Don't use unnecessary jargon. Avoid words, phrases, and ideas that are so specific to your discipline that a general arts reader might not understand them.
- Write in the first person and avoid “art speak” and jargon. - Avoid editorializing or over-explaining. - Keep your statement concise, succinct, straightforward and to the point. One page is more than enough.
An artist statement is piece of writing by you that helps the audience access or understand your artistic work. It is written in the first person, while artist bios are written in the third person. Both represent you as an artist, even while you are not there.
A contract is mandatory for any commission. Write down every detail in the contract, such as the size and media of the artwork, your compensation, due dates for payments, who is responsible for framing, installation, delivery of the artwork, etc. If your client balks at signing a contract, WALK AWAY.
Use the present tense ("I am," not "I was," "I do," not "I did.") Do use language that is direct, understandable and authentic to you and your work. Be prepared to submit short and longer more detailed versions of your general artist statement.
While a bio can be written in third-person (e.g. she grew up in Nebraska…; he studied in Vancouver…), an artist's statement has to be written in the first-person perspective (e.g. my printmaking technique…; I apprenticed to carve…).
Writing in first person — using “I” or “me” statements — conveys a more intimate, casual tone. Some artists prefer the third person, as it allows you to describe your experience and talents in a way that feels objective.
A copyright exclusive license is one in which ownership in one or more of the copyright owner's rights is transferred by the copyright owner to a third party. A copyright nonexclusive license occurs when the owner retains ownership of the copyright and retains the right to license the same right to others.
It is a legal agreement that binds the Artist and the Company to fulfill all the terms and conditions contained in it. All Individual Artist Agreements must be in compliance with the respective Collective Bargaining Agreement.
Like its name suggests, an exclusive contract is one that restricts a party from providing the same goods/services to others for a specified period of time. This can also be applied in the context where a company obtains exclusive rights and agrees to do business exclusively with another company.