The Art Marketing Podcast podcast

4 Prompts That Pull Your Story Out (Even If You Think You Don't Have One)

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A listener said their life isn't dramatic enough for a story. This episode proves them wrong — with 4 AI prompts you can try today.

Every artist has a story. Hopper painted his loneliness. Morandi painted the same bottles for 40 years. Your story doesn't need to be dramatic — it needs to be yours. These 4 prompts use AI to interview you, pull your story out, and save it so every caption, bio, and email already knows who you are.

In this episode:

  • Why you can't see your own story (and why that's normal)
  • Real artists with "boring" lives who became legends
  • 4 copy-paste prompts to pull your story out
  • How to save your story as a context file

Prompt 1 — The Origin Story Interview:

I'm an artist and I need help discovering and articulating my story. I want you to interview me — ask me questions one at a time, wait for my answer, then ask a follow-up that digs deeper. Start with how I got into art. Don't accept surface-level answers — if I say "I've always liked drawing," ask me WHEN and WHERE and WHAT I was drawing and WHY. Keep going until you feel like you have enough material to write a compelling origin story. Then write it for me in first person, in a warm conversational tone — not a formal bio. Something I could read on a podcast or put on my website. Keep it under 300 words.

Prompt 2 — The "Why This" Interview:

Now I want you to interview me about WHY I create what I create. Ask me about my subject matter, my medium, my style. Dig into why I chose these — was it intentional or did I stumble into it? Is there a personal connection to my subjects? Don't let me get away with "I just like it" — help me find the deeper reason. When you have enough, write a short paragraph (150 words max) I can use when someone asks "Why do you paint/photograph [subject]?"

Prompt 3 — The Piece Story:

I'm going to describe one specific piece of art I've made. I want you to interview me about it — where I was when I made it, what was happening in my life, what I was feeling, why I chose the composition/colors/subject. Then write me a short story (100-150 words) I could use as the caption or description for this piece. Make it personal and specific — not generic art-speak.

Prompt 4 — The Bio Generator:

Based on everything we've discussed in this conversation, write my artist bio in three versions: 1. ONE SENTENCE — for social media profiles and quick intros. 2. ONE PARAGRAPH — for show applications, website about page, email signatures. 3. FULL PAGE — for press kits, gallery submissions, and detailed about pages. Use a warm, conversational tone. Avoid art-world jargon. Make it sound like ME, not like a museum placard.

Resources mentioned:

Know an artist who thinks they don't have a story? Send them this episode.

Related episodes:

  • The Artwork Didn't Change. The Story Did. (Jan 2026)
  • Context is Still King. If You Use It. (Jan 2026)
  • Steal These Prompts (May 2025)

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