---
title: "How to Write an Artist Statement"
description: "An artist statement explains the why behind your work. This guide covers what to include, ideal length, mistakes to avoid, and how it helps applications."
author: "Angie"
author_url: "https://ancourage.academy/authors/angie"
published_at: 2026-07-13
modified_at: 2026-07-13
category: "tips"
tags: ["Art", "artist statement", "portfolio", "art applications", "students", "Singapore", "Bishan", "Woodlands"]
canonical: "https://ancourage.academy/articles/how-to-write-artist-statement-guide-singapore"
source: "https://ancourage.academy/articles/how-to-write-artist-statement-guide-singapore"
language: "en-SG"
word_count: 1021
reading_time: "PT6M"
cover_image: "https://ancourage.academy/art-pic/art7.JPG"
reviewed_by: "Min Hui"
---

# How to Write an Artist Statement

An artist statement explains the why behind your work. This guide covers what to include, ideal length, mistakes to avoid, and how it helps applications.

**An artist statement is a short piece of writing — usually one to three paragraphs — that explains the themes, materials and intent behind your work, bridging your vision and your audience.** It is essential for portfolios, art-school applications and exhibitions. [Art by Ancourage](https://ancourage.academy/art) helps students write clear, honest statements as part of portfolio coaching at [Bishan](https://ancourage.academy/find-us/bishan) and [Woodlands](https://ancourage.academy/find-us/woodlands).

This guide covers what an artist statement is, how long it should be, what to include, common mistakes, and how it strengthens applications. It pairs with our guides to [analysing and critiquing art](https://ancourage.academy/articles/how-to-analyse-critique-artwork-guide-singapore) and the [NAFA and LASALLE admission](https://ancourage.academy/articles/nafa-lasalle-portfolio-admission-guide-singapore) process. For worked examples, art educators such as [Art Prof](https://artprof.org/pro-development/how-to-write-an-artist-statement/) publish detailed guides.

Every portfolio student we coach eventually has to explain their work in words — and we have found that a clear artist statement often makes the difference at a NAFA or LASALLE interview, where you must articulate what your work is about.

## What Is an Artist Statement?

**An artist statement is a written introduction to your work that explains the "why" behind the "what" — your central themes, how you make your work, and what you hope viewers take from it.** It is usually the first point of contact between an artist and an audience.

It is different from a biography (which is about you and your history) and from a CV (a list of achievements). The statement is about the _ideas_ in your work, written in the first person.

## How Long Should an Artist Statement Be?

**Length depends on where it will be used — from a 50-word elevator pitch to a one-page statement of around 250–400 words for applications and websites.** Keep a consistent core message and adjust the length to fit.

| Length | Best for |
| --- | --- |
| **~50 words** | Social bios, short intros, tight spaces |
| **~100–150 words** | Gallery wall labels, applications with character limits |
| **~250–400 words** | Websites, grant and degree applications (about one page) |

## What Should You Include?

**A reliable structure has three short paragraphs: your themes, your materials and process, and your influences and intent.** Lead with a strong first sentence that names your central focus.

1.  **Themes:** the big idea — the subjects, concepts or questions your work explores.
2.  **Materials & process:** your media and techniques, and why those choices serve the idea.
3.  **Influences & intent:** the artists or movements that shape you, and what you want viewers to take away.

Naming an influence you understand well — drawn from [famous artists every student should know](https://ancourage.academy/articles/famous-artists-art-students-singapore) or [Singapore's pioneers](https://ancourage.academy/articles/singapore-art-history-local-artists-guide) — shows informed, intentional thinking.

## What Are Common Mistakes to Avoid?

**The most common mistakes are vague art-jargon, grandiose claims, and simply describing each artwork instead of explaining the ideas behind it.** A statement should be clear enough for a non-artist to follow.

-   **Avoid art-speak:** write plainly; skip pretentious abstraction and buzzwords.
-   **Avoid grandiosity:** no "the best", "the only", "revolutionary".
-   **Avoid vagueness:** stay focused on a few clear ideas rather than jumping everywhere.
-   **Do not restate your CV:** focus on the work and its ideas, not a list of achievements.

