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Art and Art Deadlines.com

Category: Art Blog

CALL for ENTRIES: Nocturne

Learn more about the Nocturne exhibit at the Darkroom Gallery!a-maze-ingly
CORNY

Popping corn is an art.  We consume bowls and bowls and bowls of popcorn at my house every night–organic, non-GMO cooked on the stove the same way it was done when I was little.  As a matter of fact, I believe my craving for popcorn is actually triggered by sunset.  I adore it toped by finely grated Parmesan & a sprinkle of chile powder.  My husband craves it with huge doses of freshly ground black pepper.  My son prefers it with just a sprinkle of sea salt.   That’s our nighttime popcorn trifecta.  This next Call is open to whole different kind of nighttime imagery.  Take a look…

Check out this Call for Entries from Darkroom Gallery (Essex Junction, VT) for Nocturne. $24 entry. We’re proud our readers have been both shown & awarded at Darkroom. Join their ranks

*Editor’s Note: If you have read the personal portion of this post, CALL for ENTRIES: Nocturne, anywhere other than by email subscription or on ArtAndArtDeadlines.com, it has been published without permission and is considered theft.

Learn more about the Nocturne exhibit at the Darkroom Gallery!CALL
for ENTRIES:

Nocturne

 

“Photographers have long embraced the literary and artistic tradition of the night as theme and subject in their work. The romantic notions and sense of mystery associated with the night, and the transformation from the mundane world to the unknown provide ample material for photographers to explore through their work.

“Darkroom Gallery is calling for nighttime imagery that conveys mystery, surrealism, isolation, loneliness, and time/timelessness.” –darkroomgallery.com

ELIGIBILITY:
Open to all artists 18+

MEDIA: Photography

DEADLINE: August 12, 2015

NOTIFICATION: August 21, 2015

ENTRY FEE: 4 for $24 (online)/$29 (email)

*Editor’s Note: It is important to let Darkroom Gallery know you found their Call on artandartdeadlines.com. They are friends & sponsors of AAAD, and I always want them to know they have our support…

Learn more about the Nocturne exhibit at the Darkroom Gallery!JUROR: Lance Keimig is best known for his night photographs–often made at the juncture of the built & natural environments.  Keimig has taught at the New England School of Photography in Boston since 2000, has also taught at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, The Photographic Resource Center at Boston University, The Houston Center for Photography & leads independent workshops across the country.

Keimig continues to teach night photography & light-painting workshops and leads photo tours to Iceland, Ireland, Scotland & Cuba. His photographs are held in numerous collections including The Art Complex Museum In Duxbury, Boston Athenaeum, Boston Public Library, and the Grace Museum in Abilene, TX.

AWARDS: Selected entries are included in a full color exhibit catalog & gallery exhibit. Plus: Juror’s Choice: 30×48″ image banner; People’s Choice – a free future entry; Honorable Mentions receive free exhibition catalogs and free entry in a future exhibition.

SALES: Free matting & framing of accepted entries, subject to standard sizes. For commission details, go to the bottom of the Submissions page!

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Learn more about the Nocturne exhibit at the Darkroom Gallery!

ARTIST to LOVE: Darcy Meeker

We have a new Artist to Love!

Join us in saying “Welcome” to sculptor Darcy Meeker, our newest Artist to Love

• • • • • • • • •

Darcy Meeker
Sculpture
Mineral Spirits, Italian Alabaster sculpture by Darcy Meeker
Mineral Spirits
Italian Alabaster sculpture
MEEKER tools copper, creates sculpture in stone, clay, silk, aluminum, and, well, pretty much anything she can get her hands on, and paints, collages and prints on a variety of materials with the same wide-ranging enthusiasm.

Meeker's work is all about flowing line, texture, opaque vs. translucent & figure-ground play. Whatever her medium at the moment, it asks to be touched. It's all about curves & texture, light & shadow. "I’m only interested in work that conveys that kind of sensuous pull."

FAVORITE FOOD: Sushi

• • • • • • • • •

Are you an Artist to Love? Be sure to let us know!

