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Art and Art Deadlines.com

Category: Glass

CALL for ENTRIES: Sustainable WEST

Submit your artwork to the $5 Art ContestGREEN
is more than
GREENS

Truly living green in the kitchen is a touch complicated.  Yes, I can buy locally sourced, sustainable foods.  But, as we work toward designing a  kitchen for the straw bale house we plan to build this year, do I really have it in me to skip out on a traditional stove/oven for a wood-burning or rocket stove/oven?  Not so sure.  But while I’m contemplating it, I can at least submit sustainably-themed work for this next Call.  How about you?

Check out this Call for Entries from Sustainable Silicon Valley for the WEST (Water, Energy, Smart Technology) Summit 2014 (Mountain View, CA). There is no entry fee, so don’t miss this opportunity…

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

Learn more about the 2014 WEST Summit!CALL for ENTRIES:
WEST Summit 2014

 

The WEST (Water, Energy, Smart Technology) Summit presents actions to create long-term regional sustainability and resilience to climate change.

To inspire these actions, SSV is hosting an art exposition with a theme of The Future of Silicon Valley.

You can be that inspiration.

Learn more about the 2014 WEST Summit

 

ELIGIBILITY: Open to all artists, regardless of location or age

Learn more about the Sustainable Silicon Valley-WEST Summit and Showcase!

MEDIA: A wide variety of art forms and media, such as: paintings, drawings, collage, prints, fiber, ceramics, glasswork, sculpture, animation, digital art, photography, poetry, music, dance or whatever other media you are inspired to use.

DEADLINE: March 19, 2014 (5pm Pacific Standard Time)

ENTRY FEE: None

AWARDS:  All submissions that are accepted will be displayed in a digital gallery on the Sustainable Silicon Valley website and used in future SSV marketing campaigns.  A smaller collection of selected pieces will be projected digitally during and in between speaker presentations.  A few key pieces, with artist’s consent, will be physically displayed throughout the WEST Summit/Showcase venue. Art will be shown with artist acknowledgment attached.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Learn more about the 2014 WEST Summit

CALL for ENTRIES: Art of it All

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!PETER
cottontail

So I’m a little shy about my food knowledge.  My friends, readers and even my family ask food questions all the time with the assumption that I will know the answers because I write about food everyday.  And, if you need to know how to boil the perfect egg, I’m your woman.  But, I can’t tell you the flavor profile of every fruit, veggie and meat on the planet because I haven’t tried them ALL.  I’m working on it though. In the meantime, when asked a question to which I don’t have an answer.  I just shyly beg off the subject.  Don’t be shy about this next opportunity…

Check out this Call for Entries from Shy Rabbit (Pagosa Springs, CO) for The Art of It All.  Like the name of the show implies, they are open to all media–even some fine craft like jewelry, basketry and glass work. Take a look…

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

Learn more from Shy Rabbit Contemporary Arts!CALL for ENTRIES:
The Art of it All

 

ELIGIBILITY: All artists age 18+

MEDIA: All Media

DEADLINE: September 7, 2013

NOTIFICATION: September 21, 2013

ENTRY FEE: $30 up to 3, $5 ea. add’l

JUROR: Professional Artist and Arts Educator, D. Michael Coffee, has over 30 years of combined experience in architecture, ceramics, painting, photography and fine art printmaking. As Curator and Creative Director for SHY RABBIT Contemporary Arts, Coffee has been responsible for organizing, curating and installing over 40 fine art exhibitions since SHY RABBIT’s inception in 2004.

Coffee has been credited with transforming SHY RABBIT into the region’s most important and innovative contemporary art spaces through the high level and broad range of the contemporary work and educational programs presented.

SALES: Sales will be encouraged, therefore all artwork must be available for sale. Retail sales of an Artist’s work will be split 60% Artist / 40% SHY RABBIT.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Learn more from Shy Rabbit Contemporary Arts!

FEATURED ARTIST: Julie Alland

Click to subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by email for FREE!EAT A COOKIE
already

The Featured Artist Contest means different things to different people.  Some artists feel that it is validation and merely appreciate the recognition of their work. Some artists spin it into great publicity for what they do and to funnel people to their website.  This contest remains a way to help artists get outside their heads and take a look at how their inspirations and influences have really changed their work over the years. During the interview of this month’s artist, I believe her answers may have even surprised her.  It’s nice to know we can still do that here at AAAD.

