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Art and Art Deadlines.com

Tag: Brand 40

FEATURED ARTIST: Terri Lloyd

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SUGAR

When the $2 Art Contest began, I thought it would be easy to sit on my rear and judge other people’s work. Turns out, it isn’t quite so simple.  A glass of wine is always helpful when figuring out whose work to feature, and how to word all the rejection letters.  Chocolate or goat cheese are excellent substitutes for a fine wine, in my humble opinion.  But this month’s Featured Artist finds her comfort in gnocchi.

I have a soft spot for portraiture, as you all well know.  However, I also have an attraction to typography and work that doses out a sometimes less than palatable dose of vinegar with a spoonful of sugar. Ha.  Now you can sing THAT song for the rest of the day.  It is frequently the attempt of my own work, so I suppose I am just self-absorbed enough to be attracted to it in others’ work.

This month’s artist has
a voice that will not be silenced:

and I suspect she doesn’t care what we think, either way.

 

Terri Lloyd as the Pink Buddha!The Featured Artist chosen from the May and June entries is Terri Lloyd. Lloyd’s work, quite simply, makes me clutch my guts laughing, then, once I’ve caught my breath, I say, “Hmmmm.”  I enjoy the guiltless laughter at vibrant work with both a message and a sense of humor.  I am inspired to remember that we are not invisible, you and I, and WE decide how to use our gifts.

FEATURED ARTIST:
Terri Lloyd

 

Terri Lloyd is a San Francisco Bay Area transplant that has called Los Angeles home since 1980.  Under the influence of a Sixties latch-key-kid youth, the circumstances of a working class life did not provide the conventional means to an art education or experience.

“It has been challenging, but I refuse to let the institutions get in the way of my education.  Knowledge is now available at our fingertips.  There is no excuse for ignorance.  Ignorance has become a choice.”

Introduced to the Apple Macintosh in 1987 a love affair with digital art was born.  Terri has never viewed computer generated imagery as a movement.  The computer and software are tools.  How the operator chooses to use them remains as individual as any other artist working in any other medium. 

Vessels by Terri Lloyd“I compare the work I create
to advertising.”

 

It’s about formulating the right message first, and not becoming a sporting event half-time fiasco that baffles the viewer with high tech circus tricks.”

Terri’s approach is something that she terms a “whole-istic Zen,” which emulsifies decades of commercial and graphic arts expertise into pointed, often controversial visuals.  Seasoning her images with pun and insinuation, all the while thumbing her nose at conventional wisdom and other popular absurdities.

She currently resides in Northeast Los Angeles with her husband, three cats and one boisterous macaw.

But I wanted Lloyd to weigh in on the “Pink Buddha” image to which she has become inextricably linked:  “Pink Buddha is a mythological creature who appears from time to time planting whimsy and baby headed flowers, reminding us to lighten up and stop taking ourselves (especially artists) so very seriously.

The Mommy's Curse by Terri LloydI suppose the significance to me is that I want a happier mythology, or creation story.  I don’t like what religion, dogma, ideology does to people.  Sure, there’s some good, but then again look at what is happening around the world.  We need a better, nicer story about who we are and why we are here on this small blue marble hurling through space.”

What do you consider your media? Are you a graphic designer? Or may I suggest Art Terrorist?  “I guess I’m a story teller mostly. A sort of chimera, part graphic designer, part digital artist, part performance artist, another part absurdist (okay, smart ass).   I like ‘Art Terrorist.’   I might change it to “Art Terri-ist.” (My ego again, sorry.)  I think I’m a surrealist or absurdist with photographic and digital execution.”

Talk to me about how you work, your process. Do you have special terminology that you have developed for how you work?  “The Pink Buddha video was shot using a cheap digital camera.  I’ve also created prints with linoleum, and silk screen.  Oh and I’ve even made prints using the now defunct Print Gocco.”

“The terminology I use for how I work is ‘riding the crazy train’.”

 

Dr. Phil Save Us From Ourselves by Terri LloydYou know we have to talk about food: “Well, I believe the tree of life is made from pasta.  I love Italian food. Gnocchi brings me great comfort.  So does lasagna.  But I also love Indian food. I’m a nut for saag paneer and dal.  I love fish, and the cockroach of the sea, shrimp.”

