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Category: Featured Artist

CALL for ENTRIES: About Face

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piggie, piggie

I love freshly roasted pork. Roasting a whole pig is a specialty in the South.  We then gather for something called a “pig pickin”, where we pick at the pig.  Not kidding.  I love everything except the face.  I know from hence my food comes.  But, do I really need to look the pig in the face?  No thanks.   This Call is all about the face. Take a look…

Check out this Call for Entries from Art Labology for About Face. This entry fee is much less expensive than their first Call, and you know how I love portraiture.  Don’t miss this opportunity…

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

Learn more about the About Face exhibit!CALL for ENTRIES:
About Face

 

THEME:  All about the face.

ELIGIBILITY:
Open to all artists

MEDIA:
Any media

DEADLINE:
April 30, 2013

NOTIFICATION:
Winners will be notified by email.

ENTRY FEE: $25 for up to 3 images.

AWARDS: $500.00 cash award. The winner will also receive a link for the use on your personal website and social media and an email announcement to their International database of art collectors and galleries.

For complete details, visit Art Labology online!

Learn more from Art Labology online!

CALL for ENTRIES: Women

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dearest

I’ve never been accused of being overly maternal.  However, my kid will be 14 years old soon, so I must have done something right.  He now eats brussel sprouts and asparagus.  Another point in my favor–well, OUR favor.  It was actually my husband that spent the first 12 years of our kid’s life being the more maternal one.  To hell with gender roles.  Whatever works is my motto.  This next Call wants your slant on being a woman.  Approx. 52% of you should have a bird’s eye view of this one…

Check out this Call to Artists for Women from the Linus Galleries (Pasadena, CA). The exhibit offers an online listing as well as the possibility for a showing in one of their brick and mortar galleries. Take a look…

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

Check out the Call for Entries at the Linus Gallery!CALL for ENTRIES:
Women

 

There’s a reason why women are the subjects of many, many classic paintings and sculptures.  What’s your reason?  For this call for entries, we’re looking for artwork that centers on the “fairer” sex.

Feel free to break, enforce, and comment on roles, boundaries, and expectations with this hot-topic theme.  Remember:  bring your fresh perspective to the table.

ELIGIBILITY: Open to all artists.

Learn more about the Women exhibit from the Linus Galleries!MEDIA: All Media including: Photography, wall sculpture, fabric, mixed media, painting, drawing. It must be wall hung. Sizes up to 12′. Video submissions will be displayed/accepted only for the online exhibition.

DEADLINE:
March 25, 2013

ENTRY FEE:
$35 for 3,
$5 per add’l

AWARDS: Accepted artwork for this online exhibition will be judged again for a collective live exhibition at their Pasadena Gallery. The artists will be asked if they wish to submit their artwork for the collective exhibition, which is not a requirement to being a part of the online exhibition.

SALES: 40% commission on all sales.

ABOUT LINUS GALLERIES: Linus Galleries is based in Southern California. They are located in Pasadena and Long Beach in Los Angeles County.

For complete details, Read the Guidelines!

Learn more about  the Linus Galleries!

FEATURED ARTIST: Lori Pond

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com for FREE by email!MARSHMALLOWS,
hold the fluff

I am seeing a glimpse of Spring in the entries for the $5 Art Contest. I am glad to know I’m not the only one ready to slough off winter.  Winter is full of baggage and contemplation for me.  This year in particular has required that I get a handle on a new existence, face reality and embrace my new self.  As I grow older, one resounding truth comes through–I am not alone.  If I have a heartbreak or joy, the chance are good that someone out there has been through it too.  I used to believe that no one could feel the way I feel, but I find it comforting now to be a part of the shared experience of life.

This month’s artist works as a photographer.  And although I have a soft spot for photography, I have featured very few photographers.  Mainly, I find photographers think as photographers (go figure) and frequently don’t present themselves or their work as ART.  But I found a soft spot in this month’s artist.  A gooey center to the marshmallow, made of more than just sugar. I found a shared experience of grief and rebirth–an inward contemplation that spoke to larger truth.

