Art and Art Deadlines.com

A food-themed FREE resource site for ARTISTS.

×
Art and Art Deadlines.com

Category: Illustration

CALL for ENTRIES: Turquoise

Learn more about the Turquoise Mail Art Call!don’t be
BLUE

There aren’t really any naturally-occurring blue foods–of which I am aware.  But maybe that is why I’m not a fan of color blue, with the exceptions of navy (almost purple) & turquoise (high green only).  Blue foods scream, “Plastic” every time I see them–from icing on cakes to the blue tongues of toddlers eating shaved ice.  I know; my food quirks never end.  This next Call is just the perfect shade away from blue.  Take a look…

Check out this Call for Entries from curator Monika Mori for Turquoise, an International Mail Art Project.  There is no entry fee.  If you’re looking to add an international line to your resume or just break out of a creative rut, here’s a great opportunity…

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

Learn more about the Turquoise Mail Art Call!CALL for ENTRIES:
Turquoise

 

ELIGIBILITY:  Open to all artists

THEME:  Turquoise

MEDIA:  15 x 10cm  (or 6″ x 4″) Postcards

DEADLINE:  Postmarked by March 31, 2015

NOTIFICATION:  All postcards properly addressed & postmarked will be included

ENTRY FEE:  None

Learn more about the Turquoise Mail Art Call!CURATOR:  Monika Mori, an Austrian contemporary multimedia artist creates playful moody paintings & collages celebrating experiences & emotions animated by dazzling colors.  Mori communicates through her works and wants to re-animate, in the native word-sense!  It is a language unto itself and there is merit to all interpretations.  The strength of her paintings reflect the strength of Mori herself, and the intensity of the message she has to convey.  Since 2008, her work has been exhibited worldwide and is included in major and private collection.

DOCUMENTATION:  Your artwork will be exhibited online in the blog TURQUOISE, an extensive catalog or book is possible if sponsors are found for the project.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Learn more about the Turquoise Mail Art Call!

CALL for ENTRIES: 3×3 Int’l Illustration

Learn more from 3x3 Magazine!melon or
MELON?

Things are not always as they appear.  Take the Yubari melon, while it looks like a $4 canteloupe, it has a unique flavor you won’t ever forget.  And this $150 melon is far sweeter than the $4 doppleganger.  This next Call might look like a typical publication Call, but look closer and you’ll find it is worth every penny.  Looks are deceiving, so investigate…

Check out this Call for Entries from 3×3 Magazine for the Int’l Illustration Show. You can’t go wrong with Art Publication. Plus, competitions for illustrators are a rare find. Take a chance…

*Editor’s Note: If you have read the personal portion of this post, CALL for ENTRIES: 3×3 Int’l Illustration, anywhere other than by email subscription or on ArtAndArtDeadlines.com, it has been published without permission and is considered theft.

Learn more about the 3x3 ProShow from the Magazine for Contemporary Illustration!CALL for ENTRIES:
Int’l Illustration

 

3×3 Magazine publishes the world’s best contemporary illustration as judged by some of the world’s top art directors, designers and illustrators.

Unlike many shows they have no boundaries, their entrants come from every part of the globe. They are still one of the best values around when it comes to entry fees and publication fees. And they continue to improve their entry process.

And unlike most show annuals that are on the bookshelves 3×3 Magazine’s annuals are prominently displayed on the newsstands in the US, Canada, the UK, Europe and parts of Asia where they are affordable to art directors and art buyers who may or may not be interested in illustration. There has been dramatic growth in the number of outlets stocking the 3×3 Magazine annual and the sales to art directors.

It is their mission to demonstrate the benefits of using illustration, this annual is their showcase.

Learn more from the Magazine for Contemporary Illustration!

ELIGIBILITY: Open to all illustrators, art directors, graphic designers, educators, students, recent graduates, editors, publishers in all countries for commissioned and non-commissioned work produced or published during the calendar year 2014.

DEADLINE: March 31, 2015

ENTRY FEE:  Single entries are $35 and Series (3–5 images only) are $60. They accept Visa, MasterCard and American Express. Publication fees are $90 which help cover the high cost of printing and distributing the annual and development of the app. Honorable mentions, $50.

