digital strategy, websites and creative content for artists, estates and cultural organisations

seachange is a collaborative studio with two decades of experience in the commercial art world.

We create websites, shape brand positioning and write strategic content for artists, estates, galleries and cultural institutions.

Each project begins with conversation and unfolds through clarity, craft and collaboration.

Based in Hastings, working internationally.

the studio

creative services to build a lasting digital presence

websites

Bespoke websites designed for the specific needs of artists, estates and cultural organisations. Built for accessibility, longevity and the particular demands of representing creative work online.

Content strategy, creation and ongoing management that builds genuine audience engagement over time. Coherent, sustained and always true to your voice.

social media

Visual identities that reflect the character of an artist, studio or organisation. Grounded in clarity and restraint, and designed to work across digital, print and exhibition contexts.

branding

Writing that articulates creative work with precision and authority. We bring genuine understanding to artist statements, positioning copy, press materials and exhibition texts.

copywriting

Flexible ongoing support that adapts as your needs evolve. From occasional updates to sustained collaboration, we provide consistency and confidence across every stage of a project or practice.

support

We help clients define goals, understand audiences and plan communications that connect clearly and consistently. Strategy is frequently where a wider collaboration begins.

strategy

selected
clients

Yinka Shonibare
Edmund de Waal
Antony Gormley
Michael Craig-Martin
Plus Tate

Jennifer Lauren Gallery
ActionSpace
Art Riot Collective
Jason Wilsher-Mills
William Blake Prints

David Remfry RA
Ben Johnson RA
moholinushk archive
FRANK Artist Management
Ewan Clayton

“ seachange has been a dream to work with and we couldn’t recommend them more.”

– Edmund de Waal studio

faq