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Category: Featured Artist

CALL for ENTRIES: The End

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!TWICE
as nice

It is enchiladas day at my house.  When I make them, it is a painstaking process that takes hours; however, I have learned to make enough filling for two batches and freeze the 2nd half.  Tonight, I’ll have enchiladas that take just a few minutes to fill and bake. Yeah!  This next Call calls Austin, TX home, and I promise the enchiladas you’ll find there are far better than what will be served at my  house tonight.  Investigate…

Check out this Call for Entries from Cantanker Magazine for The End, both an issue of the magazine as well as an exhibit at the Big Medium Gallery (Austin, TX).  You can enter ANY media for as little as $10.  Don’t miss this art publication opportunity!

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

Learn more about THE END from Cantanker Magazine!CALL for ENTRIES:
The End

 

In this issue, Cantanker Magazine is seeking submissions that explore the theme “THE END”.  Artists are invited to explore the symbolic, personal, social, political, economic, or formal elements of the afore-mentioned theme.

ELIGIBILITY:  Open to all artists

MEDIA:  Submitted work must either formally or conceptually address the theme THE END.  Works can be executed in any media, traditional or digital/new media.

Learn more from Cantanker Magazine!DEADLINE:  November 25, 2012

NOTIFICATION:  November 29, 2012

ENTRY FEE:  $10 for a single submission, $20 for 3 submissions.  There is no upper limit on submissions.

JURORS:  Sean Gaulager is a founder of Cantanker and Executive Director and Curator of Co-Lab Projects.  Shea Little is a founder of Cantanker and founder and Co-Director of Big Medium non-profit.  John Mulvany is a founder of Cantanker, artist and the Art program head at the Khabele School, Austin.  Debra Broz is a founder of Cantanker, artist and Acting Director at Pump Project Art Complex.

AWARDS:  Selected work will be featured in Cantanker’s full-color catalog, Issue 14: THE END and in a group exhibition at Big Medium Gallery opening mid-December 2012.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

 

FEATURED ARTIST: Caitlyn Shea

Click to Submit to the $5 Art Contest!RHUBARB!
in contrast

The $5 Art Contest continues to be a gift. I continue to be late posting results (like this one for September–due 8 days ago), but my reasons are better.   The number of entries is increasing, and I am continuing longer dialogue with those that are rejected.   The platform has become a way to help artists get outside their heads for a little while, and it requires that they take a look at how they do the BUSINESS of being an artist.  Sometimes you have to learn that packaging counts.  The cover of the book IS the first thing you see, and it DOES make an impression.  It isn’t everything, but it counts.

Learn more about Featured Artist Caitlyn Shea!This month’s artist submitted and was rejected in a previous month, but she took the opportunity to take a look at her work through a more critical lens. Her work was always wonderful, but now it is presented in a more accessible way. I am proud to announce the Featured Artist chosen from the September entries is Caitlyn Shea.  Her artwork captures the wonder and celebration in the temporary nature of our being.  I enjoy the contrast of celebration and decay, like rhubarb and cheddar, tart but savory.   This isn’t another portrait of Barbie gone bad; it is a transcendence of the human cage.  Brilliant.

FEATURED ARTIST:
Caitlyn Shea

 

Caitlyn Shea spent a great deal of her childhood admiring the NYCart scene.  At eighteen she moved to Brooklyn to attend Pratt Institute, and later pursued an education at Skidmore College in Saratoga Springs, NY.  In 2011, Shea graduated from Adelphi University with a BFA.  She received an A. Conger Goodyear Award for Outstanding Achievement and a Senior Thesis Merit Award.
Shea is inspired by Francis Bacon and the entire Abstract Expressionist movement.  She loves traveling and taking photographs.  Her trip to Italy nourished her macabre sensibilities, allowing her to observe reliquaries and Venetian masks in person for the first time.  She has a strong interest in anatomy and spends a lot of time studying human and animal body structures as inspiration for her work.
The Absurd by Featured Artist Caitlyn Shea!

