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Art and Art Deadlines.com

Category: New Media

CALL for ENTRIES: Through the Looking Glass!

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!MIX IT UP

Remember when the electric kitchen mixer was only a dream?  Well, no, I don’t either, but you have at least contemplated what it was like BEFORE we had electrical conveniences.  I, personally, don’t think I have the motivation or arm strength to deal with a manual egg beater.  But, I have no doubt that someone somewhere thought that an electric hand mixer was a ridiculous, impossible dream.  This next Call may test your ability to imagine the future, but I encourage you to be open to the possibilities.  Always be an optimist…

Check out this Call for Entries for Through the Looking Glass at Artform Gallery & Tattoo.  This is an all-hung show (or at least one piece per artist), and the entry fee is only $5 per piece. Hurry!  The deadline is in FIVE days.  It is worth a look…

CALL for ENTRIES:  Through the Looking Glass

 Download the Through the Looking Glass Prospectus! From the Artform Gallery website:  “We’ve come across some very interesting technology that we believe will change how the world can be interconnected. The technology is in the palm of most peoples hands and they don’t even realize it. Our goal is to present this new form of communication to the world is going be through art, by having a gallery opening May 7th at Artform Gallery and Tattoo.”

“Nothing like this has ever been done before. We are trying to bring public awareness to the use of this technology in our everyday life, and what better way to do it through art. Especially since life imitates art on a daily basis. This is the future and the time to act is now while we are right on the cusp of this technological revolution.”

*Editor’s Note:  I encourage you to think about this Call with an open mind.  I was very hesitant to publish it because it is vague and unclear; however, after a discussion with the Gallery, I think they are just trying to keep their “secret technology” under wraps until the opening.  But to help you a little, there is an ACTUAL show, not just an online show.  There is an ACTUAL opening, but you don’t have to send your work… only .jpgs.  I have a theory on the technology, and if you email me we can compare theories.  I’ve wasted a lot of entry fees, but I think this $5 is worth being a part of the mystery.

Download the Through the Looking Glass Prospectus!ELIGIBILITY:  Open to all artists

MEDIA:  All media – Open to all 2 and 3 dimensional art

DEADLINE:  Wednesday April 27th, 2011

NOTIFICATION:  As long as you follow the rules laid out in the prospectus, at least one piece of your art will be included.

Examples of unacceptable work: no plagiarized art or JPEGs of really bad quality.  Artists will be notified by email either way.

ENTRY FEE:  The submission fee is $5.00 per entry, up to 3 pieces.

SALES:  Artform Gallery and Tattoo will retain a 25% commission on the sale of artwork.

ABOUT THE GALLERY:  Artform Gallery & Tattoo was established in September of 2008 and is committed to showing artwork that is excellent and fearless. Not only does Artform provide affordable, first class fine art just outside of Pittsburgh; it is also committed to bridge the gap between “high- brow” fine art and “low- brow” tattoo art.

For complete information, Download the Prospectus!

 

Download the Through the Looking Glass Prospectus!

FEATURED ARTIST: Penny Perkins

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!MON PETIT
CHOCOLAT!

When the $2 Art Contest began, I did not intend to feature any particular media or avoid any other media. But as it turns out, I have unintentionally avoided photography although I have had lots of photographers enter. Many of them produce phenomenal work, and some of it has really spoken to me.  But the final chocolate has always been missing from the sampler box for me…until now.

As you know, I have a soft spot for visual places to rest, for work that makes me smile. I am mesmerized by the heart strings this imagery plucks.  This work reminds me to take stock of the amazing view from nearly everywhere of nearly everything.

Vintage Sign Series by Penny PerkinsThis month’s artist has given us visual time capsules: suspended in space, leftovers in typography and iconography.

 

The Featured Artist chosen from the March entries is photographer Penny Perkins.  Perkins’ work is like an ode to a postwar society whose mobility was made possible by electricity and oil. A salute to all that is beautiful, albeit sometimes crumbling, in the world through which we walk.

FEATURED ARTIST:
Penny Perkins

Penny Perkins grew up in southern Illinois, lived and worked for many years in New York City, and currently resides in New York’s Capital Region.

Detail of White House Lodge by Penny PerkinsRecent visual art projects include experimental video art using time-based photographic images and several on-going photographic series, including abstractions of industrial neon signs, and documentation of transportation and technology infrastructure.

