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Contact

+44 (0) 20 7439 0678
london@webberrepresents.com

11A Kingsland Road
E2 8AA
London, United Kingdom

Careers

SENIOR AGENT


Location : Paris
Direct Reports : Directors.
Employment Type : Permanent

Salary/Benefits - Upon Application

WEBBER, a contemporary creative agency and gallery representing leading talent, is expanding its European presence with a Paris-based Senior Agent.

This is a senior, client-facing role with real scope to define a market, build a roster, and further establish WEBBER in Paris.

We operate at the intersection of art, commerce, and culture - representing artists while shaping how their work is positioned and sustained over time.

What You’ll Do

  • Lead high-value projects across disciplines
  • Negotiate fees, usage, and contracts at a senior level
  • Develop and steer long-term artist careers
  • Drive new business and own meaningful revenue targets
  • Identify and sign talent with both cultural and commercial relevance
  • Build meaningful relationships across clients, brands, and collaborators

What You’ll Bring

  • Experience operating at a senior level within an agency and artist-facing role
  • An active, credible network across fashion, luxury, and advertising
  • A track record of originating and closing high-value work
  • Strong commercial instinct, taste, and judgment
  • Fluency in French and English
Webber

Zora J Murff, American Mother, American Father
02.09–18.09.22

Zora J Murff | American Mother, American Father

Landskrona Foto Festival

2 - 18 September 2022

In this new work, artist and activist Zora J Murff challenges his own relationship to race and Blackness, using himself as a site for broader social critique and interrogate an increasing yet conflicting desire for status, success, and positioning.

Drawing on vernacular and family photographs, combined with newly produced images that challenge racial stereotyping, the artist presents these images as ‘affirmations’ as he learns to unpick and remake himself in his own image. Murff states “My early images were made when I was experiencing rapid upward social mobility and becoming acquainted with Arkansas and Mississippi, my ancestral landscapes. Visiting the birthplaces of my maternal and paternal families forced me to reflect on how we build identity, how identity can be created for us, and how those phenomena collide.”