a fundamentally different approach to

Accelerate Your Art Career…

a fundamentally different approach to

Accelerate Your Art Career…

a fundamentally different approach to

Accelerate Your Art Career…

7 Avoidable Artist Statement Mistakes Part 2: Mistakes #5 – #7

7 Avoidable Artist Statement Mistakes Part 2: Mistakes #5 – #7

First, let’s recap the first four mistakes from 7 Avoidable Artist Statement Mistakes: Part 1. 

Artist Statement Mistake No. 1 Giving Up The Words Around Your Art 

When people buy art, they are subconsciously (or consciously) also buying access to the artist who, by virtue of the work they do, is bestowed with a creative aura. Combining word-language with the artist’s visual language creates a sticky factor in the viewer’s mind that serves any artist well. 

Artist Statement Mistake #2: Thinking You Have To Explain Your Art  

People viewing art don’t need an explanation, they need connection. They want to be touched by the artist as they’ve been touched by the artist’s work. 

Artist Statement Mistake #3:  Using The Third Person 

First person is both honest and relatable. Third person is holding your reader at arms-length, and this creates distance instead of the closeness to you that your viewer is craving.  

Artist Statement Mistake #4: Waiting Until The Last Minute 

An effective, compelling artist statement takes time because you want the same authenticity and uniqueness to shine through that shines in your work. Also, since artist statements are often used in other venues, a looming deadline might cause you to cut corners that will make the difference between an acceptance or rejection. 

And now…let’s roll right into the seriously avoidable artist statement mistakes No.5, No.6 & No.7. 

Artist Statement Mistake #5 Ignoring the power of an artist statement presentation text image

Artist Statement Mistake #5 

Ignoring the power of an artist statement presentation 

I remember going to an open gallery event where the artist had photocopied her statement on a single 8/11.5 sheet of paper, printed out a stack as high as a glass of water, and left it on a table at the front of her studio. 

I stayed for about 45 minutes, and in that time, with a roomful of people, I saw exactly one person, stop, pick up the first copy, glance at it, then put it back on top of the stack. 

No one left with her artist statement. No one even read her artist statement. 

Is this a comment about the fruitlessness of artist statements? Or its fruitless presentation… 

Compare this to two other artist exhibits I attended: 

The first was a sculptor who wrote an artist statement for each piece he displayed.  

He printed these on gorgeous paper, with a font large enough to easily read over another person’s shoulder. He displayed these at an average eye-height, for a person standing,  and threaded the page through a thin metal post at the top, held in place by a metal base at the bottom. 

Was this extra work? You bet! But the result was two-fold. 

  1. Everyone who stepped up to any one of his sculptures, first glanced at the artwork, then turned to read the statement next to it, then turned back to take a second, longer look at the piece. If they had a companion, a conversation ignited. 
  2. The exhibition sold out on opening night! 

The second was a photographer who wrote a stunning statement, then blew it up to a taller-than-a-person, vertical board, an easy to read font with an attractive, but subtle frame. It was impossible to ignore. Everyone stopped to read it, then continued to look at the collection with her statement humming in the background of their minds. 

When our brains are lit up by more than one form of compelling communication, in this case visual + linguistic, the layered content becomes impossible to forget. It’s what I call the ultimate sticky effect. 

While this may be the last thing you want on your list before an exhibition, your presentation style sends out subliminal messages about you and your work.  

You don’t leave your artwork in a heap, or crammed together, or placed without thought on the wall because you understand that the way you present your work becomes a reflection on the work itself. 

Your artist statement—though smaller, percentage wise, then the sum total of your artwork—deserves the same careful attention to presentation detail you give your artwork, because it reaps the same rewards. 

When you scorn presentation details because you think these are not important or essential, you drop a valuable opportunity to establish your influence on the overall impact for how your work is viewed.  

Because all of us are shell-shocked from commercial, aesthetic bombardment, your viewers need all the help you can give them to appreciate, and remember, what you do. 

Each presentation detail builds a cumulative aura, a signature of style, which lingers around your work, whether you want it to or not.  

Disregarding details, and hoping their absence gets you off the hook, does not work. 

Absences, like silences, carry their own message, a message that is much more difficult to influence and direct than the details you tried to avoid. 

Artist Statement Mistake #6 Thinking your artist statement is about marketing your work text image

Artist Statement Mistake #6 

Thinking your artist statement is about marketing your work 

I’ve said this before, and I’ll say it again: marketing strategies, by their very nature, are designed to be manipulative, while the power of an artist statement lies in the authenticity of its authorship.  