Particular influences on her current work include her stint at the Museum of Modern Art as a grant writer, 10 years as a graphic designer with an emphasis on type design, and a love of road trips which supplies her with inspiring and unusual visuals from along the nation’s by-ways. Penny has been taking photographs and making films/videos, first as a hobbyist and later as a visual artist, for 35 years.

Penny has trained in photography and/or videography at the Experimental Television Center, the Visual Studies Workshop, The Center for Photography, and The Digital Film Farm, among other places. In addition to her work as a visual artist, Penny is also a writer.  Her novel Bob Bridges: An Apocalyptic Fable was published in 1999 by ChromeDeco Press.

Currently, Penny is an assistant professor for communications at Russell Sage College in Troy, NY where she has taught since 2006.

Photo by Penny PerkinsI wanted Perkins to weigh in on the film vs. digital debate: “Is it too much to say that digital photography saved my life?   I was an avid hobby photographer.  I saved up, bought my own Pentax K1000 and had several lenses, too. 

I loved photography.  But at some point, it just became too much of a hassle: the film, the developing, the storage, the big bulky lenses.  So, I put down my camera for many many years. But I got interested again with digital photography.

In the end, I think film vs. digital
isn’t really relevant as an aesthetic question.

 

As digital imagery gets better and there are software solutions to  humanize the sharp look of digital with analog approximations, I am pro digital.  It gives me the freedom and spontaneity to take dozens, even thousands of photos for a fraction of the cost and effort of film.”

Vintage Sign Series by Penny PerkinsWhat do you say to the painters and sculptors out there that believe photography is a soul-less capturing of an aesthetic? “Photography is a metaphor for seeing, and I think there are a lot of important things to say about framing the world that the medium hasn’t even begun to explore.”

“There are philosophical issues about space and time that the medium has always shed light on, and I think there is much more there to be explored. Look at some of the amazing time lapse imagery that can be produced at 64,000 fps.  It allows us to see the world, to literally see physics and forces, in a way that we never could before.”

Talk to me about how you work… your process:  “In general, I think I’m more process-oriented than end-result. That is, my philosophy is to take photos of what I’m drawn to first and then figure out the attraction, reason, or pull later. For me, that allows me to be more flexible, more spontaneous, more in-the-moment. I love the feeling of serendipity, and of being in the right place at the right time.”

Vintage Sign Series by Penny PerkinsIt’s that notion from Heraclitus that you never step in the same river twice.

 

“If change is inherent to the nature of the universe, then I get a real high connection to the notion that the moment I captured is a unique moment in space and time (and light and perspective) that will never be repeated. That’s a very cool and very exciting notion to me. Of course, I’m speaking as a former philosophy major, so maybe you should take it with a grain of salt…” 

Speaking of salt, we have to talk about the food.  I’m guessing you’re a food on the go kind of gal.  Am I right?  “Well, I come from an ancient line of vegetarians who hate vegetables and love chocolate. The only vegetables I really like are corn and tomatoes — and I hear one is a starch and one is a fruit, so sadly neither of them count.”

“Regarding chocolate, I am a total snob. I prefer fresh, hand-made gourmet chocolate from expensive little stores in New York City. My absolute favorite piece of chocolate ever comes from Martine’s in Bloomingdales. They make an exquisite little thing called an “oyster.” They are the best melt-in-your-mouth things you will ever, ever, ever taste. If someone wants to trade me a box of them for a photo, I’m pretty sure I’d do that any day of the week.”

Learn more about the Adirondack Lakes Center for the Arts!So, what’s coming up next for you, Penny?  “First, I want to say thanks so much for your site. I just started using it last summer (August 2010), and since then I have been accepted into 10 shows/exhibits for my photography. This includes getting my first solo show (which will take place in April 2012) from one of your listings.”

Thanks, Penny!  I’m glad to hear AAAD is working for someone.  Where is your solo show?  My first solo show next April at the Adirondack Lakes Center for the Arts at Blue Mountain Lake, NY.  I’ll be showcasing one of my series — industrial neon signs.  For this show, all the photos will come from signs from the Adirondacks — a great region with lots of old motels and roadside eateries that are quickly disappearing.”

Learn more about Penny Perkins online!

Learn More about Featured Artist Penny Perkins!

Want to be a Featured Artist on www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com?
Check out the
$2 Art Contest!