This month’s artist works in a media with which I am not familiar. Her work is both industrial and organic.  It has the duality of being both stark AND somehow soft and comforting.  On behalf of ArtAndArtDeadlines.com, I am proud to announce the Featured Artist chosen from the November entries to the $5 Art Contest is Julie Alland.  Her artwork seems to freeze a moment in time. And, while Alland has a hand in the composition and an expectation of the outcome, she isn’t in complete control of the work.  It’s a little like life, don’t you think?  With the new year approaching, I encourage each of you to have a hand in the composition of your life and art, but don’t keep to tight a grip on the end result.  Let Julie be your inspiration…

Learn more about Featured Artist Julie Alland!

FEATURED ARTIST:
Julie Alland

 

Julie Alland is a sculptor who lives and works in San Francisco.  Raised in New York State, Alland earned a BFA from Antioch University in Ohio, specializing in photography.  After moving to San Francisco in 1985 Alland became fascinated with found objects, and although she’d had little formal training in sculpture, her interest turned to working in three dimensions.  Casting became a fundamental part of Julie’s work in 1993 after teaching herself mold making and casting in order to bring an idea to realization.   In 2002, Julie enrolled in a kiln casting class taught by C. Matthew Szosz at Public Glass in San Francisco. The class was her first experience casting glass.

A detail from the Desire Path Revisited Series by Featured Artist Julie Alland!The unique physical properties and technically challenging nature of casting glass motivated Alland to take her work in a new direction. She continued to hone her glass casting skills during several summer sessions at the Pilchuck Glass School. Julie’s first class at Pilchuck: Survey of Glass Techniques, taught by Karen Lamonte in 2003, introduced her to sand casting. Interest in developing a distinctive visual vocabulary led Alland to focus on experimenting with the technique in subsequent years. This exploration resulted in the method she uses to produce her sand cast work today.

Clearly, your work took a sharp left turn from your education in photography.  Tell me how (and if) photography still influences your work.  “My first impulse is to say that photography hasn’t influenced my work one bit. Now that I think about it, (thanks for bringing it up) maybe it has after all.  Much of the imagery in my work suggests forms of life — usually only seen via photographs taken in the deep sea or through a microscope.  Another trait my work shares with photography is the importance I place on composition.”  I suspect my love of photography is what initially drew me to your work, Julie.

The Transmigration of Memory - sand cast glass by Featured Artist Julie Alland!Talk to me about the process you use.  How much control do you really have over the finish product? “My technique consists of creating abstract images by bending wire and wrapping it around sticks (inclusions). A mold is made by pushing a three dimensional shape into a sand mixture. The wire and sticks are placed in the mold, then molten glass is poured over them. The hot glass burns out the organic elements and a void in the shape of the wood remains in its place. Gasses escape from the metal and wood, bubbles and sometimes ash rise up into the glass.

“The beginning stages are quite controlled: Making inclusions, planning where they’ll be placed in the mold, as well as preparing perfect, clean, sand molds. The flowing and loose quality of the later stages of a piece need to be balanced out by initial restraint — otherwise it ends up being a blobby mess.  I’ve experimented with my process and practiced it enough to have arrived at a comfortable balance between control and unpredictability (most of the time).  That said, some castings turn out to be flops.  Sometimes failure occurs because randomness overshadows intent but the opposite is also true.  Exerting too much control can result in a boring piece — it’s a bit disappointing if beneficial accidents don’t happen.”  I think we can all relate–too much control always results in boredom.

Shell - kiln cast glass by Featured Artist Julie Alland!What do you consider your media? Do you consider it sculpture or specifically glass? “I call myself a sculptor who works mainly in cast glass. I also do printmaking, works on paper and mixed media on panels. I tend to approach non-sculptural media in a sculptural way. ”

Talk to me about inspiration.  I notice your earlier glass work, like the egg crates & ice trays, has a more whimsical feel while the current work has a more serene and ethereal feel.  “My conceptual (earlier) work was inspired by a fascination with industrial design as well as ideas related to social commentary and observations of human behavior.  Also, during that period, I had just started learning to cast glass and discovered that it’s very difficult.  Problem solving is quite compelling to me so I was seeing how far I could push myself technically within the confines my philosophical framework.