JUDGES:  Ronn Campisi, former Design Director, Boston Globe; Christian Drury, former Senior Art Director, Wall Street Journal; April Montgomery, Art Director, IDG Enterprise, Samantha Johnson, Picture Editor, Penguin Press, U.K. & illustrators Nishant Choksi, United Kingdom, Christian Gralingen, Germany, Lasse Skarbovik, Sweden and Ellen Weinstein.

AWARDS: Winners will be featured in the printed annual & online; honorable mentions, online.  A free app will be sent to leading art directors & art buyers giving further exposure to student winners. Best of Show & Gold medal winners receive our distinctive 3×3×3-inch cube, Silver and Bronze winners receive a framed award; distinctive merit and merit winners receive paper certificates.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Read the Full Call from 3x3 Magazine!

CALL for ENTRIES: Art of Brands (Spring)

Learn more from Art of Brands!

my italian
HERO

What would we do without the iconic dishes that make up the safety net?  You know the ones…everyone likes some version of it.  They tend to be my “go to” meals on nights when I have to plan in advance.  Since I don’t know what anyone will be in the mood for, I hit the highlights.  Tonight is spaghetti night.  No matter who is coming, I can cover vegetarian, vegan & gluten-free if need be.  This Call is all about iconic art categories.  Please investigate this one.  If you work in 2-D, there is probably a way to make this work for you

Check out this Call for Entries from Art of Brands (a new AAAD sponsor) for Iconic Images.  There is no entry fee, and this could be a great way to earn money from your art.  Take a look…

*Editor’s Note:  So many of you have talked to me about selling your work w/o being bogged down running a gallery or about art fairs or gallery representation.  I know you often leave the conversation not feeling like nothing is accessible.  I like THIS opportunity.  If you work in 2-D, don’t dismiss this Call.  Some of you might consider simply doing what you already do but direct some content to suit this purpose.  It won’t be for everyone, but I think it is a valid option for a lot of you.

Learn more from Art of Brands!CALL for ENTRIES:
Art of Brands
(Spring)

 

ELIGIBILITY:  Open to all artists

MEDIA:  Open to 2 Dimensional work including drawing, painting, illustration, printmaking, photography, digital art, mixed media, etc.

THEME:  Favorite interests (car, city, kids, gaming, sports, technology, wine, etc.) or specific, iconic brands (Alfa Romeo, Concord, celebrities, etc).  Art of Brands is just beginning to fill out their categories, so be sure to let them know if you have work that you think might fit but isn’t currently represented.

Learn more about Art of Brands!DEADLINE:  Ongoing entries wanted. *For my favorite artistic procrastinators, don’t worry, I’ll post this Call for Entries at least once per quarter for a while just in case you are too busy to enter today.

NOTIFICATION:  Within 72 hours of completing the sign-up process

ENTRY FEE:  No entry fee

CURATORS:  A committee of members with backgrounds in art

SALES:  For reproductions (like paper, canvas, di-bond, acrylic/plexi glass) the commission rate is 20%.  Art of Brands also sells originals.  Commission for originals is higher & is discussed with artists individually and separately from the reproduction work. Payments for sales are made to artists on a quarterly basis.

For complete details, Check out Art of Brands online!

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

CALL for ENTRIES: The Mark on the Wall

Learn more about The Mark on the Wall exhibition!HYDROPONICS too,
apparently

I continue to dream of exotic walapini gardening.  In my dreams, my fantastic garden of dragon & noni fruit, black radishes & dulse (yes, hydroponics) is documented by Grete Stern & Virginia Wolfe for Garden & Gun Magazine.  I’m hoping that my dream was inspired by this next Call (and not that I need medication, ha).  This is a fantastic Call.  Take a look…

Check out this Call for Entries from Bloomsburg University of Pennsylvania for The Mark On the Wall–a juried exhibition of small works on paper  at Greenly Art Gallery in conjunction with The 25th Annual International Conference on Virginia WoolfInvestigate this opportunity…

