As an artist, trying to develop a resume for job applications might feel a little more challenging than if you were, say, a salesperson or accountant. Its difficult to quantify your accomplishments and isnt easy to prove your skills without also presenting your portfolio.
Nevertheless, employers require resumes as part of the application process. Its up to you to present yourself in the best possible light.
Here are a few tips for an
artist resume that stands out, grabs attention, and helps you land competitive opportunities:
1. Keep it Professional
Think twice before you start taking massive creative liberties with your resume. You might think youre helping yourself stand out by changing fonts and colors, including images and artwork, or moving sections around, but youre probably just confusing the person making the hiring decision.
Resumes work because theyre streamlined and predictable. The person on the reviewing end might be evaluating 30 or 40 different resumes. They need to be able to find the information theyre looking for right away. If you force them to search, you could find your resume at the bottom of the stack.
But Im an artist! How can I show off my creativity? Good question. Thats what your cover letter and portfolio are for. Youll have plenty of opportunities to show off your creativity, skills, and past work here.
Let your resume serve the purpose of highlighting your experience.
2. Use the Right Layout
If the job position or opportunity that youre applying for has specific resume requirements, always follow them exactly as theyre laid out. However, if theres no requirement, its best to use a standardized approach. (You can see some
examples of artist resumes here.)
Generally speaking, youll want to include the following sections (likely in this order):
Header
Personal information
Title
Summary
Skills
Professional experience
Education
Certifications and training
Awards and recognition
3. Dont Fluff it Up
Quality is more important than quantity on a resume. Its not about using as many words as possible or making your resume as long as you can. Its about showing that youre a qualified candidate. You do this by emphasizing quality. Leave out the fluffy language and filler sections. Focus on your most important experiences and skills to show that youre the right person for the opportunity.
4. Add Your Contact Details
Make sure you include multiple forms of contact information on your resume so that you can be reached. This includes a personal phone number, email address, and mailing address. Its also a good idea to include a direct link to your website or online portfolio.
If the resume is in a digital PDF format, you can include hyperlinks that direct people to the URL destination when clicked. If its a paper resume, you obviously cant do this. However, its still worth including the links.
5. Leave Off Irrelevant Experience
As mentioned, quality matters more than quantity. Theres no need to trace back 25 years on your job experience section and highlight part-time gigs you had while in high school. If the job doesnt have any relevance to the current position youre applying for and/or it was more than a couple of decades ago, its probably not worth including. Focus on the relevant experience. This shows employers that youre a focused individual.
6. Deliver in Person
While hiring managers and business owners often use resumes to help them sort through candidates, its admittedly tough to get a full picture of who someone is particularly an artist with a sheet of paper.
If you want to stand your best chance of getting noticed, make it a point to deliver your resume/application in person. This helps put a face to a name. Most of your peers will not do this, so it gives you an immediate advantage from the get-go.
Make Your Art Resume Stand Out
If you arent careful, your application can blend in with the dozens of other applications that are submitted for the opportunity youre interested in. And as any artist knows, blending in is never the goal. You need to stand out, grab attention, and maximize engagement.
While the resume itself isnt necessarily the best place to do something groundbreaking and innovative, its one of the more
important components involved in the application process. Use it with a cover letter, portfolio, and other forms of outreach to grab attention and move your application to the top of the stack!