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Category: Featured Artist

CALL for ENTRIES: Hidden

Learn more about the Hidden competition from ArtAscent!hidden
INGREDIENTS

My true goal with food is the same with art: to see you be brave.  But being brave has to be based on knowledge, not whim.  This is true of both food AND art.  I would never have you enter a show without doing at least some preliminary research into the venue, gallery, organization or publication.  So I want to encourage you never to let a food enter your mouth without a little preliminary research into ingredients or origin.  Do me a favor, if I can’t get you to quit eating food with labels, at least read the label.  There are scary things hidden in lots of foods. This next Call wants to explore the hidden as well.  Take a look…

Check out this Call for Entries from ArtAscent (online) for Hidden.  Only $15 to enter.  Our Featured Artist Sima Schloss, was featured on the cover of the Dark issue in December.  Are you next?

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

Learn more from ArtAscent!CALL for ENTRIES:
Hidden

Unseen, unknown, mysterious, cryptic, masked, clouded, puzzling, esoteric. Show them what hidden means to you.

 

ELIGIBILITY:
Open to all artists 18+

MEDIA: All media except video, sound & performance. Some examples: Painting, drawing, photography, mixed media, digital, printmaking, installations, ceramics, jewelry, sculpture and other 2 & 3-D media.

DEADLINE:  June 30, 2014

ENTRY FEE:  $15 for one image, $25 for up to 3 & $45 for up to 8

Learn more about the Hidden competition from ArtAscent!AWARDS: Gold Winner: Featured in ArtAscent Magazine Gold Winner section with an art writer review, bio, artwork & website link. Add’l publication & exposure includes ArtAscent website & social media.

Silver Winner: Featured in ArtAscent Magazine Silver Winner section with an art writer review, bio, artwork & website link. Add’l publication & exposure includes ArtAscent website & social media.

Bronze Winner:  Featured in ArtAscent Magazine Bronze Winner section with an art writer review, bio, artwork & website link. Add’l publication & exposure includes ArtAscent website & social media.

Distinguished Artists (17-27): Featured in ArtAscent Magazine Distinguished Artist section with artwork & website link. Add’l publication & exposure includes ArtAscent website & social media.

SALES: No commission.  Any purchase inquiries will be referred directly to the artist.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Learn more from ArtAscent!

CALL for ENTRIES: Newspace 8th

Learn more about the Portland OR food scene!deliciously
FRESH & MOBILE

I’m headed out for a 5-day retreat in a little Appalachian community about an hour from my home next week.  But next year, I’m thinking of visiting Portland–just for the food carts & Pacific North-western produce. While there, I’m checking out the home of this next Call.  I’ll be sure to report back, but in the meantime, take a look…

Check out this Call for Entries from the Newspace Center for Photography (Portland, OR) for the 8th Annual Juried Exhibit.  Great juror AND venue.  Don’t miss this opportunity…

*Editor’s Note: If you have read the personal portion of this post, CALL for ENTRIES: Newspace 8th, anywhere other than by email subscription or on ArtAndArtDeadlines.com, it has been published without permission and is considered theft.

Learn more from the Newspace Center for Photography!CALL for ENTRIES:
Newspace 8th

ELIGIBILITY:  Open to all artists

MEDIA:  Photography

DEADLINE:  May 30, 2014

NOTIFICATION:  June 30, 2014

ENTRY FEE:   $40 for up to 5

JUROR:  Melanie McWhorter, photographer and Book Division Manager of Photo-Eye

AWARDS:  In addition to exhibition selections, the juror will also select one photographer who will receive a solo exhibition at Newspace Center for Photography in 2015.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Learn more from the Newspace Center for Photography!

FEATURED ARTIST: Jillian Platt

Learn more about Featured Artist Jillian Platt!i choose
CHOCOLATE

not dishes

I’m up to my eyeballs in my own sink of dishes, as it were.  But, I appreciated the break from deadlines and mayhem afforded by reviewing the work of those that contributed to the Featured Artist Contest.

And admittedly, what I choose to feature is often colored by whatever is piled in my proverbial sink of dishes at the moment.  With my own solo show opening in July, I am deep in historical anatomies being used in my pieces.  And what comes across my desk?  The work of a phenomenal abstract painter that also does medical illustration.

