How I got that job: Kate Iverson

February 28, 2010 at 2:40AM
Kate Iverson
Kate Iverson (Star Tribune/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

Age: 33

Home: Minneapolis

Job: Editor-in-chief for l'etoile magazine, an online arts, culture and fashion blog (www. letoilemagazine.com); arts editor for Secrets of the City, a local arts and culture online publication (www.secretsofthecity.com); event producer; freelance publicist.

Salary: A lot of my work is volunteer. [l'etoile] is volunteer. The richness of the experience and being able to help the community is a lot more rewarding [than money].

Background: I used to have a job in accounting. [And I was] an artist on my own, too. I started out as a photographer.

Art publicity is completely different from accounting. How did you get involved in each field? I sort of just fell into this weird accounting job. And while I was working there, I started an art studio in northeast [Minneapolis]. One year, we brought in a bunch of other artists to show and I just got bitten by this bug, like "I want to produce an art show, I want to have shows here." And then [the studio] spawned into an art gallery that showed a lot of up-and-coming local people that were a little bit more cutting-edge. After doing that for a couple of years, and losing a lot of money, I closed that down. But in the meantime, I had made all of these really amazing connections with people. And having to do all of my own public relations work for the art gallery, I kind of got bitten by that bug, too. So I started doing a lot of publicity.

What was it like to quit your accounting job and pursue your art publicity career? It was kind of a crossover [process]. While I was working [as an accountant], I started my art studio and then I started the gallery and then over a year and a half span [the art] stuff just started encroaching on my life so much that I eventually just said I can't do this anymore. I was working on my own stuff during my work hours more than I was doing my actual work.

Did you always know you wanted to do something in the art field? My mom was a fashion designer and a costume designer. I always kind of had that artistic streak to me. And I didn't know exactly what I wanted to do and I still don't know. I could end up being an event producer or a publicist or a photographer or a magazine editor. I do all of these different things and I love all of them.

Do you think your career is specific to Minneapolis? I think Minneapolis is kind of unique. There might be a few other cities where that might be possible, but when you look at a bigger city like Chicago or New York, those places are huge and they have amazing communities there. ... Here it's all very grass-roots, so it's kind of easy to get into a community. Everybody is so interconnected here; it's really cool. But in a bigger city, not so much. I think Minneapolis is a collaborative community as opposed to a competitive community. And I think it's the perfect size. It's not too big. It's not too small. It's got all the resources you could imagine.

SARAH GORVIN

about the writer

about the writer

More from Business

See More
card image
card image