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Legit art contests: an anti-scam checklist

There are real opportunities online… and a lot of junk. This checklist isn’t about paranoia — it’s about making a decision in two minutes.

1) Is the organizer verifiable?

  • a real official website with real contacts
  • address, team, track record
  • past editions with winners you can verify

If the organizer is a “ghost”, be careful.

2) Are fees transparent?

A fee can be legitimate, but it should be:

  • clear (cost + what it includes)
  • proportional to the rewards
  • consistent (or explained if tiered)

Red flag: high fee + vague rewards.

3) Are rewards specific or fluffy?

“Global exposure” is not a prize. Good rewards are concrete:

  • cash amount
  • exhibition with venue + dates
  • publication with a real publisher/outlet
  • residency with clear duration + what’s included

4) Rights: always read that section

  • non-exclusive promotional license (often fine)
  • exclusive transfer or unlimited commercial usage (warning)

Simple rule: if they can use/sell your work commercially with no compensation, walk away.

5) Is the jury real?

  • full names
  • roles/institutions
  • verifiable profiles

“Jury of experts” with no names = low transparency.

6) Timeline: is it realistic?

  • deadline
  • results date
  • how results are communicated

7) The 60-second rule

If you spot two strong red flags, move on. Use your time on better calls.


Tip: bookmark this page and use it every time you open a listing.

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