A detail from the Desire Path Revisited Series by Featured Artist Julie AllandSometimes I miss exploring the concepts behind my earlier style of work but for the most part I’m glad to have moved on.  The older pieces are lost-wax kiln castings.  The technique allows you to reproduce objects with a lot of precision but is very slow, boring, and labor intensive.

What inspires me most is the act of investigating: Researching images or techniques, discovering and learning a process, using unfamiliar materials or tools.   Sometimes new ideas or ideas with potential to be brought to a higher level are an unexpected by-product of experimenting with materials.”

What style of art do you find unbearable to own?  Anything “pretty” which is hard to define because that word means something different to everyone.  On the other hand, an example comes to mind… certain Renoir paintings would be very difficult to live with.”  Fascinating.  I think many would would proffer the opinion that your work is “pretty,” although not necessarily in a Renoir sort of way.  Again, fascinating.

Dermatoglyphics 1 - kiln cast glass by Featured Artist Julie Alland!You know we have to talk about food. What is your favorite? “If I had the metabolism of a hummingbird my favorite would be comfort food– homemade macaroni and cheese, NY pizza, an old-fashioned doughnut or a vanilla malt milkshake. But… since I have the metabolism of a sloth, my favorite healthy compromise is eating a big salad for dinner.” Julie, you had me at mac-n-cheese, but I share your big-salad reality.

What about snack foods?  “Sloth-Julie eats pretzels. Hummingbird Julie would eat barbecue potato chips or cookies.”  I hope you don’t keep your hummingbird in a cage all the time.  Eat a cookie.

So, what’s coming up next for you?  “More experimenting with sand casting as well as another glass technique called fusing. Imbedding words or images and/or bubbles in my pieces and developing ideas for work about memory and cognition.  Also, I enrolled in a Bullseye glass workshop (in Emeryville, CA) called “Image Transfers for Kiln Glass”.  The class is taught by an artist I’ve admired for a long time, Carrie Iverson.  It meets in January and will most likely spark exciting ideas for new work.  I can’t wait!”

Thanks, Julie, for awakening both the mad scientist AND the zen yogi in us all…you are an inspiration for the coming new year.

Learn more about Julie Alland online!

Learn more about Featured Artist Julie Alland!Learn more about Featured Artist Julie Alland!

CALL for ENTRIES: Of Light and Spirit

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!FROZEN OUT

I eat my fair share of frozen lunches, but I prefer leftovers.  It isn’t the food that I object to because there are lots of options for fairly wholesome, preservative-free foods in the frozen food aisle these days.  I don’t like the plastic.  I recently abandoned all of my plastic food containers for glass.  I like the weight.  I like that I can get the orange sludge from my chili off in the dishwasher.  I like glass.  This next call is for glass lovers.  Don’t dismiss it, investigate…

Check out this Call for Entries from Studio 550 (Manchester, NH) for Of Light & Spirit.  This is a great opportunity for mixed media artists to tackle a new component.  Take a look…

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

Learn more about the Studio 550 Center!CALL for ENTRIES:
Of Light and Spirit

Hope.
Truth.
Direction.

Light holds many meanings, and the absence of light can mean just as much. This is a show of glass art that comes alive with light and depicts the artists’ interpretation of spirituality, whether it is secular or religious, inspired by stories, drawn from nature, or inspired by dreams or emotions.

They are looking for entries that come alive with light, that are well designed, well photographed and display exceptional craftsmanship.

Learn more about the Studio 550 Center!ELIGIBILITY:  Open to US residents.

MEDIA: Glass art that captures your interpretation of spirituality with glass. Functional and Non-functional welcome.  Mixed media will be considered if glass is a primary component of the work.

DEADLINE:
February 20, 2012

NOTIFICATION:
March 5, 2012

ENTRY FEE:
$30 for 3 entries. Add’l $10 ea.

SALES:  Studio 550 collects 40% of all retail sales of artwork sold, the artists receive 60% of sales. All exhibited work MUST BE FOR SALE. Retail price must be under $500/entry.

For complete details, Download the Prospectus!

Download the Studio 550 Prospectus!

