This place should be shut down. - Anonymous employee SHIN GALLERY Employee Review

1.0
27 Oct 2020
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I don't normally write reviews, but I feel compelled to after seeing the clearly fake reviews posted by management. In my time at the gallery, I too was asked to post fake reviews. To prospective interns/employees -- DO NOT WORK HERE. No one is treated with respect except wealthy collectors. As an intern/employee, you are viewed as replaceable and treated as such, even if management tries to woo you with compliments. Sure you may gain responsibility, but it only goes so far on your resume since Shin Gallery is largely unknown in the art world, and you have to pay way too heavy of a price: I and others were harassed, bullied, and put in very dangerous situations. I can't believe I stayed there for as long as I did. Please just trust me on this one and wait for another opportunity, even though it's such a difficult time to get a job in the arts. I also feel compelled to address other parties who might see this page. Artists: you are given surface-level respect, but your work is handled by unpaid inexperienced interns and stored in a disgusting basement. Artists SHOULD NOT work with this gallery. And collectors SHOULD NOT lend work to exhibitions -- unless you want unpaid interns handling your Joseph Beuys and Richard Serra. And by handling, I mean literally carrying up and down stairs and placing in a vitrine, or shoving on a basement shelf among vermin droppings.

Cons

Would give 0 stars if possible. Highly unsanitary and unsafe work environment in which you are subject to slurs, stereotypes, and bullying. No salary, no benefits, no real contract, no HR.

SHIN GALLERY Response
5y
Thank you for sharing feedback about your time at Shin Gallery. We sincerely apologize your experience here was seen negatively. As a team, we aim to treat everyone with respect and to meet the concerns of all our interns and staff. If there has been any wrong-doing or miscommunication on our part, please email us directly at info@shin-gallery.com. We take this response very seriously and would be happy to discuss this issue at your earliest convenience. We prefer to have direct and honest feedback in order to better our company. Thank you and we hope to hear from you soon.

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5.0
13 Apr 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
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Pros

Amazing experience. Learned so much.

Cons

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1.0
23 Feb 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great location, good food nearby.

Cons

This is my first ever glassdoor review, and I feel that my experience at Shin Gallery warranted it. I went into this internship knowing nothing about galleries, which perhaps caused me to overlook a few red flags. For reference, I was working concurrently at a second gallery in the city, which allows me to compare these two experiences and understand what is standard for the industry. Firstly, at the time of my internship, Shin did not employ any full- or part-time employees. It is solely him and the few unpaid interns he hires each season. As a result, the gallery is largely disorganized, and numerous responsibilities (which I’d argue should not be given entirely to interns) fall to us. This includes curating entire exhibitions—while a great opportunity in theory, the lack of organization makes this very difficult, and is generally just not something a professional gallery would allow—and washing the exterior windows of the gallery. This lack of organization extends to shows, where many are curated last minute. He also does not hire art handlers, couriers, painters, or photographers, leaving valuable artwork in the hands of often inexperienced interns. The result of this is that while knowing he is hiring interns, he expects professional quality work while offering no training. For example, expecting installation images to be professional quality without professional lighting, having interns spackle and paint over holes in the walls, and carry large artworks across the city in harsh weather conditions. This all leaves much opportunity for artwork to be damaged, and I’m frankly shocked that this has not happened yet. And again, I’ll emphasize, every other gallery I’ve worked at or am familiar with hires individual contractors to do all of these jobs. Secondly, while interns are unpaid—not uncommon in the industry, unfortunately—this internship veers into illegal territory according to the NY State Department of Labor. To mention just two violations, due to a lack of staff (violation one, interns displacing regular employees), interns do tasks related to Shin’s specific operation, and are not solely building on a classroom experience as a legal unpaid internship would (violation two). Each intern is given a 45-minute lunch break, which I appreciate, however, there is no drinking water in the gallery. A small restroom is available in the basement, however this room is often filled with various in-process artworks by the visiting artists. In order to save money, Shin often does not turn on heating or air conditioning, leaving interns to work in 95+ degree weather. Another intern I worked with recalled being told to turn the heat and AC on only when certain people visited the gallery, and to turn it off as soon as they left. Along these same cost-saving measures, interns are expected to use their personal Google drive and email, and are assumed to have access to whatever software they may need (as an example, Adobe, which will run you $70/month). Considering the money he is saving having no paid employees, this is absurd. And again, I’ll emphasize, this is not the norm at other galleries. Thirdly, Shin himself. I’ll begin by saying that he is a nice person, overall. However, he does not know how to communicate what he wants, therefore leading to a lot of frustration when trying to present him with work. This will include iterations where I’ve done what he’s asked, verbatim, only for him to say he dislikes it, and thinks I could do better. His communication is overall very unprofessional—while I understand and appreciate constructive criticism, Shin takes this further, reacting harshly to any work he believes is not up to par (and again, note that he does not provide any training for this professional expectation). He will neglect personal suggestions in favor of his own vision, then get upset when the final project is bad. On the thought of lack of professionalism, he often asks interns to work in his apartment upstairs, either solely with him or in a small group. Considering that the large majority of these interns are young women, this is particularly concerning. He does not seem to understand professional boundaries, and other interns have mentioned instances that are frankly bewildering in how inappropriate they are. His artistic interests lie in ‘provocative art’—i.e., erotic—which makes this all the more disturbing. His reputation in the art community is overall negative—other galleries I’ve worked with note his name adversely. He very much lives in his own shadow as the youngest gallery owner in the city, seemingly trying to remain important as he blends into the gallery scene. Though the opportunities he offers sound good, they are truly not what they seem.

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