Websites for Art Galleries

An art gallery website should help people understand exhibitions, plan visits and take part in public programmes. We design gallery websites that present collections and events clearly while meeting accessibility, GDPR, multilingual and public sector procurement requirements.

Worldwide.svg

Exhibition clarity · Visit planning · Accessible access · Multilingual publishing

What are the benefits?

For many visitors, a gallery website is the first point of contact with an exhibition, artist or learning programme. It needs to explain what is on, why it matters, who it is for and how to visit, without making people search across multiple pages or documents. For public institutions, it also needs to support accessible access to culture, clear event administration, multilingual communication and reliable publishing processes.

When exhibition pages include only a title, date and image, visitors may not understand the theme, relevance or featured artists. This makes it harder for the gallery to engage different audiences, support interpretation and encourage visits.

If opening times, ticketing, location, transport details and accessibility information are spread across different pages, visitors struggle to plan with confidence. This creates avoidable enquiries and can discourage families, schools, tourists and visitors with specific access needs.

Educational sessions, guided tours and workshops often require booking, but unclear forms and manual follow-up create unnecessary work for staff. Visitors may be unsure whether they are registered, what to expect or what information they need to provide.

If key content is difficult to read, navigate or use with assistive technologies, some visitors are excluded from information about exhibitions and events. For public sector organisations, accessibility is not optional and should be built into the website from the start.

Structured exhibition pages

Each exhibition can be presented with curatorial context, artist information, dates, visuals, related events and practical visitor details in a consistent format.

Visitor information hub

Opening hours, ticket information, directions, accessibility arrangements and contact details are brought together in one clear section so visitors can plan before they arrive.

Booking for public programmes

Workshops, tours and educational activities can use straightforward registration flows with confirmations, capacity handling and GDPR-conscious data collection.

Accessibility review and improvement

We review templates, navigation, content structure and user journeys against recognised accessibility standards so the website is more usable for a wider public.

Ongoing support and monitoring

We provide structured maintenance, content support and regular reviews so the website remains reliable, secure and aligned with institutional needs over time.

FAQ

Visitors need enough context to decide whether an exhibition is relevant and worth attending. Clear summaries, artist information and practical details also support education, media use and internal consistency across the site.

At minimum, visitors should be able to find opening times, ticketing, location, transport options, accessibility arrangements and contact details without searching across multiple pages. If the gallery runs events, the website should also explain booking steps and what to expect on arrival.

In many cases, yes. Public galleries often need to meet stricter requirements for accessibility, multilingual content, GDPR compliance, procurement processes and transparent public information.

The gallery should be the owner of the infrastructure.

Do you want more people to discover exhibitions and plan their visits?

🇱🇹 🇬🇧 🇩🇪 🇪🇸 🇫🇷 🇬🇷 🇮🇹 🇵🇱 🇵🇹 🇹🇷