Format for your artist resume

by Alyson Stanfield on April 30, 2007

Today’s post expands upon this week’s Art Marketing Action Newsletter, Create a Master Résumé.

Below is a suggested order for your artist resume.

Note that the most important thing will go at the top. If you are in academia, seeking a teaching job, you would put Teaching and Education at the top, followed by the rest.

  1. Solo Exhibitions
  2. Group Exhibitions
  3. Public Collections
  4. Corporate Collections
  5. Recent Publications
  6. Grants & Honors
  7. Lectures / Public Speaking
  8. Teaching
  9. Related Activities
  10. Education
  11. Born


{ 2 trackbacks }

Art Marketing Action + Podcast: Show off! — Art Biz Blog
February 1, 2010 at 3:01 am
Art Marketing Action + Podcast: Break the Rules — Art Biz Blog
February 15, 2010 at 9:09 am

{ 5 comments… read them below or add one }

1 Diane Clancy May 1, 2007 at 7:11 am

This is a classic case of how much easier life is when one keeps on top of things. I have never gotten around putting mine together, so it is a big job instead of a maintenance job. I guess I should at least start keeping track of what I am doing now so I don’t have to recreate that too. Thank you for this idea and reminder, ~ Diane Clancy http://www.dianeclancy.com/blog

2 Joe May 1, 2007 at 10:14 am

I’ve been keeping all of my show information in a database with fields for show name, type of show, start date, end date, venue, etc. And if it’s a juried show: jurors names, awards won, etc. It makes it easy to sort and filter differently depending on what I need at the moment. A spreadsheet should also work for people who don’t want to go the database route. But with a database, my online cv is also dynamically created from that same data. (It only shows a subset of the data I keep about each show.) I guess this is where the computer geek in me shows through.

3 Diane Clancy May 3, 2007 at 6:49 am

Joe – may I ssk what software you use? I have my clients and products in Filemaker Pro – but I want to start a newsletter and people talk about a database for names, emails and more. (as suggested by Alyson). I would like to start putting together my exhibits and all. Would I just use Filemaker for all that? Or should I be researching other options? Thank you! ~ Diane Clancy http://www.dianeclancy.com/blog

4 Alyson B. Stanfield May 3, 2007 at 8:17 am

Diane, you can use Filemaker for all of that. You just need to know how to export names and addresses. Some people keep their email addresses online at places like http://www.constantcontact.com, but I would think you’d want a copy yourself and to export them when they’re needed. Filemaker is amazing. I wouldn’t use anything else, but it does require you to self-format (rather than it coming as a package where you just plug in info).

5 Joe May 3, 2007 at 10:52 am

Diane, for my website, I use MySQL for the database, and php to dynamically pull that information out of the database to build the web pages. It’s a custom designed database and website – probably not what you’re looking for, but maybe I’ll market it someday. ;-) I’m not too familiar with Filemaker Pro, but it sounds like a good option, especially if you’re already familiar with it. In looking at their website, it’s possible to have webpages dynamically get information from your Filemaker database, so you could do something like what I did. But even if you don’t need the dynamic webpages, you should still find it useful to store your information in a database.

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