MABBUTT has been making felt for 10 years specializing in sculptural wet felt techniques & creating fashion & home accessories & sculptural forms from undyed wools & natural fibers. Her aim is to raise awareness of the material & its natural properties, creating unique, contemporary & desirable objects. Mabbutt's work has been exhibited in many venues including the Mall Galleries, London & The National Centre for Craft & Design. Laura also takes satisfaction in teaching the craft of feltmaking to others & is available for demos & workshops.
McCORMACK used a round oatmeal box pinhole camera to create a series of visceral images. Through successive pulling of curves in Photoshop, B&W values are replaced with color. The “Nude at Home” series, began about five years ago.
McCormack photographs the model nude in her home, apartment or studio. With the model in her space, all the objects in the image are a part of the life of the model. Then the pose, the furniture and the long, two minute exposures reveal an intimate portrait of the subject.
I dream of lemons & olives–and corn, of course. While dreaming of my future garden, I am excited at the prospect of growing non-GMO corn. But, I also have fantasies of the produce I love most like lemons and olives, neither of which is native to my climate. Is it just enormous hubris on my part to believe that if I try to grow them in a walipini that they will automatically surpass the quality of the native-grown varieties that I buy after their long trip to my local grocery store? What is it about humans that makes us want to manipulate plants? This next Call wants to see how you successfully manipulate plants in your art. Take a look…
Check out this Call for Entries from Art-Competition.net(online) for Flowers, Plants & Gardens. The entry fee is as little as $15, and the prize packages are fantastic. Don’t miss the opportunity…
MEDIA:All 2D Media – painting, drawing, mixed media, photography or digital medium
THEME:Flowers, Plants & Gardens – Individual interpretations of plants. The work can reflect on nature’s remarkable abundance and diversity in the wild, in a garden, or an individual plant and or the beauty or complexity of a single leaf or petal.
DEADLINE: January 12, 2014
NOTIFICATION:January 16, 2014
ENTRY FEE: $15 for 1, $30 for 3, $60 for 7
AWARDS:1st Place $500 cash & other awards valued at $5200. 2nd place – $125 cash & other awards valued at $1625. 3rd Place – $75 Cash. 4th Place – $50 cash.
Please stop eating fake foods. Every time I make a statement like that, I lose subscribers. But I care about your health like I care about my own. It is black & white, but I pick my battles. I won’t try to talk you into organic produce (although it is recommended), but I can beg you to stop eating fake food. No cheese food. No imitation vanilla. No caramel coloring or stuff you can’t pronounce. This next Call is a Black & White issue as well. Take a look…
Check out this Call for Entries from F-Stop Magazine for their Portfolio Issue #69. No Entry Fee. And an opportunity to join the Hotshoe community FREE. Be sure to tell them you found F-Stop through artandartdeadlines.com. One of our Featured Artists made it into their current Portfolio issue. We know you will continue to make us proud…
*Editor’s Note: If you have read the personal portion of this post,CALL for SUBMISSIONS: Black & White, anywhere other than by email subscription or onArtAndArtDeadlines.com, it has been published without permission and is considered theft.
AWARDS: This issue is sponsored by Hotshoe the photography club for black and white photography. The selected featured artist will receive a 1 year PRO membership atHotshoe.org.
ABOUT F-Stop:F-STOP MAGAZINE is an online photography magazine featuring contemporary photography from established and emerging photographers from around the world. Each issue has a theme or an idea that the unites the photographs to create a dynamic dialogue among the artists. Founded in 2003 and published online, bi-monthly.
ADAMS was born in the rural outskirts of Pittsburgh, PA, where she lived before settling in Charlotte, NC. Adams obtained a BA in Art & Education from Wingate University & a MFA in Painting at the University of SC. Her research on objects and the interior is drawn from the emotional memory of solitude and longing that the memory of place or thing holds for her. She is inspired by the desire to express, through ideas of shared experience, the emotional memory that these locations or 'special objects' hold.
My pantry is a library of food fads and favorites. You’ll find canned tomatoes from my mother (necessary to all of my favorite dishes) and high-fat coconut milk (necessary to all quiet indulgences). Then there is the the fruit cocktail, quince marmalade, pickled herring, kimchi, a jar of black lime & a few dried apricots left over from some food obsession or experiment that either went awry or with which I got bored. I can’t bring myself to get rid of the non-expired food no matter how random because they occasionally inspire genius. This next Call displays the beauty of collecting and sometimes inspires genius. This is a beautiful idea…
Check out this Call for Entries from The Brooklyn Art Library for The Sketchbook Project (SBP 2015). Send your work on tour of museums and galleries across North America for as little as $25! Since the last time I mention SBP, there is now a digitized option! Take a look…
*Editor’s Note: If you have read the personal portion of this post,CALL for ENTRIES: The Sketchbook Project, anywhere other than by email subscription or on ArtAndArtDeadlines.com, it has been published without permission and is considered theft.
