It’s a frustrating scenario for any artist. You’ve done your market research, established a consistent pricing formula, and successfully secured representation. Then, the gallery reaches out with some disheartening news: they love your work, and their clients admire it, but it just isn’t selling. Their proposed solution? You need to lower your prices.
When a gallery tells you that your art is too expensive, it is incredibly easy to spiral into a tailspin of self-doubt. You might immediately question your worth and consider slashing your rates across the board just to maintain the exhibition space.
But before you devalue your entire body of work, it is crucial to take a step back and look at the bigger picture.
The Real Issue Is Rarely the Price
When a gallery attributes a lack of movement to your pricing, what they are really saying is simply that they are struggling to make sales.
To be exceptionally clear: a gallery would have zero problems with your pricing if your art was flying off the walls. In fact, they would be thrilled, because higher price points mean higher commissions. The requested price drop is often just an attempt to find a quick lever to pull to generate activity.
However, a reduction in price rarely opens the floodgates to a rush of new collectors. If a piece isn’t selling at $800, dropping it to $650 is unlikely to miraculously change the gallery’s momentum. Often, there is something else going on—the mix of art in the gallery, a dip in their overall foot traffic, or a lack of refined sales skills on the floor.
The “Wealthy Neighborhood” Illusion
Artists are often baffled when a gallery asking for a price reduction happens to be located in a highly affluent urban area. Shouldn’t the sales naturally follow the local demographics?
Not always. In many metropolitan areas, the clientele who possess the disposable income to purchase original art are incredibly busy. They are running businesses, managing demanding careers, and rushing through their day-to-day lives. They simply do not have the time or the mindset to stroll into a local gallery on a random Tuesday. Often, these exact same clients don’t make significant art purchases until they are relaxed and on vacation in a dedicated art market.
Sometimes, a gallery looks great on paper, but their specific location and local buying behavior just don’t align.
The Flip Side: When They Want to Raise Your Prices
Interestingly, I recently wrote about the exact opposite problem. As your career expands, you may encounter a gallery in a luxury district—think Aspen or Manhattan—that tells you your prices are actually too low.
In these high-rent zip codes, a gallery owner might look at your price list and say their collectors won’t take the art seriously unless you double the price. As I advised in that article, I usually recommend letting the luxury gallery test that higher price point. If they sell the work like hotcakes, you have just learned your work is undervalued. If a collector shops around and finds your other galleries selling your work for your standard, lower rate, those other galleries suddenly look like a brilliant investment.
But dealing with a gallery that wants to raise your prices is a good problem to have. Dealing with one that wants to lower them requires a much more careful approach.
The Trial Period Compromise
If a gallery insists that lowering your price will secure sales, should you pull your work and walk away? Not necessarily. It is generally better to have representation than to have your artwork sitting unseen in your studio.
It is perfectly acceptable to offer some flexibility and agree to the lower price point, but you should frame it explicitly as a three-month trial. Allow the gallery to run its experiment. If the artwork suddenly starts selling, you can reevaluate. But if the sales remain stagnant, you have proven that the price was never the true barrier.
Maintain Your Value Everywhere Else
While you might allow one struggling gallery to experiment with a discount, do not let their feedback dictate your entire career.
Do not lower the prices on your website, and do not lower your prices when approaching new venues. Stick to your established formula. Use the grace period of that gallery’s “pricing experiment” to actively seek out new representation in markets that can actually sustain your target price points.
Remember, “expensive” and “affordable” are not objective terms; they are entirely relative to the venue and the buyer. Your goal shouldn’t be to shrink your prices to fit a struggling gallery. Your goal should be to find the venues that match your value.
Have You Faced Pressure to Change Your Prices?
Whether it is a gallery asking for a steep discount to move inventory, or a high-end space insisting on “zip code pricing” to match their wealthy clientele, navigating price changes is a delicate balance. Have you ever agreed to a gallery’s request to lower—or raise—your rates? What was the outcome? Share your experiences in the comments below!
I am not based in the USA.
I am about to open a solo show of unframed studies on paper, where the gallery displays such artwork pieces using magnets.
Apparently the market in this area does not buy canvases priced over $900. So, they have asked me to consider dropping my canvas prices to almost one third…
I have offered to simply display them till the end of the week, to demonstrate what happens to a study, and then take my high priced canvases back home with me.
-research your market locations better. if the gallery is wanting to lower prices when most of the adjacent galleries sell art at higher values its a red flag on their procedures. Maybe they are a new gallery without established clientelle. such new operators often seek market share at the lower end where there is less opposition from established marketers. often high end communities are places where the residents do not buy their art [too close to home] . [these are better places to have frame shops dealing with servicing rather than selling. ]
over 50 years i have been told the art is both too expensive and too cheap many times. one client views a thousand dollar piece as worthless where another has a hard time stretching up to that grand height.
Enjoyed this post Jason. I’ve had neither senerios happen to me as of yet….. but will be more prepared if and when it does.
I was in a gallery here in Venice, Florida, for a couple of months. Understand that High season for us is January through April. (When the Northerners come for the winter season) I was in the gallery from October to January. The first couple of months I displayed my acrylic paintings on canvas with custom frames. I priced them – they may have been a little low. Then I changed them out for my Plein Air Oils and let the gallery price them. I thought they were priced a little high, but within reasonable pricing for the area. I did not sell anything. Therefore, I don’t believe the pricing had anything to do with sales. It is also the gallery’s job to promote sales.
The customers have to feel a connection with the painting, regardless of the price. If they love it, they will buy it.
Exactly this happened to me at my first gallery, 6 years ago. They wanted me to halve my prices, it was a terrible blow, but I agreed because I wanted representation. Now I am trying to climb back out of that hole to where I felt I should start, but I haven’t felt able to double them again…yet.
I recently was asked to put my work in a gallery that is just recently opened. The place looks a mess, the artwork there is very different than my more traditional artwork and some of the work is very poor. The gallerist asked me to lower my prices when she hadn’t even hung all my pieces. She said if they start to sell then we will raise the prices. Should I even be in this gallery?
I should have added to my post that the gallery has been open for about 6 months maybe more. My 11×14’s are priced at $400 and a 16 x 20 is at $900. The gallery takes a 50/50 split.