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Art Materials Guide

A practical overview of materials, suppliers, conservation basics and documenting what you use.

Materials affect how an artwork looks, lasts, ships, sells and is described. Artists should understand what they use and record it clearly; collectors and galleries should ask material questions because they affect care, value and conservation.

Best audienceArtists, students, teachers, conservators, collectors and workshop organisers
Location focusAustralia-wide
Use this guide whenA practical overview of materials, suppliers, conservation basics and documenting what you use.

Quick summary

  • Record exact medium and support for each artwork.
  • Keep notes on varnish, fixative, adhesive or unusual materials.
  • Read safety instructions for solvents, resins, sprays and pigments.
  • Store paper, textiles and photographs away from moisture and sunlight.
  • Avoid mixing unknown materials without testing.
  • Use archival materials where longevity matters.
  • Document experimental processes for future conservation.
  • Tell buyers how to care for fragile works.
Art Materials Guide

Why materials matter

Acrylic, oil, watercolour, ink, pastel, charcoal, resin, ceramic, bronze, textiles, paper, digital files and found objects all age differently. Some materials are stable; others fade, crack, yellow, attract mould or become brittle.

Art prizes and galleries often ask for medium details because materials affect installation, conservation, judging categories and safety.

Recording materials

Artists should record brand or type where relevant, support material, ground, varnish, fixative, adhesives, edition paper, printing process or unusual components. This is especially important for mixed media, installation and experimental work.

Collectors benefit from knowing how a work should be handled, cleaned, framed or stored.

Safety and sustainability

Some materials require ventilation, gloves, masks, fire-safe storage or specialist disposal. Artists should read safety data sheets and avoid unsafe studio habits, especially in shared spaces or teaching environments.

Sustainable choices can include lower-toxicity materials, recycled supports, careful waste management and durable construction.

Practical checklist

1. Record exact medium and support for each artwork.

Record exact medium and support for each artwork.

2. Keep notes on varnish, fixative, adhesive or unusual materials.

Keep notes on varnish, fixative, adhesive or unusual materials.

3. Read safety instructions for solvents, resins, sprays and pigments.

Read safety instructions for solvents, resins, sprays and pigments.

4. Store paper, textiles and photographs away from moisture and sunlight.

Store paper, textiles and photographs away from moisture and sunlight.

5. Avoid mixing unknown materials without testing.

Avoid mixing unknown materials without testing.

6. Use archival materials where longevity matters.

Use archival materials where longevity matters.

7. Document experimental processes for future conservation.

Document experimental processes for future conservation.

8. Tell buyers how to care for fragile works.

Tell buyers how to care for fragile works.

Common mistakes to avoid

Writing vague medium descriptions

Mixed media is not enough if the work contains unstable or unusual materials.

Ignoring safety data

Sprays, solvents and resins can create health risks.

No testing

Some adhesives, varnishes and supports fail over time.

No care advice

Collectors need to know if works are light-sensitive or fragile.

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