MEDIA:Open to all media that an be contained within the confines of the 5″ x 7″ x 1″ sketchbook. It can open to any size, but it must fold down and not exceed 5” wide x 7” high x 1” thick. You are welcome to cut, rebind or alter the book in any other way – just please remember to keep it less than 1” thick. Please read the media tips and tricks.
THEMES: For a complete list of themes, click here.
DEADLINE: You must purchase your sketchbook by January 5, 2015, but the postmark deadline isn’t until March 31, 2015.
ENTRY FEE:$25 minimum fee for a standard 5″ x 7″ x 1″ sketchbook that, once completed, registered and returned will go permanently on view at Brooklyn Art Library & travel in their Mobile Library. OR
$60 digitzed fee for a standard 5″ x 7″ x 1″ sketchbook that, once completed, registered and returned will go permanently on view at Brooklyn Art Library & travel in their Mobile Library. In addition, it will be viewable in the Digital library, have a custom URL to share the digital link, can be added to curated Collections and can be added to a Queue.
To freeze or not to freeze– THAT is the question. I tend to cook in large quantities. I do it on purpose to provide additional dinners, but mostly lunches, with the same amount of effort it took to make dinner. The problem is that not all food freezes well. Chili is great reheated after being frozen for a week, but potato soup becomes paste after only a day in the freezer. Casseroles take on a luscious, unctuous quality while mushrooms turn to rubber. This next Call want you to freeze TIME, for better or for worse. Brilliant. Are you up for the challenge?
Check out this Call for Entries from the Darkroom Gallery(Essex Junction, VT) for Chronograph. They always have a low entry fee ($24) & a great juror. But, I have a soft spot for this theme. Take a look…
*Editor’s Note: If you have read the personal portion of this post,CALL for ENTRIES: Chronograph, anywhere other than by email subscription or on ArtAndArtDeadlines.com, it has been published without permission and is considered theft.
“Photography is a medium renowned for freezing time. However, there are many facets and dichotomies this theme of chronology can visually explore. Darkroom Gallery is calling for explorative visual depictions of time. Pasts and futures can often collide…and what of time travelers and quantum physics? Lastly, photographs can be truly devoid of time, they can have a sort of classic “timelessness”. “— from darkroomgallery.com
ELIGIBILITY: Open to all artists 18+
MEDIA: Photography
THEME:Time-oriented photography; vintage, futuristic or rhythmic imagery.
JUROR:Johan Hallberg-Campbell, born in Scotland & living in Canada, is a Graduate of The Glasgow School of Art. As a freelance photographer, he has worked for numerous publications and institutions worldwide, shooting assignments globally.
Johan’s commissioned and personal work has been published and exhibited internationally. As a freelance Curator, he has curated 45 photographic exhibitions in galleries such as VII gallery, New York and Pikto gallery, Toronto, showcasing the works of local, national and international photographers. Johan is the photo editor at Raw View magazine alongside Donald Weber. His work explores what it means to belong to a community and have traditions rooted in heritage, and alternatively what happens when one’s “place” is altered, removed, distorted and shifted. He continues to develop his book length project ‘Coastal’, a project photographing the Canadian coastline in which he was awarded a Canada Council for the Arts grant to make work in 2014. He will continue producing ‘Coastal’ in 2015.
AWARDS: All selected entries are included in a full color exhibit catalog & gallery exhibition. Juror’s Choice: 30×48″ image banner. People’s Choice – a free future entry. Honorable Mentions receive free exhibition catalogs and free entry in a future exhibition.
SALES: Free matting & framing of accepted entries, subject to standard sizes. For commission details, go to the bottom of the Submissions page!
My first taste of coconut milk, and I was sold. It isn’t always that way. Beets took 20 years to get on my good side. But coconut milk is good in everything. Granted, I prefer the high fat canned version, but I’m even enamored using the carton in the frig for everything from breakfast cereal to hot cocoa–and then there is the homemade ice cream, yum. This next Call is your chance to fall in love with something on the very first try. There is only one first, so don’t miss your opportunity…
Check out this Call for Entries from Paint Pulse Magazine(both online & print)for Issue #1! Here’s a great chance to get in on their debut issue. $15 for entry & all disciplines considered . Take a chance…
*Editor’s Note: If you have read the personal portion of this post, CALL for ENTRIES: Paint Pulse Mag, anywhere other than by email subscription or on ArtAndArtDeadlines.com, it has been published without permission and is considered theft.
MEDIA:Any discipline is accepted. The lens of painting is widely interpreted so feel free to submit what you wish. *Editor’s note: I clarified this statement with the editors of Paint Pulse. Specifically: “all media is accepted as long as it can be loosely related to painting”.