I am proud to welcome Jillian Platt as AAAD’s latest Featured Artist.  The historical anatomies I use are deliberately labored, graphic and anything but beautiful.  But this work is soft and delicate and draws me in–regardless of the subject matter.  Then there is the abstract work; I’m just lost in the sort of emotional chaos & cacophony of sound emitted by the color & texture of this work.  Enjoy.

Learn more about Featured Artist Jillian Platt!FEATURED ARTIST:
Jillian Platt

 

Early chalk drawings were the first indications of Jillian’s need for artistic expression.  Exposed to fine art at an early age & encouraged by surroundings & teachers her talents were solidified at Boston University School of Fine Art.

Jillian wove art & science together in the field of medical art. Her work garnered awards both in & out of the courtroom & operating theatres.  She has explained to college students, attorneys & surgeons the cellular work of the body, the mechanisms of destruction & the steps of repair.

Expressions in abstract gently pull the viewer in allowing them private entrance into the artist world. Underlying perceptions & profound realizations of softness, emotionality and solitude reach out for the viewer’ s participation.

Abstract Work by Featured Artist Jillian Platt!Are you self-taught or formally instructed? 

“I am formally trained.  A B.F.A. in painting from Boston University & a M.S. in Medical Illustration from Georgia Regents University.  I have loved to paint and draw for as long as I can remember so…

“It was only natural
for me to study art.”

 

“The science part came in after college.  I had a bookkeeping job and wanted to find a way to make a living using my art.  I had heard about medical illustration and decided to take some science classes. One teacher, a physiology teacher, got me hooked on science.”

Illustration Work by Featured Artist Jillian Platt!Talk to me about your process. 

“It depends on the job, but for the most part medical illustration is like writing a book report. You use references, such as anatomy books, medical reports, patient records, sometimes observing surgery.  Graduate school in medical illustration includes medical school courses in anatomy, neuroanatomy, cell biology, surgery (and many others).

“When you graduate you are well prepared in how to read and incorporate all the information in those references. The hardest part is simplifying the information without losing something important and still making it visually appealing.”  Editor:  I’m sure that the amount of education & preparation required should have been obvious to me, but I simply never considered it. Wow.

Featured Artist Jillian Platt!I find myself loving both your abstract paintings AND the medical illustrations.  What brought about such a stark contrast in subject matter? 

“I fell in love with art because it is an outlet for me emotionally. With abstract painting there are no references, it can be purely emotional. Muddling your way through feelings, getting dirty, and really being in your art. It’s a huge release for me.

“Medical illustration is pretty straight forward. I’m generally creating it to serve a specific purpose so there’s not much room for expression.”

Illustration Work by Featured Artist Jillian Platt!Talk to me about your inspiration. “Human physiology is fascinating to me. How it all works together. It’s so complex and beautiful. Any time I have been hired to create medical art is a chance for me to learn.  To go into an operating room and watch, or to talk with scientists about a process they are experimenting with, is fascinating.  There’s so much creativity in science.

“Abstract art is all about emotion for me. I am a pretty private person and generally keep my feelings to myself except for a few friends. So art becomes, for me, the release.

Abstract Work by Featured Artist Jillian Platt!“Sounds corny, but I really need to be making something all the time, using my hands. Painting, upholstering, making jewelry, gardening. Something is always going on in my head that needs to get out.”

Talk to me about the two artists (one living, one dead) that have most influenced your work, and tell us why.

“My 1st art teacher, a great friend & artist named John Dyer, from NY.  He taught me how to use oil paint & the importance of light.  Also, how to really try to feel the subject matter that I was painting, the texture, color, temperature.  His style is similar to Andrew Wyeth.  Anselm Kiefer’s work is gripping.  Just to be in its presence is so powerful. It was his work that really moved me and showed me what abstract is all about.

“Dead. That would be Frances Spalding Whistler.  The way he used oil paint like watercolor and the ethereal feeling of his paintings.”

Illustration Work by Featured Artist Jillian Platt!Is there one artist whose work you simply cannot abide?  Editor: I always ask this question of artists, mostly to gauge their feelings about the public image of art.  I almost never reveal the answers, but I’ll say this… I’ve only had about 4 or 5 different answers in the past few years.  Apparently we all dislike the same people, ha.

What’s coming up next for you?  “I’m doing a mural in my friend Rachel’s dining room. I’m really exited about it. I have been working on a medical animation project for a long time now and am eager to get dirty again.”