CALL for ENTRIES: not BIG

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!SNEAKY SNACKS

I become periodically addicted to snack foods.  Recently I’ve been fixated on Hot Buffalo Wing Pretzel Pieces from Snyder’s; however, an upcoming trip to a warm climate in the dead of winter means dragging out my bathing suit in December. Ugh.  So, I am trying to break the addiction by trying out new snack foods.  This week…whole grain fig newtons.  Wow, that’s a punch of flavor in a tiny package.  My logic is that the stronger flavor will result in less consumption.  We’ll see.  This next Call wants to see what can of wallop you can bring in a small package.  Take a look…

Check out this Call for Entries for not Big from the M S Rezny Studio / Gallery in Lexington, Kentucky.  Enter any media for only $20, and small size means smaller shipping price.  Hurray!

*Editor’s Note:  If you have read the personal portion of this post, CALL for ENTRIES: not BIG, anywhere other than by email subscription or on ArtAndArtDeadlines.com, it has been published without permission and is considered theft.

CALL for ENTRIES: not BIG

 

Read the Full Call from the M S Rezny Studio Gallery! ELIGIBILITY:  Open to all individual artists working in the contemporary arts.

MEDIA:  Any medium including painting, sculpture, ceramics, collage, mixed media, photography and glass.  There is no intended theme for the work; it just needs to fit the criteria of being “small art”. No works over 12 inches in any direction.

DEADLINE:  November 30, 2011

NOTIFICATION:  December 16, 2011

ENTRY FEE:  $20 entry fee for 3 images, $5 for add’l images

JUROR:  Jack Girard, Chair Division of Fine Art, Transylvania University

AWARDS:  $500 First Prize, $200 Second Prize and $100 Third Prize, as well as numerous Purchase Awards starting at $300.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Read the Full Call from the M S Rezny Studio Gallery!

 

CALL for ENTRIES: 25th Annual National Juried

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NUTS for
LOBSTER

When I think of Georgia, I start craving lobster bisque.  Yes, I know that Georgia is the Peach State, but as I have mentioned before… I have peach issues.  Georgia conjures images of trips to Savannah with my mother for glorious lunches at the River House of Caesar salad made fresh at our table, rich and creamy lobster bisque, and a huge slice of pecan pies.  You can’t touch that with peaches.  So this next Call is over 250 miles from Savannah, but it is still Georgia.  If you can’t find the bisque while at the opening, pecan pie can’t be far away…

Check out this Call for Entries from Cultural Arts Council of Douglasville/Douglas County (Georgia) for the 25th Annual National Juried Exhibition. This well-established show could be a great showcase for your work.  Take a look…

CALL for ENTRIES:
25th Annual National Juried

 

Learn more about the 25th Annual National Juried Exhibit!The National Juried Exhibition promotes an appreciation of the visual arts, enables artists to exhibit their works and allows local citizens to enjoy a wide variety high-quality art from around the country.  Since 1986, the Cultural Arts Center, listed on the National Register of Historic Places, has presented hundreds of exhibitions of works by more than 1,500 artists.

ELIGIBILITY:  All artists 18 years old or older residing in the US

MEDIA:  Original paintings, sculpture, hand-pulled prints, drawings, photography developed by the artists, fiber and original glass creations.  Film, video and crafts developed from molds or kits are not eligible. Copies will not be accepted.

Cultural Arts Council of Douglasville and Douglas County, Georgia!DEADLINE:
September 9, 2011

NOTIFICATION:
September 28, 2011

ENTRY FEE:  A non-refundable entry fee of thirty dollars ($30) for current CAC members (annual individual membership is $20) and forty dollars ($40) for non-members, qualifies the artist to submit up to three (3) works and will be used to promote the show.

JUROR:  Angela Nichols, Director of Education and Public Programs at the Hudgens Center for the Arts in Duluth, has been managing its multifaceted arts education department, overseeing its visual arts programming, and overseeing its collections since 2009.

Cultural Arts Council of Douglasville and Douglas County, Georgia! During her short tenure there, the Hudgens introduced the largest and perhaps most prestigious award to an individual visual artist ever given in Georgia. Before taking her current position, she previously served as the Visual Arts Curator at the Madison-Morgan Cultural Center from 2004 until 2008.

AWARDS:  Purchase Award Up to $1,000, First Place $500, Second Place $300, Third Place $200, Two Honorable Mentions $100, Two artists from the exhibition will be selected for solo shows during the next three years at the CAC.

SALES:  Sales will be encouraged; 25% commission will be taken on all work sold with the exception of the purchase award.

For complete details, Download the Prospectus!