When you define an artist statement as a marketing ploy, it effectively undermines the sincerity needed for a convincing, compelling statement. 

We humans instinctively know when something is done with care or not. There is a resonance of the cared for that is unmistakable. We may not be able to say exactly why, or what, we are responding to, but when something is done with respect to authenticity and the spirit, respond we do. 

And, yes, after you’ve written you artist statement, then you can consider how to use it in your marketing. 

As I’ve written in my book, Chapter 3: Soul, Not For Sale: “The point of an artist statement is to be in service to your art, not the marketplace.” 

Artist Statement Mistake #7 Forgetting the real reason you need to write your artist statement text image

Artist Statement Mistake #7:  

Forgetting the real reason you need to write your AS  

Because it helps you expand the range of your connection with a potential buyer. More connections, the stickier your art becomes. The stickier your art becomes, the longer they remember you. 

The longer they remember you, the greater chances to sell your art. The equation is so obvious, I find it hard to understand why an artist doesn’t jump at the chance to own this space. 

Consider this one sentence from Words Can Change Your Brain by the neuroscientist Dr. Newberg and researcher Waldman. “A single word has the power to influence the expression of genes that regulate physical and emotional stress.” 

If you are an artist who feels resistance at writing an artist statement, remember this: no one tell your artist story better than you. 

Ariane Goodwin's signature file

 

P.S. If you want the best crash course in writing (or updating!) your artist statement, I wrote Writing the Artist Statement: Revealing the True Spirit of Your Work  to give everyone, who finds writing about themselves a chore, a simple system.  

I guide you through my writing process, one easy chapter at a time. 

Write your statement once, and you’ll have a system in place forever. 

artist statement testimonial laurance simon

    7 Avoidable Artist Statement Mistakes Part 1: Mistakes #1 – #4

    7 Avoidable Artist Statement Mistakes Part 1: Mistakes #1 – #4

    Artist Statement Mistake No. 1 Giving Up The Words Around Your Art  text image

    Artist Statement Mistake No. 1 

    Giving Up The Words Around Your Art  

    It’s always dismayed me that artists who have resistance to the idea of an artist statement give up one of their most vital sources of power: the unique perspective only an artist can have about their work. 

    Given that so many other people take liberties with words about an artist’s work – the critics, the writers, the viewers – one would think that artists would snap at the chance to stake their claim.  

    Not so. For many artists, written language is fraught with land mines, and they simply prefer to hang out in the country of the Strictly Visual, or Strictly Musical, or Strictly Performing. 

    When you do this, you are forgetting one of the most essential facts of the artist/buyer relationship: that for most people who buy art, the artist comes from a creative, mythical realm that feels infinitely mysterious and unattainable by ordinary mortals.  

    People often buy art so they can feel closer to a creative aura that intrigues or mystifies them. They want to be touched, if just for a moment, by rare powers that only art seems to bestow. 

    When you have captured the imagination of a viewer with the power of your artwork, why not use that moment to own the relationship you’ve started? 

    When you also give this viewer a few potent, salient words connected to both the artwork they are looking at, and to you, the creative icon of that moment, you create a sticky factor in the very neurological framework of their brain, i.e., you make it impossible to forget you. 

    And besides, why should any artist give up this rare and precious chance to use their unique language to open the door to their world even wider for their viewer? 

    Artist Statement Mistake #2: Thinking You Have To Explain Your Art  text image

    Artist Statement Mistake #2:  

    Thinking You Have To Explain Your Art  

    This mistake arises from a basic misunderstand about what the artist statement is supposed to accomplish: creating a deeper bond between the art, the artist, and the viewer. 

    Besides, a lot of artists are confounded by the very idea of how to “explain” their art, which is often a deeply intuitive process that, by the nature of its visual form feels unexplainable. 

    Also, explaining often includes telling the viewer what they are supposed to be seeing. And this produces the exact opposite effect of what you want an artist statement to do: pull the viewer closer, not push them away. 

    People instinctively resist being “told” what they are supposed to be seeing. It feels emotionally invasive, as if our private experience isn’t right or good enough. 

    And this is pretty silly. When we have experiences, these are closer to a fingerprint than to a choice of this or that. You cannot explain away an experience any more than you can explain away a person’s shoe size. 

    The emotional essence of an artist statement is to give your viewer a tiny peek behind the canvas.  

    What is it like for you, the artist, to be doing the work you do. In particular, what was it like to do this piece right here, in front of this viewer? 

    Artist Statement Mistake #3 Using The Third Person text image

    Artist Statement Mistake #3  

    Using The Third Person  

    This mistake immediately labels the artist an amateur. 

