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Art and Art Deadlines.com

Category: Video/Film

CALL for ENTRIES: Fiery

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!DAILY BREAD,
I mean yogurt

Can you imagine having the same food everyday?  I have a friend that eats plain Greek yogurt with honey at approximately 10:30 am every morning.  She makes her own yogurt, and I love Greek yogurt.  But EVERY DAY?  I read French Women Don’t Get Fat, but I still couldn’t eat it every day.  This next wants to see your artwork EVERY TIME.  Take a look…

Check out this Call for Entries from Firehouse Art Center (Longmont, CO) for the Firehouse Films Logo Competition!  Here’s a great graphic design competition that isn’t exclusively for graphic designers.  Cool opportunity…

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

Learn more from the Firehouse Arts Center in Longmont CO!CALL for ENTRIES:
Fiery

 

ELIGIBILITY:  Open to all artists

MEDIA:  All unique and creative designs in any medium will be considered. Time-lapse or animated shorts are encouraged, as the logo will be shown on screen before each film. A still image of the final logo will be used on all promotional materials.

DEADLINE:  June 27, 2013

NOTIFICATION:  June 29, 2013

ENTRY FEE:  None

AWARDS:  The winner will receive $200 and 2 tickets to the Front Range Film Festival on June 28, 29 & 30. The winning logo will be announced and unveiled on Saturday, June 29.

For complete detail, Read the Full Call!

Learn more from the Firehouse Arts Center in Longmont, CO!

CALL for ENTRIES: Made from Scratch

Click to subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email for FREE!SCRATCH
that itch

Almost everything eaten at my house is made from scratch.  That doesn’t mean I make the bread for our toast; I’m not THAT devoted to the idea (and I’m not a great baker).  But, we do make our own hummus, sauces, dips, dried fruits, etc.  I want to know the origin of my food.  I just do.  This next Call is actually a food them, and you know how I love a food theme…

Check out this Call for Entries from Stop & Go (touring) for Made from Scratch for animation using stop motion techniques.  I know this Call will have limited appeal with readers of AAAD, but all of us know someone that will dig this.  So, be sure to share this with your friends…

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

Learn more from Stop and Go!CALL for ENTRIES:
Made from Scratch

 

Animations using stop-motion techniques with the subject matter of gardens, food play, kitchens as laboratories, cooking or crafting will all be considered.

ELIGIBILITY:  Open to all artists

MEDIA:  Animation that uses stop-motion techniques.  Total running time of each animation must not exceed 10 minutes.  All entries must be produced in 2011 or later.  If your animation dialog is not in English, please provide English language subtitles.  Artists must secure all copyrights associated with the work including any musical soundtracks.

DEADLINE:  November 15, 2013

ENTRY FEE:  None

AWARDS:  The last three installments of the Stop & Go screening program have toured extensively, including venues in the United States, Netherlands, Germany, Denmark, Israel and Croatia. STOP & GO: Made From Scratch will embark on a similar tour, beginning in 2014 and traveling through 2016.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Learn more from Stop and Go!

CALL for ENTRIES: POWfest 2014

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!I WONDER
if just maybe

The best cooks, and chefs for that matter, that I know are women.  Men dominate the professional culinary world, and when I did my short stint in cooking school, all but 2 of my classmates are male.  Maybe the answer is that women are smart enough not to want to spend 8 to 10 hours a day, 6 days a week in a hot kitchen.  Many of spend enough time there as it is.  Hmm.  This next Call REQUIRES that you be a woman to participate.  So there…

Check out this Call for Entries from POWFest!  Here’s a great chance to have your work in film showcased in Portland, OR.  You can enter for as little as $20 if you make the early deadline, but even the late deadline is only $35.  Take a chance!

*Editor’s Note: If you have read the personal portion of this post, CALL for ENTRIES: POWfest 2014, anywhere other than by email subscription or on ArtAndArtDeadlines.com, it has been published without permission and is considered theft.

Learn more about POWFest!CALL
for ENTRIES:

POWFest

 

POWFest places a spotlight on women directors by showcasing their work and empowering the community of women in film.

POWFest encourages women to find their voice and to share their stories through innovative and quality filmmaking. We feature the work of today’s top women directors, honoring the true pioneers while providing support and recognition for the next generation of leading women filmmakers.

