By Nelson da Cruz, Tech Artist & Game Dev.
 

A portfolio is your professional story about who you are, your skills, and your creative vision. How can you best showcase your abilities? Let’s dive into some key insights to help guide your next portfolio update.

 

Avoiding Portfolio Traps
One of the most frequent pitfalls not just junior artists encounter is including every piece of work they've ever done, hoping sheer volume speaks to versatility. However, quantity without quality dilutes your presentation and confuses the viewer. It’s far better to display fewer, thoughtfully selected works that represent your artistic strengths, voice and skill set. 

Additionally, a lack of coherence in the portfolio layout can turn away viewers. The structure should be clear, with tabs or labels if you have multiple distinct areas of work and a visual hierarchy that highlights your best projects upfront. This is the place to let your work speak for itself, so remember to keep any text punchy. Don't forget that people need to find you after they like your work, so a small boilerplate with an email and social media is plenty.

 

First Impressions matter even more online
A strong first impression is critical within the first moments. Anyone viewing your portfolio should grasp your specialization, style, and the quality of your execution within the first few seconds. Your most impressive and relevant work should lead to instantly communicating your strongest abilities and specialization areas. Leave the process breakdowns for further down and remember that movement sells. Even if you are not an animator, try adding some movement to your leading piece with a gif/video/ turntable, etc.

Target Your Portfolio: Cater to Your Audience
Your portfolio must resonate with your target audience, be it a hiring manager from a AAA game studio or the art lead from an indie animation house. Tailoring content to the specific needs of your intended audience significantly boosts your relevance, appeal, and overall chances of getting opportunities and connections from your work.

 

For instance, if you’re targeting a technical artist position focused on real-time optimization, procedural asset creation, tools and shaders, etc, showcase projects demonstrating these competencies. For artistic-driven roles, emphasize creative exploration and both stylistic uniqueness and the ability to conform to an art style. Pick your target and focus in, and if you are a polymath, feel free to separate your work into multiple portfolios so you keep showing your targets the best work in their area of need.

 

The Balancing Act: Versatility vs. Specialization
While versatility shows adaptability, specialization reflects mastery. Balancing these can increase your appeal significantly. I prefer short portfolios maxing out at 10 images (leave them wanting more; you can always show more work during the interview). My rule is usually 70% / 20% / 10% split of your work. That would be 7 (out of 10) projects presenting something you are great at, 2 pieces showing something you are focusing on and want to do more in the future (might be a new approach to software or something you haven't shown yet in the PF and know the industry needs, like rigging or impeccable UV layouts) and then one project you love, where you will put in the extra time and all the extra love focusing on creating something unique, demonstrating depth in a focused skill.

 

This split positions you as a specialist who can also effectively both adapt and innovate.

The Value of Process Breakdowns
Process breakdowns are more than helpful; they're essential in technical and creative roles alike. Showcasing your problem-solving capabilities through process breakdowns demonstrates clarity of thought and critical thinking. Don't forget to use brief descriptions, visual comparisons, or animated GIFs to clearly outline your approach to overcoming challenges.

Just remember no one wants to see your doomed spaghetti (messy node systems) unless you organise it and actually present your process, often we need to solve issues someone else already did so learning from portfolios is a thing and, in some occurrences, if there is a lot of overlap between your work and the project being worked on you might get recommended from within the company and contacted to join the team.

Presenting Unfinished Work
Showing unfinished work is acceptable if it clearly illustrates a skill or approach that is valuable to your intended role. Labeling these projects explicitly as "Work in Progress" and detailing your next steps demonstrates initiative and continual learning. However, exercise moderation. Too many unfinished projects may unintentionally suggest difficulties in completing tasks.

 

Additionally, if a project remains unfinished indefinitely, it's not a WIP; it's a pair of cement shoes dragging your portfolio down.

 

Selecting Projects for a Technical Art Portfolio
When curating a technical art portfolio specifically, prioritize projects with clear, measurable outcomes. Emphasize tasks like optimization improvements (frame rates, load times), innovative procedural techniques, or impactful shaders. (I want to hear how you pack your textures and create an atlas of trim sheets or avoid texture use altogether.) Clearly explain the significance of the challenges you tackled, offering context to why your technical solutions mattered.

Think of it as Challenge>Solution>Result. Projects that show this arc are a great way to add storytelling to your portfolio.

Focus on Impact
Ideally, every project included should highlight new skills learned and their direct impact. Articulate how your technical solutions improved workflow efficiency, elevated visuals, or addressed technical constraints effectively.

 

Often, in the mobile games industry, optimization makes a difference! More performance means more phones can play your game, that's money in your pocket and extra battery in theirs.

 

In conclusion, your portfolio is your professional narrative.
Curating it with a target company in mind can present relevance and versatility and position you as a skilled professional ready to contribute in a tangible way to the industry’s future.
The portfolio is only a part of your “brand” per se. Use social media to connect and share your art. This might increase your reach, but dedicate as much or as little time as you like to it after updating the portfolio.

Given the games industry's constant shifting dynamics, aim to update your portfolio regularly, reflecting new skills and aligning with current industry needs. Keeping your work timely and relevant (finishing those WIP pieces) ensures you’re always ready for new opportunities.

 

Get ready for Career Camp with more reads! Check How to Best Showcase your Skills in 3D.