Art and Art Deadlines.com

A food-themed FREE resource site for ARTISTS.

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Art and Art Deadlines.com

Tag: Featured Artist Contest

ARTIST of the DAY: Emily Shane

yours FOREVER

In a Walmart world where most everything can be had for $10 or less, how do we avoid reinforcing a culture that regards everything is disposable?  How do we discourage casual consumerism and reinforce long-term responsibility of ownership?  Value.  Buy what you LOVE.   Today’s AAAD Artist of the Day, Emily Shane upcycles much-loved cast-offs of days past.   I LOVE the texture AND how illustrative this work is of falling down the reading “rabbit hole”. (continues below)

"Reliquary" detail (top) & triptych (below) by Aritst Emily Shane
“Reliquary” detail (top) & triptych (below) by Artist Emily Shane

Reader’s Digest Condensed Book covers are my the base material for my mixed-media assemblages.  I’m inspired by their vintage look and texture, the rich colors, engaging patterns & surprising beauty –all of which are usually hidden under dust covers!  Now fading from the American gestalt, RDCBs speak to the baby-boomer generation as a bygone slice of middle-class life that will never return.”  Emily Shane

Rediscover #RDCB with Artist Emily Shane!

ARTIST to LOVE: Darcy Meeker

We have a new Artist to Love!

Join us in saying “Welcome” to sculptor Darcy Meeker, our newest Artist to Love

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Darcy Meeker
Sculpture
Mineral Spirits, Italian Alabaster sculpture by Darcy Meeker
Mineral Spirits
Italian Alabaster sculpture
MEEKER tools copper, creates sculpture in stone, clay, silk, aluminum, and, well, pretty much anything she can get her hands on, and paints, collages and prints on a variety of materials with the same wide-ranging enthusiasm.

Meeker's work is all about flowing line, texture, opaque vs. translucent & figure-ground play. Whatever her medium at the moment, it asks to be touched. It's all about curves & texture, light & shadow. "I’m only interested in work that conveys that kind of sensuous pull."

FAVORITE FOOD: Sushi

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Are you an Artist to Love? Be sure to let us know!

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FEATURED ARTIST: Rachel Goldsmith

Learn more about AAAD Featured Artist Rachel Goldsmith!HOT stuff

I like it spicy.  My favorite Indian restaurant offers mild, medium & hot levels of spice.  But, those with the inside track also know they offer the Indian version of mild, medium & hot.  I am pretty good with Indian medium.  On braver days I can handle Indian hot.  But, the actual heat this summer is wearing me out.  I’m not normally a heat whiner–until now.  Every degree over 90 results in my doing everything just a little slower–as though my shoes are melted to the ground.  But then, I received this fantastic Featured Artist contest entry that allowed me to shift focus and enjoy the beauty and brightness of summer–without all the hot sauce.

Painting with plastic by Featured Artist Rachel GoldsmithThis month’s artist offers us an evolving view of process and how it informs content.   Her work explores the contrast between organic forms and the plasticity of production.  Artandartdeadlines.com is proud to claim Rachel Goldsmith as this month’s Featured Artist.  This work is intricate and soft, yet hard and industrial.  It is beautiful and thoughtful and puzzling.  And then there’s the dumplings and cereal…and hot sauce.

FEATURED ARTIST:
Rachel Goldsmith

 

Rachel Goldsmith is a NY-based artist who works primarily with PLA plastic, water-based paints on canvas & permanent ink on paper.  She received her Bachelor of Arts & Fine Arts Degrees from Univ. of Michigan & her Masters of Art & Design Education Degree from Pratt Institute.  Rachel taught middle school Visual Arts in NYC from 2007-2012.  In addition to several “Best in Show” awards, Goldsmith was commissioned by the inventors of the 3Doodler to create a piece for MoMA Design Store.  Her work, including her Fabergé Big Egg, is included in various private collections.