You know we have to know about your favorite food.  You know you want to tell us…  “Sadly, at 44 years old, it’s still pizza with a lot of sauce and a coke.”  Pizza is never sad, Jillian.  Never ever.

And what about your favorite snack foods?  “Anything chocolate. I love chocolate.”  Amen.  Me too.  Did you know that there are people that dislike chocolate?  Dumbfounding, eh?

Thank you, Jillian, for being an oddly beautiful connection in what I suspect is a very small world.  Your work moves me.

Learn more about Featured Artist Jillian Platt!

If you’re interested in becoming a Featured Artist,
Click to Learn How!

FEATURED ARTIST: Charmagne Coe

Learn more about how to become a Featured Artist!chicka
chicka
CHEESE

Spring is just around the corner.  It is a sure sign when farm-animal-shaped chocolates and marshmallows start popping up everywhere.  But this year, instead of a chocolate bunny, can I formally request a chick made of Romano or maybe a simple sheep’s milk cheese shaped like the ubiquitous egg?  You know it is Spring when I am asking for cheese instead of blindly accepting  chocolate in any form.  Yum… cheeeeese.

The upcoming season of green has also brought to mind work with a lighter feel.  For the most part, artists submitted work to the Featured Artist Contest  this past month that felt hopeful although still contemplative.  And, color abounded.  This work was chosen because it had both a sense of wild abandon AND familial ties.  I found the dichotomy intriguing.  On behalf of www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com, I am proud to congratulate Charmagne Coe as our latest Featured Artist!

Learn more about Featured Artist Charmagne Coe! FEATURED ARTIST:
Charmagne Coe

 

Charmagne Coe is an American artist who creates expressive surreal paintings and drawings. Her work has been featured in international publications, group and solo exhibitions.

Her fantastical, surreal paintings are made with watercolor, ink and pastel. Inherent is a deep respect for the nature of automatism and contour line.

When she is not painting, she is inking wild expanses and heart-achy characters.

 

The Gift by Featured Artist Charmagne Coe!Are you self-taught or formally instructed in your current media?   “Both, but mostly self-taught.  I was raised in a family of artists and musicians, so I witnessed first-hand, the importance of authenticity and perseverance.  I have a minor in art from Northern Arizona University.   My schooling imparted crucial foundational skills and philosophical awareness.  From there, I developed my own auto-didactic processes. Drawing was my first artistic love, but I greatly desired to be a painter as well.  I wanted to somehow fuse the two.  Experimenting led me to the three media I conjointly employ/implore now: watercolor, ink and pastel.”

Talk to me about your process and how you feel about teaching and/or sharing your process. My process of obtaining ideas and painting itself is extremely organic and open-ended. My time management is structured. I am not inclined to teach the inspirational methods I use because painting is kind of like a personal meditation and a wild place. I like to preserve vulnerability for the canvas. However, I am always willing to discuss brush technique, marketing ideas, website construction and the like.”  (Interview continues below.)

Kinder Storm by Featured Artist Charmagne Coe!

I find myself loving both saturation of color in your paintings and the stark contrast of your line drawings.  Are the drawings studies for the paintings or just a separate passion?  “I consider my drawings to be stand-alone works of art, but sometimes they naturally become studies for paintings.  My painting and drawings are blood brothers.”

Drawings by Featured Artist Charmagne Coe!I see that figurative images weigh in heavily, and the evidence of Romanticism is rampant and extraordinary.   Talk to me about your inspiration.Yes,  my work is partly figurative. The characters are enmeshed in surreal landscapes — which, to me, are actually like emotional atmospheres. I am truly a tactile person, a romantic, if you will… so that obviously comes across! Some of the latest are very sensual. Artwork from the Renaissance and Belle Époque eras have always enticed me, but so has modernity and futuristic panoramas. My work jumps freely between time periods.”

Gossamer by Featured Artist Charmagne Coe!What style or school of art do you think work fits into? And why do you think so?  “I prefer to use the term ‘expressive surrealism’, but I find ‘abstract’ or just ‘surreal’ perfectly acceptable.

“My process and artwork is highly automatistic as was the first surrealists; I do not plan out my art in advance, so I freely express what I am feeling and sensing along the way. It’s sometimes like playing a solitary form of the game, Exquisite Corpse.” 

My goal is not to paint exact representations of the world, but rather the feelings evoked by people, places and situations.

