation is large, and the art directors are often savvy, and pair the illustrator with a subject they know they’ll like. It’s rewarding, in its own way.
RH: That’s how they get you in journalism, right? The pay is less but it’s rewarding in some way. :)
RM: Yes, that and publications use a LOT more illustrations per issue, so they’re splitting their budget between a handful of artists, every day/week/month. It’s good work for illustrators just starting out. Art directors are looking for new names.
RH: Is this what you thought you’d be doing with your skills and talents?
RM: I don’t think I expected to be working in so many different fields at once. My most concrete plan when I started was the comic books. I figured I would be working part-time somewhere to make a living, not doing freelance illustration. But I was lucky to get a few good jobs soon after graduating, which snowballed.
RH: Is there more freelance illustration work now than there used to be, specifically in editorial/news?
RM: It’s hard to say. I was a bit isolated when I was in school and didn’t pay much attention to freelance illustration since it didn’t interest me as much as book/comic book/concept art work, but now it’s a big focus for me. Also, since moving to New York I’ve become much more familiar with the people in my field. The importance of social media has certainly played a key role. If the amount of illustration work has not increased, there is certainly more attention being paid to it. It’s so easy to share great artwork online.
RH: I found your work on a Tumblr roundup of GIF artists, so that’s the proof!
RM: I owe Tumblr so much, oof.
RH: What is the process for making a GIF for a news story, start to finish.
RM: I can tell you about the job I’m working on as we speak. I’m doing a piece for the NYT Sunday Review, I’ve done a few for them before, too. Today I was asked to make an image for print and for the web, with animation. Tonight I’m doing the sketch, and tomorrow and the next day I’ll do the piece. The process is not really different from a regular non-animated illustration assignment, especially with the NYT because they know my work and process. I will include a description of what I plan to animate in my notes to the art director, and they will tell me which idea they like best. Then I’ll create the image for print, and take it back into Photoshop to animate it afterwards.
RH: What are the rates for that kind of assignment? I imagine companies haven’t had standard rates set for GIFs, if they even do now?
RM: Editorial work is often in the $250/quarter page range, sometimes less. But publications will sometimes have larger budgets and can pay $400/quarter page. Also a lot of editorial work is online now, and the rates vary--anything from $100-2,000 for a banner image. I will charge an extra 30 percent for animation, or a little more or less, depending on how complicated/time-consuming it will be. But the specifics vary a lot!
RH: So I imagine something like the animated graphic you did for Medium would be a LOT more labor intensive?
RM: Yes, good example. That image was like, all animation fee. I spent a few days on the animation, after maybe one day with the plain image (spread out over a long time, since I have to schedule my freelance work around comics).
RH: Do you find it hard to set rates or negotiate with something a bit new to the digital news industry? Or are illustrations in news stories and editorial features not that new?
RM: I don’t find it difficult now that I know what my process is, how long something will probably take to make, and how much money I need to live. I base my fees around that. Digital editorial illustration isn’t that new, it was already a healthy industry when I was still in college between 2007 and 2011, at least. The animated illustrations are a bit newer, or at least they’re a fad that’s only newly been re-invented.
RH: What would you want editors who haven’t worked with animation artists, or even illustrators before, know about the process?
RM: A good piece takes time. Especially animation; it’s time-consuming. That’s what the added fee is for. An editor should understand the artist requires a clear and manageable schedule, and enough detail that they don’t need to guess the important stuff.
RH: What was the subject of the first illustration you remember making?
RM: My first illustration job right out of school was doing background art for animations. The first one I did was horrible. It was a cityscape, Hollywood-esque. Lots of buildings, no subjects. I didn’t like images with lots of straight lines, hard edges, back then. But that’s a big part of my work now, so go figure.
RH: What about the very first drawing you remember making? Did you draw as a kid?
RM: I was a huge art nerd as a kid! I don’t remember my first, but I can remember a lot of early drawings of fairies, tracings of Archie Comics, dogs?? It’s a blur. When I got older I went to an arts middle school and high school. So I’ve been an art school kid since I was about 12.
RH: The first piece of writing I remember doing was definitely about mermaids. I was in elementary school.
RM: Yesssss. Fantasy and adventure stories!
RH: For sure! I moved on to Pegasus-related stories. Then I wrote a piece about a city cat that had an adventure in the country. Big stuff.
RM: Wow, you had a wide range of interests. Hitting all the big genres. I remember a short story I wrote about twin sisters who were fairies. And a few about a band of witches.
RH: We would have been best friends, for sure.
RM: Absolutely! You wrote the stories, I would draw the pictures for them.
RH: Well, thank you so much for your time! Is there anything else you want people to know about illustrations or GIFs -- or fairy twins?
RM: Thank you! This was quite fun for me. Everyone: read more comic books. Heck, draw more comics. They can teach you a lot about art and yourself. GIFs are fun to make and easy to learn, so try that, too.
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Ed. Note: Speaking of freelancing, here’s a crowd-sourced Google Doc where you can look up rates -- and add your own. Plus, Julie Haslanger put out a report about what journalists make broken down by title, years of experience and a few other data points. Fill it out, share it and, if you’re brave, ask your colleagues what they make.