CALL for ENTRIES: Phone-o-Graphic

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!FOOD FOR THE EYES

I would love to know what percentage of cell phone pictures are of food. I am willing to  bet it is over twenty-five percent…maybe even thirty percent.  Thanks to facebook, I am regularly made aware of the gastronomic adventures of hundreds of my friends.  Unfortunately, due to the number of my friends that are artists that also read this blog… I must honestly admit that I am among the worst of the offenders.  I submit evidence of my guilt by posting  this picture to the left of delicious Buckberry Bread Pudding that I took yesterday at The Lodge at Buckberry Creek.   And, while I am not suggesting you submit pictures of food, this Call will require use of your cell phone.  Take a look…

Check out this Call for Entries from Darkroom Gallery called Phone-O-Graphic Arts. Enter your work for as little as $20. Don’t forget Dark Room Gallery offers free framing & matting on accepted entries!

Phone-o-graph by Dan BurkholderCALL FOR ENTRIES:
Phone-O-Graphic

Likely you’ve got your phone with you at all times, while you’ve forgotten your dSLR or film camera at home.  You wouldn’t dare leave your phone at home, would you?  It’s liberating, knowing your cell or smartphone can take a picture, anytime, anywhere. 

As Photographers, you’ve likely engaged in the heated discussion over the capability, viability, credibility of the camera phone.  Purists scoff at the intrusion of a mediocre, fraud of a device, that is marring their photographic religion.  And then there are the rest of you, embracing the technology and embracing the all-in-one, multi-media lifestyle of the cellphone-toting imagist, so many of you have become.   

JUROR:   Dan Burkholder has a long history of looking over the photographic horizon to see, explore and teach the next great thing in imaging. His newest book, iPhone Artistry (Pixiq Press, 2011), is the definitive how-to for creative iPhone photographers. His first book, Making Digital Negatives for Contact Printing (Bladed Iris Press, 1995) became a seminal manual for photographers wanting to blend the power of digital imaging with the charm of the handmade print.

Learn more about the Digital Concept show at the Darkroom Gallery!Dan received his B.A. and Master’s degrees from Brooks Institute of Photography, in Santa Barbara, CA. Dan has taught digital imaging workshops for 16 years on three continents and several island countries.

Burkholder’s platinum / palladium and pigmented ink prints are included in private and public collections internationally.

PHOTO SUBMISSIONS:

Age: Entrants must be at least 18 years old. If younger, a parent or legal guardian may make the submission for you.

Ownership: All submitted photos must have been taken by the photographer making the entry.

If you are a parent or legal guardian submitting for a minor, please make it clear on the submission form.

Digital Submissions: All submissions must be made by digital files through:

1. Upload on the Dark Room Gallery website or

2. Sent via email to submissions (at) VermontPhotoSpace.com. This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it along with an application form. There is a $5.00 surcharge for email entries.

Check out Vermont Photo Space Gallery Online!3. Images should be as large as possible but no larger than 1280 pixels on the longest side, type jpg – set to the highest quality. DPI can be set to any number, but if you must specify something to go with 72 dpi.

FEES: Up to three images may be submitted for a fee of $20 US for on-line submission and $25 for email submission. Additional images may be submitted for an additional $5 US per image.

DEADLINE: Images and payment must be received by midnight EST on May 24, 2011.

RIGHTS: Photographers retain all rights to their work, except for submissions accepted for exhibition: artists grant Dark Room Gallery/Vermont Photo Space the right to use their images to promote the exhibition on the website and for inclusion in an exhibit catalog.

Darkroom Gallery provides free matting and framing of accepted entries for the duration of each of our exhibitions, subject to standard sizes. Photographers set their own prices if they wish to sell their work, and retain all rights.

For the full Call for Entries, visit the website.

CALL for ENTRIES: Can You See Me Now?

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!DIAL “A” for ADDICTION

I take some foods for granted.  Friday I learned a valuable lesson:  I am addicted to granola bars.  My beloved husband packs my daily lunch that I then refrigerate or reheat at my office.  There is usually one entree, a granola bar, and two additional salty snacks.  This past Friday he forgot to pack a granola bar.  Without my standard 10:30 am snack, I was lost all day.  Lost like I would be if you took away my BlackBerry.  Sad, but true.  This Call for Entries allows you to use that cell phone that is probably surgically connected to your hand anyway.  Take a look…

Check out this Call for Entries from [Artspace] at Untitled (in Oklahoma City, OK) for Can You See Me Now: Photos Made on Phones. The entry fee is only $25, and you probably already have a killer shot that you’re carrying around in your hip pocket.  Take a chance…

CALL for ENTRIES: Can You See Me Now?