 

Hinder Be Go by Featured Artist Charmagne Coe!Talk to me about the two artists (one living, one dead) that have most influenced your work and why.  “I am most influenced by life at large, and the loves of my life.  So those artists who go after love and life hard, are who I am most taking with.  I adore the ineffable works of Chris Berens.  Miro’s vast legacy of artwork lifts my head off my shoulders.”

What is your favorite food?  It IS a food-themed blog after all.   “That’s easy–Mexican food. I come from a larger Hispanic family that really knows how to cook traditional, hearty food. It’s always made with fresh, simple ingredients. Sentimental as it sounds, my grandmother told me to always cook with the ingredient, love. She was right.”

Prelude by Featured Artist Charmagne Coe!What is your favorite snack food?  “I am actually more of a snacker than an eater, so I have many, many faves.  But for right now it’s Manchego cheese. I was actually in Spain at a street cafe when I discovered this traditional mild, nutty sheep’s cheeseI still like to eat it just as I did then–paired with young red wine and plain almonds.”  Good choice.  I have such a soft spot for cheese from both sheep and goat’s milk. Yum.

Thanks for spending a little time with us, Charmagne. What’s coming up next for you?  “I am thrilled to have many recent paintings featured in the upcoming, Viriditas.  It is an anthology of contemporary female artists created and curated by the extraordinary Michaela Meadow of Magpie Magazine.”

Learn more about Featured Artist Charmagne Coe!
If you’re interested in
becoming a
Featured Artist, Click to Learn How!

FEATURED ARTIST: A. Laura Brody

Learn more about AAAD Featured Artist A Laura Brody!

‘NUTTY bliss

While reviewing work, I searched through entries for something contemplative but with a sense of humor to feature this month.  A little something that would spice up my winter, combating the inevitable doldrums, as well as help me find a different angle on my the serious nature of my own current work.  We are proud to Feature the work of  A. Laura Brody. I find this work organic but mechanized, self-evident but not obvious. Inspired…

• 

Featured Artist A Laura Brody - photo courtesy of Jon Meredith
Photo courtesy of Jon Meredith

FEATURED ARTIST:
A. Laura Brody

A. Laura Brody is a costume creator by trade and a functional artist by design and desire.  You’ve seen her recent work for designer Michael Schmidt on LMFAO at the Superbowl 46 halftime show, the last 2 Black Eyed Peas tours, in Fergie’s LEGO dress and on Rhianna’s bottom.“I love bringing out discarded items and materials and making them the center of attention. Zipper teeth become lace edgings, ball bearings act as pendants and centerpieces, remnant snap tape becomes footlights and old tablecloths are reborn into upholstered cushions and deconstructed finery.  My creations help people tap into childhood dreams of becoming heroines, kings, rock stars and super villains.” — A. Laura Brody

Rocking Duck Boat by Featured Artist A Laura Brody and Alan deForest - photo courtesy of Heidi Marie Photography
Rocking Duck Boat by Featured Artist A Laura Brody and Alan deForest – photo courtesy of Heidi Marie Photography

Are you self taught or formally instructed? “I’m both. I’m a costume maker and designer by trade, and my years of costume craft work have really made it possible for me to make the art. The upholstery is self taught and so is the carpentry. But I’ve got a longtime habit of tinkering. I get to use my technical skills in really different ways when I construct my artwork. It’s also pushed me to learn to weld and curve metal, how to refurbish stainless steel and silver plate, a little about wiring… Mostly, it’s teaching me patience, which I’m not so good at.”

The work for which many artists know you is mobility-centric.  What brought you to that passion?  I don’t self-identify as disabled. I have friends who do, though, and I’ve worked around quite a few folks who use disability and mobility devices. When a former boyfriend had a stroke, I spent a lot of time with his recovery and got really fascinated by all the devices you can get to help with food prep and getting around in the bathroom and such, but I was shocked at how uniformly ugly they all were. 3 years ago, I cracked my tailbone and then went through a nasty bout of tendinitis, which started me working on my own posture issues and thinking about what I would do if I couldn’t use my hands.  It was pretty terrifying, since my hands are a large part of how I make my living.

Rocking Duck Boat by Featured Artist A Laura Brody and Alan deForest - photo courtesy of Heidi Marie Photography

Those tendinitis braces
are hideous.

