Avoid These Common Curator Resume Mistakes
Boost your chances of landing the perfect museum role with a polished, ATS‑friendly resume.
Common Mistakes That Kill Your Chances
Each mistake includes why it hurts, how to fix it, and before/after examples
- Hiring managers can’t gauge seniority
- ATS may not match keywords
- Replace generic titles with specific roles (e.g., 'Assistant Curator – Contemporary Art')
- Add department and focus area
Curator, XYZ Museum
Assistant Curator – Contemporary Art, XYZ Museum
- Resume looks like a list of duties
- ATS scores lower on achievement metrics
- Add numbers, visitor counts, budget sizes, acquisition values
- Show measurable outcomes
Managed exhibitions and coordinated loans.
Managed 8 exhibitions attracting 45,000 visitors and secured $200k in loaned artworks.
- ATS may split the information
- Hiring managers waste time parsing format
- Use a consistent format: Title, Venue, City, Dates, Role
‘Modern Visions’, 2022, New York
Modern Visions – Exhibition Curator, Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY, 03/2022 – 09/2022
- ATS may not recognize niche acronyms
- Readers may be confused
- Spell out acronyms on first use
- Explain specialized tools (e.g., TMS, CMS)
Utilized TMS for collection management.
Utilized Museum Collection Management System (TMS) to catalog 3,200 artifacts.
- Use a clear, professional header with contact info
- Write a concise summary highlighting curatorial focus
- List exhibitions with consistent formatting
- Quantify visitor numbers, budgets, or acquisitions
- Include relevant museum software and research tools
- Add education and any curatorial fellowships
- Proofread for spelling and grammar
- Save as PDF with a clean file name
- Trim to 2 pages
- Add measurable impact metrics
- Standardize exhibition titles
- Insert relevant museum software keywords