You recently hit a major career milestone. You secured representation with a promising out-of-state gallery, spent weeks finalizing your best pieces, and shipped a significant body of work across the country.
Then, the communication suddenly dries up. The consignment agreement takes weeks to finalize, and the gallery manager barely acknowledges that the crates arrived safely. Months drift by, and you haven’t seen a single sale.
Your mind immediately starts racing. “Did they hate the work in person? Are my prices too high? What do I have to do just to get a response around here?”
Stop right there. The waiting period after delivering your artwork isn’t a signal to panic, and it certainly isn’t a cue to discount your prices. It is an operational pause—a critical window of time you must ruthlessly protect and use to rebuild your strained inventory.
The Danger of the Knee-Jerk Reaction
When sales don’t materialize instantly, the immediate reaction is almost always driven by anxiety. You assume the market has rejected you. You might even reach out to the gallery and suggest lowering the prices to force a quick win.
I recently watched an artist navigate this exact scenario. After months of silence, they finally got the gallery owner on the phone and offered to slash their retail prices. To the owner’s immense credit, the response was a flat rejection: “Whoa, hold on. No. We reviewed your work, we feel the pricing is appropriate, and we simply need to give it time.”
In the art business, results are rarely instantaneous. You cannot control the foot traffic walking into the gallery. You cannot control how quickly a gallery director responds to your emails. You can, however, completely control your own production effort.
1. Expect the Administrative Silence
There is no “normal” when it comes to gallery communication. Different directors have different operational habits, and a lack of immediate communication does not equate to a lack of enthusiasm for your work.
What feels like an agonizing eternity to you is often just a standard administrative backlog for the gallery. They are receiving inventory, fielding collector inquiries, and managing daily putting-out-of-fires. You need to deploy patience and persistence.
If you haven’t heard anything, it is perfectly acceptable to send a brief, polite email asking for confirmation that the crates arrived. But once you know the work is safe, you must step back.
2. Shift Your Focus Back to the Studio
Think about what it took to get those six major pieces out the door. You likely spent months preparing that specific shipment. That immense push strained your production process and left your personal inventory heavily depleted.
Instead of hitting refresh on your email inbox, view this gallery’s slow momentum as a gift. This is your chance to catch up. The gallery is doing the heavy lifting of displaying and marketing the work, freeing you to get back behind the easel.
A Strategic Framework for the Waiting Period
To keep yourself grounded during the inevitable silence, rely on these operational rules:
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Replenish your core inventory: Turn your nervous energy into creative output. Use the quiet weeks to replace the exact volume of work you just shipped out.
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Maintain your pricing integrity: Never offer a discount to a new gallery just because the initial launch feels slow. Trust the value established when the relationship began.
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Accept the timeline: Know that in the art world, momentum builds gradually. A piece might sit for four months, only to be sold to a collector who needed time to measure their wall.
One Final Takeaway
Results are guaranteed to follow effort, but we rarely get to dictate the timeline. Let the gallery do their job at their pace. Keep your hands busy, keep your mind out of the gallery’s inbox, and focus entirely on creating your next great body of work.
Question for Readers
Have you ever experienced this frustrating radio silence after delivering a major shipment to a new gallery? How do you keep your productivity high when you’re waiting for that first sale?
This is all great advice, Jason.
An artist’s work is deeply personal to them so it is so easy to be anxious when you hear nothing about it. The advice to shift attention back to the studio is extremely helpful. Creating new work gives an artist somewhere to focus their attention until they get word about receipt or sale of work that has gone out to a gallery. Creating new work is exciting and should ease the anxiety that might arise while waiting for word from the gallery.
Thanks for another thoughtful post.
Is it typical a gallery accepts a tranche of work without a specific opening to announce the work and just holds/displays it in their inventory? Galleries I’ve worked at only did this for a few key pieces of best selling artists. Could you speak to the different types of gallery contracts around this please? Thanks.
Any expectations an artist has about the showing of their art – on a regular basis, or in a show (individual or otherwise) should be explicitly discussed prior to shipping their art, and then reduced to writing in the contract between the gallery and the artist. Then there is never any disappointment, or if there is, there will be recourse available, because that too, will be covered in the contract. There is no “regular” way that galleries handle these matters. Each gallery differs. And often the differences will vary by season, and by their current profitability. Some galleries have their shows in summer, when traffic is best. Some have annual shows, or biannual. Some have shows for new artists, or only prominent artists, or only group shows. The variation is enormous. Artists – investigate before signing, and then reduce your understanding to a clause in the written contract you will always have with each representing gallery. If you fail to do this, you only have yourself to blame when things go south. Also, if you ship your art over state lines, it is possible to get the FBI to investigate problems, because it is interstate commerce. They helped me once, long ago. But it took a very long time to get results. I write as an artist and art dealer for almost 50 years. Good luck to you all.