• • • • • • • • •

FEATURED ARTIST: Rachel Goldsmith

Learn more about AAAD Featured Artist Rachel Goldsmith!HOT stuff

I like it spicy.  My favorite Indian restaurant offers mild, medium & hot levels of spice.  But, those with the inside track also know they offer the Indian version of mild, medium & hot.  I am pretty good with Indian medium.  On braver days I can handle Indian hot.  But, the actual heat this summer is wearing me out.  I’m not normally a heat whiner–until now.  Every degree over 90 results in my doing everything just a little slower–as though my shoes are melted to the ground.  But then, I received this fantastic Featured Artist contest entry that allowed me to shift focus and enjoy the beauty and brightness of summer–without all the hot sauce.

Painting with plastic by Featured Artist Rachel GoldsmithThis month’s artist offers us an evolving view of process and how it informs content.   Her work explores the contrast between organic forms and the plasticity of production.  Artandartdeadlines.com is proud to claim Rachel Goldsmith as this month’s Featured Artist.  This work is intricate and soft, yet hard and industrial.  It is beautiful and thoughtful and puzzling.  And then there’s the dumplings and cereal…and hot sauce.

FEATURED ARTIST:
Rachel Goldsmith

 

Rachel Goldsmith is a NY-based artist who works primarily with PLA plastic, water-based paints on canvas & permanent ink on paper.  She received her Bachelor of Arts & Fine Arts Degrees from Univ. of Michigan & her Masters of Art & Design Education Degree from Pratt Institute.  Rachel taught middle school Visual Arts in NYC from 2007-2012.  In addition to several “Best in Show” awards, Goldsmith was commissioned by the inventors of the 3Doodler to create a piece for MoMA Design Store.  Her work, including her Fabergé Big Egg, is included in various private collections.

Learn more about Featured Artist Rachel Goldsmith!Has the 3-D pen been a trial & error process or have you had instruction from another artist, creator, or school?  “The 3Doodler has been 100% self-taught.  I received the pen in March 2014 –early in their production, a few weeks after completing Ova Obsessive for the Faberge Big Egg Hunt. I had been drawing 12-20 hours a day for 6 weeks.  I was done with drawing for a little while, so the timing was fortuitous.  I immediately used the 3Doodler on canvas—that is what seemed natural to me. And I was instantly obsessed with the possibilities.  The more I used it, the more I loved it – and still, to this day, I am discovering new techniques and developing new ideas for its use.

Textiles by Featured Artist Rachel Goldsmith--detail“I struggle with the term “trial and error”, as it has such a negative connotation. (*Noted and appreciated.  Words have meanings.)  I prefer to think of my work with the 3Doodler as experimenting…

…happy accidents
or Beautiful Oops.

 

“I love having to react to the material – to adjust what I’m doing based on what the material does. Any pieces that feel like “errors” just have to be worked further or in a different way – scissors, heat gun, iron, spray paint, wire, and/or more plastic. I titled one piece Frankenstein because of how many times it was cut apart and put back together in a different form.”

Why PLA over ABS plastic?  “Since day one I have preferred PLA.  It is corn-based as opposed to petroleum based, so it doesn’t smell noxious.  That’s my main reason.  Additionally, I find the PLA easier to work with because it sticks to itself very easily and it hardens a bit slower then the ABS, so you have a moment to adjust the extrusion with your fingers or other tools.”

Squares 1, 2 & 3 by Featured Artist Rachel Goldsmith!

Talk to me about the 3-D printing pen.  Does form inspire content or does content require that you figure out how to make the pen conform?  Again my answer is both–it depends. When 3Doodler asked me to create a lamp for their MoMA Design Store display, I had to figure out how to make the plastic into a lamp – before that, I’d been working on canvas or other flat surfaces – balance and strength were the key factors that I had to work around.  Most of the time however, my work is material driven. I gain inspiration from my environment – especially the contrasts between natural and man-made – and I often allow the materials drive my creating.

Painting with plastic by Featured Artist Rachel Goldsmith!I am fascinated by the contrast between the control I have over the materials and what the materials do on their own.  Again, this creates a situation for me to react and respond to my work. I think this is another reason that I fell in love with the original 3Doodler. The pen has a little bit of a mind of it’s own – so I constantly have to react to how the pen extrudes the plastics, even if it is not exactly what I thought I wanted it to do.  New possibilities of what I can do with plastics keep popping into my head and keep driving my creations – adding wire, or using an iron or using the heat-gun or layering like I’m weaving or painting or drawing on the plastic or moving very slowly or fast.  It is endless.  I need another set of hands to keep up with my brain.