DEADLINE:December 31, 2014
NOTIFICATION:Shortly after submission according to their site
ENTRY FEE:$15 for up to 3 images
AWARDS: 20 talented contemporary artists will be featured in Issue 1. Selected artists will receive social media attention, spotlight on the website with contact information and will also receive a complimentary magazine of the issue for which they were selected.
Breakfast is beloved in my house. Everywhere I have ever lived, including some time in the Virgin Islands, breakfast has been the biggest meal of the day because it was always the cheapest. Even tiny islands in the Caribbean can raise chickens instead of importing eggs. So, a cheeseburger might be $18, but breakfast was always under $5. Those days have passed, and breakfast can be a pricey endeavor. It is apparently even more expensive if you get up a little later and call it brunch. Start your morning with this next Call because it is definitely cheaper than brunch. 🙂 Take a look…
Check out this Call for Entries for the 52nd Annual Juried Exhibition from the Masur Museum of Art(Monroe, LA). $10 entry fee, no commission, and the gallery is stunning. This is a great opportunity!
*Editor’s Note: If you have read the personal portion of this post, CALL for ENTRIES: 52nd Masur, anywhere other than by email subscription or onArtAndArtDeadlines.com, it has been published without permission and is considered theft.
DEADLINE: January 1, 2015 (online) and December 27, 2014 for postmarked entries
NOTIFICATION: January 21, 2015
ENTRY FEE: There is a $10 per work with a minimum of 2 and a max of 5 entries
JUROR:Sandra Q. Firmin was Curator of the UB Art Galleries, gallery of the University of Buffalo SUNY, a position she held from 2003 to 2014. Firmin is currently the Director and Chief Curator, Colorado University Art Museum.
Firmin holds an M.A. from Bard College’s Center for Curatorial Studies, and was awarded a Philadelphia Exhibitions Initiative Fellowship at Arcadia University Art Gallery. At the UB Art Galleries, Firmin established an annual residency program in which artists are presented with an empty gallery to transform over time while open to the public. These commissioned projects aim to forge meaningful interactions between artists and diverse groups of people while acknowledging a turn toward research-based and ephemeral site-specific approaches in contemporary art. In 2014 Firmin co-chaired (with Julian Cox) the Association of Art Museum Curators’ annual conference in Detroit, and moderated the panel Urban Ecologies and Cultural Exchange.
AWARDS:Best in Show is $1,000, and total awards are $3,200.00. The People’s Choice Award is $200.00 and will be voted on by visitors throughout the run of the exhibition. Best Packed: This award will honor the artist who packs their art in the most professional manner. The award is $100. *No packing peanuts, feedbags, loose papers as packing materials, no cigarette butts, etc. These types of things will disqualify you! This prize will be decided by the Masur Museum staff. I ♥ this!
SALES: The Masur Museum of Artdoes not receive a commission on sales.
The December mayhem has set in, and we’re only 3 days into the month. And my own art has taken a back seat to other commitments and tasks once again. It seems I can’t every find the time to plot and illustrate and plan and follow through on those plans. I vow this year will be different. I’m putting up a real tree (rare in my household), and this month’s artist has inspired me to string popcorn in addition to my well-planned and plotted decorative theme. And this year, art will happen IN ADDITION TO and inspite of all the holiday mayhem. AND without all the traditional plotting and planning. I am excited to see where it goes…
This month’s artist has spent years learning the art of letting go and production through play. Her work reflects a deep connection to the beauty of nature without hidden agendas–just connection and PLAY.
ArtAndArtDeadlines.com is proud to claim Emily Mitchell as this month’s Featured Artist. This work spotlights home and family and parenting and human connection–life, really. And, I really needed it. Please let it sink it and consider it a holiday gift.
For the past 20 years, Emily Mitchell has been working as an art educator, and holds a M.A. Ed. in Art Education. The joy of teaching artists has allowed her to thrive on inspiration from others including teaching High School Art, including AP Studio Art, at Champlain Valley Union High School in Hinesburgh, Vermont. Mitchell had the opportunity to work with John Crowe from Massachusetts College of Art, and with Peter London, Professor Emeritus of Art Education, UMass Dartmouth. “I am eternally grateful to them both for allowing me to simply play in my work.”
When not making art or managing family, Mitchell can often be found swimming with the BASS Masters Swim team, riding her bike with the kids, battling weeds in the garden, GF baking, obsessing about acappella music, reading, or exploring a small corner of Vermont.
How has the teaching art to others informed your own approach? Has years of teaching informed your sense of play? “Without question, I love making art with people, and I find that interacting with them, through is invaluable to my own art. My mind works in a very spiral manner – my train of thought will go from a process, to thinking and making connections through art history – helping others grow. Right now I teach adults and do the occasional workshop. But before this, I spent 16 years teaching K-5 in Massachusetts, and then 9-12 here in Vermont. Back in 2000, after reading “The Dot” by Peter Reynolds to my 4th graders, I saved their responses to the story, and often, when I am stuck, or frustrated, I will look at it. Its truly magic, free, full of joy, and THAT feeds me! Plus, kids are hilarious – and I learn so much from what they bring (mainly joy and abandon)to art making!”
