Best Art Podcasts: 12 Shows for Artists (Craft, Business, and Resilience)
Art podcasts are one of the cheapest ways to grow as an artist while your hands are busy. Here are 12 worth your time, grouped by the part of the work they actually help.
The best art podcasts do not just talk about technique. They cover the whole job of being an artist: making the work, staying disciplined, building relationships, marketing yourself, managing money, and surviving the rejection that comes with all of it. Below are 12 shows worth your time, grouped by the part of your career each one actually helps. Pick by the skill you most need right now, queue an episode for your next studio session, and let it feed the work instead of replacing it.
A podcast is one of the cheapest tools an artist has. It costs nothing, it runs while your hands are busy, and the right show at the right moment can shift how you think about your whole practice. The trick is to stop listening at random and start listening on purpose. Choose by your weakest link, not by what sounds most entertaining. If you make good work but nobody sees it, you need a marketing show. If you cannot stay consistent, you need a discipline show. Here is the full list, sorted so you can find that exact thing.
What are the best art podcasts for creative growth?
For creative growth, start with shows that push you to experiment and develop your own voice rather than copy a formula. Growing as an artist means refining your skills and exploring new techniques on purpose, learning from both the work that succeeds and the work that fails. These two shows are about that inner growth, the part that comes before any business decision.
1. The Light Movement by Milan Art Institute. This show explores creativity and spirituality, offering insight for artists who want to grow both artistically and spiritually. It is less about brush technique and more about the mindset and meaning behind the work, which is often the thing that is actually stuck when your paintings feel flat.
2. Creative Pep Talk, hosted by Andy J. Pizza. This one delivers motivational advice for creative entrepreneurs, helping you find the balance between developing as an artist and building a career. It is a good pick for the days when you have the skill but not the will, and you just need someone to remind you why you started.
What are the best podcasts for discipline and professionalism?
For discipline and professionalism, choose shows that treat art like a business with a schedule, goals, and real systems. Success in the art world is built on more than raw talent. It runs on consistency: a clear schedule, defined goals, boundaries between studio time and everything else, and a steady output of work that shows galleries and collectors you are serious. These two shows go deep on building that structure.
3. The Accidental Creative, hosted by Todd Henry. This podcast focuses on helping creatives develop discipline in their work. Henry offers advice on balancing creative passion with the practical demands of maintaining a career, which is the exact tension most artists live in.
4. Business Made Simple, hosted by Donald Miller. Miller shares practical tips for becoming a more professional and effective leader. His focus on building systems applies directly to anyone running their own art business, even a one-person studio. If you have ever felt like the admin side of art is drowning the creative side, start here.
What are the best art podcasts for networking and relationships?
For networking, pick shows that demystify how artists actually connect with galleries, curators, collectors, and each other. Relationships open doors that talent alone does not: exhibitions, collaborations, and commissions you would never find on your own. That network now lives both in person and online, across platforms like Instagram and LinkedIn, so these shows help you think about connection as a craft of its own.
5. Talk Art, with Russell Tovey and Robert Diament. Their interviews give you insight into networking and relationship building in the contemporary art world. The conversations help demystify why connecting with other people in the industry matters as much as the work on your wall.
6. The Collective Podcast, hosted by Ash Thorp. This show brings together creatives from different industries to discuss collaboration, networking, and building a strong creative community. It is a reminder that your people do not all have to be painters, and that cross-pollination often produces the most interesting work.
What are the best art marketing and branding podcasts?
For marketing and branding, choose shows that teach you to tell the world who you are, not just push individual pieces. Marketing as an artist is about building a narrative your audience can connect with, a consistent and authentic message across your website and social platforms that makes your work recognizable as yours. These two shows turn that idea into tactics. For a full walkthrough on the marketing itself, read how to promote your art.
7. Online Marketing Made Easy, hosted by Amy Porterfield. This podcast teaches essential online marketing strategies, including social media tactics and email list building, both of which help artists grow their presence and sell their work. It is not art-specific, which is a strength: the fundamentals of reaching an audience are the same whether you sell paintings or software.
8. Art Marketing Minute, with Eric Rhoads. This one is built for artists specifically. It covers pricing strategies, social media marketing, building an email list, and using online platforms to reach a wider audience. Each episode is filled with actionable tips tailored to artists, so you can market your work without feeling like you are betraying your creative vision.
What are the best podcasts for the financial side of art?
For the money side, pick shows that talk plainly about pricing, budgeting, and building more than one income stream. Managing the financial side of an art career is what makes it sustainable. That means pricing your work based on materials, time, market demand, and experience, budgeting for supplies and exhibition costs, and spreading your income across prints, licensing, teaching, and commissions so a single slow month does not sink you. These shows help you think like an owner. If pricing is where you feel lost, our guide on how to price your paintings gives you a real formula, and how to make money as an artist breaks down the income streams worth building.