 

Re-making a wheelchair into something amazing was in the back of my mind for a long time, and I finally got the guts to approach a wheelchair using friend of mine about redoing his old electric one. (Thank you, Peter Soby, for kick starting this idea!)  One of the responses I get with my mobility artwork is how impractical the pieces are. People will go on at great lengths to tell me why they won’t and don’t work. But then, they start thinking about what might work. This is the whole point. How else do we get that conversation started? If we’re lucky enough to live through age and injuries and infirmity, wheelchairs or walkers or crutches or prosthetic limbs are going to be in our future. For some people, these devices are a part of their everyday lives. Why not make them amazing? And who said design was only about being practical?

Le Flaneur by Featured Artist A Laura Brody - photo courtesy of Heidi Marie Photography
Le Flaneur by Featured Artist A Laura Brody – photo courtesy of Heidi Marie Photography

Is sustainability a purposeful choice in your work or a by product of what you do?   It’s a flat-out fascination and a longtime practice. I grew up in Alaska and was surrounded by people who took a lot of pride in figuring out how to make and fix things themselves with whatever they had around. I compost, I reuse in my artwork and everyday life, and I’m finding ways to do better with reducing my waste. I just read Junkyard Planet by Adam Minter (all about his travels in the global trash trade) and was fascinated and horrified. Check it out. You may never use another plastic water bottle.

Part of it comes from how much waste I see in the entertainment industry, which I’m a little horrified to be a part of.  Yes, I know, this is biting the hand that feeds me. But you should see the waste that comes out of a TV show.  Truthfully, though, it’s hard for me to go past a salvage yard or a thrift store or a junk pile without some piece calling out to me and begging me to take it home.

Le Flaneur DETAIL by Featured Artist A Laura Brody - photo courtesy of Heidi Marie Photography

Talk to me about what media you consider the mobility-inspired work?  “I call it over-the-top functional art. The works aren’t conveniently functional, which is kind of the point. The wheelchair and the walker’s GPS unit works (as long as I’ve charged all of the batteries), the walker rolls and the rocking chair rocks. They’re even pretty comfy. ”

What style or school of art do you think your mobility-inspired work fits into? And why do you think so?  Apparently I fall into a Steampunk category.  I guess I see why, even though a lot of Steampunk seems to be about smacking a gear or goggles onto your clothes and calling it Art.  But I like to think of my work as being like a mad scientist, poring over old junk and fitting it together in odd ways to bring it new life.  Is that Reconstructivism?”

Driven by Featured Artist A Laura Brody - photo courtesy of Heidi Marie Photography
Driven by Featured Artist A Laura Brody – photo courtesy of Heidi Marie Photography

I can’t wait to hear about your favorite food.  “There are so so many of them! Truffle oil on cooked veggies is a recent find (so good), so are bison burgers and home-cured bacon (both pork and lamb) and just about anything in spicy coconut cream curry. I love fresh herbs and berries and almost all veggies. I cut out wheat a while ago. It was hard at first, and now I feel a lot better.” Editor’s Note: Spicy coconut cream curry?  That sounds so good I could take a bath in it.  I vote we make that the food of the year.  Yum.

What style or school of art do you think your work fits into and why? “I’m comfortable with the surreal label, since Surrealism is an effective umbrella term for unusual artwork. I also feel that certain artworks of mine have Abstract and Visionary elements to them, though I don’t align myself with those movements.”

What about snack foods? “All things crunchy. I could eat a whole bunch of celery. Hearts of palm, cheese of many kinds and pickles and olives of many kinds, especially the spicy Sicilian blends. Mmm. Pickled foods.” I have a newly acquired addition to pickled foods–beets, in particular.

Driven DETAIL by Featured Artist A Laura Brody - photo courtesy of Heidi Marie Photography

So, what’s coming up next for you?  “I’m looking for a gallery to put up a 2014 Opulent Mobility, together with many more artists who want to re-imagine mobility. If anyone knows of a space that’s really chair and walker accessible, I’d love to hear about it! I’m also putting together a piece to submit to the World of Wearable Art in New Zealand.  I want to make expanding nebula wings come off the back of a wheelchair (idea in process), and I just shot some video to put together into online tutorials for staple draping.  At some point I may get it all done.”

Laura, thank you for being our mad scientist! 

You have probably worsened my desire to salvage beautiful discarded treasures.  My husband calls it hoarding.  I’ll send him to this post for a better understanding of how it all works.  I am inspired.

Learn more about A. Laura Brody online!

Learn more about Featured Artist A Laura Brody!

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2013 ARTIST of the YEAR: Sima Schloss

Learn more about 2013 Artist of the Yar Sima Schloss!