So, what’s coming up next for you, Terri?  “Lots of fun.  I’ll have a piece in the Brand 40 Works on Paper exhibition at the Brand Library and Art Galleries in September.  In October, if all goes well, my organization, The Haggus Society, will be hosting it’s first exhibition in Pasadena. We’re still sorting out some of the details.

B*tch Fest is something The Haggus Society is working toward building. Ideally it will be a month long exhibition or festival celebrating the older female artist.  For some reason, older women in the arts have no voice, and very little institutional support.  Particularly for the re-emerging artist.  It’s as if we are invisible.  Our objective is to change the thinking about this.”

Thank you, Terri Lloyd for the unapologetic middle finger you give to conformity.  I am inspired to scream at the top of my lungs…with my own art.  You are a lune of the best kind. 

Learn more about Terri Lloyd online!

Click to learn more about Artist Terri Lloyd!

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CALL for ENTRIES: Brand 40

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PEAS

Do you care if your canned peas are Le Sueur?  Are you brand loyal?  I have become label loyal.  I read labels very carefully, and I make my choices based on the best value for the best ingredients.  The results will surprise you sometimes.  This call may make you loyal to an entirely different brand.  Interested?

Check out this Call for Entries from the Brand Library & Art Center and the Glendale Public Library for the Brand 40 National Works on Paper Exhibition in Glendale, California.  The commission is only 25% on sales, and in some cases, the gallery will even take unframed two-dimensional work.  Take a look…

CALL for ENTRIES:
Brand 40 – Works on Paper

 

Learn more about the Brand 40 show at the Brand Library and Art Center!The Associates of Brand Library & Art Center and the Glendale Public Library announce a call to artists for an exhibition September 17 – October 28, 2011 at the Brand Library Art Galleries in Glendale, CA. The Brand Library Art Galleries offer visitors a professional gallery experience and showcases works by established and emerging artists that educate, enlighten, challenge and enrich people’s lives.

ELIGIBILITY:  Participation is open to artists residing in the United States.  Entries must be original work recently executed and not previously shown at the Brand Library Art Galleries.  Do not submit work, unless available August 12 to October 29, 2011.

MEDIA:  Any work on paper: collages, drawings, paintings, photography, prints, watercolors, 3-dimensional work, etc.  The “topic” for this show is “Entrances & Exits.”

Learn more about the Brand Library Art Galleries!DEADLINE:  June 1, 2011 for receipt of signed entry form, CD, fees and a self-addressed stamped envelope.

NOTIFICATION:  Jury results will be mailied June 9, 2011.

ENTRY FEE:  Non-refundable fees must accompany the submittal form: $20 for the first work, $10 for each additional work.  A maximum of 3 works may be submitted. Mail CD, signed entry slip, a check made payable to Brand Associates and a self-addressed stamped envelope to BRAND 40, 1601 West Mountain St., Glendale, CA 91201.

JUROR:  Peter Frank is art critic for the Huffington Post and Adjunct Senior Curator at the Riverside Art Museum.  He is past critic for Angeleno magazine and the L. A. Weekly and was Editor for THE magazine Los Angeles and Visions Art Quarterly. Frank was born in New York, where he served as art critic for The Village Voice and The SoHo Weekly News, and moved to Los Angeles in 1988. 

Learn more about the Brand Library Art Galleries!Frank contributes articles to numerous publications and has organized numerous theme and survey shows, most notably “19 Artists – Emergent Americans,” the 1981 Exxon National Exhibition mounted at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York. McPherson & Co. Documentext published his Something Else Press:  An Annotated Bibliography in 1983. A cycle of poems, The Travelogues, was issued by Sun & Moon Press in 1982. Abbeville Press released New, Used & Improved, an overview of the New York art scene co-written with Michael McKenzie, in 1987.

AWARDS:  $4000 in prizes will be awarded.

SALES:  Unless specified “NFS,” all works will be offered for sale.  If the price is not indicated, the piece will be considered NFS. The commission to the Brand Associates is 25%.  Payment to artists will be mailed after the close of the show.  Prices quoted on the entry form may not be changed after acceptance into the show.

For complete details, Download the Prospectus!

Download the Brand 40 show Prospectus at the Brand Library and Art Center!