♀ Women Artists

Selling Work by Women Artists

The market moment is now. Collectors actively seek women-created art, auction prices are rising faster than the overall market, and museums are building dedicated collections.

Market Overview

Women artists are experiencing unprecedented market recognition. Collectors explicitly seek women-created work as an identified buying category. Major institutions—MoMA, Tate, the Guggenheim—are prioritizing women artists for acquisitions, increasing perceived value and price floors. Auction records for women artists are rising faster than the broader market. Women comprise the majority of art collectors globally, and they actively support women artists. Work by Judy Chicago, Cindy Sherman, Kara Walker, and Louise Bourgeois demonstrates the full commercial and critical ceiling. This is the decade of women artists, and direct sales eliminate the institutional gatekeeping that historically limited access.

Selling Tips

Price confidently—women artists historically underpriced work relative to male counterparts at equivalent career stages. Research comparable prices and price within that range, not below it. Plan 10–15% annual price increases; this creates urgency and signals market growth. Own your perspective: if your identity, gender, or experience shapes your work, make this central—collectors seek exactly this. Reference your lineage explicitly: positioning yourself within the tradition of Judy Chicago, Cindy Sherman, or Maria Lassnig contextualizes your significance. Don’t apologize for ambition. Build community with other women artists—collective visibility amplifies individual reach in this market.

Own Your Market Moment

Women artists find passionate collectors on MoveArt. Direct sales, fair pricing, and global reach—AI-matched to buyers who actively seek women-created work.

Start My Campaign — From $149

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