Learn more about Featured Artist Rachel Goldsmith!Has the 3-D pen been a trial & error process or have you had instruction from another artist, creator, or school?  “The 3Doodler has been 100% self-taught.  I received the pen in March 2014 –early in their production, a few weeks after completing Ova Obsessive for the Faberge Big Egg Hunt. I had been drawing 12-20 hours a day for 6 weeks.  I was done with drawing for a little while, so the timing was fortuitous.  I immediately used the 3Doodler on canvas—that is what seemed natural to me. And I was instantly obsessed with the possibilities.  The more I used it, the more I loved it – and still, to this day, I am discovering new techniques and developing new ideas for its use.

Textiles by Featured Artist Rachel Goldsmith--detail“I struggle with the term “trial and error”, as it has such a negative connotation. (*Noted and appreciated.  Words have meanings.)  I prefer to think of my work with the 3Doodler as experimenting…

…happy accidents
or Beautiful Oops.

 

“I love having to react to the material – to adjust what I’m doing based on what the material does. Any pieces that feel like “errors” just have to be worked further or in a different way – scissors, heat gun, iron, spray paint, wire, and/or more plastic. I titled one piece Frankenstein because of how many times it was cut apart and put back together in a different form.”

Why PLA over ABS plastic?  “Since day one I have preferred PLA.  It is corn-based as opposed to petroleum based, so it doesn’t smell noxious.  That’s my main reason.  Additionally, I find the PLA easier to work with because it sticks to itself very easily and it hardens a bit slower then the ABS, so you have a moment to adjust the extrusion with your fingers or other tools.”

Squares 1, 2 & 3 by Featured Artist Rachel Goldsmith!

Talk to me about the 3-D printing pen.  Does form inspire content or does content require that you figure out how to make the pen conform?  Again my answer is both–it depends. When 3Doodler asked me to create a lamp for their MoMA Design Store display, I had to figure out how to make the plastic into a lamp – before that, I’d been working on canvas or other flat surfaces – balance and strength were the key factors that I had to work around.  Most of the time however, my work is material driven. I gain inspiration from my environment – especially the contrasts between natural and man-made – and I often allow the materials drive my creating.

Painting with plastic by Featured Artist Rachel Goldsmith!I am fascinated by the contrast between the control I have over the materials and what the materials do on their own.  Again, this creates a situation for me to react and respond to my work. I think this is another reason that I fell in love with the original 3Doodler. The pen has a little bit of a mind of it’s own – so I constantly have to react to how the pen extrudes the plastics, even if it is not exactly what I thought I wanted it to do.  New possibilities of what I can do with plastics keep popping into my head and keep driving my creations – adding wire, or using an iron or using the heat-gun or layering like I’m weaving or painting or drawing on the plastic or moving very slowly or fast.  It is endless.  I need another set of hands to keep up with my brain.

Tell me about the contrast between organic forms and synthetic materials.  “Contrasts, in general, fascinate to me.  I think it is a coincidence that I’m using plastic to create organic forms – though I love that a viewer can find meaning in my work based on this contrast. Or perhaps subconsciously I love the 3Doodler because of that contrast. I will point out though, that the PLA is corn-based.  Is it still considered synthetic? (*I think it is fair to call it synthesized, at least.)  Again, my work is hugely inspired by the contrasts between man-made and nature – working with plastic to create organic forms seems like a perfect way to represent that contrast.”

Painting with plastic by Featured Artist Rachel Goldsmith!Most artists have something to say—something they are trying to get across to viewers. I am fascinated by the contrast of the playful versus an almost robotic feel.  “I’ve discussed this a lot lately, with slight discomfort. For me the process of creating the work is the reason for creating the work.  The movement of my hand hypnotizes me, acting as a focus point for meditation–I use the same movements in drawing, 3Doodling and Painting. Also, the necessary reaction to the media engages me with ongoing challenges.  In the end I want the pieces to appeal to my aesthetic senses.  I want people to enjoy looking at the work as much as I do.  If the viewer sees a statement about contrasts, great; if the viewer sees a statement about the environment, great.  But, I’m not creating nor exhibiting with any agenda in mind.”  *Refreshingly, and shockingly honest. Bravo.