Talk to me about your paint process. For example, which comes first, the title and concept or the work? “The process I currently use is an amalgamation of three amazing art course I have taken in my life – plus about 40 years of making art. The first was called “Vigorous Play for Artists/Teachers” and it was taught at UMASS by John Crowe. I took the course in the summer of 1998, and it changed my life–Crowe did not talk for the entire week! He pushed us through readings, critiques, and playful challenges, which for me, resulted in a wonderful body of artists books, and a show of my work and the work of my elementary students. The second was called “Drawing Closer to Nature” with Peter London – that one was hosted by Kirpalu.”
“The third class I took just last year in January of 2013. Flora Bowley’s e-course, Bloom True, reinvigorated all that I “knew” in terms of process, approach, but had neglected, forgotten and moved away from after 8 years of teaching more “formal” technical drawing. Most importantly, Flora’s class helped me let go of needing to know what my work was going to look like.
“Now, I literally feel my way through my work…”
“…working in layers, responding to colors, patterns, textures, feelings, a word in a song… the title could come from any of those things, or simply a feeling weeks later (or if I’m hanging a show and I’m like, “Crap! I need a title fast!”). I find that the final pieces really reflect a mood or idea in my own life, and the visual result is part of the process of understanding.”
You seem to have VISUAL connection to nature? Is there a deeper underlying meaning or connection for you? I spent 5 summers working at summer camp in Connecticut. I found that this place helped me find myself more than college or traveling ever did. It was a place of deep personal growth and connections–and it happens to be on its own private lake, surrounded by trees. The light & sounds there are unlike any other. I still hear them in dreams. Now, I am lucky enough to live in Vermont (where it gets damn cold!), but there is beauty everywhere here–in the food, in the woods.
While I love the culture of cities,
I need space, air and green to fully breathe and live!
What are you trying to say with your work? How does it connect to your need to explore human connection? “Because I do not plan anything at all, I really feel like each piece is a response or story about the paint, my heart, and everyone’s desire to feel connected to others. While the characters in the work may be realistic (birds, trees) or abstract (bubbles or circles) the connection and harmony within the space is there and somewhat intentional. Ironically, I need to plan less in my daily life–but that’s hard to do with two busy kids!”
What style or school of art do you think work fits into? “My work is probably Realistic Expressionist, maybe? Color is certainly predominant in the art, but so is space and depth.”
What is your favorite food addiction? “Ok, this is going to sound really boring, but I actually LOVE salad with roasted veggies, my own greens, chicken and either goat or feta cheese. I essentially chop up whatever I have in my veggie drawer season with “slacker herbs” (aka Mrs. Dash) and a bit of oil. My husband also makes a mean maple balsamic dressing – I DO live in Vermont so any excuse to use Maple…We also have a pretty large localvore movement here in Vermont with about 10 CSAs(community-supported or shared agriculture) I can think of right around me! I have a garden, where I grow purple carrots, beans, lettuce, etc. and when possible, I do try to purchase as much meat and produce locally.” You are a woman after my heart. Veggies rock my world sometimes, and we certainly have goat cheese in common. But honestly, I’m going to pick chocolate every time.
What if your favorite snack food obsession? “Popcorn. I could easily eat about 12 cups of it. We make it old school with Oil in our “Whirly Pop”, and I use an herb salt on it, and when I’m feeling really VT hippy, I also toss a bit of nutritional yeast on it.” Okay, I edit responses to questions–usually only for length. So, most readers have NO IDEA how often I hear about nutritional yeast. Clearly, I am going to have to give in and try it.
On a more personal note , most of my readers know I don’t’ eat gluten due to the ugly presence of Celiac disease in my household–2 of the 3 of us. So, if you don’t mind my asking, how long have you been GF?*Editor’s Note: Published with full permission of the artist. “I have Thyroid Disease, and it was suggested I try being GF to help my thyroid function. It was also suggested to ditch dairy to be truly on the anti-inflammatory free diet…but man I LIVE IN VERMONT–there is NO WAY I am bailing on cheese! We have so much amazing cheese! So I limit cheese and diary but skip the wheat. Ironically, my asthma went away after eliminating wheat.” My son’s lactose intolerance completely disappeared, and he is happy to trade gluten for cheese any day.
What’s coming up next for you? “I have this idea for 20-30 small wood panel paintings to be displayed together – I may do this as part of an upcoming art-a-day event. I have also been pushing myself to do two portrait drawings per month to keep the ‘classical’ drawing skills fresh!”
Thank you, Emily,for reminding us that
play is productive.