I notice your recent work seems much darker in nature.  Wanna talk about that?   “I want people to have a visceral experience when standing in front of my paintings.  Francis Bacon often spoke about the “violence of the real.”  In his work, he referenced the human form as ultimately being permeable and vulnerable by nature.  Similarly, my work relays the idea of humans and animals being restricted by the limitations of their own physicality.

“I tend to love morbid subject matter in every way, shape, or form.  I spend a lot of time contemplating what a strange thing it is to possess a fragile, temporary body.  I believe that macabre subject matter forces us to be confronted with our own mortality and ask existential questions; most of which have no clear answers. Some people would argue that those sorts of questions are outdated or irrelevant. For me, thinking about living in a big, beautiful, and seemingly random universe never gets old.”

Crows by Featured Artist Caitlyn Shea!Talk to me about the process you use?  Do you attack paintings on paper and/or panel the same way you attack a mural? “Every painting always starts with a base coat of color.  I then lay down abstract marks with large brushes.  By mixing house paint, acrylic, and spray paint there is always an element of surprise and a certain “fleshy” quality to the painting’s surface that I find really exciting.  I then look and wait for the figures to be revealed to me through the chaos of abstraction.  I have a lot of photos of animals in strange positions and classical figure painting references that help me visualize possible subjects.  Once I have a solid idea of where bodies should be in the composition, I will begin to define them with charcoal.  I am often not satisfied with the initial drawing, so I wipe away charcoal layers and continue re-drawing and editing until I get to a point where it seems right, or what I describe as “inevitably placed.”

“The murals that I recently completed were different in that I had to work more directly towards a means to an end.  Painting on floors, ceilings, and even the side of a building was challenging because I had to account for a lot of odd surfaces.  At one point I had to actually tie paint brushes together in order to get at some unreachable spots.  In the end it came down to a lot of practical problem-solving, which I found to be a fun challenge.”

Do you consider yourself a painter? Something else? “I consider my work a fusion of painting and drawing.  I like the play between the dryness of charcoal and the luscious body of paint.  Charcoal defines the edge and shading of a lot of the figures and gives them a “gritty” quality.  I adore linear mark-making and the ethereal nature line brings to my subjects when layered over color.  The entire process involves experimentation and discovery through my materials; be it charcoal, spray paint, or acrylic.  ”

Anatomy Lesson for Vultures by Featured Artist Caitlyn Shea!Clearly, the figure has a strong influence in your work.  Tell me how that reconciles with your Abstract Expressionist influence. “A lot of contemporary art delivers fast, punchy messages.  While I appreciate that way of working, I choose to make paintings that are as much about the materials I use as they are about the subjects I portray.  The act of making is amazing, and I want it to be evident on the surface of my work.

“I like the quick, big, bold mark-making of abstract painting when joined with the comforting, recognizable form of human and animal subjects.  Subsequently, the subjects appear hollow and broken, and revealed as being part of the the chaotic environment that they inhabit.  To me, this is the best way to convey human experience.”

You know we have to talk about food. What is your favorite? “I have been a vegetarian since I was 5 years old, due to my love for animals of all kinds.  So, not bacon.  My longest standing favorite food is definitely rhubarb pie with cheddar cheese on top.  It is an oddly amazing combination of bitter, sweet, and savory. ” Geez, you must LOVE us to wade through all the pork, duck and beef references I make.  Rhubarb is FANTASTIC.  With cheddar, eh? I’ll have to try that one.

Ephemeral Fox by Featured Artist Caitlyn Shea!What about snack foods? “I absolutely love blood oranges.  When they are in season I fill my purse, pockets, and studio with them.  I cannot get enough of their sweet, yet tart flavor.  They are also a real treat for the eyes with their shocking crimson red interiors.” I’m obsessed with clementines right now…I get it.

So, what’s coming up next for you? “I am really excited to be teaching Painting and Drawing classes locally in the next few weeks!  I have always wanted to teach and it will help support my career as an emerging artist.