Tell me about the contrast between organic forms and synthetic materials.  “Contrasts, in general, fascinate to me.  I think it is a coincidence that I’m using plastic to create organic forms – though I love that a viewer can find meaning in my work based on this contrast. Or perhaps subconsciously I love the 3Doodler because of that contrast. I will point out though, that the PLA is corn-based.  Is it still considered synthetic? (*I think it is fair to call it synthesized, at least.)  Again, my work is hugely inspired by the contrasts between man-made and nature – working with plastic to create organic forms seems like a perfect way to represent that contrast.”

Painting with plastic by Featured Artist Rachel Goldsmith!Most artists have something to say—something they are trying to get across to viewers. I am fascinated by the contrast of the playful versus an almost robotic feel.  “I’ve discussed this a lot lately, with slight discomfort. For me the process of creating the work is the reason for creating the work.  The movement of my hand hypnotizes me, acting as a focus point for meditation–I use the same movements in drawing, 3Doodling and Painting. Also, the necessary reaction to the media engages me with ongoing challenges.  In the end I want the pieces to appeal to my aesthetic senses.  I want people to enjoy looking at the work as much as I do.  If the viewer sees a statement about contrasts, great; if the viewer sees a statement about the environment, great.  But, I’m not creating nor exhibiting with any agenda in mind.”  *Refreshingly, and shockingly honest. Bravo.

Talk to me about the two artists (one living, one dead) that have most influenced your work and why.  “Sorry, you are getting 3.  Dale Chihuly is my favorite contemporary artist. I am nearly obsessed with watching videos of him at work.  I am captivated by his process and inspired by his use of color and material, both glass and paint.  The forms he creates are direct results of the motion of his hand, arm and wrist, a motion over which he has impressive control.  His blown glass and drawings look as if they have grown from the ocean and are still suspended in the currents of the water.

Painting with plastic by Featured Artist Rachel Goldsmith!“Bill Komoski is one of many abstract painters that I could list as a favorite. He creates works that are just about looking. Like many of my pieces, his paintings are map-like—organized yet chaotic.  Similar to Chihuly, his work evokes a feeling of fluidity and weightlessness.  And, I draw a tremendous amount of inspiration from Ernst Haeckel.  His ‘Artforms in Nature’ documents my obsession with organic forms.  It illustrates the scientifically stringent aspects of nature that ordinarily seem disorganized and random.”

What is your favorite food addiction?  It IS a food-themed blog after all.  “Hot sauce–especially Cholula.  I am addicted to and allergic to cheese. I miss it everyday that I don’t make myself sick from it.  And I LOVE veggie dumplings, yum!  But, I will always choose sweet over savory.”  *Allergic to cheese would be the death of me. Truly.

What is your favorite snack food obsession?  “Cinnamon Toast Crunch with almond milk or soy milk and non-ice cream–stupid allergies force me to stick to sorbet, popsicles & non-dairy frozen treats.”

Painting with plastic by Featured Artist Rachel Goldsmith!What’s coming up next for you?  “I would like to learn more about textiles, as so much of what I’m creating looks like it is made from fabric not plastic. Also, I hope to create some mobiles as I love the shadows produced by the plastics and I love how light looks shining through the plastics – mobiles might be the perfect way to display this kind of work.  I’ve only just begun researching mobiles.  I can feel myself teetering on the edge of something amazing.  It is a really strange feeling because I’m not sure what’s coming down the pipeline, but I’m certain something big is going to burst out really soon.  It is exciting, bizarre, and a little embarrassing to admit. I think it involves mixing media. We will see.”

“I’ve never felt like this before.”

 

Rachel, don’t you dare be embarrassed.  Your honesty and openness have made my heart smile.  I sift through a lot of stock answers and standard bios and stagnant art-speak statements.  You have renewed my faith that I can still have exciting, insightful conversations about art.  Thank you for that–and the work…

Learn more about Rachel Goldsmith!

Learn more about Featured Artist Rachel Goldsmith! Are you Featured Artist material?  LET US KNOW!