Learn more about Featured Artist Lori Pond! Self as other, a theme with which I share a special bond. On behalf of ArtAndArtDeadlines.com, I am proud to announce the Featured Artist chosen from the January entries to the $5 Art Contest is Lori Pond.  I find her work both unique and communal.  Let your own Spring renewal be inspired by a little soul exposure from Lori Pond…

FEATURED ARTIST:
Lori Pond

 

When 8 year old Lori was asked about her favorite hobby, her immediate reply was “dreaming.”  “I have always had some sort of camera in hand for as long as I can remember. The re’s something about freezing a moment in time that has always appealed to me.  I’ve used Kodak Instamatics, Polaroid Land Cameras, a Minolta SRT 101, plastic toy cameras and a whole slew of Nikon film and digital cameras.  I often wonder, ‘What is Reality?’  Is it what I see with my eyes or what I dream with my mind’s eye?”

From the Self Series by Featured Artist Lori Pond!Are you self taught or formally instructed? “My Dad introduced to me to photography.  He showed me how to develop black and white film and how to print an image with an enlarger.  He often took me out to the desert in the springtime so we could make images of the ephemeral wildflowers that would spring up out of the dirt.

“In addition, I have been lucky to have studied with some amazing artist photographers, too, such as Cig Harvey, Aline Smithson, Joyce Tenneson, Eddie Soloway, JoAnn Callis and Connie Imboden, to name a few.”

Talk to me about the process you use. “My creative process involves using both the camera and post processing tools to paint in light, color, texture and movement to reveal my photographic ‘alpha state’.”

From the iPhonography Series by Featured Artist Lori Pond!Clearly, the figure has a strong influence in your work.  Tell me what motivated you to turn the camera on yourself in “Self”. “Self” has been a lifelong project, mainly because when I’ve needed a model, I’ve been conveniently around!  It’s funny, because I rarely let someone else take a photograph of me–I’m very shy that way.  But, I have no problem shooting myself then showing those images to anyone.  There’s a psychological story in here somewhere.  I do find myself gravitating toward self-portraiture when I’m going through a big change in my life, such as my recent divorce.”

Tell me about “Divorce”.  It is quite a departure from the more ethereal quality of your other work.  Wanna talk about that?  “‘Divorce’ came about because after being married for 20 years, I realized my marriage didn’t work anymore.  I never thought in a million years I would get a divorce.  My husband and I were always seen as the ‘perfect couple.’   But, we grew apart.  I started to photograph how I was feeling in the middle of the process when my husband moved out of the house.  Suddenly, I was walking around in empty rooms and I didn’t know how to fill them up.  Making self-portraits in these ‘new’ spaces was a sort of catharsis and self-therapy for me as I adjusted to a new life as a single woman.”

From the Divorce Series by Featured Artist Lori Pond!What style or school of art do you think your work fits into and why?  “I am constantly being told I have a million different ideas and that I don’t fit into any particular style.  My landscape work has been referred to as ‘The New Pictorialism’ by Stephen Perloff of The Photo Review, and my self-portraiture compared to Cindy Sherman.  I’ve shot documentary style images of psychiatric patients and macro images of tulips.  I guess I would call my work omnivorous, because I look at everything and take it all in!”  Omnivorous, eh?  Thanks for the perfect segue.

You know we have to talk about food. What is your favorite? “I have favorite combinations of food rather than one specific food.  For instance, pears sauteed in butter and champagne are ne plus ultra in my book.  I make my own marshmallows and I add rose or orange water to them.  They’re great on their own, but I like to also make my own chai and add the marshmallows on top.  They melt into the chai, and it’s just like a little piece of heaven.” Every artist gives me several answers, and they are often remarkably similar.  But no one has every said “marshmallows.”

From the iPhonography Series by Featured Artist Lori Pond!What about snack foods? “I can eat a whole bag of any kind of potato chips in one sitting, especially if they’re the salt and vinegar kind.  I eat them until my lips bleed!  I also have a special fondness for Trader Joe’s Popcorn with herbs–also, one bag per sitting.  It’s funny, because when I was younger, sweets always appealed to me more, and in my more mature years, I tend to have hankerings toward salt and savory.” Gluttony is easier with salty snacks–no sugar coma.  This is my excuse.

So, what’s coming up next for you? “I started a project last year that I’m developing with both still images and video.  It’s called “Then and Now,” and it explores and confronts mortality by superimposing a present day image of someone over a childhood image of theirs. What began as a desire on my part to face death turned into a celebration of life as I realized no matter how old we get, our essential life spirit remains.