“I have been fortunate enough to be in a lot of art exhibits in the past year.  This website has been a huge asset to achieving that!  (Happy to help!) Right now I am working on paintings that are loosely related to the Apocalypse for two upcoming Apocalypse-themed shows.  Should mankind survive December 21st, I want to go on to become a major part of defining contemporary art.”

Thanks, Caitlyn, for reminding us all that life is short, pardon the cliché, beautifully gruesome…and that it isn’t an excuse.

Learn more about Caitlyn Shea online!

Learn more about Featured Artist Caitlyn Shea!

CALL for ENTRIES: Red Eye

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!MELT the chocolate
BURN the sauce

Desserts are born out of boredom, at least for me.  I have a hard time sitting still.  So, while I’m waiting for pasta to boil or sauce to thicken, I often get a great idea for dessert.  By the way, while pursuing a recipe for that illusive dessert, I often overcook the pasta and/or burn the sauce.  This next Call is a much better way to multi-task.  Take a look…

Check out this Call for Entries from TKH Productions for the Red Eye Writing Contest.  I don’t normally publish writing calls without an art call, but I couldn’t resist this sort of romantic, pie-in-the-sky possibility.  It really COULD be you, but you have to try…

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

CALL for ENTRIES: Red Eye Writing Contest

Learn more about the Red Eye Writing Contest!

Submit your short script for a chance to potentially launch your career and win the Hollywood experience of a lifetime!

ELIGIBILITY:  US residents, 18+

MEDIA:  Submitted scripts must be original screenplays, and the sole property of the writer(s).

DEADLINE:  November 30, 2012

NOTIFICATION:  March 1, 2013

ENTRY FEE:  $35 per submission

JURY:  A handful of TKH staff and professional readers, who are bound by confidentiality agreements, read the scripts. The judges will select the Winner from the top three finalists. All judges’ decisions are final.

AWARDS: Grand Prize is a trip for 2 to Hollywood to watch the filming of your screenplay; 2nd Place $500; and 3rd Place $200.  Additional prizes like hats, posters and t-shirts may accompany some prizes.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Learn more about the Red Eye Writing Contest!

FEATURED ARTISTS: Thayer & Van Patten

Learn more about Cara Thayer & Louie Van Patten!

PEARLS of plurality

The artist features had to evolve. Some days I feel like I’ve seen everything there is to be seen.  When that I happens, I go back to the basics in an effort to remember what I personally love about art.  I think about what the art that makes me want to BUY work. 

This month’s featured artist is a departure, among other reasons, because they are this month’s artists, plural.   Collaboration.   Complicated.  They are also portraitist, of sorts.  Simplicity.  Collaboration requires a perfect combination of  both ego-maniacal fanaticism and selflessness.  There isn’t a middle ground; it is a combination of extremes.  Raw perfection.  Two pearls in an oyster–distinctly different, but the same.  I am proud to announce Cara Thayer & Louie Van Patten as this months Featured Artists…

Blue Canvas Magazine Cover by Thayer and Van Patten

FEATURED ARTISTS:
Cara Thayer & Louie Van Patten

Cara Thayer was born in Panorama City, CA but grew up in Bend, OR.  She studied painting at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (not to be confused with the Art Institute of Chicago) and received her BFA in 2007.  Louie Van Patten was born in West Des Moines, IA.

They met in Chicago in events surrounding the attendance of a Pixies reunion show.

(If food wasn’t what brought them together, at least it was music.)  They both studied art at Central Oregon Community College under Bill Hoppe, who has been hugely influential on them. They have been collaborating since 2005, maintaining a day job together and painting on the side in Bend, until they went full-time with their art in 2008.

Chromatic Maladies V - part of a diptych by Cara Thayer and Louie Van PattenThey regularly show their art in Bend, Oregon and have participated in a handful of shows along the West Coast.  In 2011, they were selected to create the art for Deschutes Brewery’s annual , as well as being featured on the cover of BLUECANVAS magazine.