Talk to me about the two artists (one living, one dead) that have most influenced your work and why.  “Sorry, you are getting 3.  Dale Chihuly is my favorite contemporary artist. I am nearly obsessed with watching videos of him at work.  I am captivated by his process and inspired by his use of color and material, both glass and paint.  The forms he creates are direct results of the motion of his hand, arm and wrist, a motion over which he has impressive control.  His blown glass and drawings look as if they have grown from the ocean and are still suspended in the currents of the water.

Painting with plastic by Featured Artist Rachel Goldsmith!“Bill Komoski is one of many abstract painters that I could list as a favorite. He creates works that are just about looking. Like many of my pieces, his paintings are map-like—organized yet chaotic.  Similar to Chihuly, his work evokes a feeling of fluidity and weightlessness.  And, I draw a tremendous amount of inspiration from Ernst Haeckel.  His ‘Artforms in Nature’ documents my obsession with organic forms.  It illustrates the scientifically stringent aspects of nature that ordinarily seem disorganized and random.”

What is your favorite food addiction?  It IS a food-themed blog after all.  “Hot sauce–especially Cholula.  I am addicted to and allergic to cheese. I miss it everyday that I don’t make myself sick from it.  And I LOVE veggie dumplings, yum!  But, I will always choose sweet over savory.”  *Allergic to cheese would be the death of me. Truly.

What is your favorite snack food obsession?  “Cinnamon Toast Crunch with almond milk or soy milk and non-ice cream–stupid allergies force me to stick to sorbet, popsicles & non-dairy frozen treats.”

Painting with plastic by Featured Artist Rachel Goldsmith!What’s coming up next for you?  “I would like to learn more about textiles, as so much of what I’m creating looks like it is made from fabric not plastic. Also, I hope to create some mobiles as I love the shadows produced by the plastics and I love how light looks shining through the plastics – mobiles might be the perfect way to display this kind of work.  I’ve only just begun researching mobiles.  I can feel myself teetering on the edge of something amazing.  It is a really strange feeling because I’m not sure what’s coming down the pipeline, but I’m certain something big is going to burst out really soon.  It is exciting, bizarre, and a little embarrassing to admit. I think it involves mixing media. We will see.”

“I’ve never felt like this before.”

 

Rachel, don’t you dare be embarrassed.  Your honesty and openness have made my heart smile.  I sift through a lot of stock answers and standard bios and stagnant art-speak statements.  You have renewed my faith that I can still have exciting, insightful conversations about art.  Thank you for that–and the work…

Learn more about Rachel Goldsmith!

Learn more about Featured Artist Rachel Goldsmith! Are you Featured Artist material?  LET US KNOW!

FEATURED ARTIST: Emilyann Gachko

Learn more from Photographer and Featured Artist Emilyann Gachko!CHEESE,
not stinky

With the arrival of February, I find myself restless and ready to move on.  My family is on the cusp of big changes, and I am finding it hard to do more than hold my breath and wait.  The problem with that is that the changes aren’t going to happen in any real way for two years.   I can’t hold my breath for two years–literally or figuratively.  I like aged cheese, but two year in my fridge would not be a good thing, really.

This month’s artist shows both gratitude for “right now” as well as hope for the future.   Her work explores the both comfort and the claustrophobia associated with staying where you are–without denying the need to go.

Learn more from Photographer and Featured Artist Emilyann Gachko!

ArtAndArtDeadlines.com is proud to claim Emilyann Gachko as this month’s Featured Artist.  This work calls attention to self-expression through your personal landscape.  It can’t be all cheddar for everyone all the time, folks.  To be fair, there’s also mozzarella and brie and Stilton and...