A trio of nationally known photographic professionals will accept a single image from up to 50 photographers and the announcement of selections will be made June 6. 

Learn more about Can You See Me Now from Artspace at Untitled!It will be the responsibility of the individual photographers to supply a high resolution file of the selected image from which an exhibition print can be made.  The exhibition will premier on July 29 at [Artspace] at Untitled with an opening reception and will continue through Oct 1, 2011.

ELIGIBILITY:  Local, regional and national artists

MEDIA:  Photographs made on cell phones

DEADLINE:  May 15, 2011 (originally May 2, 2011)

NOTIFICATION:  June 6, 2011

Learn more about Can You See Me Now from Artspace at Untitled!ENTRY FEE:  Payment of the $25 entry fee (for up to 6 images) is to be made via PayPal using the link at the bottom of the Call Page. Payment of the submission fee constitutes an agreement between the photographer and [Artspace] at Untitled establishing that the photographer understands and agrees to the terms.

SUBMISSIONS:  Submissions are accepted electronically only. They are to be e-mailed to: lindsay@artspaceatuntitled.org and the subject line must contain: CYSMN followed by the entrant’s name.  Each entrant must submit a folder containing a minimum/maximum of (6) photographs made using a cell phone.  Images should be formatted as jpeg’s and the file size of each should be 72dpi with a measurement of 720 pixels (10 inches) on the longest dimension.  Images may be color profiled in sRGB, Adobe-1998, or not color-managed.

For complete details, read the Full Call!

Learn more about Can You See Me Now from Artspace at Untitled!

CALL for ENTRIES: Saint Spotting

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FREE, but ODD

The strangest thing I’ve ever eaten is Fugu, also known as Japanese pufferfish.  What was strange was that I ate it in the USVI at the hands of a Japanese Chef who sold me on eating it BECAUSE #1 it was FREE and #2 it could kill me if prepared improperly.  No meal is worth dying for, folks; ahhh, the stupidity of being eighteen.  Well, clearly, I didn’t die, and unfortunately, I don’t really remember the taste due to my adrenaline-fueled expectation that I could, at any moment, drop dead.  In hindsight, I don’t REALLY know what I ate. Hmmm.  This next call for art may be the strangest of its sort I’ve ever seen as well–at least for an Art Exhibit.  Take a look…

Check out this Call for Art, a unique opportunity to build advertising imagery for A SAINT for Saint Spotting, and international contest sponsored by the Institute of the Daughters of MercyFree, but odd…

CALL for ENTRIES:
Saint Spotting

Learn more about Saint Spoting online!On the occasion of the bicentenary of the birth of St. Mary Joseph Rossello (1811 – 1880), the Institute of the Daughters of Mercy announces an international contest to bring to light the work of the founder, Mother Mary Joseph, born near Savona, Italy, and proclaimed Saint in 1949 for her incessant actions to assist the needy and promote social integration through the creation of educational and health institutes.

Creative people, such as filmmakers, photographers, cartoonists, graphic and fashion designers, songwriters, musicians, etc… are asked to promote a product which is most definitely unusual.  The challenge for creative artists worldwide is to create advertising for a SAINT, as if it is a product just like any other product in need of an ad campaign.

“WE’RE SEEKING a way to advertise a Saint with an unusual perspective, not necessarily religious, focusing primarily on the historical figure of this great woman, Mother Mary Joseph Rossello .”

ELIGIBILITY:  Open to a variety of creative people around the world (minimum age 16), the competition will be held in two editions, English and Italian.

Saint Mary Joseph RosselloMEDIA:  Each partecipant can submit only one work and choose only one of the following categories:  1. Audiovisual: Video clip, Commercial Ad, Animation orShort Film  2. Communication & Design: Marketing Concept, Advertising, Graphics, Photography, Design, Poster, Comic strip, Graphic novel, Fashion  or Gadgets  3. Music: Tune, Song or Music Composition

DEADLINE:
April 30, 2011

ENTRY FEE:  No fee to enter.  Works must be submitted on-line and sent by mail.

SAINT SPOTTING JURORS:

President: David Calderly, Owner Graphic Therapy

Jon Beaupre-Professor California State Univ, Owner of  Broadcast Voice, Reporter NPR

Barney Bernhard-Former N.A. President Midem Organization

Ivy Brown-Curator, Gallery Owner

Josh Cheuse-Creative Director Sony Music

Miguel Mora Díaz-Journalist, Art-Culture-Cinema, El Pais

Georgia Kacandes-Film Producer

Coco Mcpherson-Journalist Rolling Stone

Cassandra Peterson-Actress and writer

Kevin Stewart-Fashion Director ESPN Magazine, Menswear Designer, Roger Charles

Mario Zonta-Member of the Andy Warhol’s Foundation

AWARDS:  $14,000 Total Cash Awards – Two awards of $2,000 (one given by jury and one by public) for best of each category: Audiovisual/Visual & Design/Sound & Music – Special Journalism Award. 