Learn more about POWFest!Past Guests of Honor include: Allison Anders,  Irene Taylor-Brodsky, Kathryn Bigelow, Gillian Armstrong, Amy Heckerling, Barbara Kopple and Penelope Spheeris.

ELIGIBILITY: Films submitted to the 2014 Portland Women’s Film Festival must be directed or co-directed by a woman.

MEDIA:
Film/Video

DEADLINES
and
FEES:

Early Bird:
Postmarked by
June 21, 2013 ~ $20

Regular:
Postmarked by
Friday August 16, 2013 ~ $30

Late:
Postmarked by
Friday September 13, 2013 ~ $35

WAB Extended:
Postmarked by
October 1, 2013 ~ $45

For complete details, visit the POWFest website!

Learn more about POWFest!

 

CALL for ENTRIES: Summer Shorts

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!PASS THE SAUCE
and the napkins

Summer in the South means shorts and barbeque.  We’re just around the corner from our local BBQ festival, and I cannot wait.  The secret is to wear dark colors to disguise the sauce that I will inevitably dribble down the front of my shirt onto my new shorts.  This next Call hails from the South and involves shorts, but it doesn’t call for my saucy indulgence.  Take a look…

Check out this Call for Entries from whitespace (Atlanta, GA) for Summer Shorts, a series of short film screenings.  There is no entry fee, and the subject matter is open.  Investigate…

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

Learn more from the whitespace gallery!CALL for ENTRIES:
Summer Shorts

 

Are you an artist or film-maker looking for a way to showcase your short films? whitespace gallery in Atlanta, Georgia is currently accepting submissions for a series of short film screenings this summer. These events, sponsored by Cathead Vodka, will be free and open to the public with films being projected in our outdoor patio after dark. In an effort to showcase new artists, encourage experimentation with film, and grow the Atlanta art community, the subject-matter for the screenings will remain open.

ELIGIBILITY:  Open to all artists

MEDIA: Film and video

DEADLINE:  June 1, 2013  EXTENDED: June 23rd, 2013, 5pm

Learn more about the Summer Shorts Call from Whitespace!NOTIFICATION:  Artists will be notified of their screening date in advance.

AWARDS:  Accepted works will be divided into two groups and shown on either July 24th or August 21st.

SUBMISSION
GUIDELINES:

– Films may not be longer than 10 minutes
– Must be sent via Vimeo or Youtube
– Accepted submissions must be resubmitted via online file transfer or CD in MPEG-4 format
– Email submissions to gallery@whitespace814.com w/ “Summer Shorts Series” in subject line
– Please be sure to include a link to your submission, name, email address,
phone number, artist’s statement and bio in the body of the email

*Editor’s Note:  This Call DOES NOT appear on the whitespace website; therefore, bookmark this page for reference or…

Download the Submission Guidelines!

Learn more from the whitespace gallery!

CALL for ENTRIES: Transylvania U

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!FAST FOOD
bytes

I cannot handle fast food commercials anymore.  The food looks fantastic, but it doesn’t LOOK or TASTE that fantastic if you give in to the midnight-food-run indulgence.  Why?  Digital enhancement…retouching.  Damn the fat and salt mongers for their digital deception.  This next Call allows you to use your digital skills for good, not evil.  Take a look…

Check out this Call for Entries for the STUDIO 300 Digital Art and Music Festival at The Byte Gallery–an interactive kiosk at Transylvania University (Lexington, KY).  This show is free to enter, and includes digital art which is often excluded from more traditional shows.  Investigate carefully…

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

CALL for ENTRIES:
STUDIO 300 Digital Art and Music Festival

Learn more about the STUDIO 300 Digital Art and Music Festival

The Studio 300 Festival explores creative manifestations of technology through concerts and exhibitions of digital art and music.  This year’s festival will feature concerts in Haggin Auditorium, and multimedia gallery exhibits in the Morlan Gallery and the BYTE Gallery kiosk.  Artists and musicians from across world will be participating.  A late night concert will also take place off campus at Al’s Bar.

ELIGIBILITY: Open to all artists

MEDIA: Electro-Acoustic Music, Video Music, Dramatic Video, Animation, Digital Print/Still Image, Installation and Late-Night Club Electro Music.  Click here for full descriptions of the categories.

