June brought a set of practical updates across Artlope. The focus was on making the existing workflow easier to reuse, easier to present, and easier to control.
The profile area became more useful for professional documents. You can now add work history to your profile, and that information can appear in your CV and in portfolio work history sections. CV export also improved. In addition to PDF, you can now download your CV as a DOCX file, which makes it easier to edit or send on when a gallery, curator, or institution asks for a document they can work with directly.
Artworks received a few important additions. You can now store frame information in artwork records, which helps when installation details matter. Sale records can now include one attachment, such as an invoice or another sale-related document, so the financial trail stays closer to the artwork itself. Artworks also gained more precise website visibility controls. Instead of only relying on the general website settings, you can now decide that a specific work should always be shown or never be shown.
Website control became more flexible in general. If you want your public site to feel fuller, you can now choose which works should visible there. Exhibitions also got better website support. They can now include an external link, and you can decide whether that link should appear on the public exhibition page. This is useful for linking out to a venue page, ticket page, press page, or event announcement without needing to repeat the information elsewhere.
Exhibitions and submissions are now easier to reuse. Both can be cloned, which is helpful when you are preparing something similar to an earlier application or planning a new exhibition based on an existing structure. When adding artworks to exhibitions or submissions, search is also more helpful now. It no longer only looks at artwork titles. It can also find works through category names, which makes larger archives easier to navigate.
The overview pages became more interactive too. On artworks, exhibitions, and submissions, the charts now do more than summarize. You can click into them to filter what you are looking at, and the selected bar is highlighted so it is clearer what part of the archive you are focusing on. That makes it faster to move from overview to action.
There were also a few smaller but very visible improvements. Detail pages now use stronger header visuals, which makes artworks, exhibitions, categories, and submissions easier to scan at a glance. Artlope also keeps better track of your time zone, which helps dates behave more reliably. And when Artlope is temporarily unavailable, the app now shows a clearer retry screen instead of leaving that state ambiguous.
Taken together, the June changes were about reducing repeated work. Reusing old records is easier, CV documents are more flexible, public website choices are more precise, and day-to-day browsing feels clearer.