For complete details, visit Saint Spotting online!

Learn more about Saint Spoting online!

CALL for ENTRIES: Digital Concept and Construct

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!EAT MY PIXELS

I am annoyed by late-night fast food commercials because my will power doesn’t need the test.  But my child falls for those digitally-enhanced, staged food product advertisements everytime.  I cannot tell you how many cereals I have bought for him because they “look yummy,” only to find out they are artificially-flavored cardboard.  This next Call for Entries shows the positive side of digital manipulaton.

Check out this Call for Entries from Darkroom Gallery (converting from the Vermont Photo Space Gallery) called Digital Concept / Digital Construct. Enter your work for as little as $20. Don’t forget Dark Room Gallery offers free framing & matting on accepted entries!

Editor’s Note:  I know how many of you roll your eyes every time you read that the media for a show excludes computer-generated  work, new media and digitally manipulated artwork and photography.  If you want more opportunities and to be accepted into the same shows with mainstream traditional media, DO NOT let shows like this one pass you by. This show is made for you.  No whining… just do it.

Learn more about Digital Concept Digital Construct show at the Dark Room GalleryCALL FOR ENTRIES: Digital Concept / Digital Construct

This is a digital world. We are surrounded, engulfed by, and reliant upon digital media. It has become a way of life and a way of seeing. As digitally manipulated images become the norm, their fantasy perspectives are becoming the new reality.  Is there such a thing as truth and lies in digital art photographs, or is it all just possibility?

Our capacities and aptitudes for creating digital photographic art far exceed what we had imagined. We’re tempted by new technologies – camera phones and point and shoots, the next 80 megapixel medium format digital back, the newest apps, the latest updates – we cannot help but push the proverbial envelope (shadow/highlight recovery, adjustment brushes, the curves line, layer blending modes).

 
Work by Juror Suzette Troche-Stapp

There is art in successful digital imaging and manipulation.

 

Vincent Dixon, the Wade Brothers, David LaChapelle, the collaborations of Warren Du Preez and Nick Thornton Jones, and our Juror, award-winning Photoshop expert Suzette Troche-Stapp are elevating the digitally manipulated photograph to the next level.  How do you use it to develop your concepts and achieve your constructs? Whether you are enhancing or altering reality, creating fantasy, retouching, compositing, constructing, how has digital informed your imaging?

JUROR:   A photographer since the age of sixteen, Suzette Troche-Stapp has been working in digital imaging since its inception in the 1980’s. Recognized throughout the industry, Suzette was recently named one of the “Top 40 Photoshop Experts,” awarded the “Guru Award” for excellence in Photoshop by NAPP, and nominated for the “Photoshop Hall Of Fame” several years in a row. 

Her images are seen in national ad campaigns, editorial beauty and fashion features, and her celebrity images have been broadcast to millions on shows like “The View”, “The Late Show”, and “Kathy Griffin’s Life on the D-List”.

Learn more about the Digital Concept show at the Darkroom Gallery!Troche-Stapp is also a workshop facilitator and author, offering tutorials, several published articles and an award-winning book “The Glitterguru on Photoshop:  from Concept to Cool.”  The Dark Room Gallery is so pleased to have Suzette Troche-Stapp’s digital expertise and commercial experience as Juror for “Digital Concept.Digital Construct.”

PHOTO SUBMISSIONS:

Age: Entrants must be at least 18 years old. If younger, a parent or legal guardian may make the submission for you.

Ownership: All submitted photos must have been taken by the photographer making the entry.

If you are a parent or legal guardian submitting for a minor, please make it clear on the submission form.

Digital Submissions: All submissions must be made by digital files through:

1. Upload on VermontPhotoSpace.com or

2. Sent via email to submissions (at) VermontPhotoSpace.com. This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it along with an application form. There is a $5.00 surcharge for email entries.

Check out Vermont Photo Space Gallery Online!3. Images should be as large as possible but no larger than 1280 pixels on the longest side, type jpg – set to the highest quality. DPI can be set to any number, but if you must specify something to go with 72 dpi.

