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Tag: Featured Artist

FEATURED ARTIST: Gracelee Lawrence

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she held the sugar

The judging of this $2 Art Contest is really not getting anyeasier. I review lots of art both as a part of judging this contest and as a part of my passion for art.  But nothing makes writing rejection letters okay.  I get them myself, and let’s be honest… they suck, no matter how well-intentioned.  My letter-writing mission is simple.  I want to highlight what makes work good and offer suggestions or explanations for why it doesn’t work for this particular contest this particular month.

This month’s artist is a perfect example of how a rejection letter CAN work.  She submitted work.  I didn’t choose her.  It had nothing to do with her work and everything to do with the accessibility and presentation of the work.

Now normally, when I write a rejection letter, I get one of a handful of responses: a simple thank you, excuses, or objections.  But, every once in a while, I get a response that makes it all worth it: “Thank you.  I fixed the issues.  Please take another look.”

Learn more about Gracelee Lawrence!I took another look.
And the view is spectacular.

 

I am so proud to announce the Featured Artist chosen from the November entries is Gracelee Lawrence. Her artwork speaks to what it means to be feminine without indulging stereotypes.

Sweet as honey, not sugar,
if you will.

 

These sculptures are a beautiful aesthetic combined with the marvel of hand-crafted workmanship that both speak to how powerful the feminine dynamic can be.  It isn’t as if I had forgotten that I AM WOMAN, but is wonderful to see someone scream it.

Endometrium by Sculptor Gracelee LawrenceFEATURED ARTIST:
Gracelee Lawrence

Gracelee graduated from Guilford College with a degree in Sculpture, minors in Spanish and Art History and plans to pursue her Master’s Degree in the future. She comes from a family of artists- her mother, father, and grandmothers introducing her to many different kinds of art from an early age. Gracelee is a sculptress and horsewoman.

What do you consider your media?  Do you primarily consider yourself a sculptor or an installation artist? Something else?  “I am a sculptor all the way, tried and true. In a few weeks I’ll be doing my first large installation, who knows where that will lead. My sculptures and installations are completely linked and related, in my mind it is all about using and changing how we perceive space.  As Pablo Gargallo once said, ‘Sculpture is air…’ ” 

Clearly, there is an aesthetic voice to your work.  How does color choice play a role in expressing your point of view?  “I think of color as an object.  This is a thought that I first heard when Orly Genger described her work.  How great is that?  Color both incites emotion and creates a particular aesthetic.  I am usually drawn to warm colors… hard to verbalize exactly why that is.”

Lustrum by Sculptor Gracelee LawrenceDo you do your own builds–mechanics,  welding and  powder coating?  “Hard and soft is my deal, I’m all about that contrast.  I’ve been sewing since I was 4 years old (taught by my mother and grandmother) and have done several sculptural dresses.  When I got my hands on steel and learned how to weld it was time for me to combine these two passions.  I do all of my own steel work and painting.  I prep the steel, mix my own custom colors, and everything else except the coating itself.  I don’t do the powder coating but if I had the facilities I certainly would.  I create creatures (big steel forms) by using a series of templates that I have created. These templates range from 1 foot to 5 feet and are triangles, pentagons, and squares. Perhaps there are some hexagons emerging in the near future…”

The use of natural materials like eggs and crab claws and  horse hair alongside industrial, powder-coated steel really captured my heart.  Is this a less  literal hard and soft…ie, natural and manufactured? “Definitely, natural and manufactured is one of the other contrasts that I enjoy.  Even the synthetic orange baling twine takes on a more organic feel when paired with the steel.

Fledge by Sculptor Gracelee LawrenceYou know we have to talk about food.  What are your favorites? “Scones are most certainly my favorite baked good… if I could I’d make a batch every day.  I love when the whole house smells like tasty baking scones.  Toast with honey is a clear snack-food winner. Especially if accompanied with a large mug of earl grey tea.”  Just as a side-note, Gracelee, these foods are far more Zen than I would have expected from an in-your-face sculptor.

So, what’s coming up next for you?  “I’m exhibiting up and down the east coast, my first solo show is in February of 2012!  Very exciting.  Going for my MFA starting next fall.  And of course, continuing to ride my lovely horse.”

Thank you, Gracelee Lawrence for making me want to sing “I Am Woman” at the top of my lungs.  I’m not certain that you will take conjuring Helen Reddy as a compliment, so trust me…it IS meant that way.  I am reminded of my own power by the power in your work. You’re are an inspiration!

Learn more about Gracelee Lawrence online!

Learn more about Featured Artist Gracelee Lawrence!

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

FEATURED ARTIST: Pamela Zimmerman

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MY EGGS

This was the most unusual crop of entries $2 Art Contest yet.  I review lots of paintings, sketches, mixed media & photos.  This month I reviewed woven metal, furnishings, installations, screen printing and fiber art.  None of those media is necessarily unusual, but getting them all in one month was unexpected.

I love textiles and texture.  I’m one of those nuts that has shelves and shelves of fabric for absolutely no valid reason other than I loved it enough to bring it home with me.  Everything I know about basket weaving, which isn’t much, I learned from a kit I bought at Piece Goods in 9th grade.  So how do I review fiber work and weaving?

I need the guts of it all.
The how of it all is very important,
but the why is what I really want to know.

 

"Catching the Pale, Pale Moon" by Fiber Artist Pamela ZimmermanThe Featured Artist chosen from the September entries is Pamela Zimmerman.  Her work made me stop and wonder HOW is this done?  What is the story behind THIS piece.  I just kept going back to the work and zooming in to inspect the details.  In the end, the same intricacy that usually speaks to delicacy left me with a sense of warmth and strength that I just could not dismiss.  This month, all my eggs are going in Zimmerman’s basket.

