This article was co-authored by Claire Wentzel. Claire Wentzel is an award-winning Artist and Strategic Creative Consultant. Her business, Red Rose Studios, is based in Las Vegas, Nevada, where she also serves on the Clark County Public Art Committee. With over 20 years of experience, she specializes in mixed media participatory art, brand messaging, and building organizational culture. She earned her BA in Fine Art with Distinction from the University of Colorado-Boulder and completed a painting residency at the International School of Painting, Drawing, and Sculpture. Her chalk mural work has been featured in EdHat and I Madonnari Italian Street Painting Festival advertising.
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A clear and intelligent artist’s statement will make you stand out from the crowd and will show people that you are a thoughtful and deliberate artist. Writing your statement can be a difficult process, but it is also an enormously valuable exercise as it can help you to achieve a greater understanding of yourself as an artist. Here is a helpful guide to steer you in the right direction.
Steps
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Be honest with yourself. Before you write a word, take some time to just think about you and your art. You need to understand what it is that you are trying to achieve, before you attempt to explain it to anyone else.[1]
- Ask yourself what you're doing. What does your art express? What makes your art unique?
- Ask yourself why you're doing it. What motivates you to create art? What emotions or ideas are you trying to convey? What does your art mean to you?
- Ask yourself how you're doing it. What do you draw inspiration from? What tools and materials do you use?
- Know that your artist statement will evolve over time as your work evolves and your own understanding of it changes as people respond to it.
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Consider your influences. Think about the things that influence you, whether it's art, music, literature, history, politics or the environment. Think about how these influences have made an impression on you and how they manifest themselves in your work. Try to be as specific as possible.[2]Advertisement
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Make a mind-map. Mind-mapping is a good way to free your thinking. It will also help you to trace the relationship between different ideas.
- Jot down a key idea that informs your work in the center of a blank page. Then spend 15 minutes writing down any words, phrases, feelings, techniques etc. related to that idea.
- Free writing is another technique that can help get the creative juices going. Spend 5-10 minutes writing whatever pops into your head when you think about your art. You'll be amazed at what you come up with.
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Determine what you want people to understand. Think about what you want people to take away from your art. What message or emotion are you trying to convey?
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Make a statement about why you do what you do. The first section of your artist's statement should begin with a discussion of why you make art. Try to make it as personal as possible. Talk about what your goals are and what you hope to achieve through your art.[3]
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Describe your decision-making techniques. In the second section of you statement, tell the reader about your decision-making process. How do you select a theme? How do you choose what materials to use? What techniques to utilize? Keep it simple and tell the truth.
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Talk about your current work. In the third section, provide some insight into your current work. How does it relate to your previous work? What life experiences informed it? What are you exploring, attempting or challenging through this work?
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Keep it short, sweet, and to the point. Your artist statement is an introduction to your work, not an in-depth analysis of it. Your artist’s statement should be one to two paragraphs and no longer than a page.[4]
- Your statement should answer the most commonly asked questions about your art, not overwhelm readers with irrelevant facts and minute details. It's good to articulate your goal, but try to leave space for people to have the experience of your work with their own personal baggage.
- Brevity and efficiency of language are key. A good statement will leave your readers wanting more.
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Use simple language. An effective artist's statement reaches out and welcomes people to your art, no matter how little or how much they know about art to begin with; it never excludes. It should make your work more accessible, not obscure it with convoluted language filled with artsy jargon. [5]
- Write in simple, straightforward, everyday language.
- Make "I" statements rather than "you" statements. Talk about what your art does for you, not what it's supposed to do for the viewers.
- Know your audience but remember that simpler is always better in this situation.
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Let it rest. Your artist's statement is a piece of very personal writing. Once you've finished writing, let it rest overnight before your reread it. Taking some time will help you take a step back and give you the detachment necessary to polish the writing without violating your sense of integrity and safety.
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Seek feedback. Before you go public with your statement, get feedback. Show your art and statement to friends, friends' friends, and maybe even a stranger or two.[6]
- Make sure your readers get it, that they understand what you want them to understand. When they don't, or you have to explain yourself, do a rewrite and eliminate the confusion.
- Keep in mind that you alone are the authority for what is true about your work, but feedback on clarity, tone and technical matters such as spelling and punctuation never hurts.
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Revise as needed. Many times, a little rearranging is all that's necessary to make your statement a clean, clear read. If you need help, find someone who writes or edits and have them fix the problem.
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Use your statement. Make the most of your artist statement and use it to promote your work to gallery owners, museum curators, photo editors, publications and the general public.
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Save all your notes and drafts. Save all the notes and drafts that you've made. You'll want to revise and update your artist's statement from time to time to reflect changes in your work. Having your original notes and drafts at your disposal will help you to immerse yourself in your past thought processes and will give you a sense of creative continuity.
Sample Artist Statement
Community Q&A
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QuestionHow do I make an artist statement interesting and fresh?Community AnswerKeep it short and sweet. Base it on your personal work as an artist and what you intend to portray through your designs.
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QuestionHow do I figure out what type of art group I fall into?Community AnswerI personally find it much more satisfying to not confine myself to one particular group or way of thinking. Instead, maybe think of the groups you identify with in a venn diagram kind of way. Also, just like any group made of people, there's not going to be one homogeneous identity within the group (unless it's like a cult, I guess). It's easier to be a part of a group when you connect with artists on an individual level because of the people they are.
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Tips
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Avoid comparing yourself to other artists. It can seem presumptuous and you may not come out of the comparison favorably. Let the critic's decide who you're like.Thanks
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Not all artists can write well. If you're in that category, think seriously about hiring a professional writer or editor, preferably one with an art background, to help you convey what you want your statement to convey in language that ordinary everyday people can understand.Thanks
Expert Interview
Thanks for reading our article! If you'd like to learn more about becoming an artist, check out our in-depth interview with Claire Wentzel.
References
- ↑ https://www.gyst-ink.com/artist-statement-guidelines
- ↑ https://www.artbusiness.com/artstate.html
- ↑ https://www.callforentry.org/how-to-write-an-artist-statement-stop-stalling-and-start-writing/
- ↑ https://theabundantartist.com/how-to-write-an-artists-statement-that-doesnt-suck/
- ↑ http://www.artbusiness.com/artstate.html
- ↑ https://www.artbusiness.com/artstate.html
About This Article
If you need to write an artist statement, start with a personal description of why you decided to make your art, including your goals for your career as an artist. Then, talk a bit about your decision-making process behind your art, like your themes, materials, and techniques. Next, include some background about your current works of art, and talk about how they relate or differ from your previous works. Remember to limit your statement to 1-2 paragraphs, since it's supposed to be a brief introduction to your work. For advice on planning out your statement and exploring your personal story, read on!
Reader Success Stories
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"I struggled with other sources to understand how to create a simple, yet informative artist statement. This article was really helpful, though, and easy to follow, especially through the use of steps and examples provided. "..." more