Talk to me about inspiration. “We are inspired by the little sweet spots of masterworks of art – – things in the margins, single frames from a film, faces and musculature in motion and in stasis. We are fascinated with flesh and the relationship between frame and canvas and skin and bone, the apertures of the face and the way intense light traces the contours of the skeleton under the skin. We are inspired by paint as paint and paint being an analogue of skin and viscera.

Saccadic II by Cara Thayer and Louie Van Patten“Our paintings could be considered to be at least quasi-biographical about paint itself, so paint and pigment are also very much a source of inspiration – – we are very medium-oriented at the moment, hopefully not to the point of the tail wagging the dog. It also just occurred to us that we’re probably a self-fueling fire as we inspire and invigorate each other. ”

What do you consider your media? Are these pieces strictly paint? “We are primarily infatuated with oil paint. We’re not sure that we’re strictly painters, though. A certain theatricality informs the work, being transduced into paint via photography. Our collaborative process first began with fiber art and work with resin and spray paint. It is likely we’ll return to more semi-sculptural fiber art at some point, especially as more opportunities for installations and public art surface. We very much enjoy working together and that is truly the only constant.”

Apertural - a triptych by Cara Thayer and Louie Van PattenClearly, portraiture has a strong influence in your work.  While I love the hands, I have to admit that I am drawn to the faces. “Portraiture does have an influence on the work, as does the general physicality of human forms, both formal and informal.  We tend to paint hands often, as they work as a portrait for people, rather than a specific person and they are also great armatures for paint.  We’re interested in faces for the apertures, as well as the effect of filling a canvas with the architecture of facial flesh.

Saccadic I by Cara Thayer and Louie Van Patten“We also enjoy the ambiguity that emerges from the truncation of the human face.  Some of the imagery emerges from the fact that we use ourselves as source material, the portraiture happens naturally, but not without intention. Creating an exaggerated representation of our process, the final image looks like two people struggling to fill the picture frame with only their face by brute force, but becoming one form instead.”  I find this an oddly poetic description of their own painting process.  Watch the video.

Do you have special terminology for how you collaborate?  “We do not have special terminology, although perhaps we should consider that. Conjunctive-painting? Bilateral art-making?

Tangled-arm painting? Shiva the Destroyer?

 

“As far as we know, the actual act of painting is painfully conventional in nearly every other way, aside from the fact there are two of us.

Chromatic Maladies IV by Cara Thayer and Louie Van Patten“Years ago, when we first starting making art, we created a website called thegryllus.com, as a way to loosely reference this four-armed method of painting.  Essentially, a gryllus is a creature comprised of other creatures with nameable parts, such as a griffin.  Our use of the word may be a little off, but the basic idea is that we work as one painter, made of the parts of two significantly different people.”

You know we have to talk about food. What is your favorite? “We’re very partial to scallops with a little sriracha, as well as pan-fried Brussels sprouts with Parmesan. For Louie, it might just be NY-style pepperoni pizza dipped in pukka sauce (hot sauce made with Jamaican scotch bonnet peppers).

Saccadic III by Cara Thayer and Louie Van PattenGenerally speaking, we’re big fans of cured meats, aged cheeses, raw vegetables, and craft beer, preferably all at once. Since we seem to drink more than we eat (nothing terribly excessive, we assure you), we’ll also mention that Cara is a gin girl and Louie is a bourbon/rye/scotch kind of guy.” I’ve never been to Oregon.  I’m thinking the Thayer-Van Patten household needs to make room for a visitor. Yum.

What about snack foods? “We love smoked oysters with crackers. We also both love popcorn. Being a normal person, Louie shoves handfuls in his face like a savage, but Cara meticulously picks apart each kernel like a total weirdo. Point being, we have a very hard time sharing a bag of popcorn. It is a good thing painting doesn’t resemble popcorn-eating, at least not in any way we’re aware of.”  For the record, I avoided asking which two hands of this four-armed monster wrote the interview responses.

So, what’s coming up next for you? “Ideally, a lifetime of painting. This is something one does not have to retire from, nor should they desire to.”