    It also, ironically, shows the viewer the very thing the artist is resisting: showing the depth of self-confidence they lack. 

    Why is that? 

    Because, the third person form is an attempt to make your artist statement sounds as if someone important is writing about you. 

    In this case, the third person implies dishonesty and a lack of courage. It feels as if the artist is unwilling to be vulnerable enough to make I statements, so s/he/they hide behind the screen of maybe someone else wrote this besides me.  

    Behind this urge to write in the third person are three off-base assumptions: 

    • Worrying that your statement needs evaluative comments (Ripple’s sculpture excels in the lost wax technique…) 
    • Worrying that your work needs authoritative commentary (Sybil Caplan’s watercolors open up a whole new direction for…) 
    • Worrying that no one will take you seriously if you write about your own work. 

    Hiding your authoritative “I” behind s/he/they/name sends the wrong, unconscious message to your prospective buyers: this artist lacks confidence in the authentic power of their personal truth. 

    Artists, who use third person, unwitting push viewers away instead of drawing them closer.  It’s also a failure to understand how much the viewer craves a peek behind your canvass.  

    First person “I” is the most direct, honest way to write your artist statement because it gives your artist statement the same authenticity and sincerity you give your artwork.  

    When you write about your process as an artist, and the relationship you have to your work, you not only draw the viewer closer, you trigger an urge for them to take another, closer look at your work.  

    I know because I’ve seen this happen over and over when artists know how to effectively present their statements at a show. People look at an art piece. Read a statement. Then take another, much longer look at that very same art piece. 

    Authenticity, or the ability to speak to the true essence of a thing, actually creates a more powerful aura of authority than using the third person. For, after all, who better to speak about an artist’s work than the artist herself?

    Artist Statement Mistake #4 Waiting Until The Last Minute text image 

    Artist Statement Mistake #4 

    Waiting Until The Last Minute  

    You’ve put off writing an artist statement as long as possible, but now you’re applying for a grant, a show, a residency, position in the arts, and they want one! 

    What, may I ask, has been so off-putting that you’ve left this vital piece of your portfolio hanging out on the street corner until now? 

    Maybe it hasn’t occurred to you, yet, that an artist statement is a necessary part of your career.  Here are the most common, 19 places that will use your artist statement. 

    That’s right: nineteen! 

    1. Websites 
    2. Social media posts/reels  
    3. Portfolios 
    4. Brochures 
    5. Galleries 
    6. Catalogs 
    7. Press releases 
    8. Journalists/Writers  
    9. Media articles 
    10. Art festivals 
    11. Craft Shows  
    12. Retail Stores  
    13. Contests 
    14. Exhibition/performance notes 
    15. Applying for grants 
    16. Applying for teaching positions 
    17. Applying for artist-in-residence 
    18. Degree Applications 
    19. Your Local Chamber of Commerce 

    The sad thing is that, with a deadline looming, there is no way you’re going to come up with an artist statement that is both compelling and effective for your viewers/readers. 

    The good news is, when you have an evergreen system in place, you can not only write your core artist statement, you’ll have a template for updating it when your art evolves, for standalone pieces, for commissions, or for a series. 

    Ariane Goodwin's signature file

     

    P.S. If you want the best crash course in writing (or updating!) your artist statement, I wrote Writing the Artist Statement: Revealing the True Spirit of Your Work  to give everyone, who finds writing about themselves a chore, a simple system.  

    I guide you through my writing process, one easy chapter at a time. 

    Write your statement once, and you’ll have a system in place forever. 

    artist statement testimonial laurance simon

      9 Ways To Use Artist Statements

      9 Ways To Use Artist Statements

      Let’s face it; no matter how much you decry, defame, or devalue writing an artist statement, you need it. I guarantee that somewhere along your creative-journey you will be asked for one.

      Hopefully, you will outsmart the nay-sayers and not get caught in the same predicament as a painter who contacted me ten months after a prestigious New York gallery had accepted his work. He was a hard worker and a fine artist, and this was a pivotal point in his career. Yet, he had not shown a single piece of work in all ten months. Why?

      The gallery asked him for an artist statement and he froze. He’s still painting, still producing canvass after canvass, but as far as I know, he hasn’t written the statement that will, literally, launch his career.

      Savvy galleries understand the value of artist statements — that’s why they insist on them. Besides benefiting the artist, an artist statement saves a gallery owner precious time, even as it gives that extra emotional connection that can influence the perception of an artist’s collectability.

      Something all creative entrepreneurs can use, yes?