From The Intimate Universe Series by Featured Artist Lori Pond!No amount of wrinkles and age spots can occlude that spark.  I make 3D images of both portraits; I hang a diaphanous image of the person on fabric over one in print; I cross dissolve between ‘”then and now” so the viewer can see a gradual aging process.  I will be exhibiting the multimedia work at the Julia Dean Photography Workshop space in an exhibit entitled, “Alchemy and Entity” in March.”  Can’t wait to see these images.  Since my father passed and my grandmother has Alzheimer’s, I have an increasing intrigue with mortality.  I am happy to hear of a celebratory look at the subject matter.

Thanks, Lori, for reminding me that we are not alone

Learn more about Lori Pond online!

Learn more about Featured Artist Lori Pond!

ARTIST RESIDENCY: I-Park 2013

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anyone?

Could you host a dinner party for 4 weeks in a row?  I’m not sure I could either.  Feeding 6-8 people every day for a month has got to be a challenge.  I think it would have to involve lots of pasta, casseroles and soups.  But, it would be a great excuse to eat comfort food.  This next Call will give you 4 weeks away in a creative atmosphere…and group meals.  Check it out…

Check out this Call for Applications for an Artist Residency at I-Park (Connecticut). There is a $30 entry fee, but if selected, there is no fee for the 4-week residency which provides a private bedroom, private studio, artists’ meal program, etc. Don’t miss this opportunity!

*Editor’s Note: If you have read the personal portion of this post, ARTIST RESIDENCY: I-Park 2013, anywhere other than by email subscription or on ArtAndArtDeadlines.com, it has been published without permission and is considered theft.

Learn more about the Artist Residency Program at I-Park!ARTIST RESIDENCY:
I-Park

 

I-Park is both an open air and a closed studio laboratory for individual artistic pursuits in the fields of the visual arts, music composition/sound sculpture/design, moving image, landscape/garden design and creative writing. The artists-in-residence program offers a quiet, retreat-like environment conducive to exploration and experimentation – without the expectation of particular outcomes. Artists are free to conceive and execute new ideas or work on existing projects.

ELIGIBILITY: Open to artists internationally, aged 21+ years.

CATEGORIES: Visual Arts, Music Composition/Sound Sculpture/Design, Creative Writing, Moving Image and Landscape/Garden Design. Inter-disciplinary artists are welcome to apply for a residency at I-Park.

Read the Full Call from I-Park!DEADLINES:

April 1, 2013
(For Landscape and Architecture)

February 18, 2013
(For all other disciplines)

NOTIFICATION:
Usually around mid-March

APPLICATION FEE: $30

JURORS: For 2012, I-Park has organized juries for the following programs and/or disciplines: Visual Arts, Music Composition/Sound Sculpture/Design, Creative Writing, Moving Image and Landscape/Garden Design.

AWARDS:A 4-week residency includes a private bedroom, private studio, artists’ meal program, etc.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Learn more about the Artist Residency Program at I-Park!

CALL for ENTRIES: Direct Art 20

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by EmailBREAST
wanted

Some days I just want fried chicken and macaroni and cheese.  Yes, I could make a beautiful coq au vin  instead of fried chicken or pastitsio instead of mac ‘n’ cheese.  But sometimes the comfort of the familiar is the only thing that will do.  Magazines like the one in this next Call are a lovely alternative to the onslaught of online art zines that pop up day after day.  Here’s your chance to be amongst its pages…

Check out this Call for Entries from Direct Art Magazine for publication in Volume 20!  There are very few paper-publishing opportunities left out there, and this one is a great one.  Take a look at this competition…

*Editor’s Note: If you have read the personal portion of this post, CALL for ENTRIES: Direct Art 20, anywhere other than by email subscription or on ArtAndArtDeadlines.com, it has been published without permission and is considered theft.

Learn more Direct Art Magazine!CALL for ENTRIES:
Direct Art 20

 

ELIGIBILITY:
Open to all artists

MEDIA:
Open to all media

DEADLINE:
March 31, 2013

NOTIFICATION: 
April 30, 2013

ENTRY FEE:  $35 for up to 4, $5 ea. add’l

AWARDS:  Grand Prize: Front Cover and six page feature display.  Second Prize: Back Cover and four page feature display.  Awards 3-4: Four page feature.  Awards 5-6: Double page feature display.  Awards 7-20: Single full page display.

