
Over the years, I’ve learned that rules can be freeing. At the gallery, we have systems for nearly everything—how we photograph artwork, how files are named, how and when clients are contacted. It’s not because I love structure for its own sake. It’s because good systems make space for calm. They reduce anxiety, eliminate rework, and keep the creative energy where it belongs: on the art.
Artists can benefit from the same kind of structure in their studios. A few clear rules can take the edge off the chaos that comes with managing your own production, promotion, and communication.
The Power of a Pre-Submit Checklist
Before you send an image to a gallery, publication, or collector, pause and run through a short list:
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Final photo taken? Make sure lighting, color, and cropping are accurate.
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Title, size, and medium finalized? Details tend to drift during creation—lock them down before sending.
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Varnish or finish applied? Avoid awkward surprises when a piece looks different in person.
This checklist becomes your line in the sand—proof that the piece is finished and ready to represent you.
No Edits After Send
Once you’ve shared an image, consider the piece done. This single rule saves a lot of stress for both artists and galleries.
When a piece keeps changing after it’s been submitted or photographed, keeping records straight becomes a tangle of confusion. It also drains you emotionally—you’re never “done.” Establishing your own no edits after send policy lets you release the piece and focus on what’s next.
If this idea resonates, I wrote more about it here:
https://reddotblog.com/stop-revising-your-art-after-you-share-the-photo/
Versioning and Naming
Adopt a simple naming convention for your images and documents, such as:
Lastname_Title_Year_Dimensions.jpg
orLastname_Title_YYYYMMDD_v1.jpg
When you’re sending dozens of images a year, this habit prevents mix-ups, helps galleries stay organized, and makes it easy for you to track versions when you update your portfolio or website.
A Simple Outreach Cadence
Without structure, communication can become reactive—you either overdo it or forget entirely. Set a rhythm:
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Check in with your gallery once a month.
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Email collectors quarterly with updates or new work.
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Post on social media once or twice a week, then stop worrying until your next slot.
Predictable routines reduce decision fatigue. You don’t have to guess when to reach out—you already know.
Other Studio Rules to Consider
Here are some practical “rules of thumb” I’ve seen artists adopt that make their careers smoother and less stressful.
Creating and Workflow
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Paint in consistent blocks of time, even if short, to build rhythm.
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Photograph every piece before varnishing or framing.
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Keep a simple studio log noting title, date, medium, and size.
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Have a weekly cleanup and restock day—reset before the next cycle.
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Set a rule for when a piece is finished (e.g., after signing, no further changes).
Gallery and Representation
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Respond to gallery emails within 24 hours.
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Never deliver or ship wet work.
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Keep a current inventory list that matches what the gallery has.
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Notify your gallery immediately if a work sells directly from your studio.
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Use consistent pricing across venues—no exceptions.
Client and Collector Communication
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Send thank-you notes (or emails) within 24 hours of a sale.
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Follow up with new collectors a month later to check on delivery and satisfaction.
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Maintain a collector database with notes about preferences and purchases.
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Offer to notify clients when new work in their favorite style becomes available.
Marketing and Professionalism
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Update your website twice a year with current inventory.
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Keep your artist statement and bio in a single, easy-to-access document.
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Use the same headshot and short bio everywhere for consistency.
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Avoid posting work-in-progress photos until pieces are finished and documented.
Personal Sanity Rules
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No studio work after a set hour—protect your rest and recharge time.
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Step back from a finished piece for 24 hours before calling it done.
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Treat administrative time (emails, inventory, finances) as real work—schedule it.
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Don’t compare your studio pace to anyone else’s.
Rules That Simplify, Not Restrict
Good studio rules don’t box you in—they clear mental clutter so your creativity can breathe. Whether it’s a workflow checklist, a naming convention, or a policy that says “the painting is done when the photo is sent,” structure builds confidence.
I’d love to hear from you—what rules or systems have made your studio life smoother? Share your ideas in the comments so we can learn from each other’s best practices.