      Imagine, three measly paragraphs that can hold you hostage, or set you free.

      But here’s the kicker: even if your creative entrepreneurship—as a visual artist, sculptor, a writer, dancer, musician, or a creative scientist/engineer/carpenter—doesn’t include galleries, you can steal their ideas and apply what they do to your artist statement.

      Here are 9 ways galleries use selected sections, or an entire artists statement:

      • In their press releases
      • For announcing shows, or the addition of a new artist to their stable
      • On their websites
      • In the gallery’s portfolio/exhibition book
      • To give to writers or journalists for articles
      • As historical notes for a retrospective exhibition
      • In conversations with collectors and patrons
      • As support material on the wall, or beside the artwork
      • To hand out at shows for take-home information on a specific artist

      A good artist statement gives off the glow of professional detail that makes any gallery owner’s life a bit easier. It also adds spit and polish to the overall effect of the artist-as-person, which in turn compliments the artist-as-artist and the artist-as-investment.

      When you give a gallery your artist statement, up front, they credit you with being an organized, professional, and ambitious artist. If a portfolio is missing a statement upon acceptance, most galleries will ask for one.

      As with all smart, marketing strategies, a rule of thumb is: know your audience. Each gallery owner has a different idea of what an artist statement is; where, or if, they will use one; and what distinguishes a fine statement from the mediocre.

      9 Ways To Use Artist Statements lady sitting on bench in art gallery looking at 4 art pieces

      Before you submit anything, call or write the gallery for their portfolio guidelines. What do they expect to see in your portfolio, and how do they want it presented? If a gallery doesn’t mention the artist statement, ask if they use them and if they have guidelines or suggestions. Many galleries are informal and will simply talk you through their expectations. Be prepared to take notes before you call. I recommend a simple, spiral notebook where you can collect all of your information from every gallery in one place.

      When you call, be sure to ask if it is a convenient time for them to answer your questions. You’d be surprised how far a little courtesy like this will go.

      Remember, your professional credibility is on the line the minute you open your mouth or send in your portfolio. Here are some suggestions to keep you from making 7 blunders that will cost you dearly:

      • Don’t use your artist statement to make up for work that doesn’t work. Get professional feedback before you send anything out.
      • Have at least three people, whom you respect, look over your writing for typos, grammatical errors, unclear phrasing, etc.
      • Stay away from evaluative comments about your work. Critics’ shoes do not fit artists’ feet.
      • Use language that is lively, clear, and accessible. Esoteric, arcane language will not impress anybody.
      • Beware of grandiose statements. Low self-esteem loves to dress up in loud outfits.
      • Write with details, the spice of life. Generalities generally are flavorless.
      • Keep it short (max: three paragraphs).

      A gallery is one of your vital links to collectors. When galleries ask for an artist statement, they know what they are doing. Offering their audience more ways to connect with you increases the overall appreciation for what you do, and the perceived value of your work. Of course, if your statement isn’t well written the opposite will be true.

      Before you start writing, I suggest a “gathering” stage. This is especially important for the artists who fear that they have nothing to say about their work. I assure you; you do. You have a specific art language, which you use all the time when thinking or talking about your work.  The trick is to learn how to catch yourself in the act. Begin with the stated intent that you will listen to yourself.  Then follow these tips

      1. Carry around a spiral notebook or tape recorder for phrases about your work that come in:
      • A conversation
      • A daydream or night dream
      • In the car, in the studio, in the shower, anywhere inspiration strikes

      (I don’t know about you, but the more years I tuck under my belt, the clearer I am that my mind lies a lot about what it will remember.)

      1. Include reflective comments in your technical notebook. What were you thinking as you applied that final glaze, did a color study, selected the perfect marble, composed your latest song, or wrapped fabric samples around your model? Also, take note of which technical notes could make good copy.
      2. Enlist a friend who is willing to talk with you about what you do and why — someone willing to take notes, or tape-record the conversation. Often we say the perfect thing to someone else
      3. Let the experts do it for you: Pluck out quotes, of yours, that appeared in articles about your work. Or, if you are clear that you just don’t want to write about yourself, hire a professional writing consultant who specializes in working with artists. They can save you time and heart ache.

      For the most part, gallery owners welcome artist statements with open arms. But every once in a while, you may come across a gallery that won’t. Some of these gallery owners/managers are also artists, who instinctively respond more to visual language than to the written word. They assume that the people coming into their galleries do the same thing. It is a common human error to think that everyone is just like us.

      Another possibility is for a gallery to have a policy not to use artist statements. Perhaps the gallery likes to create a personal rapport through face-to-face meetings, conveying the sentiments of an artist statement, in person, to their collectors.