HAPPY NEW food YEAR!

It’s January, and we’re thrilled to be in 2014!  I am joyfully looking forward to a new year.  2013 was a year of growth for my family, my art, and for AAAD.   There were wonderful food highlights including a renewed interest in baking.  And AAAD covered some fantastic opportunities in 2013 and even more fantastic artists.  Which leads us to our proud announcement…

Ignorance vs Ignorant, Mixed media, by Artist of the Year Sima Schloss!Today we name the 
2013 Artist of the Year!

 

When AAAD began in 2009,  I was determined to cover art deadlines, and more importantly, artists producing really good ART.  And, after I chose a few artists, I quickly realized that the Featured Artist program needed structure, or it would never really get done on any sort of regular basis. That is how the Featured Artist Contest was born. (The Featured Artist program was retired in 2015 and replaced with the Artist of the Day program.)

The Featured Artist Page was getting crowded and each post was lessening the impact. I began archiving artists yearly, and the Artist of the Year was born.

I now give all of our Featured Artists each year notice that at the end of the year, the Artist of the Year will be determined by the number of comments on their individual Featured Artist blog posts.

Congratulations to Sima Schloss,
AAAD’s 2013 Artist of the Year

Never an Equinox, mixed media, by Artist of the Year Sima Schloss!

I followed up with Sima to find out what’s new: “Yay!! Thanks so much- Im so honored to be the winner!!! Whats going on now with my work now? Lets seeI am one of the winners of ArtAscent Magazine’s Dark Issue (December, 2013)  ArtAscent.com, and my work  ‘New Sheriff’ is featured on the cover!!!  I have a group show in the works coming this Spring  (details in the near future), and a collaboration in the works as well. I’m also in process of revamping my website!”

And new foods?  Are there any new tasty morsels inspiring you?  “I had the most incredible Brussels sprouts at my friends place the other night! I think I’ve only tried them a couple of times in my life, but these were outstanding. They were cooked in garlic & oil and had some incredible seasoning--I was in heaven!  I’ve also really been into red and yellow peppers as well, they are so great with labneh (an incredible lebanese dip) hummus or guacamole.” Editor’s note:  I’ve rediscovered the mini sweet peppers in my produce aisle.  They have a milder flavor and crisper texture and ROCK stirfry dishes.

I have enjoyed getting to know you, Sima.  I am inspired by your work.  It is an expression of freedom, limitless potential and self awareness.  I LOVE the work, and I’ve enjoyed forging a slow and easy friendship.  YOU were my reward for choosing to feature your WORK. Thank you, Sima, for being a highlight of the AAAD year!  Get to know Sima Schloss yourself.

*Editor’s Note: Sima remains one of my favorite people, and her work has grown and developed, surpassing anything I could have imagined.  She was featured again in 2017 as an Artist of the Day!

 

Learn more about Sima Schloss, 2013 Artist of the Year!

 

Who will be ARTIST of the YEAR?

Enter the $5 Art Contest today!SPRINKLE ME

One of the  joys of writing posts for this blog is the privilege of reviewing entries into the $5 Art Contest.  Choosing a Featured Artist is difficult, but I appreciate the opportunity to do so.  Featured Artists are a little like the sprinkles on top of my art community cupcake.

Once a Featured Artist’s post goes live, their job is simply to promote the post to both the benefit of AAAD and their own exposure.  Comments generated by their posts are counted at the end of the year, and the post wit the largest number of comments is named Artist of the Year.

In 2010, it was Catherine Roach.  She will always have a special place in AAAD’s history.  She keeps in touch, and we are so very proud to be a part of her history.  In 2011 it was the intricate work of weaver Pamela Zimmerman.  Her original interview remains among my favorites.  In 2012, it was mixed media collage artist Stephanie Mead’s portraiture work that took my breath away.

Who will be ArtAndArtDeadlines.com’s
2013 Artist of the Year?

That is all up to you.

Look through the 2013 Featured Artist profiles.  Leave a comment for your favorite…or more than one.  Comments stop being counted after midnight EST on December 31st.

Results will be announced the first week of January!

 

If you would like to be considered for Featured Artist, enter our $5 Art Contest (that can also be entered for free).  Or, if competition isn’t your cup of tea, submit your information to our Artist to Love program and start building a stronger web presence today!