 FEES: Up to three images may be submitted for a fee of $20 US for on-line submission and $25 for email submission. Additional images may be submitted for an additional $5 US per image.

DEADLINE: Images and payment must be received by midnight EST on April 4, 2011.

RIGHTS: Photographers retain all rights to their work, except for submissions accepted for exhibition: artists grant Dark Room Gallery/Vermont Photo Space the right to use their images to promote the exhibition on the website and for inclusion in an exhibit catalog.

Darkroom Gallery provides free matting and framing of accepted entries for the duration of each of our exhibitions, subject to standard sizes. Photographers set their own prices if they wish to sell their work, and retain all rights.

Learn more about Vermont Photo Space Gallery!

For the full Call for Entries, visit the website.

 

CALL for ENTRIES: Photowork 2011

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!MY HEAD SPINS ROUND

How food looks matters.  There is a reason split pea soup turned up as vomit in The Exorcist.  I love the taste, but let’s face facts folks… split pea soup looks gross.  There is no great surprise that kids find brussel sprouts and wild rice and oatmeal don’t appeal to a large segement of the population.  Why eat peas when you can eat Peeps?  I get it.  But beauty is in the eye of the beholder.  This Call for Entries will give you a chance to show beauty (or not) from your perspective.

Check out this Call for Entries for Photowork 2011 from the Barrett Art Center.  Open to all photographic styles and techniques, this is a great chance to be a part of a prestigious show and gain a fan or two while you’re at it.  Take a look…

Learn more about Photoworks at the Barrett Art Center!CALL for ENTRIES:
Photowork 2011

Photowork 2011 is a premier exhibition of new photographic images. The show is visited by art appreciators from a five-county area including parts of Connecticut and New York City.  As a National show, this exhibition brings together photographers from across the country with artists from 30 to 40 states represented each year.

The spirit of the show is a juxtaposition of traditional styles and cutting edge images. The show celebrates the photograph both as FINE ART and as SOCIAL COMMENTARY.  Winners in the past have included traditional 35mm photographs, silver gelatin prints, digital prints and even pinhole camera pictures!  Cash prizes are also awarded.

Enigma by Susan May Tell from Photowork 2010ELIGIBILITY:  Open to any USA artist for work completed in the last 4 years.

MEDIA:  Photography

DEADLINE:  April 1, 2011

NOTIFICATION:  You will be notified by E-mail and/or phone call of your acceptance or rejection on or about April 8th.

ENTRY FEE:  Entry fee is non-refundable.  Entry fee is $30.00 for the first 4 images, $6.00 for each additional image.

JUROR:  Prior to the Guggenheim, Lauren Hinkson was senior cataloguer for the Department of Prints and Illustrated Books at the Museum of Modern Art, NY, and a fellow at the Museum of Art at RISD.  She received her degree in Art History and Architecture from Brown University.

Altheus and Bernadine Banks of New Orleans by Thomas Neff from Photowork 2009AWARDS:  Recipients of cash awards will be determined by the juror and announced at the opening reception.  Artists need not be present to win.

ABOUT THE BARRETT ART CENTER:   The Barrett Art Center building is the heart of the association and is still used for administrative purposes.  It also provides a meeting place for art enthusiasts and artists alike to view, exhibit, discuss, create, and learn about art.

The Center hosts a changing exhibition program devoted to fine contemporary and traditional works of art.  Prestigious national juried shows in contemporary art (New Directions) and photography (Photo Works) have each been held annually at the Art Center for more than 20 years, attracting hundreds of submissions from across the country.

 Other events held annually at the Center include shows featuring works by members and by our faculty and students, as well as topical shows (such as the recent Latin American show).  The Center also provides space for classes.

For complete details, Download the Prospectus!

Download the Photoworks 2011 Prospectus from the Barrett Art Center!

CALL for ENTRIES: Seeing Seeing

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!GOODBYE STRAINER

I’m getting a little jaded about kitchen gadgets.  I love them, but I am fairly regularly disappointed by their results.  But, I have to admit that I’m really excited about the new FoodPod.  Too Cool.  Okay, my faith is renewed in kitchen gadgets.  Use this next Call to renew my faith in your ability to take a great picture from your cell phone.  Whatcha think?

Check out this Call for Entries from Creative Arts Workshop (CAW) for Seeing Seeing: Capturing a Moment.  You can even use your cell phone to take pictures for this juried exhibit… and you might even win a joint show.  Take a chance today!