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

Learn more about The Mark on the Wall exhibition!CALL for ENTRIES:
The Mark on the Wall

 

In keeping with the theme of the conference, Virginia Woolf and Her Female Contemporaries, preference will be given to works inspired or broadly influenced by those female artists who were contemporaneous with Virginia Woolf, including but not limited to Berenice Abbott, Anni Albers, Vanessa Bell, Ilse Bing, Romaine Brooks, Claude Cahun, Dora Carrington, Leonora Carrington, Imogen Cunningham, Gisèle Freund, Barbara Hepworth, Hannah Höch, Frida Kahlo, Loïs Mailou Jones, Ergy Landau, Lee Miller, Lucia Moholy, Gabriele Münter, Georgia O’Keeffe, Méret Oppenheim, Grete Stern, Dorothea Tanning, Suzanne Valadon, and Remedios Varo. –from The Mark on the Wall prospectus

ELIGIBILITY:  Open to all artists age 18+

MEDIA:  Open to works on paper (15” x 11” or smaller) in all traditional & experimental visual arts media, including photography, will be considered.

Learn more about The Mark on the Wall exhibition!DEADLINE:  April 20, 2015

NOTIFICATION:  May 1, 2015

ENTRY FEE: $25 for up to 3, $5 ea. add’l

JURORS:  Rosalyn Richards received her BFA from the Rhode Island School of Design & MFA from Yale University School of Art.  Her work is represented in many museum & university collections. She has held artist residencies at numerous locations in the U.S., including VA Center for Creative Arts and Ragdale in Illinois.  She was a visiting artist and critic at Colby College, Cornell University, the University of Dallas and Tianjin Academy of Fine Arts in Tianjin, China.  Richards retired as Professor of Art at Bucknell University in 2014.

Chad Andrews received his BFA in studio art from Kutztown University & his MFA in printmaking from the University of PA.  He has taught at The University of PA for five years, and held the position of Director of Visual Arts at the Interlochen Center for the Arts (Interlochen, MI) for six years.  He is currently a full-time instructor of printmaking and 2-dimensional design at Bloomsburg University.  He maintains a private studio at the Pajama Factory in Williamsport, Pennsylvania.

SALES:  Sales will be encouraged, and a 20% commission will be retained by Greenly Art Gallery from the retail price listed on the entry form.

For complete details, please read the Full Call!

Learn more from Bloomsburg University!

 

CALL for ENTRIES: Militarism

Learn more from the American Friends Service Committee!vacuum-sealed
NUTRITION

MREs now have a strong secondary market–doomsday preppers.  I don’t think that most people relish the idea of eating pre-packaged, processed military rations.  They have improved great (or so I’ve been told); pizza is even on the horizon.  However, I would think that preserving seeds, building hydroponic systems and farming fish would be better long-term solutions than MREs.  But then again, I’m not a doomsday prepper–so, what do I know?  This next Call wants your view on militarism, but I don’t think they are interested in the food options.  Take a look…

Check out this Call for Entries from the American Friends Service Committee for All of Us or None: Responses and Resistance to Militarism.  Add a nationally-traveling exhibit to your resume.   This Call is tailor-made for graphic  & digital artists, but doesn’t exclude other media

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

Learn more from the American Friends Service Committee!CALL for ENTRIES:
Militarism

ELIGIBILITY:  Open to all artists

MEDIA:  Any media that results in an 8.5 x 11 digital image (300-600 dpi)

THEME: Submissions should explore: Militarism’s negative effects on your community, your country, or the globe;  Ideas for active resistance to militarism; and/or Alternative approaches, new projects, or manifestos that seek to achieve lasting peace and justice.

DEADLINE:  December 15, 2014

ENTRY FEE:  None

AWARDS:  AFSC will print & professionally display the chosen work in the traveling exhibit.  The exhibit website will identify each poster by artist, title, short description & website.  Artists will receive a $50 honorarium & a print copy of the catalog.

SALES:  By participating in this project, artists are donating their work to AFSC to use in the traveling exhibit, in digital replicas of the work available for download for free. Work will be fully credited to the artists, with contact information included.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Learn more from the American Friends Service Committee!

