Fine art photographer career description
In this post, you
can ref career description of Fine art photographer in details. A
complete career description concludes Fine art photographer key
duties/responsibilities, Fine art photographer career qualifications
(knowledge, education, skills, abilities, experience…KSA model) and other ones
such as daily tasks, key activities, key/core competencies, job
functions/purpose…
I. List of Fine art
photographer duties:
- Must be able to shoot a minimum of 50 oneofakind, unique works of art per day.
- Deliver high res images with min. of 300 DPI in Tiff format for print and web platforms.
- Must be able to technically light one of a kind, unique works of art
- Manage and facilitate all postproduction work (color correction, cropping etc.) on files using CS5.
- Must be Mac literate and have strong working knowledge of photo asset management software and systems as well as a working knowledge in prepress workflow including color management and digital imaging tools and software.
- To help in recruiting new photographers to the gallery
- Online researching and reaching out to photographers for recruitment
- Correspondence with photographers regarding our gallery agreement
- Possibly assist during events and receptions
- Maintain and log all correspondence from photographers that are being considered for recruitment possible curating from our online gallery for clients and internal use
II. List of Fine art
photographer qualifications
- Be very internet savvy and with excellent online research abilities
- Possess excellent written and verbal communication
- Possess multitasking and coordination experience
- Passion for fine art photography; actively involved in the art/photography community and have a great eye for excellent photography.
- Demonstrate attention to details while maintaining perspective
- Have working knowledge of Adobe Photoshop, Excell, Word, Gmail
- Prefer
to have a minimum of 5 years of professional experience in digital
imaging.
Strong interpersonal skills for working crossfunctionally with the Fine Art Division in San Francisco.
No comments:
Post a Comment