CALL for ENTRIES: Digital Dimensions

Learn more about the Digital Dimensions exhibit from the Niza Knoll Gallery!PIZZA
hot off the printer

I need a food replicator.  The replicator from the Quark Bar (Star Trek) would be a stand out in any kitchen.  Although I have to admit that using 3D printing technology for food gives me pause.  I can’t wrap my brain around the ingredients that could take so little space that it would fit in my kitchen but yet be able to create an almost infinite variety of foods.  Freaky, no?  There must be science I am just not comprehending.  But, I have to admit the pizza pictured here doesn’t look half bad.  This next Call wants to see how YOU use the technology.  Fascinating…

Check out this Call for Entries from the Niza Knoll Gallery (Denver, CO) for Digital Dimensions.  Enter for as little as $10.  If this isn’t for you, please be sure to share.  Take a look…

*Editor’s Note: If you have read the personal portion of this post, CALL for ENTRIES: Digital Dimensions, anywhere other than by email subscription or on ArtAndArtDeadlines.com, it has been published without permission and is considered theft.

 

Learn more about the Digital Dimensions exhibit from the Niza Knoll Gallery!CALL for ENTRIES:
Digital Dimensions

 

In recent years, the ability to create dimensional objects from 3D computer files has put a whole new set of tools in the hands of artists. This show explores the directions that these new possibilities are leading artists to travel in their quest to make their visions a reality. –from nizaknollgallery.com

ELIGIBILITY:  Open to all artists (int’l)

MEDIA:  Work created via digital fabrication methods such as 3D printing, Laser cutting/etching, Plasma cutting or CNC Routing.  Please note that “digital fabrication” does NOT include such processes as digital print or gicleè.

DEADLINE:  July 26, 2015

NOTIFICATION:  July 31, 2015

Learn more about the Digital Dimensions exhibit from the Niza Knoll Gallery!ENTRY FEE:  1 entry for $10, 2 entries for $20, 3 entries for $25, 4 for $30, 5 for $35, 6 for $40, 7 for $45, 8 for $50

JUROR:  Judy Gardner is a Colorado artist and educator.  She is Director of Alchemical Eye Studio, a printmaking and digital fabrication studio located in Colorado.  Gardner earned a BFA in Graphic Design at Northern Arizona University & an MH in Fine Art & Theater at the University of Colorado.  For many years she has worked with 3D visualization software creating images for architects, engineers, manufacturers and court room exhibits.  Now, with the availability of 3D printers at the consumer level, she has launched wholeheartedly into 3D printing as a means of artistic expression.  She currently teaches Printmaking and Electronic Imaging at Regis University.  Gardner’s artwork has been featured in shows across the country including current shows at the Wailoa Center in Hilo, Hawaii & at the Arvada Center in Arvada, CO.

Learn more about the Digital Dimensions exhibit from the Niza Knoll Gallery!Wes Price is also a Colorado artist and educator with 19+ years professional experience in anatomy illustrations for print, app and web-based interactive teaching modules. He was awarded a M.S. in Medical Illustration by the Medical College of GA (1 of only 4 accredited graduate programs of its kind in North America). Price is one of approx. 250 Certified Medical Illustrators in the world.  Currently, Price is an Associate Professor of Media Arts at the Art Institute of Colorado.

SALES:  All work must be available for sale during the exhibition. Please note that Niza Knoll retains a 40% commission on all art sales.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Learn more about the Digital Dimensions exhibit from the Niza Knoll Gallery!

CALL for ENTRIES: Red

Learn more about the RED exhibit from art-competition.net!*blush*

Red is undeniably my favorite color.  I find myself drawn to red tones in food, from salmon to cherry Jell-o, Bloody Mary’s to pomegranates.  Go figure.  But recently I tripped across golden raspberries.  How had I missed them all these years?  They are slightly sweeter & milder than the traditional red variety, and I am willing to admit that I like them better in some instances.  I feel like such a traitor.  The next Call is the perfect red celebration.  I like this group exhibit…

Check out this Call for Entries from Art-Competition.net & G25N (online) for RED, an online group exhibit. $20 entry & significant marketing efforts.  Take a look

*Editor’s Note: If you have read the personal portion of this post, CALL for ENTRIES: Red, anywhere other than by email subscription or on ArtAndArtDeadlines.com, it has been published without permission and is considered theft.

