So I am in the middle of a learning all sorts of marketing stuff, and one thing this one person keeps going on about is artists who show their art on a black background because it makes their art pop. This particular marketer hates it. She points out that galleries don’t display art on dark walls… Her basic premise is black is a powerful color that can easily overwhelm art. Black distracts from the art even as it draws you in. I dunno about that but I will entertain the notion.
This marketer also says reverse type (white type on a black background) is harder to read than the converse, especially on the web. That argument won me over. I don’t want my visitors straining their eyes trying to read something.
The problem for me is that I had designed both my prints area and my original art areas with backgrounds that were nearly black-they were at least 80–90% neutral gray. I chose the dark color as I did intend to use reverse type, and reverse type becomes more visible the more contrast you give it from the background. On the other hand I didn’t want to go absolute black with my original design, so the nearly black was my compromise.
Fast forward to last week. I did design my site with style sheets which meant I could easily make big color changes. It turns out I set the font color as a page property so I had to find that line of code in all my pages and change it. Fortunately software also allows a find and replace option for all pages in the web so that turned out to be pretty easy too. The biggest hassle was with my images. I have a lot of them set up as a swap image. Swap images have to be the same dimensions, so I have filled out my images with background matching the website background; that meant I had to edit all those images. But its all done I think; I didn’t check each page to make sure, but I did make sure all the images were updated.
So instead of have 80–90% black its now 10–20%% gray backgrounds instead, nearly white-I just can’t bring myself to do pure white-its so boring. All the type is black san serif (serifs are all those embellishments in certain kinds of type like Times New Roman and also make web type harder to read) arial/helvetica family.
So what do you think? I have changed over the art and print sections in their entirety. Is Black type and colorful pictures on white better than White type and colorful pictures on black? Was all that dark gray detracting from my work. This inquiring mind wants to know what her patrons think of the change.
Jake
Artist, AKAJake.com Come Experience the Art!
The art work in this blog is federally copyrighted. All reproduction and publishing copyrights are retained by the artist. Images are not to be copied, re-distributed, imitated, derived OR otherwise used in any form without the explicit written permission of the artist.