Thank you, Cara and Louie for bringing me back to what I love about art–raw perfection.  The connection between you translates to canvas as a visceral tie to all that is human in art.  Lovely.

Learn more about Thayer & Van Patten online!

Learn more about Thayer and Van Patten!

CALL for ENTRIES: Changes Abound!

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!LET US
eat cake

Can you believe we have arrived at our three year anniversary here at AAAD?  This is post 812.  What has changed in three years?  I receive A LOT of email.  I love the foodie email, updates on careers, and recipes, recipes, recipes.

Most of the galleries and artists that contact me are looking for exposure. They aren’t asking for reviews, recommendations or glowing critiques.  Most are confident in their abilities to prove themselves and simply need a little help getting their gallery opportunities or their personal artwork out there.  I applaud your motivation.

As usual, every year I glance back at the sites older pages and make a few updates to the visual style and ridiculous wordiness of my writing style.  I made a few changes today, and most of them are in response to your requests for additional opportunities for exposure.  There are lots of opportunities for Exposure on AAAD.  Take a look…

  • Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!Submit your Call – With 1000+ daily readers, you’ll receive a wide diversity of entries. Guidelines for submissions have been updated.
  • Featured Artist Submissions – Enter the $5 Art Contest for a post featuring your work, an interview and links back to your website. Yes, this went from $2 to $5. Still cheap.
  • Sponsors – You can now advertise your art-related business on AAAD.  This isn’t Google Ads, folks.  Art-related business only. I reserve the right to say “no” if it isn’t the right fit for the site.  Visit the new Be a Sponsor page for more information.
  • Food Sponsors – Want me to try a new food?  Click here.
  • Individual Artists – I am still figuring out the best way to offer an unjuried and inexpensive way for artists to share a page that links back to each website without just making it a long alphabetical list.  Boring.  Give me a little while, and I’ll get back to you.

So thank you for three great years.  I have got the 3-year itch…so hang on folks.  AAAD will be undergoing a few experimental changes over the next few weeks.  As always, I welcome your feedback.

Have a Wonderful September!

CALL for ENTRIES: Art Every Day 2 U

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by EmailHOME
GROWN

There are two or three new restaurants in my neighborhood.  I’m headed out to eat at each of them this weekend.  Support local everything.  Put yourself and your appetite in the hands of others occasionally.  Support a dream–even if it isn’t your own.  This next Call involves a brand new art blog that could use a little love from you and wants to give a little love back.  Support a dream…

Check out this Call for Entries for a Featured Artist post from Paula Shaughnessy, editor of the new blog Art Every Day 2 U!  There is no cost to submit, and this could be a great opportunity for a little art publication

*Editor’s Note: If you have read the personal portion of this post, CALL for ENTRIES: Art Every Day 2 U, anywhere other than by email subscription or on ArtAndArtDeadlines.com, it has been published without permission and is considered theft.

Learn more about Art Every Day 2 U!CALL for ENTRIES:
Art Every Day 2 U

 

The intent is to showcase one work from a different featured artist every day, with the feature piece somehow tied in to something about the day – a holiday, a famous person’s birthday, an event in history, etc.

Although I can’t promise to feature everyone who submits, there will be absolutely no charge – ever – to the artist for the feature, so it’s a good opportunity for a no cost resume builder – my only request is that artists follow the blog so I can start to build up some audience.  Anyone featured in the first 6 months will get priority for re-feature later once we’ve got an audience built up.” –Paula Shaughnessy, Editor

ELIGIBILITY: Open to all artists

Learn more about Art Every Day 2 U! MEDIA:  All mediums are eligible, although she is partial to non-digital work:  paint, sculpture, photography & mixed media.  No religion, election stuff, nudity or language that would make her “mama blush” Everything else is fair game.  Editor’s Note:  I GET that many of you are not well behaved enough work inside these guidelines.

DEADLINE:  On going

NOTIFICATION:  No time frame

ENTRY FEE:  None

AWARDS:  Your work featured on Art Every Day 2 U.

