There is no single job title for someone working in fine or visual arts. Some people work primarily as practising artists. Others work in roles that support artists, exhibitions, collections, audiences, communities or creative projects. Many people combine several of these areas across their career
Practising artist
Practising artists create original work and develop a professional artistic practice over time. This might involve making and exhibiting work, selling work, applying for residencies, securing funding, undertaking commissions, collaborating with other artists or organisations, and building relationships with galleries, curators, collectors, commissioners, communities and audiences.
Artists may work across one or several forms, including painting, sculpture, printmaking, photography, moving image, performance, installation, sound, digital art, public art, participatory work or socially engaged practice.
Many artists are self-employed or freelance, and their income is often project-based. Some are represented by galleries, but many develop their careers independently through open calls, artist-led spaces, studios, festivals, online platforms, residencies, commissions and networks.
A practising artist’s work may include:
- Studio-based or exhibition practice: developing work for exhibitions, galleries, artist-led spaces, degree shows, open studios, prizes, residencies or collections.
- Public art: creating work for public spaces, buildings, landscapes, regeneration projects, festivals, local authorities, cultural organisations or commercial developments. This may include sculpture, murals, installations, participatory projects, memorials, digital works or temporary interventions.
- Community or socially engaged practice: working with people, groups or communities to develop creative projects. This might take place in schools, hospitals, prisons, youth settings, charities, community centres, arts organisations, local authorities, health and wellbeing settings or public spaces.
- Digital, moving image or interdisciplinary practice: working across film, video, sound, animation, creative coding, gaming, immersive technology, virtual reality, augmented reality, performance, installation, data, online platforms or interactive media.
These areas often require more than creative ability alone. Artists may need to write proposals, respond to briefs, manage budgets, document their work, communicate with non-specialist audiences, collaborate with partners, and evidence the impact or context of their practice.
Useful links:
- Prospects: Fine artist
- National Careers Service: Fine artist
- Artquest: How-to guides for artists
- Artquest: Types of artist commission
- CuratorSpace: Opportunities
- National Careers Service: Community arts worker
- Film London: FLAMIN
- LUX: Artists’ moving image
Artist assistant or studio assistant
Artist assistants and studio assistants support practising artists with the practical, creative and administrative aspects of their work. This may include preparing materials, organising studio spaces, researching, photographing work, supporting production, installing exhibitions, managing archives, coordinating suppliers, helping with social media or assisting with commissions.
These roles can be a useful way to understand how professional artists work and to build networks in the sector. Some roles are advertised, but many opportunities are found through personal contacts, tutors, alumni, studios, galleries and speculative approaches.
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Art technician or exhibition technician
Art technicians and exhibition technicians support the production, handling, installation and maintenance of artworks and exhibitions. They may work in galleries, museums, universities, studios, theatres, festivals, art fairs, auction houses or with freelance artists.
The work can involve installing exhibitions, building displays, handling artworks, preparing materials, using tools and equipment, managing lighting or AV, packing and transporting work, and solving practical problems. Technical confidence, attention to detail, health and safety awareness and practical problem-solving are important.
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Gallery assistant or front-of-house role
Gallery assistants, invigilators and front-of-house staff support the day-to-day running of galleries, museums, exhibitions and arts spaces. They may welcome visitors, answer questions, supervise galleries, support events, assist with sales, help with opening nights or provide administrative support.
These roles can be a good entry point into the visual arts sector. They can help you understand audiences, exhibitions, artists, programming and the practical running of arts organisations.
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Arts administrator or programme assistant
Arts administrators and programme assistants help arts organisations, galleries, festivals, studios and cultural projects run effectively. They may support events, exhibitions, artist liaison, finance, marketing, fundraising, communications, evaluation, ticketing, volunteer coordination, project planning or general office administration. This can be a strong route for students who enjoy the arts but also have organisational, communication and project management skills. It can also sit alongside an artistic practice.
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Curatorial assistant or exhibitions assistant
Curatorial assistants and exhibitions assistants support the research, planning, organisation and delivery of exhibitions, collections displays, public programmes or artist projects. They may carry out research, liaise with artists, write interpretation text, support loans, coordinate installation, assist with catalogues or help organise talks and events. Some curatorial roles, particularly in museums and major institutions, may require postgraduate study or specialist knowledge. However, there are entry-level roles and internships where research, organisation, communication, writing and visual analysis are valuable.
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Gallery educator, learning officer or workshop facilitator
Gallery educators, learning officers and workshop facilitators develop creative learning opportunities for schools, families, young people, adults, community groups or specific audiences. They may design workshops, deliver sessions, produce learning resources, support public programmes or work with artists to create participatory projects.
These roles suit people who enjoy communication, teaching, facilitation and public engagement. Experience with young people, communities, education, volunteering, tutoring, outreach or widening participation can be useful.
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Art teacher, lecturer or academic
Some artists move into teaching in schools, further education, higher education or adult learning. School teaching usually requires a teaching qualification. Teaching in higher education often requires postgraduate study, a developing research profile, exhibitions, publications, professional practice or a combination of these. Many artists combine teaching with their own practice. This can provide income, structure, networks and opportunities to continue developing creative and critical work.
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Art therapist
Art therapy is a specialist profession that uses art-making within a therapeutic relationship. It requires approved postgraduate training and professional registration. This route may appeal to students interested in creativity, communication, mental health and wellbeing, but it should not be treated as a direct extension of being an artist. Research the qualification route carefully before committing to this path.
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Art writer, critic or editor
Art writers, critics and editors write about artists, exhibitions, visual culture, institutions, collections, arts policy or creative practice. They may work freelance or for magazines, journals, newspapers, publishers, galleries, museums, websites, agencies or cultural organisations.
This route suits students who enjoy writing, research, criticism, interviews, editing and communicating complex ideas clearly. Building a portfolio of published or self-initiated writing is important.
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Arts marketing, communications or fundraising
Arts marketing, communications and fundraising roles help cultural organisations reach audiences, promote exhibitions, raise income, build relationships and explain the value of their work. These roles may involve social media, newsletters, press, campaigns, audience development, donor communications, grant applications, events, membership, sponsorship or evaluation. They can be a good fit for students who are interested in visual arts but want to use communication, writing, digital, relationship-building or strategic skills.
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Illustrator, concept artist or applied visual artist
Some fine art students move into applied visual roles, including illustration, concept art, storyboarding, graphic art, artworking, animation, visual development, publishing, editorial illustration, advertising, games, film, theatre or commercial image-making. These areas often have different application expectations from fine art practice. You may need a portfolio that shows your ability to work to a brief, adapt style, communicate ideas clearly and produce work for a specific audience, client or platform.
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