Learn more about the STUDIO 300 Digital Art and Music Festival

DEADLINE: Submissions must be received no later than June 15, 2013.

ENTRY FEE: There is no entry fee.  Composers and Artists whose works are accepted and programmed for performance in concerts or installations are required to attend in person.  A registration fee of $45 is required for participation.  Early registration fee (received before August 1st, 2013) is only $25, instead of $45.

SUBMISSIONS: Submission is through email only—do not attach anything to the email, instead provide links to your application materials.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Learn more about the Byte Gallery at Transylvania University!

CALL for ENTRIES: Art/Identity

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!BLUEBERRY
-ish

My son loves blueberries, and buying blueberries is a happy indulgence for me to supply for him.  I have been known to buy lots of blueberry-flavored foodstuffs, but I’m also an avid label reader.  I believe people have the right to know the actual identity of what we are eating.  And folks, blueberries are a hot mess in almost any form outside the actual blueberry.  Check out foodidentitytheft.com if you’re interested.  In the meantime, this next show is all about identity.  Check it out…

Check out this Call for Entries from Gallery 263 (Cambridge, MA) for Art/Identity. The entry fee is cheap, and the media is wide open. Don’t miss this opportunity…

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

Work by Guest Juror Geoff Hargadon!CALL for ENTRIES:
Art/Identity

 

Art is an extension of the self, a combination of flesh and soul that is enriched by a variety of experiences, loves, histories, and hopes. Within the criss-crossing of lines, the pooling of paint, the spectacle of performance, the mechanical memory of the photograph, and the interactivity of video, one can catch a momentary glimpse of essential characteristics of personhood. They invite you to submit work of all media that examines identity in all its forms—the personal, the social, the revolutionary, the imaginary.

ELIGIBILITY: Open to all artists residing in the US.

MEDIA: 2D, 3D or Time Media.

Work by Guest Juror Susan Sills!DEADLINE:  May 12, 2013

NOTIFICATION: May 20, 2013

ENTRY FEE: $25 for one entry of up to 3, $40 for 2 entries (total of 6).

JUROR: A resident of Somerville, MA, Geoff Hargadon is a multimedia artist who has shown across the country. His current project, Cash for Your Warhol, has caused a stir all over the world by blurring the lines of fact and fiction, self and society, in an uncertain economic climate.

Susan Sills was born and raised in Chicago and moved to the Boston area in 1973.  After receiving a Masters in Architecture from Harvard, Sills began her career as an architect and designer. In the early 1990’s she returned to painting and combined her innovative spirit with her training and experience.  This led to an endlessly evocative body of multimedia work.  Her artistic vision exists “somewhere between the safe, structured environment of the world around us and the chaos of the textures within us all”.

SALES: Work is For Sale By Artist. Gallery will provide introduction to interested parties.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Read the Full Call from Gallery 263!

FEATURED ARTIST: Lori Pond

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com for FREE by email!MARSHMALLOWS,
hold the fluff

I am seeing a glimpse of Spring in the entries for the $5 Art Contest. I am glad to know I’m not the only one ready to slough off winter.  Winter is full of baggage and contemplation for me.  This year in particular has required that I get a handle on a new existence, face reality and embrace my new self.  As I grow older, one resounding truth comes through–I am not alone.  If I have a heartbreak or joy, the chance are good that someone out there has been through it too.  I used to believe that no one could feel the way I feel, but I find it comforting now to be a part of the shared experience of life.

This month’s artist works as a photographer.  And although I have a soft spot for photography, I have featured very few photographers.  Mainly, I find photographers think as photographers (go figure) and frequently don’t present themselves or their work as ART.  But I found a soft spot in this month’s artist.  A gooey center to the marshmallow, made of more than just sugar. I found a shared experience of grief and rebirth–an inward contemplation that spoke to larger truth.

