In our newest series, “Gentle Reminders,” we provide working artists with essential and convenient reminders for the care and maintenance of a nimble and flourishing creative practice. If your art is a garden, this series is about the continual weeding, watering, and miscellaneous upkeep it requires. To kick it off, we’re digging into the importance of regularly rewriting your artist statement.
When you aren’t around to tell someone what your work is and why you make it, the artist statement is your proxy, providing audiences with the context, ideas, and depth behind your work. An artist statement can be your trusty sidekick whenever you put yourself out there. An outdated artist statement, however, can actually do your work a disservice. Enter: frustrating stagnation.
To me, an artist statement is like your favorite pair of jeans. When they fit just right, you and your jeans can frolic together through every season. But when you outgrow them, they’re less forgiving than a pair of leggings or sweats—and harder to let go of because of the history you have together. In this article, we’re going to approach the rewriting process like a tailor would tackle the Favorite Jean problem:
PATH A: If your statement is missing your latest work, it creates a growing gap between how you present yourself and what you’re actually working on. A few new sentences could provide the patch your artist statement needs. |
PATH B: Build a new, custom artist statement in the tone, color, and style of your choosing. The white page is your oyster, not your enemy. |
AFFIRMATION INTERLUDE
Writing about your creative practice is an inherently vulnerable experience.
It’s important to respect who you were when you wrote the statement and validate any lingering attachments you have to it before launching into any judgment or assessment. We’re rooting for you—and past you.
Artists are under a lot of pressure to create fresh, relevant work. But refreshing your artist statement is an overlooked part of that continual evolution.
Every artist I know has a rich, branching network of ideas and questions that inform their work. It’s up to the artist to determine and communicate their current priorities and emerging interests. For example, you may have the bulk of your research in performance art—but you’ve recently begun exploring sustainable materials for the performers in your show.
Threading in a new section about recent work is worth the extra effort because it allows readers to experience the continual evolution of your creative practice. In my own life, I tend to write off whimsical new explorations when I talk about my work, because the experiments haven’t been recognized or shown anywhere. This kind of self-minimizing can hold you back in your artist statement and beyond, because you’re not giving the world an accurate picture of how innovative and imaginative your practice really is. Join me in saying no to self-minimizing and yes to transparency in 2023 ✨
Sometimes, pants are beyond repair. In this case, the mending process quickly becomes discouraging and time consuming. My advice? Give yourself the permission to dream up and craft an entirely new piece of writing, instead of using past statements to create the art world equivalent of Frankenstein’s monster 🥴 Here are some tried-and-true starting points for an artist statement writing session:
Getting your “core themes” handed to you on a silver platter by a superfan might be unrealistic, but building a writing community specifically for artists isn’t. Share your writing and receive thoughts from the Creative Outpost community in our brand new ✨Writing Feedback Space✨
Just like your favorite pair of jeans, it can be troubling when you outgrow an artist statement. But growth and evolution isn’t only natural—it’s what makes supporting an artist’s career so uniquely satisfying. Your community never knows what kind of adventure you’re going to take them on next. Let your artist statement be their portal into a lifetime of shared adventures.
Fractured Atlas | How to Pitch Yourself: 8 Tips for Artists
The Creative Independent | How to write an artist statement
Artwork Archive | 5 Tips for Writing a Memorable Artist Statement