      In either case, I suggest educating in a gentle, respectful way. Suggest that, since you have already “developed” a statement, you will include it for their “review.” If they “choose” not to use it, that’s fine. Then — and here’s the secret for having galleries end up loving you — when you send in your portfolio, include a TIP SHEET OF POSSIBLE USES clipped to your artist statement. (Just cut & paste the list at the beginning of this special report on how galleries use an artist statement. Be sure to put it on your letterhead. You do have a letterhead, don’t you?)

      After you’ve been accepted, respectfully request that the gallery make your statement available for the public. Most galleries, no matter what their personal preferences, are not likely to turn down professionally developed, intelligent, and accessible secondary materials.

      Want to take your artist statement to the next level?

      Check out Writing The Artist Statement: Revealing the True Spirit of Your Work  for a step-by-step guide to your best artist statement ever!

      Ariane Goodwin's signature file

       

       

        Three Gates Of Relationship: A Pivotal Upgrade for Selling Your Art

        Three Gates Of Relationship: A Pivotal Upgrade for Selling Your Art

        I believe there is A Path of Visionary Affluence for every visual artist for selling your art. And it begins with the Three Gates of Relationship—which are intimately knowable, easily accessible, and practical to implement.   

        And when you align yourself with these relationship gates, it will impact your mindset for how you sell your art. 

        However, before we dive into the gates, there’s a question I want to ask you: What Is Art? 

        Ah, yes, the question asked down the ages. 

        With answers, as we all know, that range from the absurd to the sublime. 

        From Gauguin’s, “Art is either a plagiarist or a revolutionary.” To O’Keefe’s, “Art is not what you see, it’s what you make others see.” 

        I have a folder full of these quotations on art; each one as varied as the individuals speaking.  

        It’s as if each quote is one piece in a tapestry of how art impacts culture, along with the individuals in that culture. And each piece adds to the overall sense that above all, art is infinitely important to humanity no matter where or when. 

        Before we get to the Three Gates of Relationship (coming up…), giving yourself permission to answer “What Is Art?” will tell you what you value about art, and how you use what you value in both defining yourself, and in making your art. 

        It will guide you in understanding how to identify the Three Gates of Relationship for yourself. 

        Defining What Is Art? is not a small exercise. It’s essential. 

        Here, I’ll take a stab at it and then it’s your turn. 

        Ariane Answers: What is art?  

        At the physical level?  

        It’s an object you’ve created in time and space. 

        At the mental level?   

        It’s an idea that arose in the hallowed halls of your imagination. 

        At the emotional level?  

        It’s the fulsome expression of a feeling inside you that wants, or needs, manifestation in time and space. 

        At the intuitive level?  

        It’s one more demonstration of what ignites your creative spirit. 

        At the spirit level?  

        It’s one more, infinite outcome of What Is. 

        At the personal level?   

        It’s what connects you to others. It’s the emotional, highly personal container in which you live that encourages an engagement with others that you might not even be aware of craving.  

        At the art-career level?  

        It’s the collector/buyers that come (or don’t) to your door. 

        It’s the offering you proffer to the collectors/buyers who want your art. 

        But none of my responses matter if you are not aware of what art is for you! 

        I know, this feels a bit esoteric, and you want to sell your art. 

        I get it. I truly do. 

        But since selling your art is directly connected to another person—your buyer/collector— understanding how your buyer/collector is connected to you through your art becomes the doorway that opens more sales.  

        And how can you do that? 

        You start by looking at the Three Gates of Relationship in the same way you study a piece of art you are making: look directly at what you actually see, not what you think you see. 

        The Three Gates Of Relationship That Most Impact Selling Your Art

        GATE ONE:  

        Your relationship to yourself as an artist: aka, your artist identity  

        How well do you actually know yourself, as an artist 

        Have you ever examined the qualities of your Artist Self vs the qualities of your Family Self vs the qualities of your Friend Self? 

        Have you ever taken the time to identify and name these Artist Self qualities?  

        Or how these integrate into the art you make? How they impact the way you communicate with the world about your art?  

        How they impact selling your art? 

        Have you ever taken the time to connect the dots between who you are, what you make, and how you offer this to your potential buyers? 

        Or have you settled for an artist identity that remains at the subconscious level, where, because there is no shining light of conscious awareness, it remains relatively in the dark, relatively unknown? 

        And quite literally use-less… because you can’t use what you can’t name. 

