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Features
Overview AI workspace agentArt inventory managementCollector client portalConsignment managementEditions and print runsGallery CRMGallery website builderPayments and invoicingPrivate viewing roomsSales pipelineViewing room alerts
Solutions
Art fairs & festivalsPrivate & secondary salesSoftware for art advisorsSoftware for art dealersSoftware for museums
Compare
Art.industries vs ArtBinderArt.industries vs ArtCloudArt.industries vs ArtfolioArt.industries vs ArtGalleriaArt.industries vs ArtlogicArt.industries vs Artwork Archive

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Inventory Management Pricing & Selling Art

June 1, 2026

Edition numbering and inventory IDs for artists without a registrar on staff

How to assign stable inventory numbers, model editions and proofs, and keep studio records ready for gallery consignment — before someone retypes your work into their system.

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Artists without a registrar still need registrar discipline. Galleries hesitate to consign work when edition counts are ambiguous, inventory numbers change between studio visits, and titles vary by three spellings across email. The studio that arrives with clean records gets wall time faster; the one that says "I'll send dimensions later" waits.

Edition numbering and inventory IDs are not bureaucracy. They are how you protect pricing, provenance, and credit when your work enters someone else's inventory graph.

Choose an inventory numbering scheme and keep it

There is no single correct format. Common patterns include year-sequence (2026-014), medium prefix plus sequence (P-2026-014 for painting), or artist initials plus chronology. Pick one, document it in studio notes, and never reuse a number — even if a work was destroyed or never released.

Inventory numbers should appear on the physical label, in your catalogue, and on any certificate you issue. Collectors and estates rely on that string for decades.

Editions, APs, and proofs as structured records

An edition of ten is not "ten similar paintings." It is one conceptual work with traceable copies. Record total edition size, the number of artist proofs and bon à tirer if they exist, and which positions are available vs sold vs reserved.

When a gallery consigns 3/10, they need to know 3/10 — not "the third one," which could mean third made or third in the edition depending on studio habit. Align on fractional notation early.

Titles, translations, and alt titles

Store the primary title in your working language and add translations when you routinely exhibit abroad. Alternate titles ("Working title: Blue Room") belong as variants, not silent renames that confuse consignment contracts.

When a gallery imports your CSV, matching titles and inventory numbers prevent duplicate rows that fragment provenance.

Dimensions and medium once, used everywhere

Record unframed dimensions for studio reference and framed dimensions when frames exist. Medium strings should be consistent across your site, room PDFs, and COAs — "acrylic on canvas," not three phrasings for the same piece.

Photograph finished work before it leaves the studio. The image you attach to the record becomes the one fairs, rooms, and invoices inherit.

When you hand off to a gallery

Export or share a consignment-ready subset: inventory number, title, year, medium, dimensions, edition position, retail policy, and high-resolution image. If the gallery runs on structured inventory, your cleanliness reduces their retyping and your risk of stale public listings under wrong details.

Art.industries supports edition hierarchies, title translations, and CSV import with artist upsert — studios that maintain one graph can invite galleries into shared visibility without losing control of studio-only notes. Even before that, adopting the same field discipline galleries expect makes you the artist registrars prefer to call back.

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