Learn more about Featured Artist Lori Pond! Self as other, a theme with which I share a special bond. On behalf of ArtAndArtDeadlines.com, I am proud to announce the Featured Artist chosen from the January entries to the $5 Art Contest is Lori Pond.  I find her work both unique and communal.  Let your own Spring renewal be inspired by a little soul exposure from Lori Pond…

FEATURED ARTIST:
Lori Pond

 

When 8 year old Lori was asked about her favorite hobby, her immediate reply was “dreaming.”  “I have always had some sort of camera in hand for as long as I can remember. The re’s something about freezing a moment in time that has always appealed to me.  I’ve used Kodak Instamatics, Polaroid Land Cameras, a Minolta SRT 101, plastic toy cameras and a whole slew of Nikon film and digital cameras.  I often wonder, ‘What is Reality?’  Is it what I see with my eyes or what I dream with my mind’s eye?”

From the Self Series by Featured Artist Lori Pond!Are you self taught or formally instructed? “My Dad introduced to me to photography.  He showed me how to develop black and white film and how to print an image with an enlarger.  He often took me out to the desert in the springtime so we could make images of the ephemeral wildflowers that would spring up out of the dirt.

“In addition, I have been lucky to have studied with some amazing artist photographers, too, such as Cig Harvey, Aline Smithson, Joyce Tenneson, Eddie Soloway, JoAnn Callis and Connie Imboden, to name a few.”

Talk to me about the process you use. “My creative process involves using both the camera and post processing tools to paint in light, color, texture and movement to reveal my photographic ‘alpha state’.”

From the iPhonography Series by Featured Artist Lori Pond!Clearly, the figure has a strong influence in your work.  Tell me what motivated you to turn the camera on yourself in “Self”. “Self” has been a lifelong project, mainly because when I’ve needed a model, I’ve been conveniently around!  It’s funny, because I rarely let someone else take a photograph of me–I’m very shy that way.  But, I have no problem shooting myself then showing those images to anyone.  There’s a psychological story in here somewhere.  I do find myself gravitating toward self-portraiture when I’m going through a big change in my life, such as my recent divorce.”

Tell me about “Divorce”.  It is quite a departure from the more ethereal quality of your other work.  Wanna talk about that?  “‘Divorce’ came about because after being married for 20 years, I realized my marriage didn’t work anymore.  I never thought in a million years I would get a divorce.  My husband and I were always seen as the ‘perfect couple.’   But, we grew apart.  I started to photograph how I was feeling in the middle of the process when my husband moved out of the house.  Suddenly, I was walking around in empty rooms and I didn’t know how to fill them up.  Making self-portraits in these ‘new’ spaces was a sort of catharsis and self-therapy for me as I adjusted to a new life as a single woman.”

From the Divorce Series by Featured Artist Lori Pond!What style or school of art do you think your work fits into and why?  “I am constantly being told I have a million different ideas and that I don’t fit into any particular style.  My landscape work has been referred to as ‘The New Pictorialism’ by Stephen Perloff of The Photo Review, and my self-portraiture compared to Cindy Sherman.  I’ve shot documentary style images of psychiatric patients and macro images of tulips.  I guess I would call my work omnivorous, because I look at everything and take it all in!”  Omnivorous, eh?  Thanks for the perfect segue.

You know we have to talk about food. What is your favorite? “I have favorite combinations of food rather than one specific food.  For instance, pears sauteed in butter and champagne are ne plus ultra in my book.  I make my own marshmallows and I add rose or orange water to them.  They’re great on their own, but I like to also make my own chai and add the marshmallows on top.  They melt into the chai, and it’s just like a little piece of heaven.” Every artist gives me several answers, and they are often remarkably similar.  But no one has every said “marshmallows.”

From the iPhonography Series by Featured Artist Lori Pond!What about snack foods? “I can eat a whole bag of any kind of potato chips in one sitting, especially if they’re the salt and vinegar kind.  I eat them until my lips bleed!  I also have a special fondness for Trader Joe’s Popcorn with herbs–also, one bag per sitting.  It’s funny, because when I was younger, sweets always appealed to me more, and in my more mature years, I tend to have hankerings toward salt and savory.” Gluttony is easier with salty snacks–no sugar coma.  This is my excuse.

So, what’s coming up next for you? “I started a project last year that I’m developing with both still images and video.  It’s called “Then and Now,” and it explores and confronts mortality by superimposing a present day image of someone over a childhood image of theirs. What began as a desire on my part to face death turned into a celebration of life as I realized no matter how old we get, our essential life spirit remains.

