Gallery Wall
Art, prints, photography — high price, low quantity
Your 10x10 becomes a small gallery. The back wall does most of the work — hanging art, framed prints, or a slatwall run — and the front tables carry just a sample, unframed prints in a bin, and checkout. Fewer pieces, higher prices, longer conversations, quieter booth overall. This is the right layout when each piece sells for enough that you earn the sale with a conversation, not with volume. The aesthetic matters too: a back wall styled as a single composition reads as a destination from 30 feet, which is how you pull art buyers from across a venue. Less is more — the moment the front tables clutter up, the gallery feel collapses.
What you’ll use
The pieces that make up this layout. Each color matches the category pill you’ll see in the editor — so the diagram above reads the same as the app.
- 2×Art HangerDisplays
- 1×Print BinDisplays
- 1×Payment CounterTables
Tips from the setup
- 01
Hang the back as a single composition, not a grid. Movement beats symmetry.
- 02
Light the work. A pair of battery spot lights on the top bar transforms the booth.
- 03
Use a print bin for unframed work at a lower price. Gives a buyer a smaller yes to start with.
- 04
Your chair goes behind the register, not against the back wall. Stay approachable without blocking the art.
Other layouts to consider
Make this layout your own
Free to start. Move things around to match your actual gear. Save it once, reuse it every event.