91大神

  • A Week in the Life of a Fine Artist Who Refuses to Be Disrespected

    When Renike Olusanya got her first commission to paint a portrait for 鈧25k, she didn鈥檛 realise her life was about to change. Now, she looks back at her journey as an artist and tells 91大神 about her work-life balance and how she deals with troublesome clients. #AWeekInTheLife

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    A Week in the Life聽is a weekly 91大神 series that explores the working-class struggles of Nigerians. It captures the very spirit of what it means to hustle in Nigeria and puts you in the shoes of the subject for a week.


    Fine artist has always excelled in art, but several years ago, when she got her first commission of 鈧25k, she didn鈥檛 realise her life was about to change. In 2022, she鈥檚 illustrated for international brands and publishing houses and sold a tonne of remarkable art. She tells 91大神 how she navigates work-life balance as a freelance fine artist, her frustrations dealing with clients and how she鈥檚 focused on building friendships. This is her life in one week.

    MONDAY

    I used to sleep around 3 a.m. 鈥 which is normal for artists because we鈥檙e all messed up 鈥 but I don鈥檛 want again. These days, I try to sleep between 12 and 1 a.m. I believe in gradual changes as it鈥檚 more realistic to go from sleeping by 3 a.m. to 1 a.m. than 10 p.m. I usually wake up around 9 a.m, but today, I woke up at 6:30 for some reason, and it was hell.

    I like to respond to my inquiries and emails on Sunday nights so I won鈥檛 be under too much pressure on Monday. I also schedule emails for different times of the day depending on the time zone of the recipient. First, I write a to-do list, eat breakfast and get to work. I just started eating breakfast two months ago because I鈥檓 trying to build lean muscle and maintain healthy habits.

    I like to eat overnight oats, which is funny because I used to hate [cooked] oatmeal until I discovered the beauty of overnight oats. I make it by soaking rolled oats in oat milk with chia seeds, Greek yoghurt, grapes & peanut butter and storing it in the fridge overnight. So in the morning, I just wake up and eat. Sometimes, I eat it with fried eggs. 

    I work from home as an artist, so it can be difficult to get into work mode. I like to act like I鈥檓 going to work. When I鈥檓 done with breakfast, I freshen up, dress up formally and head to my home art studio for the rest of the day. By midday, I鈥檓 fully in work mode, and I work until 5 p.m., only pausing to stand up every hour when prompted by my Apple Watch. While working, I love listening to podcasts like The Archetypes by Meghan Markle and No Stupid Questions by Stephen Dubner and Angela Duckworth.

    By 5 p.m., I get out of my work chair and change into gym clothes. I recently bought a treadmill I put in my studio because I neither have the strength for Lagos gyms nor a car to make daily trips. I also don鈥檛 like going out. I used to work morning till night without standing up. But that鈥檚 unhealthy, and I recently decided to become more physically active, I bought the treadmill and some dumbbells to work out in the evenings. I also do yoga until 7:45 p.m. 

    Renike's home art Studio
    Renike’s home art Studio

    Afterwards, my Mondays can go either of two ways. I either eat dinner, read articles or a book, scroll through Twitter and TikTok and watch a movie, or I go to Obi鈥檚 House at Hard Rock Cafe 鈥 but this is once in a blue moon. Tonight, I鈥檓 staying in my house. Before I go to bed, I love those quiet moments when I just apply skincare products to my face.

    TUESDAY

    It鈥檚 funny how people only notice you when you鈥檙e out there and seem to be doing well. Sometimes, I get so caught up in trying to move forward I forget how far I鈥檝e moved from the early days of my career. But today, I woke up thankful. And while eating my overnight oats 鈥 I can鈥檛 get enough of it 鈥 I took a few moments to meditate on my journey. 

    In 2016, when I was in Unilag, someone reached out and asked me to supply prints of my artwork to a guest house. When the money entered my account 鈥 鈧500k 鈥 I was just looking at the alert like, I鈥檝e used talent to escape the trenches o! Which is funny because my first commission was so random. I had a mentor 鈥 a pastor who used to encourage me. He commissioned me to paint his wife and paid me 鈧25k. 