## How Does an Artist Statement Help With Applications?

**Art schools and overseas programmes assess your ability to articulate your work, so a strong statement directly supports a portfolio application.** The skill of explaining your intent is tested in interviews and written submissions alike.

-   **NAFA & LASALLE:** applicants discuss their work at interview — the themes, the media chosen and why, and the artists who influence them (see our [admission guide](https://ancourage.academy/articles/nafa-lasalle-portfolio-admission-guide-singapore)).
-   **Universities & overseas:** a statement and personal essay are required by almost all programmes — see [university art degrees](https://ancourage.academy/articles/university-art-design-degrees-singapore-guide) and [studying art overseas](https://ancourage.academy/articles/study-art-overseas-foundation-degree-pathways-singapore).
-   **Keep it your own:** like the portfolio itself, your statement should be genuinely yours — institutions discourage AI-generated submissions.

Funding applications need one too — see our guide to [art scholarships and financial aid](https://ancourage.academy/articles/art-scholarships-financial-aid-singapore-guide).

## How Does Art by Ancourage Help Students Write One?

**Art by Ancourage coaches students to put their work into words, so their statement matches their portfolio and reads clearly and confidently.**

This is part of portfolio mentoring in [Professional Fine Art Classes](https://ancourage.academy/courses/art/professional) and [private lessons](https://ancourage.academy/courses/art/private-lessons), and supports [DSA Art Portfolio](https://ancourage.academy/courses/art/dsa) applicants. [Book a trial class (from $18)](https://ancourage.academy/art) at Bishan or Woodlands to start.

## Frequently Asked Questions

**Quick answers about writing an artist statement.**

### What is an artist statement?

An artist statement is a short piece of writing — usually one to three paragraphs — that explains the themes, materials and intent behind your work. It is the bridge between your vision and your audience, written in the first person, and is used for portfolios, art-school and grant applications, and exhibitions. It focuses on the ideas in your work, not your biography or CV.

### How long should an artist statement be?

It depends on the use. A social bio might be about 50 words; a gallery label or application with limits, around 100–150 words; and a website or degree-application statement, roughly 250–400 words (about one page). Keep a consistent core message and adjust the length and detail to suit each destination.

### What should I include in an artist statement?

Three things, in short paragraphs: your themes (the big idea your work explores), your materials and process (your media and techniques, and why they suit the idea), and your influences and intent (artists who shape you and what you want viewers to take away). Start with a strong sentence that names your central focus.

### What mistakes should I avoid in an artist statement?

Avoid vague art-jargon and pretentious abstraction, grandiose claims like "the best" or "revolutionary", and simply describing each piece instead of explaining its ideas. Do not restate your CV. Keep it clear, specific and honest — clear enough that someone who is not an artist can understand what your work is about.

### Do I need an artist statement to apply to art school?

Often, yes. NAFA and LASALLE expect you to discuss your work at interview, and most university and overseas programmes require a written statement or personal essay alongside your portfolio. Being able to articulate your themes, choices and influences is a core part of a successful application — and the statement should be genuinely your own.

## Related Courses

- [Professional Fine Art Classes](https://ancourage.academy/courses/art/professional) — Portfolio mentoring that includes writing your statement
- [Private 1-to-1 Art Lessons](https://ancourage.academy/courses/art/private-lessons) — One-to-one help articulating your work in words
- [DSA Art Portfolio Preparation](https://ancourage.academy/courses/art/dsa) — Statement and portfolio coaching for secondary applicants
- [Book an Art Trial (from $18)](https://ancourage.academy/art) — Begin portfolio and statement coaching at Bishan or Woodlands

## Sources

- [Guide to Artist Statements](https://artprof.org/pro-development/how-to-write-an-artist-statement/) — Art Prof
- [How to Write an Artist Statement](https://thecreativeindependent.com/guides/how-to-write-an-artist-statement/) — The Creative Independent
- [Artist Statement Guidelines](https://www.gyst-ink.com/artist-statement-guidelines) — GYST
- [BA (Hons) Admissions — Entry Requirements](https://www.lasalle.edu.sg/admissions/ba-hons-admissions/entry-requirements) — LASALLE College of the Arts