Call for Entries:
Seeing Seeing: Capturing a Moment

Learn more about the Seeing Seeing Exhibit from Creative Arts WorkshopSpecial photographs capture a moment in time of somewhere, someone, something in a way that leaves us spellbound. They reveal, tell, relate, inform, depict what we didn’t really know existed, and leave us wanting for more.

With the proliferation of cameras of all sorts, it’s no wonder everyone sees themselves as a photographer of one form or another.  All of these tools beget an enormous number of images created by almost anyone who can get their finger on the “shutter.”  But how many of those images are so remarkable we are left breathless as we are introduced to a new insight – a new way of seeing something, perhaps even something familiar?

MEDIA:  Open to all photographic formats.  The juror welcomes entries from all types of photographic equipment (i.e., cell phones, laptop cameras, etc., as well as digital or film cameras).

Learn more about the Seeing Seeing Exhibit from Creative Arts WorkshopELIGIBILITY:  Open to all artists

DEADLINE:  March 11, 2011

NOTIFICATION:  April 11, 2011

ENTRY FEE:  One $30 entry fee covers up to three entries.

AWARDS:  Two winners awarded joint exhibition in 2012.

ABOUT THE JUROR:  Science photographer Felice Frankel is a research scientist in The Center for Materials Science and Engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.  Working in collaboration with scientists and engineers, Frankel’s images have been published in over 300 journal articles and/or covers and various other publications for general audiences, including National Geographic, Nature, Science, Angewandte Chemie, Advanced Materials, Materials Today, PNAS, Newsweek, Scientific American, Discover Magazine and New Scientist.

Learn more about Felice FrankelHer new book
No Small Matter:
Science on the Nanoscale

is co-authored with
George Whitesides.

 

Frankel and her work have been profiled in the New York Times, Wired, LIFE Magazine, the Boston Globe, the Washington Post, the Chronicle of Higher Education, National Public Radio’s All Things Considered, Science Friday, the Christian Science Monitor and various european publications. She exhibits throughout the United States and in Europe.  Her limited edition photographs are included in a number of corporate and private collections.

ABOUT CREATIVE ARTS WORKSHOP:  CAW is a community art school devoted to fostering creativity through participation in and appreciation of the visual arts.  CAW has served the Greater New Haven area since 1961, offering classes in fine arts and crafts to more than 3,000 adults and young people every year in its fully-equipped studios located in downtown New Haven.  The Workshop’s two-story Hilles Gallery presents exhibitions to the public free of charge throughout the year.

For complete details, Download the Prospectus!

Learn more about the Seeing Seeing Exhbit from Creative Arts Workshop

CALL for ENTRIES: About Face

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FISHY FACE

I have more than one friend that won’t eat food with a face… which should make her a vegetarian on moral grounds, right?  Well, while out to lunch with one of them many years ago, my friend ordered fish.  I promptly reminded her that she didn’t eat food with faces and that fish definitely have faces.  She looked at me as seriously as possible and said, “I’ve looked into a fish’s eyes.  They have no story to tell.  There’s nothing going on up there.  Bring on the tuna.”  This next Call will require that your face tell a story.

Check out this Call for Entries from the Annmarie Sculpture Garden (an affiliate of the Smithsonian Institute) for About Face.  The entry fee is only $20 for up to four pieces, and this is an excellent opportunity to put your best face forward.  Take a look!

Download the About Face Prospectus!CALL for ENTRIES:  About Face

About Face explores the artist as storyteller. How does an artist develop and arrange the elements of a good story—character, setting, plot, conflict, climax, and resolution—through the format of a portrait?  Though we all have a story to tell, what is gained or lost when we are rendered through an artist’s point of view?  Do the completed works represent the person we are, the person we strive to be, or the character the artist sees?  How do traditional and new media types affect the impact of a portrait?  To this end, the jury seeks portraits that tell a compelling story in a visually interesting way.

About Face will be installed in the spacious Mezzanine Gallery of Annmarie Sculpture Garden’s Arts Building.  With over 3300 sq ft of exhibition space, moveable walls, high ceilings, tile floors, an Arakawa hanging system, Internet access, and electricity, the Mezzanine Gallery can accommodate all sizes and types of installations.  A few outdoor works will also be considered for inclusion in About Face.