Learn more about the 25th Annual National Juried Exhibit by Downloading the Prospectus!

CALL to Artists: Art Kudos

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!SWEET NOT SOUR

Today, I am going to give you a time-tested Southern recipe for success. Use sugar, not vinegar. It worked for Mary Poppins; it will work for you. When sending in your Calls for Entries, entries for the $2 Art Contest or for ANY show. Be professional, but above all else… be nice.  This is a great exhibit sponsored by a great site (albeit a competitor, of sorts). Consider the benefits.

Check out this Call to Artists for Art Kudos, and international juried competition sponsored by ArtShow.com, my personal favorite of the mass-listing art deadline sites. And there is NO COMMISSION. Take a look…

*Editor’s Note:  Please remember that we are on hiatus until July 5, so most of the posts will be “best of” reruns, but still worthy of a second look.

CALL to ARTISTS: Art Kudos

Learn more about the Art Kudos show sponsored by Artshow.com!Art Kudos is an annual international juried competition that serves to recognize and honor excellence in the visual arts. Artists who are selected as finalists benefit from world-wide exposure in a year-long online exhibition and have the opportunity to win cash awards for their exemplary work.

ELIGIBILITY: The competition is open to artists anywhere in the world, 18 years of age or older. Publishers, galleries, agents, and collectors may not submit artwork on behalf of artists.

MEDIA: Drawings, paintings, printmaking, photography, digital art, sculpture, installations, wood, glass, ceramics, fiber art and mixed media are eligible. Media not accepted: video/film, wearable art (clothing or jewelry). All works submitted must be original in design and concept. Artwork must not be copied, in part or wholly, from any published or copyrighted work. Work previously shown in an Art Kudos exhibition is ineligible. Please do not submit images which would be inappropriate for general audiences.

Learn more about the Art Kudos show sponsored by Artshow.com!DEADLINE: June 30, 2011

NOTIFICATION: August 1, 2011

ENTRY FEE: Artists must submit a completed entry form and pay a non-refundable entry fee of $30 US dollars (check, money order, or PayPal) to submit 3 images. For sculptural or three-dimensional pieces, artists may submit 2 views of each work (for a total of 6 images).

JUROR: Holly Koons McCullough is the Director of Collections and Exhibitions at the Telfair Museum of Art in Savannah, Georgia. She began her career at the Telfair in 1996, serving as the museum’s Curator of Education before assuming leadership of the curatorial department.

Learn more about the Art Kudos show sponsored by Artshow.com!McCullough spearheaded the publication of the Telfair’s first collection catalogue, and has organized exhibitions on subjects ranging from modern silverpoint drawings to contemporary Southeastern art, as well as 19th and early 20th-century American art, including the recent Dutch Utopia exhibition. She holds a B. A. in English and art history from the University of Georgia and a M.A. in art history from the University of Notre Dame.

AWARDS: Exemplary works will be displayed in a year-long online exhibition at www.artkudos.com beginning August 15th, 2011. Cash awards totaling $4,400 will be distributed as follows: Best of Show – $1,200; Second Place – $900; Third Place – $750; Founder’s Award of Distinction – $500; (3) Merit Awards – $250 each; (3) Honorable Mentions – $100 each.

COMMISSION: No commissions are taken for sales generated via the exhibition, and works submitted do not have to be available for sale. Sales will be encouraged, however, and artists will have the option to display their contact information beside their images.

For complete details, Download the Prospectus!

Learn more about the Art Kudos show sponsored by Artshowcom!

CALL for ENTRIES: 2012 Niche Awards

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!NUTZ for NUTS

Twenty years ago, niche market foods were thought to exist in ethic grocery stores.  These days you can make shopping for food a full time job.  You can buy almost every food product from a specialty store–from bacon to nuts, coffee to herbs.  The advantage to niche markets is, of course, artisan farming and culinary creation.  These same applies to artisan crafts, from jewelry to pottery.  This next Call could provide the perfect boost for your craftwork…

Check out this Call for Entries for the 2012 Niche Awards sponsored by NICHE magazine!  Winners receive a spread in NICHE magazine, trophy and press as well as an opportunity to display their work in a special exhibit at the February 2012 Buyers Market of American Craft (BMAC) at the Pennsylvania Convention Center in Philadelphia, PA.  Take a look…

Learn more about the 2012 Niche Awards!CALL for ENTRIES:
2012 Niche Awards

 

Sponsored by NICHE [“neesh”] magazine, the annual NICHE Awards competition celebrates excellence and innovation in American and Canadian craft.

