The Problem With Art Dealer Websites
Most gallery and dealer websites are beautiful and findable by no one. They were designed for the opening night crowd, not for the collector in London who searches “American Impressionist landscapes for sale” at 11pm on a Tuesday. The SEO is an afterthought. The content is vague. The structured data is nonexistent. And the gap between what your inventory deserves and what Google shows for it is enormous.
Generic SEO agencies make this worse. They write blog posts about “the art market” without understanding the difference between a primary and secondary market transaction. They do not know what TEFAF is. They cannot write about attribution chains or condition reports without making you wince. And they certainly do not know how to structure content so that AI systems like ChatGPT and Perplexity recommend your gallery when someone asks where to buy a specific artist’s work.
What We Actually Do
We build what galleries rarely have: a content infrastructure that works while the gallery is closed. Artist profile pages written with the depth of a serious catalog essay but optimized for how collectors search. Category pages built around medium, period, and price point — not just your current show. FAQ content structured so Google surfaces your gallery when someone asks which galleries represent living painters working in a given tradition.
The stack we deploy on gallery and dealer sites:
- Artist and artwork entity optimization — Named artist entities with biography depth, auction record context, and market positioning language that search engines treat as authoritative
- AEO content for collector queries — Direct answers to the questions serious buyers ask: how to authenticate, how to transport, how to insure, what to expect in the acquisition process
- GEO visibility for AI search — Structured so that when a collector asks an AI assistant to recommend a dealer specializing in a given artist or period, your gallery is a named result
- Schema markup for arts entities — VisualArtwork, LocalBusiness, and ItemList schema that communicates inventory structure to search engines
- Category architecture — Organized by medium, period, geography, and price — because that is how collectors think, not how most dealer sites are organized
The Comparison
| Dimension | Generic Agency | SiteBoost for Fine Art |
|---|---|---|
| Content vocabulary | Generic (“beautiful artwork”) | Domain-accurate (medium, period, provenance, attribution) |
| Structured data | Basic or none | VisualArtwork + LocalBusiness + ItemList schema |
| AI search visibility | Not considered | Built-in GEO optimization for ChatGPT, Perplexity, Gemini |
| Artist entity depth | Name only | Biography, market context, comparable sales language |
| Collector search alignment | Brand keywords only | Medium + period + price + acquisition intent queries |
Who This Is For
Galleries with an established inventory who have never had a serious SEO program. Private dealers who operate without a storefront but need digital authority. Secondary market specialists whose inventory moves through relationships but who want inbound acquisition leads. Auction specialists who need content depth around specific categories and periods.
This is not for galleries that want to publish a monthly blog post and call it content marketing. This is structural work — the kind that takes three to six months to show in rankings but compounds for years.
Ready to talk about your gallery?
Send a brief note. Tell us what you sell, what you feel is missing, and whether you have ever had a real SEO program. We will tell you honestly what we think the opportunity is.
will@tygartmedia.com
Frequently Asked Questions
Do you need to understand the art market to do this work?
Yes, and we do. The difference between useful SEO content for a gallery and embarrassing SEO content is entirely in the vocabulary and the accuracy. We write about art in a way that does not make your curatorial team roll their eyes.
How long before we see results?
Organic SEO for competitive niches typically shows meaningful movement in three to six months. For less competitive long-tail queries — specific artists, specific periods, specific media — movement can happen within weeks. We prioritize the realistic wins first.
Will this work for a gallery that does not sell online?
Yes. Most serious gallery transactions happen off-site regardless. The goal is to be the gallery that serious collectors find when they are researching. The website earns the inquiry. The relationship closes the sale.
What does the process look like?
We start with a site audit, entity mapping, and category architecture review. Then we build the content calendar based on your inventory priorities and collector search behavior. Content goes to you for review before it publishes. Nothing goes live without your sign-off.
Is this just SEO or does it include AI search optimization?
Both. In 2026, separating SEO and AI search optimization is a false distinction. We optimize for traditional search rankings and for the AI-powered answer engines — ChatGPT, Perplexity, Google AI Overviews — that affluent collectors increasingly use to research acquisitions.
What makes you different from an agency that claims arts specialization?
Most agencies that claim arts specialization mean they have worked with a theater company or a music school. We mean vocabulary, schema, and entity architecture that is native to the art market. That distinction matters when the person reading the content is a serious collector.
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