TO ENTER:  Send 1 image of your work, your name & links to your webpage to paula.shaughnessy@yahoo.com.  One entry per artist.

For an idea of what work is being featured, Visit the Website!

Learn more about Art Every Day 2 U!

CALL for PROPOSALS: Public Art

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!CHIPPING away

My son has recently decided to try to break a Guinness World Record, but he can’t figure out which one (he’s 13).  It takes all the self-control to not suggest that he make the world’s largest chocolate chip cookie.  This next call will resort in only a 10 foot circle; I suspect that is far to small for the world’s largest cookie.  Nonetheless, this is a great opportunity…

Check out this Call for Entries from the Warrensburg Arts Commission (WAC) for Public Art Design Proposals.  The entry fee is cheap, and unlike many public art calls, this is not limited to sculpture.  Take a closer work…

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

Sponsored in part by the Warrensburg Missouri Arts Commission!CALL for PROPOSALS:
Public Art

 

On behalf of a public art initiative for the city of Warrensburg, Missouri, the Warrensburg Arts Commission (WAC) seeks a two-dimensional design for a 10-foot diameter etched concrete circle that will be permanently installed in the sidewalk on Pine Street in historic downtown Warrensburg.

ELIGIBILITY:  This is an open competition for non-professional and professional artists.  A team of artists is welcome to apply, and multiple applications are allowed.

MEDIA:  2 Dimensional work.  There is no pre-determined theme for artwork, but WAC suggests that the content reflect the vibrancy of downtown, the beauty of the region, and the energy of the Arts and Entertainment District.

Sponsored in part by the Warrensburg Missouri Arts Commission! DEADLINE:  September 1, 2012

NOTIFICATION:  September 7, 2012

ENTRY FEE:  $20 for 1 to 3 images

SELECTION PROCESS:  The Warrensburg Arts Commission and the City of Warrensburg will select one design based on creativity, appropriateness, and practicality for implementation.

AWARDS:  A prize of $500 will be awarded for the chosen design. The award funds are made available through the WAC and the City of Warrensburg.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Sponsored in part by the Warrensburg Missouri Arts Commission!

CALL for ENTRIES: Altered

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by EmailSIMPLY
divine

I love to alter recipes.  Sometimes it works; sometimes it doesn’t.  I love to test how far I can push the limits.  Bok choy instead of napa cabbage, dates instead of figs, lemon instead of lime.  Just stay in the family tree, and you’ll be fine.  This next call wants to know how you alter photographs.  Don’t miss this chance…

Check out this Call for Art Entries for Altered a alternative process photo show at Open Shutter Gallery (Durango, Colorado). Enter your photographs for $25, but be sure to make the September 15th deadline!

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

 

Learn more about the Altered Show from the Open Shutter Gallery!CALL for ENTRIES:
Altered

 

A juried exhibition for photographers working in low-fidelity or alternative process photography. Images must be shot with a toy or vintage camera and/or printed in an experimental or antique / alternative process.

ELIGIBILITY: This competition is open to all artists. Works must be original, created within the last two years and may not have been shown previously at Open Shutter Gallery. All works must be framed, ready to hang, and for sale.

MEDIA: Photographic images must be captured or printed in an experimental, antique or alternative process (or altered in some way).

Learn more about the Juror for the Altered show at Open Shutter Gallery!DEADLINE:
September 15, 2012

NOTIFICATION:
September 23, 2012

ENTRY FEE: First three entries: $25, each additional entry is $5 each.

JUROR: Mark Sink is a photographer, curator, and teacher who has made a living from fine art photography since 1978.  Sink lived in NYC in the 80s. He worked with and documented the lives and works of Andy Warhol, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Rene Ricard, and other art luminaries of that decade.

In the early 1990s, Sink was an inspirational driving force and co-founder of the Museum of Contemporary Art Denver.  In recent years, Sink has worked as a private art consultant in Denver, independently curating a wide range of shows.