9. Creative Boom. This show focuses on the financial and business sides of a creative career, with episodes on pricing art, contracts, and the money topics most artists were never taught. It treats the business of creativity as a skill you can learn, not a betrayal of the art.
10. BiggerPockets Money Podcast. This one is about achieving financial independence through smart money management, side income, and better financial habits. It is not aimed at artists, but the lessons on managing irregular income and building stability apply directly to a creative career where the money rarely arrives on a steady schedule.
What are the best podcasts for resilience and adaptability?
For resilience, choose shows that treat rejection and failure as part of the process rather than proof you should quit. The road to a successful art career is full of slow sales, rejection, and stretches where inspiration feels far away. Those moments are not the end; they are where you either grow stronger or give up too soon. Adaptability matters just as much, because the art world keeps changing and the artists who last are the ones who can pivot. These two shows are about staying in the game.
11. How to Fail, with Elizabeth Day. This podcast celebrates failure as a key part of success, offering lessons in resilience that any artist can relate to when navigating the highs and lows of a career. Hearing accomplished people talk openly about what went wrong is a quiet antidote to the comparison that eats most artists alive.
12. Raw Material, produced by SFMOMA. This show features artists sharing their stories of adapting to challenges in the art world, with real examples of how they kept thriving despite obstacles. It is a good listen for the weeks when you need proof that the struggle you are in is normal and survivable.
How should you actually use these podcasts?
Use them as input that feeds the work, not as a substitute for doing it. The fastest way to waste this list is to binge advice and never act on it. Pick the section that matches the part of your career you are most stuck on right now, choose one show, and queue an episode for your next time at the easel. After a week, write down one concrete thing you heard and actually try it. One acted-on idea beats ten saved episodes.
It also helps to remember why you are listening at all. Podcasts are company for a job that is often done alone. They are most powerful when they push you back toward the work and toward other artists, not deeper into your own head. If the thing actually holding you back is not technique or marketing but the quiet sense that you are not a real artist, that is worth naming too, and our writing on how to overcome creative block and getting out of an art block goes further into it. You can keep exploring that whole theme in our creative block and identity collection whenever you are ready. For now, pick one show, press play, and get back to the easel. If you want a structured place to put all that fresh inspiration to work, our free Two Week Challenge gives you a real practice to start tomorrow.
Frequently asked questions
What are the best art podcasts for artists?
The best art podcasts cover more than technique. For creative growth, The Light Movement and Creative Pep Talk are strong starts. For discipline, The Accidental Creative helps. For marketing, Art Marketing Minute and Online Marketing Made Easy are practical. For money, Creative Boom digs into the business side. The best one for you is the one that fixes the part of your career you are stuck on right now.
Are there podcasts specifically for professional artists?
Yes. Several shows speak directly to working artists who need to run a business, not just make art. Art Marketing Minute with Eric Rhoads covers pricing, social media, and email lists for artists. Creative Boom focuses on contracts and the financial side of a creative career. Business Made Simple teaches systems any solo artist can use to run their studio like a real business.
What podcast is good for the business side of being an artist?
For the business of art, start with Art Marketing Minute for marketing and pricing, Creative Boom for contracts and finances, and Business Made Simple for building repeatable systems. If you want broader money habits, the BiggerPockets Money Podcast covers financial independence and managing income, which matters when your earnings arrive in uneven waves.
Can a podcast actually help me get better at making art?
A podcast will not replace time at the easel, but it changes how you think while you work. Shows on creativity and spirituality help you find your voice, interview shows expose you to how other artists make decisions, and discipline-focused shows help you keep going. Use them as input that feeds the work, not as a substitute for doing it.
How should I choose which art podcast to listen to first?
Choose by your weakest link, not by what sounds most fun. If you make good work but no one sees it, start with a marketing show. If you cannot stay consistent, start with a discipline show. If rejection is grinding you down, start with a resilience show. Fix the part of your career that is actually holding you back.
What to practice this week
- Name the one part of your art career you are most stuck on right now: craft, discipline, marketing, money, or resilience. Pick a podcast from that section and start there.
- Queue one episode for your next studio session and listen while you paint, so the input feeds the work instead of replacing it.
- After a week of listening, write down one concrete action you heard and actually try it, instead of collecting more advice.
Supplies used
The 2-Week Challenge
Ready to take the next step with your art?
- Two weeks, one finished piece you are proud of
- Taught by a working artist, not a hobbyist
- A structure that beats painting alone
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