CALL for ENTRIES: Experimental

Enter the 5 Art Contest today!SUGAR
honey
AGAVE
oh my

I am not a naturally-talented baker.  I can create savory dishes all day, but the precision required for baking is a trying experience for me.  I have been experimenting with a peanut butter cookie recipe for days. It only has 4 ingredients, and I have still made it no less than 12 times to get it exactly right.  My family is tolerant of baking experiments, but not every audience is as forgiving.  This next Call is specifically looking for your experiments, but don’t send peanut butter cookies.  Bribery is frowned upon…

Check out this Call for Entries for Experimental Documentary Films for the 2014 Currents New Media Festival from Parallel Studios.  You can enter for as little as $15 per film.  Take a look…

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

Learn more about the Currents New Media Festival!CALL for ENTRIES: Experimental

 

ELIGIBILITY:  Open to all artists (including minors)

MEDIA:  Experimental Documentary film:  short pieces 1-20 minutes & feature pieces 45-90 minutes

DEADLINE:  January 6, 2014

NOTIFICATION:  February 10, 2014

ENTRY FEE: $20 for 1 entry, $15 each for 2, and FREE for those under 18 years old.

VENUES:  The Festival will be held in several venues throughout Santa Fe – El Museo Cultural de Santa Fe, Center for Contemporary Art, Digital Dome Facility at the Institute of American Indian Arts, Zane Bennett Contemporary Art, David Richard Gallery, the Railyard Plaza, Santa Fe Art Institute, Axle Contemporary, Warehouse 21 and the Tower Gallery on Pojoaque Pueblo.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Learn more about the Currents New Media Festival!

FEATURED ARTIST: Michael O’Gorman

Learn more about Featured Artist Michael O' Gorman!‘SHROOM to go

It has been a truly surreal year for me, my personal art, and for many of my readers.  So, with fingers crossed I began reviewing the entries hoping to find a little surrealism.  Honestly, I rarely have surrealists enter, but I was hopeful.  I knew what I wanted, and what-do-you-know, I found it.   It was like finding that random mushroom on your pepperoni pizza just when you were hoping for veggies.  On behalf of AAAD, I am proud to announce this month’s Featured Artist is Michael O’Gorman.  I find this work to be endlessly complicated, but fluid.

The Application of Great Britain to the Earth by Featured Artist Michael O'Gorman!FEATURED ARTIST:
Michael O’Gorman

Michael O’Gorman is an artist from the United Kingdom who specializes in surreal oil paintings of organic and anthropomorphic subject matter, expressed through a unique ’merging’ style. He is obsessed with detail and perfection, and spends many months on a single painting, ensuring that the color gradients are smooth, that all narratives within a composition blend harmoniously, and – most importantly – that each painting is exciting and rewarding to view!

O’Gorman graduated from the University of Warwick in 2006 and works as a freelance artist and writer.  He loves to create complex, detailed artworks whose narratives can be explored and observed forever, with the viewer always discovering something new and exciting.

Memoirs of a Fertile Imagination by Featured Artist Michael O'Gorman!Are you self taught or formally instructed?  “I’m self-taught. I always doodled as a child, but it wasn’t until 2002 – when I was 17 years old – that I tried to create my first serious drawing. Four months of obsessive penciling by lamplight later, and ‘Black Water’ was finished!

“Three years after ‘Black Water,’ I taught myself to paint. I outlined some figures onto canvas with pencil and coloured them with acrylic paints. This was the beginning of my first painting, ‘Perpetual Fluidity,’ which remains my only improvised painting.

“I’m extremely glad that I avoided art lessons, since I cannot understand how surreal artists – artists whose works are assessed on uniqueness of expression – could benefit from an external mentor. I do have a university degree, but it’s in an unrelated field.”

The Medicine Tree by Featured Artist Michael O'Gorman!Is your media paint, ink, digital?  Of the twenty-eight artworks I have created to date, two are in pencil, one is in acrylic, and the rest are in oil. It didn’t take me long to graduate from acrylic to oil after completing ‘Perpetual Fluidity.’   Though I appreciated their boldness, I found acrylics a little too shallow for my tastes.  Moreover, their quick drying times maddened me; I’m a perfectionist, and I need to spend hours moving paint around the canvas until the colour gradients are seamless!