Learn more about the Annmarie Arts Center!ELIGIBILITY:  All media types are welcome.  The exhibition is open to all artists age 18 and older working in the U.S.  Video entries must be submitted on DVD, playable on QuickTime or RealPlayer, and no more than 30 minutes in length.
DVD or computer based works must be exhibited on equipment provided by artist. Internet access is available.  Bases and pedestals must well-balanced and sturdy. Annmarie has a limited number of bases available, please inquire.  All frames must be black or silver and simple in design.  All works that will be hung on the wall must have brackets that work with the Arakawa hanging system. More information on this system will be provided upon acceptance.

DEADLINE:  March 1, 2011 is the deadline for your application.

Download the About Face Prospectus!NOTIFICATION:  Artists will be notified of final acceptance status via email by March 7, 2011.

ENTRY FEE:  Artists must submit a $20 non-refundable entry fee for up to four entries. Entry fee must be paid by check, money order, or credit card. Each entry must be submitted with three images of the artwork, including one overall view of the artwork, one detail shot, and one installation shot.

ABOUT the ANNMARIE SCULPTURE GARDEN:  An affiliate of the Smithsonian Institution, Annmarie is a thirty-acre public sculpture garden and arts center located in scenic Solomons, Maryland, on the Chesapeake Bay. The sculpture garden features a walking path which meanders through the forest, past permanent and loaned sculpture, including more than thirty works on loan from the Smithsonian Institution and the National Gallery of Art. The garden also presents a variety of special events, gallery shows, and engaging public art programs. The new Studio School offers creative classes taught by a talented faculty. The award-winning Arts Building, which opened in May ‘08, is a 15,000 sq.ft. museum-grade exhibition space that includes two large galleries, a gift shop, café, and a sunny patio that offers lovely views of the outdoor sculpture.

For complete details, Download the Prospectus!

Learn more about the Annmarie Arts Center!

CALL for ENTRIES: Digital Works

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“CUBIST”
EGG

I live a fairly rural existence, but no one loves technology more than me.  Kitchen technology is even better.  CUTE technology is the best.  Check out this not-so-tech-savvy egg cuber at Amazon.  I am fascinated by technology and art too.  I love new media.  iPhone pics, digital drawings and more.  This next Call give you an opportunity to let your pixels shine.

Check out this Call for Entries for the 2011 National Juried Competition featuring Digital Works from the Long Beach Island foundation of the Arts and Sciences (LBIF).  Browse, enjoy and enter…

Learn more about the 2011 Digital Works show!CALL for ENTRIES:
Digital Works

The Long Beach Island Foundation of the Arts and Sciences (LBIF) encourages emerging artists as well as those with established reputations to participate in the National Juried Competiton. The purpose of the exhibition is to showcase works created through digital processes that reflect artistic merit, sophisticated use of media, and personal vision. Work may include any digitally produced presentations. All entries must be original and must have been executed since 2008.

ENTRY FEE:  There is an entry fee of $35.00 for up to four submissions.  Fee will be received in U.S funds only, payable by check, money order, or credit card (MasterCard or Visa only) payable to LBIF.  All fees are NON-REFUNDABLE.

DEADLINE:
Postmarked by March 18, 2011

NOTIFICATION:
May 6, 2011

IMAGES:  Entries will be juried from digital files on CD or DVD (these will not be returned). Up to four (4) digital files (images must be in .jpg format not smaller than 1280×1024 and not larger than 4MB per image) may be submitted. Images should be labeled as follows: Last_First_Number on entry form_Title of Work (Example: Doe_John_1_Untitled). Audio & video files should not exceed 10 min or 20MB each. Label CD or DVD with artist’s first & last name.

AWARDS:  Best in Show $1000, 2nd Place $500, 3rd Place $200, and Two Honorable Mentions $100 ea.

Digital Art by Christiane PaulJUROR:  Christiane Paul is the Director of the Media Studies Graduate Programs and Associate Prof. of Media Studies at The New School, NY, and Adjunct Curator of New Media Arts at the Whitney Museum of American Art.  She has written extensively on new media arts and lectured internationally on art and technology.

An expanded new edition of her book, Digital Art  was published in spring 2008 and her edited anthology, New Media in the White Cube and Beyond – Curatorial Models for Digital Art, was published by UC Press in December 2008. 

At the Whitney Museum, she curated the shows “Profiling” (2007) and “Data Dynamics” (2001); the net art selection for the 2002 Whitney Biennial; the online exhibition “CODeDOC” for artport, the Whitney Museum’s online portal to Internet art for which she is responsible; as well as “Follow Through” by Scott Paterson and Jennifer Crowe (2005).

For complete details, See the Prospectus!