Magpie offers an easy-to-adapt but flexible-to-use site structure based on three page types:

PAGE
It is what it's called: a simple page with a Page Builder. Here you can easily add and arrange Content Modules such as Text, Images or Galleries, and Buttons.

PORTFOLIO
In addition to the Content Modules at the top of the page, there is a Project Gallery. The look of each gallery can be changed for every Portfolio page. You can create an image grid, an image feed, or just a simple list with project titles and a short excerpt. Every gallery is highly customizable. Project galleries can be filtered by Tags.

PROJECT
Projects are child pages of a Portfolio. They can be added via the Portfolio page. Projects is just the name; they can be anything: artworks, news or blog articles, exhibitions, publications, or whatever you want to showcase.

A Project can have a Featured Image, multiple Category Tags, a Year, a Description, and a dedicated Excerpt if you don't want to use the description for that. You can choose if the Featured Image is used as a Header Image. Below the Description, there are the Content Modules. Here you can add images of your projects, embed audio players, add videos directly or embed them via YouTube or Vimeo, write text, add a button for a PDF download, and much more.

This could be a sitemap. We have a landing page with some general content. An about page with a profile image, some text, and a CV table. Next, we have a portfolio page. It starts with some text and a button. Below, there is the Project Gallery showcasing art pieces and the option to filter by the categories: Painting, Installation, and Performance.
The Projects themselves have different content: one has Images and a Video, while another piece just has some text and an image gallery. The last page is a dedicated contact page with some text and a Contact List module that holds an email link, a social media link, a phone number, etc.

Here we can see a different possible site structure. The landing page is a Portfolio. Starting with just some text and followed by a Project Gallery showing art pieces. Let's imagine these are just paintings and no filter is needed. Every Project has the same structure and layout: just a text and an image gallery. If you want your projects to all appear the same, you can just duplicate an existing Project and simply exchange the text and images.

The second page is a News page. It's a second Portfolio but used in a different manner. It's more like a blog where the artist is presenting information about the next exhibition, a residency, a prize, or a publication. These can be filtered again, and the content is completely different. The info page holds an About text, a CV table with, for example, all his/her exhibitions, and a Contact List.