Learn more about the Altered Show from the Open Shutter Gallery!Photography runs deep in Sink’s family heritage.  Sink’s great-grandfather was photographer James L. Breese, who was the founder of the Camera Club of New York, one of the earliest organizations of fine art photographers.  Even further back, Breese’s uncle— Samuel Finley Breese Morse—is known as “the father of American photography”.

AWARDS: Cash awards and alternative process supplies will be awarded.

SALES: A 50% commission will be retained on all artwork sold during the exhibition.  Works should be priced accordingly and may not be changed after submission.  Selected artists are encouraged to mat works in white and frame with black.

For complete details, visit the Altered website!

Download the Toyed With Prospectus!

 

FEATURED ARTIST: Grant Penny

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!ROUNDS
of goodness

The $2 Art Contest is has evolved over the past few years. I went from sorting good work from bad to sorting good work from great work.  Lately, I am sorting great work from great work that would be more appropriate at a different time of the year. It is getting harder and harder, but I am appreciating both the work and the honor of getting to review the work more and more as time goes by.   I always appreciate simplicity when I don’t have to actually live it.  Sometimes it is the absence of something (or the absence of many, many of things) that makes you notice the details.

This month’s artist has stripped down scenes and objects to focus on the line, continuity and impact of the parts. Like a perfect roundness of a glazed donut, Grant Penny wallows in the fatty decadence of simplicity. His artwork has a sort of simplified retro elegance without a true retro reference–but rather a nod to modernity. Perfection.

Learn more about Featured Artist Grant Penny!FEATURED ARTIST:
Grant Penny

 

Grant Penny grew up in central N.C. (Sanford).   His mother, an artist, art teacher and graphic designer,  gave Penny the solid foundation in the arts that fuel a lifelong passion. He and his wife, Carly, (then girlfriend) would regularly visit Asheville, NC for the occasional long weekend and…

“We knew that if we didn’t live here we would look back in 20 years and regret it.”

 

They have called Asheville home since 2003 and haven’t regretted it for a moment. Penny reports the city is full of genuinely good, happy people. Great food. Great art.  Since moving to Asheville, he got married now has daughter Emaline.   The recent addition to the family is actually the inspiration for my his new paper airplane series. Originally a theme of “anticipation” evolved into something different as time went by.  A small paper airplane piece now hangs in his daughter’s room, the message being:

as if on a wire by Featured Artist Grant Penny!“I wish for you to soar in life… but don’t take it too seriously.”

 

Talk to me about inspiration.  Most of us can see the beauty in a fern frond, branch, a flower.  But you have found beautiful inspiration in traffic lights and power lines. Talk to me about that.“I find my inspiration in “simplicity.” It’s often a curve or a line that gets my attention. For example the powerline pieces you’ve mentioned – It’s that never ending line that draws me in visually. It just keeps going and going and going. I follow it with my eyes as I travel down the road.

“Often there is flip side to the visual. Something that amuses me. I look at  powerline/telephone cables and think about what those silly looking, seemingly hap-hazard wires hoisted up on big sticks are doing there? They’re doing simple things – warming the water for a bath, connecting a phone call between a grandmother and a child, keeping my beer cold.”

broadway st by Featured Artist Grant Penny!What do you consider your media? Are these pieces strictly collage or do I note a touch of photographic work?  There even seems to be the appearance of silk screen.  Explain.“My media is strictly paper – specifically ‘Lokta”’paper which is hand made and dyed in Nepal.  I do shoot photos to create the composition. But what you see in the finished pieces is cut paper. I coat the pieces with layers of acrylic medium which gives some texture to the surface (and really brings out the rich saturation in the papers).”