ELIGIBILITY:  The competition is open to any professional craft artist residing in the U.S. or Canada, over the age of 21, who is actively involved in the design and production of craftwork supplied to galleries and craft stores.

MEDIA:  Artisan Crafts

DEADLINE:  Friday, September 30, 2011

NOTIFICATION:  December 2011. Winners will be announced at the NICHE Awards ceremony during the February 2012 Philadelphia Buyers Market of American Craft.

ENTRY FEE: $40 for up to 3 entries

Learn about past Niche Award winners!JUROR: Each image entry is judged individually. The judges’ scores are not cumulative per application, but reflect their decisions per individual image entry. Decisions of the judges will be final. Images are judged on the following:

• Technical excellence, design and form
• Market viability
• Unique, original and creative thought

AWARDS:
Finalists receive:
• Award certificate from NICHE magazine
• Listing in Winter 2011 issue of NICHE
• Listing in February 2012 Buyers Market of American Craft (BMAC) Buyers Guide
• Listing on www.NICHEAwards.com
• Press materials tailored to local and trade media
• An opportunity to display their work in a special exhibit at the February 2012 Buyers Market of American Craft (February 18-21, 2012, in Philadelphia, Pa.). [Drop-off and pick-up of items is required. Further details concerning the special display are provided in the finalist’s packet.]

Winners receive:
• Award certificate and trophy
• Press materials tailored to local and trade media
* Prominent listing in Spring 2012 issue of NICHE Magazine

For complete details, download the Application!

Learn more about the 2012 Niche Awards!

CALL for ENTRIES: Materials Hard & Soft

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!PRETTY PlEASE

Food marks most of the special occasions in my life from birthdays and vacations to weddings and anniversaries.  Some of you are aware that my husband Jon and I sing together as the Pea Pickin’ Hearts, and food often makes our gigs memorable too.  One of my favorite gigs includes the Spring & Fall Gatherings at the Cliff Dwellers Gallery, where we sing on the front porch and are rewarded with a pea-themed lunch.  This next Call is a perfect fit for the ladies of the Cliff Dwellers, and hopefully it will be a fit for you too…

Check out this Call for Entries from the Greater Denton Arts Council for the 2012 Materials Hard & Soft Contemporary Craft Exhibition at the Meadows Gallery, Center for the Visual Arts, Denton, TX.  Over $5000 in Awards will be given away!

CALL for ENTRIES:
Materials Hard & Soft

Learn more about the Materials Hard and Soft show!ELIGIBILITY:  Artists must reside in the United States or its possessions.

MEDIA:  Works produced in any of the craft media: clay, fiber, glass, metal, paper, wood, or any combination of craft media, are acceptable. Entries must be the complete work of the submitting artist. Kits or commercially designed works will not be accepted. All work must have been completed within the past two years and not previously exhibited in the Center for the Visual Arts.

Learn more about the Greater Denton Arts Council online!DEADLINE:
Received by September 9, 2011

NOTIFICATION:
November 4, 2011

ENTRY FEE:
There is a $30 non-refundable fee,
for up to three (3) entries,
payable to GDAC
(check or money order).

JUROR:  Monica Moses became editor in chief of American Craft magazine in June 2010.

Moses brings to that role 20 years’ experience in media organizations as an editor, designer, and creative director – as well as a lifetime of passion for the visual arts. Moses is a Phi Beta Kappa graduate in English of St. Olaf College and has a master’s degree in visual communication from the University of Minnesota. 

See the 2011 Materials Hard and Soft winners!Moses was on the visual faculty of the world’s leading training institution for mid-career journalists, the Poynter Institute for Media Studies, for four years and served as a Pulitzer Prize juror in photography in 2006. When she is not editing the magazine, Moses paints, makes jewelry, works with handmade paper, and dabbles in clay.

AWARDS:  GDAC will provide $5,000 in awards. Winners will be determined by the juror, on site, after the accepted works are received at the Center for the Visual Arts.

SALES:  A 30% commission will be retained from all work sold during the exhibition. Works which are not for sale must be clearly marked as such.

For complete details, Download the Prospectus!

Download the Materials Hard and Soft Prospectus!