A body of work isn't finished when the last piece is dry. It's finished when it's presented — chosen, sequenced and spaced so a stranger can walk along the wall and follow your thinking. This is the real finish line of the whole unit: not making the works, but curating them into something that reads as one statement.
How Real Artists' Series Hang Together
When you look at an artist's body of work in a gallery, almost nothing is accidental. The selection comes first — they make far more pieces than they show, then cut hard, keeping only the works that carry the idea and dropping the ones that merely repeat it. Then comes the sequence: which piece greets you, which one you meet in the middle, which one sends you out. A strong show often opens with a clear, welcoming piece, builds through the surprising ones, and ends on something that resolves or lingers. The spacing matters too — generous gaps say "look slowly"; a tight cluster says "read these as one breath."
Sequencing Is Storytelling
Here's the grown-up part: the order of a series changes what it says. Put the dusk piece last and the show feels like a day winding down; put it first and it feels like waking in the dark. Same four works, different story — purely from sequence. Spacing does the same job with rhythm: even gaps feel calm and considered, while a deliberate cluster makes a group of pieces argue with each other. You're not just hanging pictures; you're writing a sentence whose words are artworks.
Curating Your Own
For your series, the job is to be a tough editor of your own work. Lay everything out, pick the pieces that genuinely belong to the idea, and bin the near-duplicates — even good ones. Then sequence them so the wall moves: a way in, a development, a way out. Pin your artist statement at the start so a viewer knows the thread before they walk it. Do that, and a handful of works about one site becomes a small exhibition with a point of view — which is exactly what this unit set out to make.
Why This Is the Real Finish Line
Discovering why a series beats a single picture was the "aha". Planning cohesion and variation made it buildable. Curating it — selecting hard, sequencing for story, spacing for rhythm — is what turns a folder of pieces into a body of work someone could stand in front of and understand. That's mastery, and it's the climax of everything Compositions within landscapes has been building toward.