FEATURED
ARTIST:

Emilyann Gachko

Emily Gachko was raised in Cranford, New Jersey–where all the shooting for her current project has taken place.  Gachko majored in Fine Arts with a concentration in Photography at Ramapo College of NJ –winnging Best in Show with her Senior Thesis Exhibition.  She aspires to get her MFA in Photography and teach photography at the collegiate level.  Gachko currently lives in Spring Lake, New Jersey, where she has a variety of jobs teaching kids and and working with horses.

Learn more from Photographer and Featured Artist Emilyann Gachko!Talk to me about your process when searching for subjects.  Are the models friends, peers or acquaintances?  “So, I got the idea for the project living at home with parents, which quite frankly, I was not thrilled about.  I wanted to make lemonade out of the lemons that was living situation, so to speak.  That’s how I landed on the idea.  I started out with friends, and then friends of friends, and then eventually I would go to bars with said friends, and they would point people out to me that they vaguely knew and thought might live at home with their parents.  And I would approach them, and explain the project, and ask if I come home to their house and photograph them.  Despite being a total stranger to most of these people, only one person ever said no!”

Learn more from Photographer and Featured Artist Emilyann Gachko!

Talk to me about the portraiture aspect of your work.   “I wanted the people in the image to be very matter of fact, in that they didn’t give you any kind of overt emotion to go off or decide the tone of the photograph by say, their expressions. But in a way, the sitters are still the most important part of the photograph, in that they designed the space that envelops them. I wanted people to look at each photo and really get a feel for that person, of their individuality. The whole photograph makes up the portrait, not just the sitter, but the sitter is who assigns the most important part of the photograph’s identity.”

Learn more from Photographer and Featured Artist Emilyann Gachko!Finding the balance between people & their self-imposed habitats or between gratitude & anxiety creates a beautiful tension in your work.   Was that your intention?   Thank you!  Yes, I definitely sough to portray the tension between the individuals and the rooms themselves, mostly in that a lot of the environments have things that are clearly left over from childhood, and all of the sitters are young adults.”

What style or school of art do you think work fits into?    “I would say environmental portraiture. Even after this project, this is a style of art that I’m very much interested. The way that people both interact with and are informed by their environments. I really fascinates me.”

Learn more from Photographer and Featured Artist Emilyann Gachko!Talk to me about the two artists (one living, one dead) that have most influenced your work and why. “Photographer William Eggleston is one of my favorites, and a huge inspiration, in the way that he so elegantly captures every day life. Dead? Joseph Cornell.  He was one of the first artists I really loved, and he way he works with color, objects, and space within his shadow boxes is really beautiful.”

What is your favorite food addiction? It IS a food-themed blog after all. “Can I say pizza, even though that is super basic?  I don’t care, my answer is definitely pizza, haha!”  Pizza is always the right answer.  Always.

Learn more from Photographer and Featured Artist Emilyann Gachko! What if your favorite snack food obsession? “Cheese and crackers, so not too far off from pizza, haha.  Or Phish Food Ben & Jerry’s ice cream, depending on my mood.”

What’s coming up next for you? “I’m hoping to start work on another project that’s also sort of about suburban living, but I don’t really have the details hashed out yet so I don’t want to say too much about it until the idea comes into fruition! Other than that, I’d like to experiment with some collage and mixed media work. I took a class on it in college and it was my favorite one.”

Thank you, Emilyann, for reminding us
to appreciate where we are RIGHT NOW.

Learn more about Featured Artist & Photographer Emilyann Gachko 600x

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

ARTIST to LOVE: Gail R. Mitchell

We have a new Artist to Love!

Thanks for introducing us to Crystal Illumination Art!  Say “Hello” to our newest Artist to Love

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Gail R. Mitchell
Crystal Illumination Art
CIA15, Crystal Illumination by Gail R. Mitchell
CIA15
Crystal Illumination
MITCHELL created Crystal Illumination Art to bring the transformative quality of illumination, light & color to the human experience and celebrate its ability to inspire, heal and nourish our physical, mental, emotional & spiritual well being. The refractory & reflective light emanate through prisms of crystals stimulating the senses & evoking a visual dimension that captivates viewers. Art is a universal language. Mitchell aspires to continue lighting the way for people to experience this transformative sensory art experience.