FEATURED ARTIST: Joseph Cavalieri

Learn more about Featured Artist Joseph Cavalieri!hold the
CREAM

Twinkies abound in the art world.  You know, that work that grabs your attention with some knock-off aesthetic resembling a Pop Art master only to leave you with calorie-dense, nutrient empty content.  I see a lot of it.  Jurists and directors the world over see a lot of it.  As a result, illustrators and graphic designers have frequently been left out of “all media” shows without so much as a thank-you-very-much-for-the-entry-fee.

Not today.  The work of this month’s artist has more than just a cream center.  I have a soft spot for the catch-more-flies-with-honey feel of this work.  The delivery is almost Southern.

Learn more about Featured Artist Joseph Cavalieri!I am proud to welcome Joseph Cavalieri as AAAD’s latest Featured Artist. This work shines a spotlight on  the baggage of life, both in celebration and lament, while wrapping it in the razzle dazzle of popular culture.  It feels a little like I just heard a song on Top 40 radio that had lyrics of substance.  Rare.

FEATURED
ARTIST:

Joseph Cavalieri

 

Joseph Cavalieri is a native New Yorker, based in the East Village, and one-hundred percent of his life is spent as an artist and educator.  Since 1997 Joseph has been exhibiting painted, air brushed and silk-screened stained glass.

Muscle Addiction by Featured Artist Joseph Cavalieri!In 2013 Joseph had four one-man shows, and “Madonna & Prada” was acquired for the permanent collection of the Museum of Arts and Design. Cavalieri also has work in the permanent collection of the Leslie-Lohman Museum, in Manhattan.  Joseph’s MTA Arts for Transit public art commission can be viewed at the Philipse Manor Train Station in Westchester, New York.

Cavalieri’s unique glass art techniques combine modern elements with time-honored processes used by Medieval stained glass artists.

 

Women figure prominently in your work.  Friend or foe? “Being the youngest of seven children, five sisters and one brother, I was a bit confused when was exactly my mother. I was constantly passed around from sibling to sibling. I this is one reason why I work so well with women, and have featured many in my work… I really have always “got them” from an early age.”

Evil by Featured Artist Joseph Cavalieri!Are you self-taught or formally instructed?  “I come from a graphic design background, art directing at GQ, Good Housekeeping and People magazines.  (Yes, I helped decide what was the best and worst dressed and the sexiest man.)  During this time I took a variety of classes at UrbanGlass in Brooklyn and became hooked on using glass as my canvas.  Now as a full time artist I teach these techniques, mixed with what I learned as an art director– around the world.”

Talk to me about your process.“I use different techniques in my work–airbrush, silk-screening, and painting.  But, I still feel I am a graphic designer.

“I am an artist working on posters made of glass.”

 

“Glowing, back lit glass is very similar to a computer screen or iPad, and immediately seen from a distance.  No wonder the church used it to tell the message of the Bible… a very early version of illuminated advertisement .”

Smoking Addiction by Featured Artist Joseph Cavalieri!I notice a huge portraiture influence even on the pieces that prominently feature a portrait.  Confess…  “I may be the first artist to place an image of an African American man in stained glass. I have done many portraits, ranging from Agnes Moorehead, Jackie O, The Lady Bunny and Isaac Hayes. Why? When I visit a gallery, portraits are what I am drawn to the most, and I find them to be the most challenging. Plus, we all know Agnes Moorehead IS a friggin’ goddess!”

Talk to me about your inspiration.  “One of my more popular series was based on modern day addictions.  It was shown in a church here in Manhattan.  We are all surrounded by addiction, but we don’t all create work about it.  The inspiration for these 10 pieces came for deep in my heart, with some humorous elements that are deep down there too.  I did use one swear word in a panel, which a priest covered with black tape for the run of the show.”  Electrical tape?  Perfect.  I’m sure THAT is archival. *snicker*

Gluttonize by Featured Artist Joseph Cavalieri!Talk to me about the two artists (one living, one dead) that have most influenced your work, and tell us why.  “Dead, it would be Fortunato Depero, who created very graphic posters for Campari.  Living, Matthew Dayler, also very graphic work with an edge.”

