Learning to write a more effective artist's statement. Writing is a skill that can be learned
What is the point of artists' statements?
What is the point of artists' statements?
- Explains your work when you aren’t there
- Informs audiences what you made & why
- Used by curators etc to know if work is a good fit
- Used to promote show
- Used by scholars, critics, students
- Marketing tool
- Write a draft
- Revise draft
- Check for spelling, grammar, formatting erros
- Get feedback
- Revise
- Check for errors again
- Writing an artists statement is an iterative process
How to approach it:
- Remember you are writing this for people who don't know anything about you or your work. Explain so anyone can understand your work
- Write how you talk (use common language)
- Write in the first person
- Avoid generalize statemtns, especially ones that many artists share ("I love color!") Be specific. Focus on the important ideas you are expressing
- Be honest. Work doesn't have to provide the meaning of life to be valuable or interesting. If your work is about perfecting handles, say that.
- You don't have to reinvent the wheel. You can follow the structure of an artists' statement that you like. Use template?
- Free write
- Or free talk! Explain your work to a friend to clarify your ideas
- When starting draft, focus on clarity rather than spelling or grammar
- Get your thoughts down first
To get ideas, read alot
- Other artists' statements
- Books, magazines (Ceramics Monthly has lots of artist-statement-y articles)
- Articulate storytellers
Questions to ask yourself when writing
- Why did I make this work? What response do I hope to invoke?
- What do people need to know to understand this work?
- Explain references you make in your work, technique, materials
- Which aspects of my work are most important for people to take away?
- People have limited time, be concise & get to what you really want people to know
- You aren't trying to impress. You are trying to communicate
- Gyst-ink.com
- How would you explain your art to your grandpa
- Imagine a person who isn't a part of your inner circle, nor in the clay world
Examples of artists' statements
- Risa Pumo: I make…I like to think about…I hope to create…The key to understanding my work
- Ayumo Horie: My work attempts to…I use ____as a form to…
- Doug Johnson: I have been focused on…The work utilizes ------history….I have worked to build a vocabulary
Structure:
- First sentence: what do you make
- 2nd: Why do you make it? What inspires you?
- What do people need to know to understand your work
- Why does you work matter today? How does it fit into the world?
Revising:
- Wait at least a half hour, better longer
- Get spelling & grammar right
Get feedback
- Be sure to ask pointed questions to get the feedback you need
- What do you understand about the intent of this work
- Are there parts you don't understand
- What is your takeaway?
- Feedback isn't personal
- The goal of your statement is to convey the meaning of your work, it's not an art object itself
- Even editors need editors
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