Editors Awards: Additional pages, inside covers, mast head and outside covers may be assigned based on editorial selection.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Read the Prospectus from Direct Art Magazine!

FEATURED ARTIST: Stephanie Metz

Learn more about Featured Artist Stephanie Metz!BUTTER, melts like butter

I try to co-ordinate the Featured Artists I choose with the season, the weather and, well, my mood.  Given the time of year and the constant presence of butter-laden comfort foods in my house, I have been in the mood for something comforting, something soft, something knowable.  Well, I don’t always get my way.

This month’s artist works in the soft and fuzzy, but she left me with an uneasy feeling.  After reviewing her work, I had more questions than answers and the sinking feeling I might have seen something that wasn’t any of my business.  I feel a little voyeuristic when feasting on her work.  I am uncomfortable, and I am okay with that.  On behalf of AAAD, I am proud to announce this month’s Featured Artist is Stephanie Metz.  Her artwork is mysterious but overtly human.  Let Stephanie take YOU out of your comfortable place and inspire you for the New Year…

Learn more about the Featured Artist Stephanie Metz!FEATURED ARTIST:  Stephanie Metz

Stephanie Metz lives and works in San Jose, California and was a featured artist in Bay Area Currents 2009 at ProArts Gallery, Oakland, CA.  She has exhibited at Hosfelt Gallery, San Francisco and New York, and the San Jose Institute of Contemporary Art.  Her numerous group exhibitions include Creatures: From Bigfoot to the Yeti Crab at the Sun Valley Center for the Arts in Idaho, Formex Stockholm 2008 in Stockholm, Sweden, and Transmission: Experience at the Institute of Contemporary Arts Gallery, Singapore.  Metz was honored with two Center for Cultural Innovation Grants in 2011 and 2009.

Her artwork has been reviewed and featured in the San Francisco Chronicle, Fiberarts Magazine, Craft Magazine, Artweek Magazine, and PBS. She received her BFA in Sculpture at the University of Oregon.  Metz’s focus is overly domesticated creatures, especially those whose form has overgrown their function.

Flesh and Bone Study 2 by Featured Artist Stephanie Metz!What do you consider your media?  Felted Wool?  Mixed Media?  “I describe myself as a ‘Sculptor’, and I mostly use wool, but I feel free to use other things when they’re needed. I’m known for my felted wool work, and I truly love the medium, but I don’t identify myself as a fiber artist or a felt artist or a wool artist—all of which apply, but really narrow down the discussion with a lot of preconceptions.  I have in the past listed my medium as ‘felted wool’ on labels for my work, but recently saw a show of Rosemarie Trockel’s wrapped yarn canvases described simply as ‘wool,’ and really liked the simplicity of it—probably because I feel that I’m always having to push forward the idea of wool as just another medium with which to sculpt, rather than a way to draw a line between art and craft.   So I guess I’m saying my medium is wool.”

Talk to me about the process you use.  “My process is ridiculously simple: I poke at masses of wool fibers with sharp, notched needles from various directions until they compact into nearly solid forms. Needle felting is a way to make non-woven textiles, but unlike wet felting which tangles the wool fibers through heat and motion, needle felting accomplishes the tangling by mechanically forcing the wool fibers against each other, where they become interlocked thanks to the microscopic scales that cover the hairs.

Hair Underwear by Featured Artist Stephanie Metz!“Eventually the fluffy wool becomes more like a solid object, given a particular shape by the process of turning it over to reach different areas, adding on more wool, compacting it down, and all the time poking and poking and poking. Repeat.  I enjoy pushing the known limits of a material and a technique, and since I had no background whatsoever in fibers when I stumbled across needle felting, I didn’t know what rules I might be breaking.”  For those interested, there are some great process pictures on her Facebook page.

How do you feel about what I suspect are never ending questions, like mine, about your process?  “Sometimes I wish I were a painter, because then when people ask what I do I could just say ‘I’m a Painter’ which either ends the discussion or opens on to a discussion of ideas and themes, rather than detailing the physical application of materials.  Working in an unusual and craft-heavy medium means I have a lot of practice talking about my technique, which is a blessing and a curse. It’s great that people find it interesting, and I’m enthusiastic about sharing the ins and outs of needle felting—but that doesn’t always leave time to talk about the ideas behind the work. ”  Watch a time lapse video of 35 hours of work in 4:14 minutes.

