The Art Marketing Podcast podcast

Should Artists List Prices on Their Website? The Gallery Test

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There's one number that should end the price-on-request debate forever: artworks with visible prices sell 2-6 times more often than the same works with hidden prices. The data is in. The artists are still hiding the prices.

This episode runs the gallery test on your website. A real gallery prices the work, frames it, lights it, and puts a checkout at the desk. Christie's, Sotheby's, Gagosian, 1stDibs — every serious art business does this online too. Almost no working artist does. Today we close that gap.

In this episode:

  • The gallery test — the one rule every digital decision should pass
  • The 5 things almost every artist website gets wrong
  • "Oooooh so mysterious" — why "contact for pricing" is the gallery with the lights off
  • The shop is the signal: how a real storefront tells visitors they're welcome to buy
  • Why the biggest art sellers on earth all do this — and the artists somehow don't
  • The generational gut-punch: collectors under 40 don't tolerate hidden prices
  • Mix the feed the way you'd mix an opening — killing the "art-only Instagram" sacred cow
  • Why a gallery with the lights off on Wednesday loses every Wednesday walk-in

The data referenced (with sources):

Resources mentioned:

  • Art Storefronts — the website and storefront engine built for working artists

Walk into a real gallery this weekend. Then load your website. Stand them side by side. If your site doesn't make a stranger feel welcome to buy, you have work to do. The basics in this episode are the same basics in 2055.

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