Learn more about the RED exhibit from art-competition.net!CALL
for ENTRIES:

RED

 

ELIGIBILITY: All artists age 18+

MEDIA: Open to all 2D media: painting, drawing, collage, photography, digital, etc.

THEME: “RED” The judges will be looking for artwork where the artist’s interpretation of any subject is enhanced by the use of the color red, whether it is a single dot of red or completely red image.

The color red can imply many emotions and feelings, for example: power, heat, love, sexuality, anger, joy, war, etc.  It can be used to enhance, emphasize or be a focal point in the artwork.  The artwork can be expressed from representational, expressionistic, surrealistic and or abstraction.

DEADLINE:  July 13, 2015

NOTIFICATION:  July 20, 2015

Learn more about the RED exhibit from art-competition.net!ENTRY FEE:  $20 for 1, $10 each add’l

AWARDS:  Gallery25N.com & Art-Competition.net will co-market the ten artists and their artwork in the exhibition worldwide in the following ways:  An electronic invitation (12,000+ recipients), press release, event listings & calendars, social media marketing via Art-Competition.net, Artist Website Pro & Gallery 25N’s social media-marketing network via LinkedIn, Pinterest, Tweeter, GooglePlus, Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, etc., Art Market newsletter (over 16,000+ subscribers), exhibit will remain in the “Past Exhibits” section of Gallery 25N’s website with a back-link to the artist’s websites for a minimum of two years & a video published on G25N’s website & YouTube Channel.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Learn more about the RED exhibit from art-competition.net!

CALL for ENTRIES: Small Plates

Learn more about the Small Plates exhibit from ArtAndArtDeadlines.com!i want some
MORE

Remember having “eyes bigger than your stomach”?  That was the automatic response to an overly large-portioned plate at my childhood dinner table.  It was then immediately followed by a lecture reminding me of children thought to be starving in a far away country that seemed, well, other worldly to a five year old.  The truth would have been more effective.  There were starving children in my own country, my own state, my own town, probably my own neighborhood.  I was fortunate not to want for food as a child.  But today, my eyes are always bigger than my stomach.  I always take on more than I can easily digest, gastronomically and otherwise, and yet I always find myself both hungry to pile on more–even while suffering the indigestion of my last turn at the proverbial table.  This next Call is proof.  In 2016, we are proud to be offering a buffet for all of you.  Take us up on this, the first of several dinner invitations to come… 

Check out this Call for Entries from ArtAndArtDeadlines.com (AAAD) for Small Plates: A Response to Hunger, a small works show, exhibited in The Balcony gallery (Knoxville, TN) located at The Emporium Center.   Grow with us…

Enter the Small Plates Exhibit at The Balcony in Knoxville, TN sponsored by AAAD!CALL for ENTRIES:
Small Plates

 

“The purpose of life, after all, is to live it, to taste experience to the utmost, to reach out eagerly and without fear for newer and richer experiences.” – Eleanor Roosevelt

Here at AAAD, we believed that the food metaphor is a perfect vehicle to inspire you to feed your creative self. We shun the demeaning cutesy-ness of the bohemian “starving artist” image as it numbs us to the real struggle of hunger & starvation worldwide.  Starvation, in a literal way, robs humanity of being human and ends even the possibility of a creative self. For SMALL PLATES, AAAD wants your views on hunger —physical, spiritual, political, emotional and/or creative. Food references are optional.

The SMALL PLATES will be exhibit will both open & close on May 6, 2016 as a part of the First Friday festivities at The Balcony Gallery, located in The Emporium Center in Knoxville, TN –a one-day show.

ELIGIBILITY: Open to all artists —any age, any gender, any location.

THEME: Hunger—physical, spiritual, political, emotional or creative. Food reference optional.

MEDIA: Open to all media that will fit in a 9”x12” envelope (aka 229 mm x 305 mm or No. 10 ½), including but not limited to: painting, drawing, fiber, collage, digital, photography, graphic design, illustration, pen and ink, printmaking, etc.

DEADLINE:  April 18, 2016

NOTIFICATION:  Ongoing by April 19, 2016

Small Plates: A Response to Hunger from artandartdeadlines.comENTRY FEE: $5 for up to 5. Entry fee waived for members in good standing of The Haggus Society.

