Leo+DadMade for Leo
Proposing a Street Artwork
Rung 3 of 3 · Mastery

Pitching It for Real

Where it all pays off: how public art actually gets commissioned, and how you stand up and pitch yours.

Postmodern & conceptual frame Builds on: how to do it

Build Snap your site, concept, message and mock-up into one tidy pitch card you could actually present — then write the artist statement that ties it together.
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Audio WalkthroughDad & Leo, Two Minutes — Coming Soon
Video ExplainerComing Soon

You've got an idea, a site, a mock-up. Now comes the part that turns a design into a commission: the pitch. This is the rung where everything you've made gets argued for out loud — to a class, a teacher, a council panel, a building owner — and where you write the short, sharp artist statement that does the arguing when you're not in the room. It's also the literal finish line of the whole year, so let's make it count.

How Public Art Actually Gets Chosen

Real murals get commissioned through a process that's surprisingly ordinary. A council or a business decides a wall needs art and puts out a call — a brief saying what they're after, the budget, the deadline. Artists respond with a proposal: site, concept, audience, mock-up, costs, all the things you've been building. A panel reads the lot, often shortlists a few, and sometimes asks the artists to present in person. The one that wins isn't always the prettiest design — it's the one that's argued best: the artist who can say why this, why here, why now, clearly and with confidence.

That's the quiet lesson of this whole concept. Talent gets you the design; the pitch gets you the wall. Learning to assemble and present your idea is a genuinely professional skill, and it's exactly what a public artist does for a living.

The move: don't present your drawing; present your argument. Lead with the concept and the audience — "this wall, these people, this message" — then let the mock-up prove it. The picture is your evidence, not your whole case.

The Artist Statement That Does the Work

When you can't be there, your artist statement speaks for you. It's short — a paragraph or two — and it answers the questions a panel always has: what is this work about, who is it for, why does it suit this site, and what do you want people to feel or think as they pass? Written well, it makes the panel see the finished wall in their heads. Written badly, it's a list of materials nobody reads.

In the toy, you'll snap your site, concept, message and mock-up together into a single pitch card — the kind of one-pager a real artist hands across the table — and draft the statement that ties it off. It's deliberately the same shape as a professional public-art submission, scaled down to something you could actually present in class. Build one you'd be proud to stand behind, and you've done the real thing.

Why This Is the Real Finish Line

Working out why the proposal comes first was the "aha". Designing and mocking up for a real site made it solid. Standing up and pitching it — concept, audience, mock-up, statement, all in one confident go — that's mastery. It's the skill that turns an idea in your head into colour on a wall the whole suburb walks past, and it's the note this entire year of Visual Arts has been climbing towards. Nice work getting to the top.

Us, Thinking Out Loud

If we had ninety seconds in front of a real council panel, which one sentence would we lead with?

Whose street art around our place would we fund if we ran the panel — and could we say why in a single line?

Of everything we've built this year, which toy do you most want to come back and play with again?