Important Note: These jobs are posted in real-time and might expire. Please apply promptly.
This week’s job market feels a bit like a mixed bag. There’s a critical need for skilled makeup artists, especially those who can thrive in varied environments like theaters or events. Remote work remains available, providing flexibility for those who need it.
This Week’s Jobs
Artist Assistant Company: Lexington Ice Sculptures | Location: Lexington, KY
Dive into a unique art medium that’s as fleeting as it is beautiful. Work alongside a lead artist to create intricate ice sculptures that make every moment unforgettable. Apply Here
Subway Sandwich Artist Company: Subway Placentia | Location: Placentia, CA
Get hands-on with daily food preparation and customer service. A role that requires attention to detail and a knack for keeping things clean and organized. Apply Here
Assistant Charge Artist - 2026 Company: Contemporary American Theater Festival | Location: Shepherdstown, WV
Perfect for those who thrive in theatrical settings. You’ll contribute to the visual storytelling of a festival known for its dynamic productions. Apply Here
Hair Stylist / Make Up Artist Company: Priceless One | Location: Dallas, TX
Join a team for upcoming trade shows and photoshoots. Ideal if you love creating looks that pop and can handle the pace of event work. Apply Here
Realtime Lighting Artist Company: GungHo Online Entertainment America, Inc. | Location: Redondo Beach, CA
If you’ve got a background in 3D lighting and scene setup, this could be your chance to shine in the gaming industry. Apply Here
Work From Anywhere (100% Verified)
This week, remote work options are a bit limited but still worth checking out if flexibility is your thing. Here are verified remote positions:
Freelance Clean Beauty Concierge Company: Westman Atelier | Location: New York, NY
Work remotely with a brand that blends performance with clean beauty. Ideal for those with a passion for holistic living and skincare. Apply Here
Sales Manager Company: Empire Original Designs | Location: New York, NY
Take ownership of the business side of creativity. Perfect for those who can juggle art and commerce seamlessly. Apply Here
Did a sub-zero ice bar shoot last year and learned to stash lash glue and alcohol palettes in a zip pouch with hand warmers; cold skin + adhesives is tricky, so a silicone primer and a final sealer saved me from “eyeliner on a popsicle.” Since these listings are “real-time,” I keep a mini go-bag ready for theater/events, and for remote gigs I send a quick product map ahead in case it flips to Zoom. Caveat: some silicone primers pill under water-activated colors, so test your combo the night before.
Quick tip for the ice sculpting gig: bring a tiny thermos of warm water to revive cream products and clean brushes, and do complexion in a cooler vestibule so models don’t “sweat back” like a glass in July when they head indoors… I like a light barrier spray after moisturizer with a full 5–7 minute set; if that feels heavy, a thin silicone primer is a decent fallback. @sophiaBee +1 on heat — stick a disposable heat patch inside your kit lid to keep pencils and lash glue pliable.
For fast turnovers at theaters or events, I pre-label quart bags per talent and look, with a mini face chart and disposables inside — huge time saver when cues change mid-show. In these “varied environments,” I’ll switch to small hard cases if it’s wet or below freezing so products don’t get crushed or foggy.
On cold outdoor sets I switch to alcohol-activated colors and a quick-set lash adhesive; silicone primers can pill when faces go from cold to warm — ask me how I know. Building on @sophiaBee’s point about sweat, a pocket fan plus a mist-press-mist with setting spray keeps texture calm without caking; if it’s remote, I also lighten base a half shade to offset webcams.
Building on @ritaV2021, I keep a tiny 95+ CRI clip light with a soft diffuser for backstage and hotel rooms so skin tones don’t drift under random worklights. If I can’t plug in, a USB power bank runs it, but I’ll swap to a warm-balanced headlamp in a pinch — “bad light lies”.