Fifteen years ago, Ryan Stanier started cold-calling estate agents across London asking if he could borrow their empty shops for free.
Most ignored him. One handed him the keys.
That tiny pop-up became ArtBeat, then The Other Art Fair, one of the world’s biggest artist-led fair movements, spanning London, Los Angeles, Brooklyn, Sydney, Chicago, Melbourne, and beyond.
But after more than a decade working closely with artists, Ryan kept hearing the same thing:
Art fairs were becoming too expensive.
Booth fees, shipping, framing, travel, marketing, logistics artists were taking enormous financial risks just to be visible.
So, he decided to rebuild the model.
In this episode, Ryan Stanier founder of The Other Art Fair and Fair Play opens up about the changing art world and the realities artists face behind visibility, pricing, and creative survival.
We cover:
The empty London storefront that started everything
Why the art world believed artists “weren’t good at business”
The biggest mistakes artists make at fairs
Why artists struggle to talk about pricing
The heartbreaking thing Ryan still sees at exhibitions
Why Fair Play removed booth fees completely
The emotional connection between artists and collectors
Why visibility in the art world still feels inaccessible
How social media changed the art industry
The artist Ryan still keeps on his wall years later
Whether you’re an emerging artist, a collector, or someone trying to understand how the art world really works behind the scenes, this episode is a rare look at the systems shaping creative careers today.
Pull up a chair. this conversation might change how you think about the art world.