Change is the only constant, even in the art world, where trends can appear overnight and fade just as quickly. What felt groundbreaking last year can suddenly seem outdated, while what feels fresh today might be tomorrow’s standard. As we approach 2026, the art market is quietly but significantly evolving, and the shifts taking place are already affecting the way artists present and sell their work, collectors make purchasing decisions, and audiences experience creativity. This is not some vague prediction for the future, it is a reality you can already see…
If you’ve been wondering whether your art belongs here, consider this your reassurance: it does. And more importantly, it’s wanted. Every submission so far has expanded this exhibition in ways we never expected, but there is still a space that only your perspective can fill. So if a place has shaped your heart, your imagination, or your identity, share that story through your work. Submit now, and let your landscape become part of a growing global dialogue about memory, meaning, and the worlds we carry within us.
When a place stays with us, it leaves a mark on memory, on imagination, on art. The Women in Arts Network invites women-identifying and non-binary artists to explore the theme “Landscapes & Places” in our international virtual exhibition. Whether real, remembered, or imagined, these spaces shape who we are and how we see the world. Submit your work and share the places that live inside you.
Let your art mark a powerful ending to 2025 and an inspiring beginning to what comes next. Submissions for Artist of the Month December 2025 are open, share your voice and your vision.
Time is almost up! Submit your work to Faces before November 25, 2025. This is a chance for women-identifying and non-binary artists to explore identity, expression, and emotion through faces whether portraits, abstract forms, or conceptual interpretations. Your art could inspire, move, and connect audiences across the globe.
Artists often focus on the work itself, and that focus is essential, but the way the work is presented creates the first layer of trust. A strong piece can lose its impact when the surrounding details feel rushed, unclear, or inconsistent. People rarely say this out loud, but presentation becomes the quiet filter through which curators, galleries, and jurors decide whether someone feels ready for professional opportunities. The small things carry weight because they reveal how seriously an artist treats their own practice. What surprises many emerging artists is that these…
Building a career in the arts has a funny way of teaching you something no one mentions early on, community does not automatically equal access. You can be surrounded by supportive people who genuinely love your work, cheer for every win, and still feel like you are standing outside the doors where real decisions happen. That gap can feel confusing until you realize that access works differently than popularity. A lot of artists collect contacts the way people collect pretty notebooks, nice to have, but not actually used for anything meaningful.…
They say not every door is meant to be knocked on, and that’s especially true in the art world. The gallery system can look like a ladder, but it’s more like a network of rooms , each with its own energy, audience, and expectations. Knowing which one to step into at your current stage isn’t just strategy, it’s self-awareness. Many artists waste years chasing galleries that don’t align with where they are yet. They send portfolios to top-tier spaces that only work with established names, or they settle for venues that…
At some point in your art journey, your work finally leaves the studio. Maybe it’s wrapped up for a show, maybe it’s headed to a collector who found you online, or maybe it’s just your first sale ever. It feels good, right? But here’s the part most artists don’t really think about , that sale is just the beginning of your artwork’s story. What happens next, who resells it, and how its price changes over time, that’s where the art world starts to get interesting. There are basically two worlds your…
If you’ve ever wondered why some artists’ prices seem to rise steadily while others stay flat, it usually comes down to one unglamorous but powerful thing: consistency. Not just in how often they create, but in how they show up, communicate, and build trust with their audience. Consistency doesn’t make headlines, but it’s the backbone of every sustainable art career. Collectors, curators, and even followers learn what to expect from consistent artists. Their work carries a rhythm, a visual or emotional through-line that says, you can rely on me to show…
🎊 Let’s Welcome 2025 Together 🎊 Flat 25% off!. View plan