Anyone searching for an artist's name today will first land on Google, and what appears there often shapes the initial impression more strongly than the work itself. For artists who take their work seriously, their own website has long been more than just a digital shop window. It's both a gallery and a business card, the place where collectors, curators, and fans get a complete picture, instead of just seeing a single post while scrolling.
And it begins with a single decision: the domain name. Ideally, it bears the artist's own name and thus functions like a digital signature, under which work, exhibitions, and contacts can be permanently gathered in one fixed location.
Your own domain name as a digital signature: How artists become visible online. Photo by Glenn Carstens-Peters @glenncarstenspeters, via Unsplash
It all starts with a simple, often underestimated step: registering your own suitable domain namebefore someone else claims it. Short, common names and popular extensions like .de or .com are quickly taken, and once a name is registered, it's almost impossible to reclaim it, even with the best intentions on both sides.
Securing your artist name early on gives you more flexibility for everything that follows: the website itself, but also an email address that ends with your own name instead of a free email provider. A message to a gallery or collector has a noticeably different impact when the sender and domain match, rather than when it's sent from a generic free address that could belong to a thousand other senders tomorrow.
Why a fixed address counts more than a profile
Instagram, TikTok, or portfolio platforms offer rapid visibility, but they remain unfamiliar territory. Ultimately, what visitors see is determined by the platform's algorithm, not the artist themselves. Communication scientist Anna Sophie Kümpel from LMU Munich describes this dependence on the rules of individual platforms as a structural characteristic of social networks: it decides which content an audience sees at all, regardless of how relevant or carefully crafted it is.
A dedicated website with its own domain name completely defies this logic. There, the order in which works are displayed remains with the artist, not a recommendation system. Collectors, galleries, and fans can find what they want to see, regardless of how a feed is sorted on any given day, and a link on a business card or in an exhibition invitation reliably leads to the same place, even years later.
What makes a good artist name online
Not every name is equally suitable as a domain name. It should be short, easy to remember, and simple to type, without hyphens or numbers that are difficult to pronounce verbally. Your own legal name or an established pseudonym usually works best because it's already associated with your work and leads directly to the correct address in a search. The domain extension also plays a role: A .de domain signals a local presence to German-speaking collectors and galleries, while .com remains internationally understandable.
DENIC registryfor all .de domains, states that .de domain names shape the visibility and identity of millions of people, companies, and, explicitly, creative projects. For an artist, this means specifically: the domain name influences how serious a presentation appears, even before the first work is loaded. Anyone still unsure about ranking can find information in an article about the role of SEO for the art industry , explaining how search engines make artists and their work discoverable in the first place, long before someone directly enters the name.
From name to platform
With a secured domain, the next step almost follows automatically: a website that brings together portfolio, biography, and contact information, as well as an address for exhibitions, catalogs, and press releases, where visitors immediately recognize who owns the site. Those who want to keep an eye on their budget will find a promising starting point in the overview of affordable website solutions for artists , ensuring that a tight budget doesn't prevent a professional online presence.
Crucially, the domain name must remain consistent across all channels: in the Instagram profile name, on business cards at exhibition openings, and in every email to a gallery. Over time, this creates brand recognition that grows independently of individual platforms because it is tied to a specific address, not an account.
A captivating name won't sell a single work; it merely ensures that people searching for something actually find it, whether through a Google search, a recommendation, or a handwritten note from an exhibition. Securing your domain today lays the foundation for a digital home that belongs to you, not to the next update of some stranger's algorithm.
Owner and Managing Director of Kunstplaza . Publicist, editor, and passionate blogger in the fields of art, design, and creativity since 2011. Graduated with a degree in web design from university (2008). Further developed creative techniques through courses in freehand drawing, expressive painting, and theatre/acting. Profound knowledge of the art market gained through years of journalistic research and numerous collaborations with key players and institutions in the arts and culture sector.
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