FAVORITE FOOD: Just cannot decide

Are you an Artist to Love? Be sure to let us know!

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FEATURED ARTIST: Jennie Traill Schaeffer

Learn more about Featured Artist Jennie Traill Schaeffer!i choose CHEESE

With the arrival of January, I finally been able to concentrate on comfort –and yearly nesting maintenance of both my literal home and second home, this blog.  My own art is still in flux and the reduction of my belongings in in full swing.  As I prepare to purposefully downsize once again, I am happy to be liberating my belongings into the hands of others who are more interested than I in owning stuff.  As you might imagine, I seem to be divesting myself of kitchen wares the slowest.  I let go of the ice cream maker this week.  But, between you and me, I did add a digital thermometer for cheese making.  I mean really, doesn’t everyone need 6 sizes of melon ballers?  Of course.

This month’s artist both celebrates and laments our kitchen icons.  Her work explores our connection to the tools of domesticity and the roles they play in defining our roles in life–real and imagine, chosen and not.  Separating me from my mixer just got harder.

Learn more about Featured Artist Jennie Traill Schaeffer!AAAD is proud to feature the work of Jennie Traill Schaeffer.  This work calls attention to how what we own speaks to who we are.  It isn’t all pots and percolators...

FEATURED ARTIST:
Jennie Traill Schaeffer

 

Contemporary artist Jennie Traill Schaeffer holds a BFA in Painting and Art Education from Syracuse University’s College of Visual and Performing Arts.  She studied with painters Jerome Witkin, Gary Trento, and John Thompson while studying abroad in Florence, Italy.   Jennie received the “Hiram Gee Award,” given each year to a graduating senior painting major.

Jennie grew up in Easton, Pennsylvania, and comes from a lineage of happy artists (visual, musical, and performing).  She and her husband, Lee Goldberg, are happy to now call New Jersey home along with their adorable sons, Joel & Auggie–and exuberant dog, Ringo.

Perker Maestá by Featured Artist Jennie Traill SchaefferTell me about your art education–both the self-taught and the formal instruction.  “I hold a BFA in painting and art education from Syracuse University.  The technical foundations of painting I developed while in art school, but in order to continue painting in oils safely in my home while pregnant, I researched and taught myself to paint without solvents.  Over the past decade, I’ve experimented with direct painting using both brushes and knives, adjusting my style.”

How has your technique developed over the years? Does your substrate determine the texture of the final work? Do the works on paper have the same topography as the work on panel?  “A mixture of indirect and direct painting stuck with me from art school, but due to my need to remove solvents from my studio, my paint application thickened.  Now because of both time constraints in the studio due to caring for children, as well as painting mostly without a vehicle, my painting process if very direct.  However, I’ve always been attracted to the play of thick paint moving around a surface.  That visceral feeling of applying paint is one of my first memories of learning to paint.  It’s usually in the end layers when the paint is still wet and I’m able to lay in other colors, brushing in texture, when I’m happiest at the easel.  When I shift to works on paper it’s usually to switch to a drawing or printmaking medium, so that will dictate the texture of my work.”

Stainless Steel Cooker of Eggs by Featured Artist Jennie Traill SchaefferIt would seem you have a significant relationship with the kitchen. With such a prolific portfolio of cutlery, aprons, appliances & more, it has to more than just a matter of kitchen convenience.  Yes?  ‘An argument between my, then, fiancée, now husband and I.  We both love to cook, and when we were first living together and engaged, we both shared the responsibility.  He was in graduate school and I was working at an art store and setting up a studio at home.  I was trying to figure out what to paint.  After having a huge disagreement over how and when to wash our pots and pans, I painted my dishwasher, which was in view of my dining room studio.  We registered for wedding gifts, many of which were domestic kitchen appliances.  I began painting them as portraits, not sure of the meaning at the time, but attracted to their design, reflective qualities, and color.  Along the way, I realized the import of what I was painting –Icons of the Kitchen.  They are heavily marketed tools that many in my generation don’t use, but desire to have as a status symbol.  Once I was aware of this, I began donning the appliances with halos and seating them on thrones evoking references to religious paintings from the Early Renaissance.”