What if your favorite snack food obsession?  “I recently taught a workshop in Zurich & brought a few silk-screens with me for the students to use.  One was of a Twinkie®, which, since I was 12 years old has been one of my personal obsessions.  I had used this image in work named “Gluttonize” which was a stained glass window based on food addictions.  Surprisingly, the class had no idea what Twinkies were or are!  After a long explanation they asked me to bring a case when I return to teach in 2015.”

What’s coming up next for you?  “Opening June 20th is “NYC Makers” at the Museum of Arts & Design in NY. I have a large portrait of Jackie O in this Biennial, silk-screened on glass.”

Thank you, Joseph, for being more than the gooey middle.

Learn more about Featured Artist Joseph Cavalieri!

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

FEATURED ARTIST: Jillian Platt

Learn more about Featured Artist Jillian Platt!i choose
CHOCOLATE

not dishes

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

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

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

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

 

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

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

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

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

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

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

 

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Learn more about Featured Artist Jillian Platt!

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

CALL for ENTRIES: Me, Myself & I

Learn more from the Runnels Gallery at ENMU!over easy
benedict

SUNNY SIDE UP
hold the salsa

Don’t throw tomatoes.  I never search my own blog history before I write these segues.  So unknown to me, I might be contradicting/repeating myself, but I am always being sincere–I swear.  Having said that, I remember having written about this topic many times.  That’s right, it is time for what-would-I-be-if-I-were-food.  This week, I’m thinking I would be an egg.  Really.  They are ultimate in adaptive foods.  They are in everything from cookies to lasagna.  My family OF THREE now eats approximately 3 dozen a week.  Really.  This episode of what-would-I-be-if-I-were-food was brought to you be this self-portrait Call–the ultimate what-would-I-be-if-I-had-only-one-shot-to-show-the-world experience.  Enough hyphens; I digress…

Check out this Call for Entries from the ENMU Runnels Gallery for Me, Myself & I, a self-portrait show.  No entry fee, and this is a great institution.  Take a look…

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

Learn more about the Me Myself and I from the Runnels Gallery at ENMU!CALL for ENTRIES:
Me, Myself & I

Social, cultural, political, gender, age and sexual orientation are part of our identities as individuals. Each of these elements play a part in how we identify within various constructs such as family, workforce, community and greater society.

The aim of this exhibition is to feature self-portraits that best depict our own individual identity and the ability to be a camellia of uniqueness or to fit within the statuesque.

ELIGIBILITY:  Open to all artists

MEDIA:  Must be 8” x 10”. No landscapes orientations accepted. B&W or color photography, digital photography or illustrations, and photos or scanned replications of drawings, paintings or sculptures. Self-portraits will not be returned; do not submit original prints/artwork.

Learn more from the Runnels Gallery at ENMU!DEADLINE:
May 1, 2014

NOTIFICATION:  “All artists will be featured. Artists are welcome to submit as many self-portraits as they wish; however, the gallery can only guarantee a minimum of six photos per artist will be displayed. If space permits, more photos will be used from each submitting artist.” — quoted from from the Me, Myself & I prospectus

ENTRY FEE:  No fee to enter

SALES:  Artwork will not be sold. (or returned)

Editor’s Note:  According the prospectus, this is a National Juried exhibit; however, it also claims to be open to ANY artist, and no juror is listed.  The quote above indicates it is a form of all-hung show.  So, my guess is it is only juried for awards.  However, the awards are not defined in the prospectus either.  Normally I wouldn’t publish a Call without getting all of these questions answered…but I  HAVE shown at this gallery myself and it was a FANTASTIC experience.  If you’re looking for a line on your resume, this is a great academic gallery with an historically great curatorial vision.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Learn more from the Runnels Gallery at ENMU!