CURATOR:  R.L. Gibson (yours truly), a working artist, also serves as the editor of artandartdeadlines.com (AAAD). Trained in classical, French culinary techniques, Gibson created AAAD as a food-themed resource to motivate artists to create their own community, standards & artistic opportunities.  In addition to producing her own solo & collaborative art, Gibson has served as a gallerist, juror, teacher & arts administrator for nearly two decades.

AWARDS:  To assist resume building, designations of Best of Show, 1st, 2nd & 3rd Place will be awarded; however, cash prizes will NOT be awarded.  Award designations will be chosen from the physical work and will be judged based on artistic merit and interpretation of the theme.  If not chosen for the gallery exhibit, please note that at the curator’s discretion, ONE image from EVERY artist will go into the online exhibit* with a link to the artist’s website. *Editor’s note: So if you follow all the rules, you can at the very least add the online exhibit to your resume, even if you are not selected for the physical exhibit.

SALES:  All work will be considered for sale unless marked NFS.  A commission of 30% will be taken on all sales. Please note, 20% commission on cash/check sales and 25% commission on credit card sales is held by Arts & Culture Alliance of Greater Knoxville.  The additional 5-10% commission is retained by AAAD.  Unsold artwork will be returned and payment for sold artwork will be made within 30 days of the close of the exhibit.

For complete details, Read the Full Prospectus!

Click to Read the Full Call for Small Plates: A Response to Hunger!

CALL for ENTRIES: Still Life II

Learn more about the Still Life II exhibit from art-competition.net!make mine a
DOUBLE

Do you know what is better than fresh, local fruits & vegetables? Twice as many fresh local fruits & vegetables.  Have you heard about a program that is slowly spreading throughout farmers’ markets & co-ops in the U.S. called Double Bucks?  It seems just about right that it would be folks dedicated to fresh food that would figure out how to get it into the hands of people who need it–affordably.  Double the veggies might be the only thing better than the doubled cash prizes in this next Call.  Make us proud…

Check out this Call for Entries from Art-Competition.net (online) for Still Life II.  The cash prizes are DOUBLED for this one!  Take a look

*Editor’s Note: If you have read the personal portion of this post, CALL for ENTRIES: Still Life II, anywhere other than by email subscription or on ArtAndArtDeadlines.com, it has been published without permission and is considered theft.

Learn more about the Mind Spirit and Emotion exhbiti from Art-Competition.net!CALL
for ENTRIES:

Still Life II

 

ELIGIBILITY: All artists age 18+

MEDIA: Open to all 2D media: painting, drawing, collage, photography, digital, etc.

A still life artwork featuring an arrangement of inanimate, everyday objects, whether natural organic objects such as flowers, food, wine, etc and or manufactured items such as books, bottles, crockery, etc.

The Still Life art is an under estimated art genre, the art is usually quiet & subtle in its communication, however it’s narrative can speak volumes about a culture, a society or a lifestyle. – Edward Burke

DEADLINE:  July 6, 2015

NOTIFICATION:  July 14, 2015

ENTRY FEE:  1 Entry for $20, up to 3 entries for $35, up to 5 entries for $60

Learn more from art-competition.net!AWARDS:
1
st Place: $1000 in cash & $5,200 in prizes
2nd Place: $250 in cash & $1,625 in prizes
3rd Place: $125 in cash & $125 prizes
4th Place: $75 in cash 5th Place: $50 in cash

The 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th & 5th place winner’s art will be featured in Art-Competition.net “Winners Showcase” with links to their websites.

The 10 Honorable Mentions artwork will also be displayed in the “Honorable Mentions” section of the Art Competition website.  All entries will be displayed on our Art-Competition website Submissions Showcase page in the order that the submissions are received.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Learn more from art-competitions dot net! 2

ARTIST to LOVE: Martha Carroll

We have a new Artist to Love!

Join us in saying “Welcome” to Martha Carroll, our newest Artist to Love

• • • • • • • • •

Martha Carroll
Mixed Media
Beijing Wall, Mixed Media by Martha Carroll
Beijing Wall
Mixed Media
After earning both a BFA & a MS degree at UT Knoxville, CARROLL began her art career as an illustrator. Art direction led her into years of talent & production work. In her second career, Robbins has taught drawing, painting and photography for all levels in public schools.