    My first book cover was also a commission from a friend. She paid 鈧30k for the illustration, and I was more than happy to work on it because I loved everything about her poetry collection, from vision to execution. I kept creating and putting out my work and not long after, I got a gig that paid 拢500. Just imagine the gap. And then, the gigs just kept coming鈥.

    As I finished my oats and prepared for the day, I knew I was going to absolutely slay it.聽

    WEDNESDAY

    As a freelance fine artist, the nature of my job lacks structure, so I have to consciously decide to stick to a routine every day of the week, and a to-do list is my greatest tool. Knowing what to do before I start each day has helped my artistic process a lot because I track my activities and progress on projects for the day.

    As a full-time fine artist, I draw what I like and sell them. Sometimes, people want me to draw things for them, and for a fee, I do. I get book cover commissions from either a self-published author or publishing house. When a house reaches out to me to design a book cover, it could be because the author saw my work somewhere and liked it. Like when I designed the cover of Nicola Yoon鈥檚 book Instructions for Dancing, one of Penguin鈥檚 creative directors reached out to me and said Nicola Yoon saw my work on Instagram 鈥 it鈥檚 always Instagram 鈥 and thought I鈥檇 be a great fit. Of course, I was interested. There鈥檚 usually a process that makes collaborating easy: a creative director reaches out, I do my work and get paid. 

    A photo of a woman Renike posing with some books she designed covers for
    Renike posing with some books she designed covers for

    But with independent authors, there鈥檚 a lot of back-and-forths because I ask a lot of questions, and sometimes, they don鈥檛 really know what they want, so I have to guide them through. I鈥檓 the illustrator as well as the consultant. I can ask for a non-disclosure agreement to protect their work if they feel reluctant to tell me certain details of their story.

    I used to have a fixed price list, but not anymore, because I often sold myself short, especially when the projects evolved or derailed. Right now, I have a base fee and add extra depending on the complexity of the project. Painting someone鈥檚 head will be different from painting someone鈥檚 hand, for example; the same goes for half-body vs full-body portraits.

    When I do personal art, I start with an idea, roll it around in my head for a while before I start painting. Which reminds me, the last time I did something personal was in July [2022]. I worked really hard between 2020 and 2022, putting out a a lot of work and building my reputation 鈥 and that鈥檚 why I can afford my lifestyle today. I still have ideas, but it鈥檚 been hard to find space to create personal work. Funny, I never struggle with commsioned work.

    I鈥檓 thinking this as I step out of my studio at 5 p.m. today. I make a note to paint something personal soon.

    Renike the fine artist posing with her artworks

    THURSDAY

    Today was just annoying; payment wahala here and there. The biggest headache I have these days is accepting payments. Most of my clients are outside the country so anytime I need to receive a payment, I always have to manoeuvre one issue or the other as a Nigerian living and working in Nigeria.

    I鈥檝e put my name out there to the point that people now trust me. All you need to do is Google my name and see I鈥檓 legit. But it wasn鈥檛 always the case. When I was still coming up around 2019/2020, it used to frustrate me that some international clients would just air me after seeing I鈥檓 Nigerian. 

    There was a time one of these traditional banks that recently went digital kept restricting my account until I threatened to sue. I was getting paid, but I couldn鈥檛 get my money. It鈥檚 not like the money was plenty o 鈥 didn鈥檛 even have the money to sue 鈥 but I couldn鈥檛 take it anymore. 

    I鈥檓 also struggling with inflation, and it鈥檚 affected the kind of projects I take on. My foreign clientele typically commissions digital art and book covers while most of my Nigerian clients prefer portraits. But right now, I don鈥檛 take as many portrait commissions or get as many requests as I used to because my base price is in dollars. With the way the naira is moving nowadays, I can鈥檛 charge Nigerians in Nigeria. It鈥檚 ridiculous to convert what was, say, 鈧100k at the beginning of 2022 to more than double that. 

    It鈥檚 such a struggle, and I鈥檓 tired mehn. When does one get a break?

    Renike the fine artist posing with her artwork
    Renike posing with one of her works

    FRIDAY

    A younger artist reached out to me today, complaining that they did work for someone, and the client refused to pay. I discussed with the person on how they could prevent it from happening again.

