TRASH
or treats?
I’ve gotta figure out how to make composting work in my life. The amount of food discarded from my kitchen from trimmings alone could no doubt eliminate any need to purchase mulch or fertilizer again…ever. I’m told there are simple guidelines and compact systems commercially available. This next Call may not e interested in your food scraps, but they DO want your trash. Take a look…
Check out this Call for Entries from Ojai Art Festival (Ojai, CA) for Discarted. I love trash art shows, and the cash awards range from $500 to $1500. Don’t miss this opportunity…
*Editor’s Note: If you have read the personal portion of this post, CALL for ENTRIES: Trash, anywhere other than by email subscription or on ArtAndArtDeadlines.com, it has been published without permission and is considered theft.
CALL for ENTRIES:
Discarted
The art will be shown in approx. 40 shops, restaurants and galleries in Ojai from Nov. 7 -24, 2013. The opening weekend is Nov. 7-10, coinciding with the Ojai Film Festival’s Focus Earth screenings. Every year, nearly 4,500 people attend the film festival events. The goal is to stimulate environmental awareness, encourage conservation, and promote new ways of thinking about art, sustainability, and the environment.
ELIGIBILITY: Open to all artists
MEDIA: DISCARTED asks artists to work with trash, discarded objects and materials to raise questions and ideas, aesthetic and moral, about the life of the planet our wasteful society threatens. Art from trash, discarded objects and material: Submitted work may be reasonably considered ‘Art from trash, discarded objects and material’ if it is entirely, or primarily, composed of at least 75% material(s) that would have otherwise been disposed into the waste streams. Accepted art includes collage, assemblages, wall hangings, sculpture, other 2 or 3-dimensional artwork and moving or projected images.
NOTIFICATION: October 6, 2013
ENTRY FEE: $20 per piece, up to 3 pieces per artist
JUROR: Deborah Munk has served as the Director of the Artist in Residence Program at Recology since 2007. The Artist in Residence Program at Recology San Francisco is a unique art and education program that provides Bay Area artists with access to discarded materials, a stipend, and a large studio space at the Recology Solid Waste Transfer and Recycling Center. By supporting artists who work with recycled materials, Recology hopes to encourage people to conserve natural resources and promote new ways of thinking about art and the environment.
AWARDS: First Place $1500; Second Place $800; and Third Place $500.
SALES: 60% will go to the artists, 30% of the sale will go to the shop or venue where the art is displayed, 10% to Ojai Art Festival.