Artist biography project instructions

  • Visual artist bio example
  • Short artist bio sample
  • Artist bio samples
  • Crafting the right documents to showcase your work as an artist is essential for your professional journey and knowing how to sell your art.

    It’s not just about listing your accomplishments—it’s about telling your story and articulating your vision in a way that resonates deeply with your audience. Whether you are applying to be in one of your local galleries, trying to be accepted for a public art commission, or even looking to sell your art online or at art fairs, you'll need to create documents that effectively convey who you are as an artist and what your work represents.

    A strong artist bio, along with a compelling artist statement, CV, and resume, not only supports your applications but also plays a critical role in attracting potential buyers and collectors. These documents act as a bridge between you and your audience, helping them understand the person behind the art.

    At Milan Art Institute, we believe that your voice is unique, and it deserves to be presented in a way t

    Artist Statement Guidelines

    Artists can send their artist statement for professional review. GYST submission policies, examples of artist statements, and writing tips are found below:

    What Is an Artist’s Statement?

    1. A general introduction to your work, a body of work, or a specific project.
    2. It should open with the work’s basic ideas in an overview of two or three sentences or a short paragraph.
    3. The second paragraph should go into detail about how these issues or ideas are presented in the work.
    4. If writing a full-page statement, you can include some of the following points:
      • Why you have created the work and its history.
      • Your overall vision.
      • What you expect from your audience and how they will react.
      • How your current work relates to your previous work.
      • Where your work fits in with current contemporary art.
      • How your work fits in with the history of art practice.
      • How your work fits into a group exhibition, or a series of projects you have done.
      • Sources and inspiration fo
      • artist biography project instructions
      • The Gallery’s Guide to Writing Good Artist Bios

        1. Create a concise summary

        An artist bio should concisely summarise the artist’s practice. It’s not about covering an artist’s entire CV or full biography. Focus on a few main points that you believe to best introduce the artist and their art. Always include the medium, themes, techniques, and influences the artist works with.

        2. Use clean, simple language

        Use clean, simple language and avoid academic jargon and exaggerated language. Readers respond to authentic, simple texts and will take you much more seriously than if you use over-embellished language.

        3. Grab the attention with a creative first sentence

        Try to uppstart the bio with a first line that fryst vatten not simply a standard biographical introduction. Instead, be more creative and write a first sentence that grabs your readers’ attention while also telling them what fryst vatten the most important thing about this artist and their work.

        4. Include the artist's date of birt