Lorica 5 by Featured Artist Stephanie Metz!Your work actually makes me a little uneasy.  It seems far too intimate for public viewing, and I don’t know why.  Talk about your influences. “I’m intrigued to find that my work seems intimate to you, since I sometimes suspect that I’m too much of a chicken to really put it all out there.  I’m a private person.  I feel somewhat protected by the non-literal nature of my artwork, but perhaps it’s more self-disclosing than I realize. Or maybe it appears to be self-disclosing to a viewer because it reflects back their own issues or expectations. I do find that when I meet new people who have known my work first they often seem surprised that I am, er, ‘normal.’  I don’t know any ‘normal’ artists Stephanie.  Even the folks doing representational pastel beach scenes on the Boardwalk have a weird streak.

“It is a strange disconnect to make things and know what they mean to me, and then find out that others have completely different takes on them.  But I know each of us carries around a lifetime of personal baggage, and that affects the way we interpret art and life.  My teddy bear skulls, for example, tend to separate viewers into two distinct camps: those who see them as specimens of surreal nature, and those who see them as evidence of murdered childhood icons.  I’m in the former camp.”

Learn more about Featured Artist Stephanie Metz!What style of art do you find unbearable to own?  “I dislike artwork that mines the cultural iconography of another time or culture in a frivolous way… like plunking a Kokopelli figure on a mailbox, for example. There has to be a reason, a connection.”

You know we have to talk about food. What is your favorite? “Hmm. I’m not sure if ‘butter’ is considered to be a food or just a component of food. I was allergic to dairy as a child, so I tell myself I’m making up for lost time. Perhaps a more socially acceptable answer would be one of many cheeses, probably between Cotswold and fancy sharp Cheddar.  I lean towards an Italian palate of breads, cheeses, tomatoes, and the like.”  Butter.  I miss butter as it has been relegated to a rare indulgence, despite to my French culinary leanings.

What about snack foods?  “I really like rice cakes with cream cheese heavily applied, but some Oreos wil l do as well as long as it’s after real food.  I have a thing about not eating dessert food (chocolate-based) before ‘real food’. Not sure why.”  Rice Cakes, Stephanie?  Really?  You lead me on with butter only to slap me down with rice cakes?  I love them too, but it’s a long fall from butter.

Learn more about Featured Artist Stephanie Metz!So, what’s coming up next for you? “I’m considering this a ‘making year’- head down, working on my large scale body of work (and smaller studies as I work out the mechanics of making the large pieces). I’m looking into renting a larger studio space at the end of the year, since my work is lately taking over more of the house.”

What style or school of art do you think your work fits into and why?  “I think my work is perhaps related to post minimalism, but the ‘official’ style that best seems to fit is “Eccentric Abstraction,” a term coined by curator Lucy Lippard in 1966, which refers to the use of organic abstract form in sculpture evoking the gendered body through an emphasis on process.  I don’t know when there will be a term for a style or school that emphasizes hand work within the world of modern technology (and without the negative associations of ‘craft’), but I think I would fit there.”  Holy cannoli, someone finally ANSWERED this question without saying, ‘I don’t think in terms of labels’ or “My work doesn’t really fit into any particular style.”  Thank you.  You might be the first one EVER.

Thanks, Stephanie, for making me uneasy with your felted creaturesWe all need to be forced out of our comfort zone…

Learn more about Stephanie Metz online!

Learn more about Featured Artist Stephanie Metz!

2012 ARTIST of the YEAR: Stephanie Mead

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!HAPPY NEW YEAR!

Today marks another year for ArtAndArtDeadlines.com! And, I am running a little late again, but I at least I’m getting it done before Chinese New Year (February 10th this year).   I am joyfully looking forward to a new year.  2012 was a really tough year for me personally.  But, 2012 had some wonderful food highlights including pesto made from home-grown basil from my newly-planted garden as well as highlights for AAAD, including this one…

This is the day we name the
Artist of the Year for 2012.

 

When AAAD began in 2009, I was determined to cover art deadlines and 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. The $5 Art Contest was born.