        Since word language is so fundamental to how humans experience every aspect of our lives, when a “thing” goes unnamed, it actually goes unknown. In a very literal sense, it doesn’t exist.  

        When you can’t name something, when it remains an inchoate experience, you have no way to use it for further growth.  

        When your Artist Identity remains unknown, in a very literal, word-language sense, it keeps you from leaping forward with clarity and, yes, joy. 

        It also keeps you from a powerful truth that could help you sell your art more easily because sharing a deep truth that is connected to your art is essential in nudging your potential buyers/collectors toward wanting to buy—so you don’t have to push a sale. 

        When you identify, name, and wholly own exactly who you are as an artist, you ignite core aspects of yourself that have always been a part of you, have always existed to help you transcend any art-world challenge. 

        When you expand your awareness of your artist identity, it no longer languishes half-in and half-out, but steps fully elevated into your ArtLife. 

        GATE TWO:  

        Your relationship to your art: aka, your artistic fingerprint connection  

        As I outlined in another blog post, here’s my definition of an artistic fingerprint: 

        First, it’s not your artistic voice (unless you’re planning an Off Broadway review). 

        It’s not your artistic style (unless you’re planning a runway collaboration during Fashion Week. Or you want to know where your work is on the historical art styles spectrum). 

        You Artistic Fingerprint is what distinguishes you from the thousands of other artists all vying for visibility.  

        It is what sets you apart from the pack of ordinary work, where a dozen pair portraits from a dozen different artists could be lined up next to each other and all look as if they came from the same artist. 

        It’s the X factor in every, single piece you create that tells anyone that you, and you alone, made this. 

        And like your literal fingerprint, no one else can truly duplicate what you do.  

        When your work is speaking from the level of your soul, no one can ever successfully copy you. Your artistic fingerprint is just that: yours. By definition it cannot be anyone else’s. 

        Only a lot of artists feel confused by the difference between loving what they have just made, and knowing the work carries a distinct sense of who they are as an artist. 

        GATE THREE:  

        Your relationship to the people who want your art: your artist statement 

        At the heart of an artist statement is this: 

        Reaching to understand what, how and why you do what you do does not dismantle either the beauty or mystery of it. Quite the opposite. Revealing the evolution of your understanding invites others to participate in the mystery and to share the beauty.   ~Ariane 

        When you give the art buyers/collectors a peek behind the canvass, and create meaningful connections with you and your work, you are letting them know that it’s okay to truly see you. And truly seeing each other engenders a deep connection between seer and seen. 

        The artist statement, when it reveals your relationship to your work, becomes an invitation to step into your inner world as it spills out from your soul into their world. 

        Like the art which it reflects, an artist statement uses its sincerity of purpose and its purity of intent to create a powerful word-reflection of the art and the artist. 

        The point of an artist statement is to be in service to your art, not the marketplace.  

        Labeling an artist statement as something primarily for marketing diminishes the spirit behind your work. Like art created with the pocketbook in mind, artist statements which focus on the shallow “point of purchase” technique lose their authenticity, their authorship and their unique reflections by artists about their work. 

        The relationship you have with your artistic fingerprint is the most important thing humming beneath the words of your artist statement. This relationship of Gate Two affects what you write, and frames your writing tone of voice for the statement.  

        If you connect to the spirit inherent in your relationship to your artistic fingerprint, the words you use in your artist statement will sing at your next opening. 

        Three Gates Of Relationship A Pivotal Upgrade for Selling Your Art diagram

        Gate One & Two Overlap:  

        I know who I am as an artist, I know my artistic fingerprint. However, even though I am producing my best work, it’s not selling at the level I want, or sales are inconsistent because I’m in my own bubble of “self” and “art.” 

        Gate One & Three Overlap:  

        I know who I am as an artist and I’m invested in the buyers/collectors who want my art. However, by not fully understanding and communicating my artistic fingerprint, I’m don’t have the leverage to maximize their loyalty. 

        Gate Two & Three Overlap:  

        I know and communicate my artistic fingerprint to my viewers, whom I court on a regular basis. But since I don’t know enough about my purpose and presence as an artist, my artist identity as it flows from my soul, my vulnerability and creative expression are limited.   

        ========================================= 

        With the right support, all three of these Gates of Relationship weave together an art career where selling your art—with the creative mindset that each of these Gates are  intimately knowable, easily accessible, and practical to implement—can bring you the same level of exhilaration and satisfaction you get from creating your art. 