Clearly, graphic design has a strong influence in your work.  Can you appreciate what it brings to your sensibility despite your efforts to produce hand-made work to specifically separate yourself from  your graphic design? “My graphic design background plays into my work especially when it comes to composition. I tend to leave large expanses of blank space which certainly comes from years of doing layouts where I needed to balance images with content. I really enjoy those empty spaces. I tend to crop the subjects in my work so that you can’t see it entirely. I find it makes it more interesting. More intimate maybe.”

where we make our inside jokes by Featured Artist Grant Penny!You know we have to talk about food. What is your favorite? “All things PORK. What a magical animal. Bacon, Ham, Pork Belly, Ribs, BBQ … On a radio show, maybe 10-12 years ago, I heard of a specific Spanish ham that wasn’t even available in the U.S. at the time–called ‘Jamón ibérico.’  It’s made from free-range Black Iberian Pigs raised on a diet of acorns.  I never forgot about this amazing sounding ham for all these years.  Just a few weeks ago I finally had the pleasure and experience of tasting this most wonderful pork delicacy. Oh. My. God. Drop your fork delicious.”  For those of you that are regular readers, you’ll note that this seems to be a trend–the love of pork–amongst Featured Artists.  Interesting

ruby on the right by Featured Artist Grant Penny!What about snack foods? “My current favorite snack is freshly made Guacamole on a salty chip with a nice cold beer.”

So, what’s coming up next for you? “I’ve been going after (and getting in) a few shows lately. Tip of the hat to your blog for wonderful advice and encouragement. I will continue to pursue more opportunities to show my work.  The main and constant focus is Work Work Work! If I don’t get ample time in the studio the quality of everything else around me suffers.” Happy to have nudged you along the way.

Thank you, Grant for reminding us of the beauty in simplicity–from a cold beer to paper airplanes. You have reminded to not let life wash over me in a clutter of the wholeness of it all but to celebrate the simple details.

Learn more about Grant Penny online!

Learn more about Featured Artist Grant Penny!

CALL for ENTRIES: Biennale internationale d’estampe contemporaine de Trois-Rivières

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!SWEET
‘n’

SALTY

When I think of Canadian foods, I think maple syrup.  But, it occurred to me that I don’t have any other pre-conceived notions other than that stereotype.  So, I Google’d it.  Shockingly, an informal Facebook survey resulted in poutine being voted as Canada’s unofficial national food.  Poutine is a French Canadian dish of French fries, topped with brown gravy and cheese curds. French fries, gravy and cheese.  What more could you want.  Nevertheless, if you go to the opening for this next Call, I am out of syrup.  Investigate…

Check out this Call for Entries for the Biennale internationale d’estampe contemporaine de Trois-Rivières.  This is a printmaker’s dream, and the prizes aren’t too shabby either.  Take a look…

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

CALL for ENTRIES:  Biennale internationale d’estampe contemporaine de Trois-Rivières

 

Learn more about the Biennale internationale d'estampe contemporaine de Trois-Rivières!ELIGIBILITY:  Open to all artists

MEDIA:  PrintmakingAccepted techniques:  intaglio, relief prints, lithography, silkscreen. Techniques not accepted:  photography, monotype, photocopy, and digital prints.

DEADLINE:
October 1, 2012

ENTRY FEE:  $25CND, or $25US  or €25, payable by international money order to Biennale internationale d’estampe contemporaine de Trois-Rivières.

JURORS:  A jury, composed of experts and artists, will make the selection amongst the proposed dossiers. The decisions are without appeal.

Learn more about the Biennale internationale d'estampe contemporaine de Trois-Rivières!AWARDS:  The Grand Prix de la Biennale, accompanied by a bursary of $3000 CNDThe Prix Banque Nationale Groupe Financier, accompanied by a prize of $1500 CND.

The Prix du Québec, accompanied by a prize of $1000 CND.  The Public Award will be attributed, at the end of the exhibition to the artist who has received the greatest number of votes from the visitors. This prize is for a value of $1000 CND.

The Invitation Presse Papier prize will be attributed to the foreign artist whose work is the most appreciated by the members of the Presse Papier workshop, the professional artist printmakers collective of Trois-Rivières. This prize includes an option for a working residency at the Presse Papier workshop.

For complete details, Read the Rules & Regulations!

Download the Rules for the Biennale internationale d'estampe contemporaine de Trois-Rivières!