Mixed Media by 2013 Featured Artist of the Year Stephanie Mead!The Featured Artist Page was getting crowded and adding each new artist was lessening the impact of being Featured.  I knew I had to start archiving artists yearly.  And, the idea of the Artist of the Year was born.

I now give all of our Featured Artists each year notice that on December 31st at midnight EST, the Artist of the Year would be determined by the number of comments on their individual Featured Artist blog posts.

Congratulations to
Stephanie Mead,
AAAD’s 2012 Artist of the Year

I followed up with Stephanie to find out what’s new:  “I try to balance my art and my music and my cooking (I just made another batch of chili yesterday in between preparing a submission for a fellowship in Music through New York Foundation of the Arts)The Sullied Accolades are gaining happy success in our musical career; this year we have completed an in-home recording booth and are getting much use out of it. Additionally, our music video project was screened at the 2012 Coney Island Film Festival in Brooklyn.

2012 Artist of the Year Stephanie Mead!“In the meantime, my large, mixed media, octopus piece is out on our main wall, reaching towards anyone that walks by.  She is almost finished (a long, on-going project because of the scale!), and I felt compelled after Hurricane Sandy to pick up bits of paper from the streets and insert pieces of fishing route/Manhattan waterway maps as the octopus tentacles…

“As I gain more experiences in life, the more complex and refined my art has become. I look forward to keep pushing forward. I am happy to be an artist in this life, it is my calling. I am excited for all opportunities that are coming my way.”

I have enjoyed getting to know Stephanie this year.  I found a kindred artist and musician in Stephanie, and her work spoke to both my frustration AND my optimism.  Thank you, Stephanie, for being a highlight of the AAAD year!  Get to know Stephanie Mead yourself.

Do you want to be the 2013 Artist of the Year?
It all starts with the $5 Art Contest.

CALL for ENTRIES: 50th at the Masur

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email for FREE!LAZY DAYS
of Winter

Chili mac is in the crock pot right now.  Mmmhmm, sophisticated.  I spend a lot of time talking about gourmet foods, but it is cold and drizzly outside.  And since I cannot spend a couple of balmy days in Louisiana soaking up the warm, humid goodness… I made chili mac instead of grilled portobellos with homemade pesto over flax seed, whole wheat pasta.  Don’t judge me–or my chili mac.  This next Call is enticing me, if only because I am dreaming of attending a Louisiana opening.  Take a look…

Check out this Call for Entries from the Masur Museum of Art (Monroe, LA) for their 50th Annual Juried Competition.  The entry fee is only $10, and it is open to all media.  This is a great museum, and did I mention there is no commission?  This is a great opportunity…

*Editor’s Note: If you have read the personal portion of this post, CALL for ENTRIES: 50th at the Masur, anywhere other than by email subscription or on ArtAndArtDeadlines.com, it has been published without permission and is considered theft.

Learn more from the Masur Museum!CALL for ENTRIES:
50th Annual Juried Competition

 

ELIGIBILITY:  US Residents, 18+

MEDIA:  Open to all media

DEADLINE:  January 11, 2013

NOTIFICATION:  January 28, 2013

ENTRY FEE:  $10 per image, min of 2 & max of 5

JUROR:  George T.M. Shackelford is the Senior Deputy Director of the Kimbell Art Museum in Fort Worth, Texas. Most recently he co-curated the exhibition Degas and the Nude with Xavier Rey, Curator of Paintings at the Musée d’Orsay, while serving as Chair of Art of Europe at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.

Learn more from the Masur Museum!Shackelford also curated the exhibitions Monet, Renoir, and the Impressionist Landscape (1999); Jean-François Millet (2001); and Delacroix to Munch: Nineteenth-Century Visions (2004), all held at the Nagoya/Boston Museum of Fine Arts (N/BMFA) in Nagoya, Japan. Among the exhibitions he has co-curated at the Boston MFA are Monet in the 20th Century (1998-99), Impressionist Still Life (2001–02) and Gauguin Tahiti (2003–04). In 2005, he was honored with the title Chevalier de L’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres (Knight of the Order of Arts and Letters) by the Republic of France.