From The Intimate Universe Series by Featured Artist Lori Pond!No amount of wrinkles and age spots can occlude that spark.  I make 3D images of both portraits; I hang a diaphanous image of the person on fabric over one in print; I cross dissolve between ‘”then and now” so the viewer can see a gradual aging process.  I will be exhibiting the multimedia work at the Julia Dean Photography Workshop space in an exhibit entitled, “Alchemy and Entity” in March.”  Can’t wait to see these images.  Since my father passed and my grandmother has Alzheimer’s, I have an increasing intrigue with mortality.  I am happy to hear of a celebratory look at the subject matter.

Thanks, Lori, for reminding me that we are not alone

Learn more about Lori Pond online!

Learn more about Featured Artist Lori Pond!

ARTIST RESIDENCY: I-Park 2013

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!PASTA
anyone?

Could you host a dinner party for 4 weeks in a row?  I’m not sure I could either.  Feeding 6-8 people every day for a month has got to be a challenge.  I think it would have to involve lots of pasta, casseroles and soups.  But, it would be a great excuse to eat comfort food.  This next Call will give you 4 weeks away in a creative atmosphere…and group meals.  Check it out…

Check out this Call for Applications for an Artist Residency at I-Park (Connecticut). There is a $30 entry fee, but if selected, there is no fee for the 4-week residency which provides a private bedroom, private studio, artists’ meal program, etc. Don’t miss this opportunity!

*Editor’s Note: If you have read the personal portion of this post, ARTIST RESIDENCY: I-Park 2013, anywhere other than by email subscription or on ArtAndArtDeadlines.com, it has been published without permission and is considered theft.

Learn more about the Artist Residency Program at I-Park!ARTIST RESIDENCY:
I-Park

 

I-Park is both an open air and a closed studio laboratory for individual artistic pursuits in the fields of the visual arts, music composition/sound sculpture/design, moving image, landscape/garden design and creative writing. The artists-in-residence program offers a quiet, retreat-like environment conducive to exploration and experimentation – without the expectation of particular outcomes. Artists are free to conceive and execute new ideas or work on existing projects.

ELIGIBILITY: Open to artists internationally, aged 21+ years.

CATEGORIES: Visual Arts, Music Composition/Sound Sculpture/Design, Creative Writing, Moving Image and Landscape/Garden Design. Inter-disciplinary artists are welcome to apply for a residency at I-Park.

Read the Full Call from I-Park!DEADLINES:

April 1, 2013
(For Landscape and Architecture)

February 18, 2013
(For all other disciplines)

NOTIFICATION:
Usually around mid-March

APPLICATION FEE: $30

JURORS: For 2012, I-Park has organized juries for the following programs and/or disciplines: Visual Arts, Music Composition/Sound Sculpture/Design, Creative Writing, Moving Image and Landscape/Garden Design.

AWARDS:A 4-week residency includes a private bedroom, private studio, artists’ meal program, etc.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Learn more about the Artist Residency Program at I-Park!

ANNUAL OPEN CALL: Soap Factory

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by EmailWINE
not whine
please

I am now officially one of those old codgers that complain about the price of potatoes to the grocery cashier and bitch about the prices of soft drinks to my waitress.  Ugh.  I cannot believe I have turned into THAT person, but I have.  My Dad would be so proud.  But, I don’t feel alone due to the number of artists I listen to lament the price of entry fees.  This next Call doesn’t have one.  Woohoo!

Check out this Open Call from The Soap Factory (Minneapolis, MN). The Soap factory is looking for work for group exhibits, AND they offer installation support, travel, accommodations, and a stipend to those selected to exhibit. Did I mention NO ENTRY FEE?

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

Visit The Soap Factory online!ANNUAL
OPEN CALL:

The Soap Factory

 

The Soap Factory exhibits work in its galleries throughout the year. Exhibitions curated from submissions and could have as many as 8 artists. The Soap Factory is a 120-year old ex-industrial warehouse on the banks of the Mississippi River in Minneapolis.

They have no climate control, air conditioning or permanent heating system; please bear this in mind when submitting your work.  Projects by individual artists that propose to use the entire 12,000 sq feet of gallery space are always encouraged.