I read your method of deriving inspiration from words randomly chosen from the dictionary, but I am also interested in knowing those pieces that have personal meaning to you.  Talk to me about your favorite (non-random) piece.  My favourite piece to date is probably ‘Memoirs of a Fertile Imagination’ since I feel it encapsulates the most unique aspects of my style: An unlimited sense of flow (resulting in a non-existent focal point), anthropomorphism (giving human features to non-human subjects), and a playful tone. Its warmth always brings a smile to my face.” 

The Landscape Painter by Featured Artist Michael O'Gorman!You state that, “Working from life is plagiarism”.  That’s a pretty controversial way of explaining you’re not a fan of representational work.  What does that say about your view of photography?   “I appreciate photography to an extent, and the medium has incomparable value as a historical document. Unfortunately, while not everyone can compose music, write stories, or paint landscapes, everyone can take photographs. Consequently, photography has become the refuge of the amateur, and the online art world is now saturated with unremarkable photos that often eclipse the actual artwork.” Editor’s Note: Ouch.  Just in case you think this contest is rigged or biased, please note this is the second Featured Artist in a row that has, innocently enough, slammed some aspect of how I work.  Geez.  Guess it is good that I’m not thin-skinned.

A Corporate Ladder Deflating an Encapsulated Situation of Its Irony by Featured Artist Michael O'Gorman!What style or school of art do you think your work fits into and why?  “I’m comfortable with the surreal label, since Surrealism is an effective umbrella term for unusual artwork. I also feel that certain artworks of mine have Abstract and Visionary elements to them, though I don’t align myself with those movements.”

What artists (living and/or dead, famous or not) inspire you most?   I’m not a great art lover, and I can’t claim direct inspiration from other artists. That said, I do appreciate the works of Hieronymus Bosch, Pieter Bruegel, Salvador Dali, Jacek Yerka, and Zdizslaw Beksinski. I like artists whose works are unique and instantly recognisable – artists that don’t need to signature their paintings because no-one can imitate them in the first place.

Interview continues below Perpetual Fluidity.

Perpetual Fluidity by Featured Artist Michael O'Gorman!

You know we have to talk about food. What is your favorite? Though I’m from the UK, my mother is Italian and I was raised in a household where Mediterranean food reigned supreme: Pasta, salads, buffalo mozzarella, bruschetta, pizzas, etc.  Italian food still remains my favourite.

“I’m also a big fan of British desserts, especially fruit scones with clotted cream and homemade strawberry jam (served with English breakfast tea, of course). I honestly think I could eat that every day. In fact, when I’m elderly enough to get away with it, I probably will.”

A Multi-Instrumentalist’s Self-Performance by Featured Artist Michael O'Gorman!What about snack foods? “Probably arancini. They are balls of rice and cheese that have been fried and coated in breadcrumbs.” I have to admit, I have never heard of arancini, much less tasted it.  Fascinating.  That doesn’t happen often.

So, what’s coming up next for you? “In-between creating new artwork, I hope to put my existing artwork on sale for the first time.  I’ll also create a page on my website where people can buy prints of the original work.  After all, is a home truly a home without a framed print of a campfire transforming into a horned beast that writes algebra on an oversized blackboard pulsating with live flesh?  Definitely not!”

Michael, thank you for such a well-defined point of view and for being precisely that for which I was searching this month.

Learn more about Michael O’Gorman online!

Learn more about Featured Artist Michael O Gorman!

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CALL for ENTRIES: Digital

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When I moved recently, I pared down some unnecessary kitchen gadgets–all digital.  Among the things I ditched were a digital meat thermometer and a digital kitchen timer.  I just prefer the non-digital ones.  I never quite trust the digital ones.  I’m always concerned about whether the batteries are on the fritz.  This next Call, although digital, isn’t one to ditch…

Check out this Call for Entries from Unframed for Digital.  Unframed is an online gallery dedicated to the celebration of art and creativity–for artists, by artists.  It is brand new!  In fact, this is their first juried show.  Take a look

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

Learn more from unframed!CALL for ENTRIES:
Digital

 

ELIGIBILITY: Open to all artists

MEDIA: Open to all digital art, including but not limited to:  digital painting, computer illustration, digitally manipulated photography, computer generated art, digital manipulations of traditional art, digital collages, fractal art, computer printed sculpture,  algorithmic art, app art, etc.

DEADLINE: December 15, 2013

NOTIFICATION: Ongoing

ENTRY FEE: $20 for up to 3 images

JURORS:  Entries will be juried by a selected panel from unframed’s staff.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Learn more from the unframed online gallery!