AWARDS:  Best in Show is $1,000 and total awards are $3,000.  Editor’s Note:  OMG, how I love this next award!  Best Packed: This award will honor the artist who packs their art in the most professional manner. No packing peanuts, feedbags, loose papers as packing materials, no cigarette butts, etc. these types of things will disqualify you! Show your work and our staff the respect they deserve. This prize will be decided by the Masur Museum staff.

SALES:  The Masur does not receive a commission on sales.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Learn more from the Masur Museum!

REMINDER: Open Call at Flow

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!A Season for…
everything

The featured food at my house this week is Jona Gold apples ($.89/lb). Last month is was asparagus ($1.99/lb).  This whole month it has been apples, partly because of our proximity to an orchard, and partly due to price.  We’re heading toward Winter, and I’ll be eating $1 butternut squash for at least 2 months. It is all about eating what’s in season. It is cheaper, healthier, and yummier. Think of it as a seasonal treat.  This next Call is all about the upcoming season, and it’s a treat too!  Take a look…

Check out this Call for Entries for 2013 Exhibitions from Flow Art Space (Minneapolis, MN). Great news…NO COMMISSION, no really.  This is a rare opportunity in a fairly new gallery. The deadline is just around the corner…

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

OPEN CALL: 2013 Exhibitions

Learn more about Flow Art Space!Flow Art Space in Minneapolis, MN announces an open call for submissions for 2013 shows. Artists will be considered for possible inclusion in group shows and/or chosen as a featured artist.

ELIGIBILITY: US artists at least 18 are welcome to submit.

MEDIA: 2D and 3D media and all subject matter will be considered, including but not limited to drawing, painting, photography, book art, printmaking, sculpture, fiber, glass, encaustic, ceramics, mixed media, wood, digital art, video, and installation.

DEADLINE: November 14, 2012

EARLY DEADLINE ENTRY FEE: $50 for up to 4 images

JLearn more about Flow Art Space!UROR: Artist, Curator and Flow Art Space Founder Melissa Metzler will select work.

SALES: Artists will keep 100% of their sales and handle their own transactions by accepting their preferred method(s) of payment. Artists deliver or ship their sold work to buyers. The mission of Flow Art Space is to provide ongoing opportunities for artists to show their work in a professional environment and to connect them with potential buyers. The goal is to establish ongoing relationships between artists and buyers, because buyers like to buy directly from artists and artists like to keep 100% of their sales!

For complete details, Download the Prospectus!

Download the Propsectus from the Flow Art Space website!

CALL for ENTRIES: Winter Feature

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!When I grow old I will
EAT PURPLE

I try to eat at home for most of my meals.  Partly, I’m a little cheap; partly, I like to know where my food originates and what is in it.  However, one of the things I most love about good restaurants is their habit of featuring seasonal or fresh finds.  One of my favorite local eateries featured beautiful fragrant purple basil from a local grower in it’s caprese salads.  I ate my weight in their sandwich version this past summer.  This next Call wants to feature YOU, or at least your work.  Investigate this opportunity…

Check out this Call for Entries for Winter 2013 Featured Artist from the Kiernan Gallery (Lexington, Virginia). The entry is very reasonable considering the number of images and pieces you submit and could end up showing.  Take a look…

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

Learn more about the Kiernan Gallery!CALL for ENTRIES:
Winter 2013 Featured Artist

 

The Kiernan Gallery seeks an entire documentary series for exhibition in one room of the gallery.  The selected documentary work will be shown in conjunction with our upcoming show Encore: A Look at Music, though it need not be thematically related.

To continue the gallery’s mission of promoting the work of emerging photographers, The Kiernan Gallery will hold its first tri-annual call for portfolios submissions to select a featured artist.

ELIGIBILITY: Open to all artists

MEDIA: All photographic media are encouraged.

DEADLINE: November 22, 2012

NOTIFICATION: Approx. 8 days after deadline

ENTRY FEE: $50 for 8-10 images

Learn more about the Featured Artist Call from the Kiernan Gallery!CURATOR:   The featured artist will be chosen by Owner/Director Kat Kiernan.

AWARDS:  The chosen artist will have their work occupy the entirety of  a room in the Main Gallery. The featured artist will receive:  A one month show of approximately 10 images, a feature on The Kiernan Gallery’s blog and website, an electronic show card designed and distributed by The Kiernan Gallery.

SALES: Kiernan Gallery retains 30% of the sale price as commission.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Read the full call from The Kiernan Gallery website!