Master of Drink Mixing by Featured Artist Jennie Traill SchaefferSpeaking of appliance portraiture, how is it that even the spoons feel as though they are sitting for portraits?  “I love to paint portraits, but have a fear of having people sit for me and prefer to paint from life when possible.  I think the appliances fill that need for me and feel like portraits due to their scale and positioning.  They are not arranged in a typical still life grouping, but are situated on non-descript surfaces with cords and handles that have seem to suggest hands on hips. Of course the appliances seated on chairs is obvious.  In many cases, though not all, they are larger than life.”

Producing vintage-inspired work that isn’t sentimental takes a careful hand.  Both your color palate and your composition speak to a vintage perspective. Was that your intention?  “I am drawn to, have been fascinated, and sometimes disgusted by the era my parents group up in.  For the most part, I would not have wanted to be a woman during the earlier 20th century, but I appreciate the work women did in the home.  The color palette comes from the objects themselves, many of which are vintage-inspired in their design. The composition is vintage in that I am referencing older works of art.  But removing the sentimentality wasn’t intentional, and the pieces do evoke an emotional response from viewers.  I think the removal of the objects from their environment, along with the historical references maybe tames the sentimentality.”

St Perker by Featured Artist Jennie Traill SchaefferWhat style or school of art do you think work fits into? I’ve always found it difficult to pigeon-hole my work into a particular style.  “The subject matter is Pop Art, but the intent is more a blend of Realism, Conceptualism, and a bit of Expressionism.  I want the objects to be readily understood,  and I enjoy depicting things realistically.”

But, I am striving to convey meaning or a better understanding of who I am, who wives are, who mothers are through my work.

 

What is your favorite food addiction?  “Pasta is my ultimate love. I grew up with a half-Italian father who has perfected an amazing spaghetti sauce chocked full of garlic, onions, a terrific balance of herbs and sausage and meatballs.”

What if your favorite snack food obsession?  “I am definitely torn between chocolate and cheese.  It’s trite, but when I’m itching for a snack and the “clean” or “healthy” option just won’t satisfy me, I look for a bag of chocolate chips in the baking cabinet or aged, extra sharp cheddar.”  Chocolate vs. cheese is a question for the ages.  And I would argue if both are high quality, they are both clean and healthy.  Eat them both.

Oh Slicer of Cheese by Featured Artist Jennie Traill SchaefferWhat’s coming up next for you?  “I have a lot of ideas that I’ve jotted down, but none fully formed yet. Thoughts of kitchen icons or relics, creating more large maestás, incorporating more collaged egg shells into paintings, making a large piece painted on a bed headboard similar to an altarpiece.”

“I’m considering attempting a small lunchtime work each day featuring lunch ingredients.” 

 

“Since I had my second child, 19 months ago, motherhood and art has been on my mind a lot.  This may somehow creep into my subject matter.  At the end of 2014 I created a linocut called St. Mixer of the Bags, which I printed on reusable bags.  I would like to print a limited edition on paper, and then pursue more linocuts of my work.”

Thank you, Jennie, for reminding us that we CHOOSE
both our treasures and our trammels.

Learn more about Featured Artist Jennie Traill Schaeffer!

Should you be our next Featured Artist?
Be sure to let us know!