Learn more about The Soap Factory!ELIGIBILITY:
Open to all artists

MEDIA:
Artists working in all media
are encouraged to submit proposals.

DEADLINE:
April 30, 2013

NOTIFICATION:
Summer of 2013

*Editor’s note: Do not call or email to check on your submission.

AWARDS:   Group exhibitions curated from submissions could have as many as 8 artists.

The Soap Factory provides full installation support for all selected projects, including travel and accommodation, as well as a stipend to artists. Plus, they provide publicity, exhibition invitations, mailings, opening reception and artist talks.

Learn more about The Soap Factory!SUBMISSION TIP:  Examples of artists shown by The Soap Factory from submissions: Nadine Anderson, Matt Bakkom, Nina Lola Bachhuber, Ernest Arthur Bryant III, David Bartley, Ian Burns, Santiago Cucullu, E-Team, Omer Fast, Harrell Fletcher, Isa Gagarin, Michael Gaughan, Amber Ginsburg, Jay Heikes, Alexa Horochowski, Margaret Kilgallen, Chris Lawrence, Keith Lemley, Rita MacDonald, Joseph Madrigal, Rodney McMillian, Clive Murphy, Wil Natzel, Kelly Nipper, Carl Pope Jr, David Rathman, Patrick Scully, Slinko, Xavier Tavera, Bruce Tapola, Traci Tullius.   Editor’s Note:  DO YOUR HOMEWORK!

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Read the Full Call from The Soap Factory!

CALL for ENTRIES: Archetype Drift

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!GROCERY
mania

It is snowing like crazy at my house right now, and I promise you that the grocery store is crowded with people shopping as though it is the last food they will ever buy.  There is something about the peaceful quilt of snowfall that brings out the animal instinct regarding food.  My favorite is when people stock up on microwaveable food that they won’t be able to cook if there is no electricity.  What would these folks think if they could see themselves in the mirror?  This next call is a “momentary mirror” of sorts.  Take a look…

Check out this Call for Entries from Filter Photo Festival for Archetype Drift, an exhibit at the Johalla Projects Gallery (Chicago, IL).  The entry fee is low, and I appreciate the questions this Call asks.  Investigate for yourself…

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

Learn more from the Filter Photo Festival!

CALL for ENTRIES:
Archetype Drift

 

Photography can be a painful mirror.  Because of its illustrative tendencies and mnemonic capacities, photography enables us to tell the stories we want to tell with a hammer that is the frame. What happens when the medium gets in the way of the most important narratives?

Photography can be a seductive enabler that, at its worst, allows us to fetishize, beautify, and conduct shallow investigations. Meanwhile, paradigmatic changes in history and culture metastasize alongside new technological ways to make, edit, and distribute images. Are photographers pushing envelopes of meaning and relevance? Are they even keeping pace?

Powerhouse Gym by Brian UlrichWith the ubiquity of images high and low, how does an image-maker create cultural value in 2013? Archetype Drift is a call for new methods of photographic making, editing, and presentation.  It is a call for risk taking, chance operations, relabeling, and letting go of the comfortable.  It is in itself an experiment and a (momentary) mirror.

ELIGIBILITY:  Open to all artists

MEDIA:  All types of photographic and lens-based work will be considered, including video and GIFs.

DEADLINE:  February 4, 2013

NOTIFICATION:  Mid-February

Too Hard to Keep by Juror Jason Lazarus installation at Illinois State University!ENTRY FEE:  $25 for 3, $5 ea. add’l up to 6

CURATOR:  Jason Lazarus (born 1975) is a Chicago based artist, curator, writer, and educator who received his MFA in Photography from Columbia College Chicago in 2003.

His work has been exhibited internationally and is in major collections including the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, the Art Institute of Chicago, the Bank of America LaSalle Photography Collection, and the Milwaukee Museum of Art among others. Major exhibitions include “Black is, Black ain’t” at the Renaissance Society, “On the Scene” at the Art Institute of Chicago, “Not the Way You Remembered” at the Queens Museum of Art, and “Image Search” at PPOW Gallery in NYC.

Jason recently became the Co-Director of Chicago Artist Writers, a new art criticism platform.

SALES:  There is no commission on artwork, and artists will receive 100% of any sales.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Learn more from the Filter Photo Festival!