    I鈥檝e worked with too many problematic clients than I鈥檇 like, but because I鈥檝e had a few years of experience, I can spot them from a mile away and run for my life. They always have a crazy long list of things they want done 鈥 things that鈥檒l normally cost an arm and a leg 鈥 but never have the budget for it. 

    No matter how big you are, you can鈥檛 escape problematic clients. These days, what I do is if there鈥檚 something they want and their budget doesn鈥檛 match it, instead of chasing them away, I try to compromise to find middle ground. For example, if you really want a full-body portrait of five people, and you only have enough to cover a full-body portrait of three, I can suggest a half-body portrait of five people instead. But the problematic ones don鈥檛 even want to make concessions; all they do is stress me out, so I just run away.

    A few years ago, there was this lady who reached out to me for a painting. I was still charging around $500 and above at the time. We moved to the consultation stage, but after hearing all the details she wanted, I was like, ehn? This thing you want 鈥 with the whole world including heaven 鈥 is how much it would cost. Omo, this woman started ranting. What really annoyed me was when she said I鈥檇 wasted her time. I had to clear her 鈥 respectfully 鈥 on the spot.

    Clients are always right o, but they should also respect people who work with or for them. She wasted my time too when she was describing heaven and earth. People need to understand that they鈥檙e paying for a service and we鈥檙e doing it in return for the payment. Our work as artists is to bring your vision to life, so you can鈥檛 disrespect us because you only want to pay a certain amount of money. I won鈥檛 accept disrespect just because I鈥檓 providing a service.

    I鈥檝e had to evolve my process in a way that demands respect, so right from the beginning, you know you鈥檙e not dealing with an anyhow person: 

    1. I ask a lot of questions and sign contracts from the get-go, so nobody will say something, and then later, say that鈥檚 not what they said, because I have the receipts. 
    2. I don鈥檛 attend to inquiries over the phone. I prefer emails so there鈥檚 a trail of communication.
    3. When people divert from the original agreement or add something or the other, I charge extra.

    I always set boundaries from the beginning. I don鈥檛 work for people who refuse to respect these boundaries because my peace of mind is important to me. Once people realise that after two revisions, they have to pay extra fees, they sit up and tell me exactly what they want.

    But you see clients who treat me well? First of all, they offer me good money and are polite. Sometimes, they鈥檙e even ashamed to offer the money. To me, it鈥檚 big money o; to them, it鈥檚 like, 鈥淵ou have all this talent, and I can鈥檛 afford you, but please, take this money. And I鈥檓 like, 鈥淵es ma鈥檃m.鈥 

    After I did the book cover for my friend鈥檚 poetry collection, I kept posting my work on social media, and the next people who reached out offered me 拢500 and were telling me they knew it was lower than what I usually charged. The way I screamed. Me that my previous job was 鈧30k? Me that used to beg people to pay 鈧50k, and they鈥檇 refuse? Me that didn鈥檛 even think I was good? That was my turning point.

    SATURDAY

    On weekends, I like to work out in the afternoons rather than in the evening. I also spend time watching and making TikToks of my art 鈥 and some fun dance routines too. Weekends are when I let my hair down and dance. But not at parties because, these days, if I do legwork in public, they鈥檒l say Renike is razz. I do my legwork in my house, please. Dancing makes me feel really active and happy. 

    Weekends are also for hanging out with friends. I didn鈥檛 have a lot of friends growing up. I鈥檓 only starting to make them 鈥 especially female friends 鈥 in my adulthood. I love them so much and love hanging out with them. They make life worth living. When I鈥檓 sad, I know I have this group of people I can talk to, who won鈥檛 judge me. They listen to me, hype me up, dance with me, crack funny and dead jokes with me, etc.

    I like to read books too. Today, I finished Colleen Hoover鈥檚 Verity, and I鈥檝e still not recovered. Tomorrow is Sunday, and I鈥檒l sleep like my life depends on it. When another Monday comes, I鈥檒l eat overnight oats, dress up and face the week.


    Check back for new A Week in the Life stories every first Tuesday of the month at 9 a.m. If you’d like to be featured on the series, or you know anyone interesting who fits the profile, fill out聽.

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