FEATURED ARTIST of the YEAR: Emily Mitchell

Fig Newtons by Artist of the Year Emily Mitchell!HAPPY NEW YEAR!
food & art

It is January again, and we can’t believe it is 2015 already.  I am joyfully looking forward to a new year. 2014 was a year of growth for my family, my art, and for AAAD.  There were wonderful food highlights including a renewed interest in baking and continuing to fight the appearance of processed, fake foods.   I appreciate that some of you are tackling the same issues–like fig newtons.  The fig newtons, at left, are a self-proclaimed fail by painter Emily Mitchell.  And AAAD covered some fantastic opportunities in 2014 and even more fantastic artists.

Today, we name the
2014 Artist of the Year!

 

Get Close by 2014 Featured Artist of the Year Painter Emily Mitchell!When AAAD began in 2009, (YES, we are starting year SIX!) I was determined to cover art deadlines, and more importantly, artists producing really good ART.  And, after I chose a few artists, I quickly realized that the Featured Artist program needed structure, or it would never really get done on any sort of regular basis. That is how the Featured Artist Contest was born.

The Featured Artist Page was getting crowded and each post was lessening the impact of being Featured. I had to start archiving artists yearly.  And, the Artist of the Year was born.  I now give all of our Featured Artists each year notice that at the end of the year, the Artist of the Year will be determined by the number of comments on their individual Featured Artist blog posts.

Congratulations to
Emily Mitchell,
AAAD’s 2014 Artist of the Year

The Dragonfly Gift by 2014 Featured Artist of the Year Painter Emily Mitchell!I followed up with Emily to find out what’s new:  “I’m hoping to start a new series with insects.  I’d like to do about 20-25 of them in a similar approach to my work but probably with some more mixed media-colored pencils, papers, perhaps. Oh!  And I’d like to do a few give a ways this year! I’m also doing a few workshops for some teachers and art associations. “

And new foods? Are there any new tasty morsels inspiring you? “So, since going GF, I really really miss Fig Newtons. I love/loved them, and they were my daily coffee accompaniment each morning.  They also made great training food when I did triathlons. But the ones I have found that are on the shelf are not stupendous.  So I have begun making my own. It’s laborious, and they are ugly!  Like, really ugly.  But so far they taste good. And much fresher than the original.” Editor’s note:  The food pic above ARE Emily’s figgy fail.  I think they look yummy.  All hail the ugly food!

I have enjoyed getting to know you, Emily. I am inspired by your sense of yourself. I love you adapt in life and how that carries over to your work.   I appreciate that your fans and peers loved you enough to make you the Artist of the Year even though your feature was the last one of the year.  Thank you, Emily, for ending 2014 with a bang!  If you missed her original Feature, check it out and get to know Emily Mitchell yourself.

Learn more about 2014 Artist of the Year, Painter Emily Mitchell!

Do you want to be the 2015 Artist of the Year?
It all starts with the Featured Artist Contest.

ARTIST to LOVE: Laura Mabbutt

We found another great artist to celebrate!

This time it is a feltmaker! Say “Hello” to our newest Artist to Love

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Laura Mabbutt
Designer/Maker of Felt Objects
Necklaces made from Merino wool & copper piping by Laura Mabbutt
Necklaces
Merino wool & copper piping
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.

FAVORITE FOOD: Veggie Roast Dinner

Are you an Artist to Love? Be sure to let us know!

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ARTIST to LOVE: Dan McCormack

We found another
great artist to celebrate!

This time it is a photographer! Say “Hello” to our newest Artist to Love

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Dan McCormack
Photography
Vera by Photographer Dan McCormack
Vera
Pinhole Photography
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.

FAVORITE FOOD: Blueberries

Are you an Artist to Love? Be sure to let us know!

• • • • • • • • •

ARTIST to LOVE: Ansley Adams

WE found ANOTHER great one!

  This fantastic artist is from Rock Hill, SC!  Say “Hello” to our newest Artist to Love

Ansley Adams
Painting
The Red Horse, Oil Painting by Ansley Adams
The Red Horse
Oil Painting
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.

FAVORITE FOOD: Mashed Potatoes

Are you an Artist to Love? Be sure to let us know!