An artist bio introduces you, a CV records your practice history, and a statement explains the work. They should not be the same document.
Artists, students, teachers, collectors, arts workers or art audiences who need practical Australian guidance.
You should leave with a clearer process, a useful checklist and fewer surprises.
This is written as a practical working page. Start with the four-step path, then use the detailed notes and checklist before you apply, buy, submit, document, plan or contact anyone.
Read the guide goal and define what you need.
Collect dates, images, records, links or documents.
Confirm official rules, costs, rights and responsibilities.
Apply, submit, buy, visit, document or contact with confidence.
An artist bio introduces you, a CV records your practice history, and a statement explains the work. They should not be the same document.
This page is designed to work like a practical service guide for artist cv and bio. Instead of giving broad theory, it focuses on the decisions, documents, checks and questions that usually make the difference.
Gather the basic information first: names, dates, links, artwork details, images, budgets, contact people and any official terms. Most mistakes happen because people start with enthusiasm but no records.
If the task involves a gallery, council, prize, buyer, insurer, school or public place, confirm the source requirements directly before relying on memory or assumptions.
Use the checklist as a working tool. Save a copy, mark what is complete and make notes beside anything that needs confirmation.
When money, copyright, cultural permission, insurance, freight, public safety or legal obligations are involved, treat the official source as the source of truth and seek specialist advice where needed.
Keep bio concise.
Use reverse chronological CV.
Write clear statements.
Tailor to opportunity.
Proofread names and dates.
Save official links and contact details.
Record deadlines and next actions.
Keep copies of submitted or received documents.
How to write an artist biography, CV and statement for grants, galleries and prizes.
Prize entries are best judged by fit, not by panic. A strong decision weighs the artwork, category, cost, exhibition value, terms and timing together.
The practical checks are eligibility, medium, image quality, framing, freight, finalist duties, sale terms, copyright, acquisitive clauses and collection dates.
Artists should keep a record of the submitted image, title, medium, dimensions, entry receipt and terms. That record matters if the work is shortlisted, sold, returned or needed for another opportunity.
Use this page to orient the decision, then compare related Artsoz pages and confirm live details before committing time, money, travel or public work.