          

        Ariane Goodwin's signature file

         

          What, Exactly, Is An Artist Statement? Find Out So You Can Use Its Power to Sell Your Art

          What, Exactly, Is An Artist Statement? Find Out So You Can Use Its Power to Sell Your Art

          It was true in 2002 and it’s just as true in 2024: 

          The more ways you can reach your artience, the greater your chances for selling your art. 

          Yes, most likely, your creative strength lies in your visual language, whatever the genre. And words—the language of everyday communication, the language of our culture and family, the language in our thinking minds, the language we depend upon to clarify an image—hold a far more complicated place in our psyches, which I’ll explore in another blog post.

          Most of us accompany any visual image with some word-language, even when the visual image is more compelling or dominant.  

          In fact, the very dominance of visual imagery often seduces us into believing that the visual trumps words, which is why the cliché “a picture is worth a thousand words” is quoted so often. And in my estimation, so thoughtlessly. 

          What’s important to remember is this: all humans respond to word language, be it verbal, written, or via thought.  

          And ignoring the power of words to amplify the power of your visual work means you are also ignoring a powerful pathway into the hearts and minds of your artience—the people who love your work and who only need one, extra push to buy it. 

          The most direct, and most elegant container for words that relate to you and your art is the simple, if challenging, artist statement. 

          But, where do you begin? What do you need to know before you tackle what I call a grain of sand in an artist’s shoe? 

          When you’ve read as many truly awful artist statements as I have, it begins to dawn on you that maybe, just maybe, the awfulness starts at the very beginning.   

          Here’s the most basic question—What the heck is an artist statement? 

          It turns out you need a definition to start, but there is far more at stake here than just a definition. 

          For a compelling, engaging artist statement, which truly catches the attention of your viewers instead of making them yawn, here are five major things to keep in mind. 

          First: Accurately Defining An Artist Statement 

          When you have an accurate definition, that becomes the very first step in deciding if you’re headed in the right direction or not. 

          I’ve tracked down ten different sites with ten different ideas about what an artist statement is. And, as far as I can tell, none them really understand three things:  

          1. What an artist statement does for the viewer who is reading it. 
          2. What an artist statement does for the artist who is writing it. 
          3. And how these two trajectories affect each other; both for what is written and for the statement’s final effectiveness.  

          During my years of one to one coaching, I discovered one of the most confusing aspects of an artist statement is deciding, exactly, what it is.  

          As I was working with painter, Bob McMurray, I asked if he had an old artist statement we could compare to the one he had just written. 

          Not really, he said.  I wrote some things for a web site, but it’s not an artist statement. I’ve been thinking about writing one for ages, so I was primed and ready to go when I got your book. 

          Imagine my surprise, when I surfed over, to find a perfectly coherent artist statement on his site. True, a few touch-ups and a stronger central theme would be a plus; and, what he had worked. So, why was this clear to me… 

          …but not to McMurray, who, after all, wrote the artist statement that he did not think was an artist statement?  

          It’s Not Obvious, But The Answer Is Simple 

          Many artists suffer from LOI:  Lack Of Information.  

          If you don’t know what an artist statement is, then how can you be sure that what you’ve written is an artist statement? 

          When I ask artists to tell me what they think a statement is, one of the most common responses I hear is: I’m supposed to tell my viewer something about my art.  

          Well, yes, that’s pretty much it in a nutshell… only who is telling you about this nutshell? Is it the hull of a hazelnut? An almond?  

          When you have a vague definition like this, it becomes subject to a steady stream of individual interpretations, much like the ten websites I just reviewed. Ten different, often vague and disconnected characteristics of an artist statement, but not the deeper purpose of it.   

          Consider This:  

          Does An Artist Statement Support Your Art Or Reflect On It? 

          The problem, when you don’t know exactly what an artist statement is, is that you end up cobbling together a statement out of resumes, biographical statements, and critiques about the artwork and technique. Or, you opt for academic mumbo jumbo. 

          This usually happens when how you use an artist statement—support material for your art—gets confused with what it is: a very personal reflection on what, how and why you do what you do. 

          Defining an artist statement has the same benefits as setting a goal: it tells you if you are headed in the right direction. If you don’t know where you are going, then getting there becomes a dicey affair.  

          You could end up driving aimlessly around for hours. On the other hand, if you establish where you are going, you have a marker for knowing whether or not you have arrived. This single step will save you hours of grief.  

          So, in case you blew past it a few paragraphs ago, here’s a definition based on your deepest truth that simultaneously holds the power of viewer engagement: 

          ===========================================================

          An Artist Statement Definition:

          An artist statement is a written, personal reflection on your insights about your relationship to what, how, and why you do what you do—from your perspective as the artist-creator. 