CALL for ENTRIES: 3×3 ProShow

Learn more about the 3x3 ProShow from the Magazine for Contemporary Illustration!horny as a
CUCUMBER

I’m on the lookout for a horned melon aka an African cucumber.  I tried one many years ago and remember the flavors of lemon, banana and cucumber, but because they are exceedingly rare, I can’t find one locally.  I suspect if I find one in the South, it will probably be imported and unripe.  Those tend to just taste like banana.  Keep your fingers crossed, or send me one if you run across it.  In the meantime, the next Call is a very rare illustration call.  Take a look…

Check out this Call for Entries from 3×3 Magazine for their Annual ProShow. You can’t go wrong with Art Publication, and competitions for illustrators are a  rare find. Take a chance…

*Editor’s Note: If you have read the personal portion of this post, CALL for ENTRIES: 3×3 ProShow, anywhere other than by email subscription or on ArtAndArtDeadlines.com, it has been published without permission and is considered theft.

Learn more about the 3x3 ProShow from the Magazine for Contemporary Illustration!CALL for ENTRIES:
3×3  ProShow

 

3×3 Magazine is entering its ninth year judging the world’s best contemporary illustration judged by some of the world’s top art directors, designers and illustrators.

Unlike many shows they have no boundaries, their entrants come from every part of the globe. They are still one of the best values around when it comes to entry fees and publication fees. And they continue to improve their entry process.

And unlike most show annuals that are on the bookshelves 3×3 Magazine’s annuals are prominently displayed on the newsstands in the US, Canada, the UK, Europe and parts of Asia where they are affordable to art directors and art buyers who may or may not be interested in illustration. There has been dramatic growth in the number of outlets stocking the 3×3 Magazine annual and the sales to art directors.

It is their mission to demonstrate the benefits of using illustration, this annual is their showcase.

 

Learn more from the Magazine for Contemporary Illustration!

ELIGIBILITY: Open to all illustrators, art directors, graphic designers, editors, publishers in all countries for commissioned and non-commissioned work produced and/or published during the calendar year 2013.

DEADLINE: March 31, 2014

ENTRY FEE: Single entries are $35 and Series (3–5 images only) are $60.  They accept Visa, MasterCard and American Express.  Publication fees are $90 which help cover the high cost of printing and distributing the annual and development of the app.  Honorable mentions, $50.

JUDGES:  Marieke Griffioen, Design Director, Edenspiekermann, Amsterdam; Paul Gonzales, Deputy Design Director, Los Angeles Times; Tim J. Luddy, former Design Director, Mother Jones and illustrators Klaas Verplancke, Belgium & Mark Smith, United Kingdom.

AWARDS:   Winners will be featured in our printed annual and online; our honorable mentions, online. Winners receive discounts on purchasing either a print of digital edition of the annual. A free app will be sent to leading art directors and art buyers giving further exposure to our student winners.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Read the Full Call from 3x3 Magazine!

CALL for ENTRIES: Anything Goes

Enter the Featured Artist Contest today!call me
HERB

I live with culinary diplomats.  Never ones to forsake a food altogether, my family tries to find the silver lining to every food basket.  They have mastered words like “earthy, piquant, herbaceous & grassy” to avoid speaking ill of my food experiments.  As a result, I cook with a sort of anything-goes-abandon that produces both masterpieces & snacks turned down even by the dogs.  This next Call wants the masterpieces that come from your anything-goes, devil-may-care, art abandon.  Give it a shot…

Check out this Call for Entries from Exhibitions Without Walls for Anything Goes II.  As the name indicates, there are no media restrictions.  Take a look…

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

Learn more from Exhibitions Without Walls!CALL for ENTRIES:
Anything Goes

 

ELIGIBILITY:  Open to all artists

MEDIA:  Open to all photographers, digital artists, graphic designers, or illustrators

DEADLINE: February 8, 2014

NOTIFICATION:  February 16, 2014

ENTRY FEE: $25 for up to 5 images, $4 each add’l up to 10

AWARDS:  BEST in competition $300 USD plus add’l prizes, 2nd Place $175 plus add’l prizes & 3rd Place $125 plus add’l prizes.  Up to 10 Awards Of Excellence will be awarded.  Editor’s Note:  The additional prizes are of significant value to some, be sure to take a look.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Learn more from Exhibitions Without Walls!