Carroll's mixed media works demonstrates both her perspective of humanity and the stories associated with objects, people, or landscapes. Currently, she enjoys incorporating her original photography into her mixed media work.

FAVORITE FOOD: Potato Chips

Are you an Artist to Love? Be sure to let us know!

• • • • • • • • •

PSA: Facebook

Are you missing posts from your favorite Facebook pages? http://wp.me/pDu2s-6uUanyone know
where I can find

TAHINI?

Have you ever gone to the grocery store in search of just ONE item, but you quickly discover that the grocers have moved it to a different location.  And, even when you ask a cashier, butcher or produce manager, no one can seem to tell you where it is or why it was moved.  Me too.  Recently I looked for tahini for 20 minutes.  I eventually found it near the pickles.  Go figure.  Well, this public service announcement is no different…

You have been asking and asking, “I follow you on Facebook; so why don’t I see your posts?”   We share your frustration, but instead of climbing on into the choir loft and joining all of the voices singing the Facebook woes, let’s just try to fix the problem.  Here’s an infographic… (post continues below)

Are YOU missing posts from Art & Art Deadlines on Facebook? http://wp.me/pDu2s-6uU

So, here are the steps again:

  1. Be certain you have liked our Facebook Page at http://www.facebook.com/artandartdeadlines
  2. Be sure you are “Following” the page
  3. Hover over the “Liked” button & then click “Get Notifications”

Head on over to our Facebook page and test it out…

Find Art And Art Deadlines on Facebook! http://wp.me/pDu2s-6uU

CALL for ENTRIES: Opulent Mobility

Learn more about the Opulent Mobility Show from Dreams by Machine!small
PLATES

My kitchen is now tiny.  My family has been downsizing year by year in prep for permanent tiny living.  My kitchen/dining are is 10′ square.  Not small by NYC efficiency standards.  For a cabin in the woods serving a family of 3 foodies, it IS small space for a double sink, full-size stove, refrigerator, dishwasher, microwave, kitchen table, 4 chairs, & dog bowls.  We adapted an under-the-stairs closet as a pantry, created a custom overhead pot rack to free up cabinets space and hung a small folding step stool on the wall to allow easy access to cabinet top space.  It is working.  In fact, I might be able to work in LESS space.  Who knew my space adaptive efforts would be both useful AND a stylish upgrade to my mountain-top kitchen?  But can I apply those skills to this next Call?  Just maybe…

Check out this Call for Entries from Dreams by Machine (Ventura, CA) for Opulent Mobility.  A great chance to stretch creatively & NO ENTRY FEE!  Don’t miss this winning combination…

*Editor’s Note: If you have read the personal portion of this post, CALL for ENTRIES: Opulent Mobility, anywhere other than by email subscription or on ArtAndArtDeadlines.com, it has been published without permission and is considered theft.

Learn more about the Opulent Mobility Show from Dreams by Machine!
photo by Heidi Marie Photography

CALL for ENTRIES:
Opulent Mobility

” ‘It’s far too ugly for me to die here!’ –designer Michael Graves re: hospitals.  The ugliness that prompted Graves’ outburst included the devices he came across because of his new disability. The Opulent Mobility exhibit is an opportunity to change that.

“Wheelchairs, walkers, prosthetics, crutches and other assistive technology devices are part of our lives. But in the grand scheme of design innovations, they’ve been left in the dust. There are hundreds of thousands of designs for glasses, chairs, and tech of every other kind.  Now’s your chance to help change the conversation about assistive technology of the future.” –from the prospectus

ELIGIBILITY:  Open to all artists

MEDIA:  Open to all media

THEME:  Submit art, designs & inventions dealing with mobility, disability & accessibility.

Learn more about the Opulent Mobility Show from Dreams by Machine!DEADLINE:  June 30, 2015

NOTIFICATION:  July 6, 2015

ENTRY FEE:  None

JUROR:  A. Laura Brody, creator;  Anthony Tusler, photographer & disability arts activist; Zeina Baltagi, artist & teacher

SALES:  If your work sells, there will be no commission fees.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Read the Full Call from Dreams by Machine!