          ===========================================================

          Its purpose is to give your artience a peek behind the scenes, to let them have a taste of what your experience, as an artist, is really like. 

          But wait… there’s more! 

          Counter Intuitively, It’s Not Just For Your Artience 

          There’s another side to the artist statement that no one usually articulates: the artist statement is not just for art patrons and gallery owners.  

          It is also has the capacity to deepen the creativity in your ArtLife.  

          The very effort of searching for words, which reflects your relationship to your art, increases your creative flow. This is true whenever we engage in a form of self-expression that pushes us out of our comfort zone. Like sweat from physical exertion, the struggle to articulate an artist statement has the added benefit of getting your creative juices flowing. 

          Writing the Artist Statement focused my connection to my art in a new way. The whole process primed me, gave me a sense of direction. 

          Now when I’m faced with choosing what to paint out of hundreds of photographs, understanding what moves me, this core place of nostalgia, gives me the reference point I need. ~ R. McMurray, retired Pres. of the Federation of Canadian Arts 

          As Uncomfortable As It May Feel…It’s About You 

          We have been conditioned, in so many ways, to feel awkward saying anything complimentary about ourselves. While, conversely, our culture encourages us to make demeaning, belittling self-comments, especially under the guise of humor.

          And because an artist statement is so deeply personal—as personal as your art—this tendency toward the Negative Self often pushes us in the opposite direction. 

          Keep in mind that a good many in your artience think you are magic and if they stand close enough, some of the magic will rub off.  

          With an artist statement, you give them permission to stand close enough to get a contact magic-high. At its best, an artist statement is honest in the same way that your art is honest. They both reflect a true expression of your being. 

          When an artist statement speaks from that place of what’s real, then, and only then, will the truth of your statement and your art effortlessly support each other. 

          Because It’s All About The Personal, Keep This In Mind … 

          An effective artist statement is as personal as your art. Which is why I insist that artists use first person, I, even though the very thought of writing “I” statements about your art might strike dread into your heart. 

          It’s very tempting (and artist do it all the time) to write your artist statement in third person because it feels as if that will keep strangers from judging you.  

          Even though you see artist statements written in the third-person (she/he) all the time, this is never a good idea.  

          Usually, an artist does this fearing that their statement, and by implication the art, doesn‘t have enough authority to be believed, respected or taken seriously.  

          Because authorities write about others in the third person, the artist tries to make it sound as if an authority is doing the writing.  

          But a third-person artist statement becomes easily confused with a critique, and as we have said, an artist statement is not a critique.  

          Third person also drops the artist statement squarely into a lie, since the artist purposefully sets the reader up to believe that someone else, besides the artist, is doing the writing. 

          Third person feels more credible, as if some expert wrote all this cool stuff about your work and isn’t that just too neat!  

          Unfortunately, that removed quality, which third person offers, is exactly what will kill the very reason for an artist statement in the first place: to give your viewer another way to bond with you because now they know something real about you and your art. 

          The Sticky Factor 

          An effective statement creates a personal connection to the artwork and stimulates our human thirst for “story.” This, in turn, triggers longer memory storage, and increases the sticky factor about your art, by immersing the viewer in two languages: visual and linguistic. 

          Writing in prose works best because prose is a friendly, accessible form. Prose lends itself to narration and storytelling, which helps the reader engage with what the artist is saying, which in turn encourages the reader to engage with the art.  

          Once in a while, poetry or prose-poetry is effective, when an artist is comfortable and skilled enough to pull it off. 

          The content of a statement is simple: It’s made up of specific words, which the artist chooses, and their construction. 

          Details Matter 

          Even if collectors love your work, an artist statement that comes off as arrogant, naïve, pushy, academic, or fluffy taints your artwork by association. Why take the chance?  

          Your work deserves an artist statement that gives you the professional edge you need.  

          Even though Artdex’s definition of an artist statement is only partially accurate, this bit of their advice might motivate you: A compelling artist statement can break a tie in an art competition, an artist grant application, or secure your spot in a coveted artist residency program. 

          And, to help you with the “detail” end of things, here’s one tip I’ll share about compelling writing: always use specific details in place of generalities. 

          “A tree” becomes “A gnarled oak with one branch blackened from lightening.” 

          “A sliced orange” becomes “One slice into the skin and the pungent, orange fragrance rose up from the cutting board.” 

          If you would like a comprehensive understanding of what an artist statement is—and how to leverage the purpose it serves for you and for your artience—alongside a step-by-step process for how to write an artist statement, keep in mind that the learning curve is similar to taking a class in a new technique for your artwork.  

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