FEATURED ARTIST:
Pamela Zimmerman

Zimmerman was a National Park Ranger, and lived and worked close to nature. Living in the desert Southwest, she admired the native basketry in that area. She was  intrigued by the notion of making “something from nothing.”  In the late winter of 1998, she began weaving baskets from her garden.  The pine needles in her yard were short and twisted, but her first basket was enough “like a basket” to keep her going.

Soon she realized many materials from the woods and roadsides could be woven.  Some very tolerant neighbors (and strangers, too) allowed gathering of dying leaves from their yards with which to experiment.  Storm-downed trees yielded green needles, bark, or roots with which to weave.  Not all of the fibers worked out in that weaving adventure; but finding and trying new materials is all part of the fun of basket making.

"Catching the Moon: Celebration" by Fiber Artist Pamela ZimmermanIt wasn’t long before Pamela began to execute the miniature basket,  and she has developed her own techniques for working with horsehair.

“Coiling and twining are acknowledged as time consuming and thought by many to be tedious.
I find these processes contemplative, meditative, thought-ordering.

“Frustration is usually easily set aside, because there is always another project in the wings, beckoning, when one does not bear fruit.  It is also easy to forgive oneself for a basket turning out different than one had  envisioned, or conceived… so much easier to live with than the complexities of  dealing with people.  Most of my weaving is about making things  work.”

What do you consider  your media?  Do you primarily consider yourself a fiber artist or a basket weaver?  “I consider  myself a fiber artist who primarily uses basketry techniques.  I am constantly exploring new techniques and media to incorporate into my fiber art,  not all of them relate to basketry.  I also consider myself a basket MAKER – because I sometimes use  materials that I gather and process myself, and make them into  original baskets… making something from nothing.  Basket WEAVING, to  me, is when materials are prepared by someone else, or when the basket is  not of one’s own design.”  

"Waiting" by Fiber Artist Pamela ZimmermanClearly, there is a  clear aesthetic voice to your work.  But I want to hear about your point of view.  “I  generally do not try to work on a focused theme, but I find there are ones that  repeat in my work. They speak, I think, to my role as a  mother.  Birth, rebirth, cocooning,  transition, transformation, metamorphosis, emergence, change, and perspectives on these processes often are apparent.

“At my house, we try to make ourselves understand and live within society’s  rules.  It is a struggle from waking to sleeping, and we must find ways to adapt and learn, despite our differences, and fit into something which looks like normalcy.  It is hard to deal with, day in and day out.

Weaving is the escape.
Art is the place where there is no need
to do what someone else thinks is right.

 

"To the Sky" by Fiber Artist Pamela Zimmerman“I use the problem-solving skills that I have needed for survival throughout my whole life,  learning to adapt in a world that does not make sense, and the fiber responds silently, there is no yelling…the harshest penalty is loss of material.  I can almost always go back, something I cannot do when dealing with people.”

You know we have to talk about food, and I am always delighted when someone can’t give me a one-word answer to the favorite food question: “I love to try new  foods, and gravitate towards spicy and creamy, like Mexican with a lot of  cheese, and fettucini alfredo with hot peppers on top!

"Catching the Moon When the Deep Purple Falls" by Fiber Artist Pamela Zimmerman!But when it comes to every day eating, salads with feta cheese and olives topped with hummus and  plain yogurt.  And, being a Texan by birth, I love a good steak, and I NEVER  seem to be able to resist mushrooms, in any form.”  Make room for me, Pamela.  I’m movin’ in, ha.

So, what’s coming up next for you? “I enjoy teaching, and interacting with the online community.  I would like to teach more, and as my children grow, I am beginning to.  A book about horsehair coiling has been in the works now for several years.  Other than that,  I will keep weaving what I want to – of course there are more “moon” pieces in  the works.”

Thank you, Pamela Zimmerman for reminding me for the need for contemplative, introspective silent work…with voice.  I am inspired to never be the person that that tries to make you fit, and I am on winter hiatus from yelling, I promise.  You’re a good egg!

Learn more about Pamela Zimmerman online!

Learn more about Fiber Artist Pamela Zimmerman!

 

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

OPEN CALL: Culture Hall

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!DON’T LABEL ME

Generic versus name brand and heirloom versus genetically-modified and cheese food versus cheese. The debates over what makes the grade and what doesn’t will NEVER end. In my kitchen, I read labels and I buy the very best quality that I can afford at the moment. I steer clear of any foods with scary ingredient lists, and I cross my fingers and hope my family enjoys their dinner. This Call is all about the subjective question “is it good enough?” Say some affirmations in the mirror and take the leap…

Check out this Open Call from CultureHall.com, a curated online resource for contemporary art. This isn’t a come-one, come-all, pay your cash for exposure site. You have to make the cut based on your own merit. Do you have what it takes?

OPEN CALL: CultureHall.com

Learn more about CultureHall!Culturehall, a curated online resource for contemporary art, invites artists to submit work to an open application call. From this open call, four artists will be selected for membership and inclusion in their Spring New Artists Feature. As a member, each artist can directly share their work, accomplishments, and events with the audience of arts professionals who visit Culturehall daily.

ELIGIBILITY: Open to all artists

MEDIA: Open to all media

DEADLINE: By midnight EST of August 27, 2011

ENTRY FEE: The application fee is $35 for up to 5 images

ABOUT: Culturehall is a curated online resource for contemporary art where selected artists can share their work with curators, gallerists, collectors and other artists. They provide free artist portfolios with an easy to use set of web-based tools to make presenting art online simple and efficient. Their community of artists “consists primarily* of MFA graduates, arts professionals and teaching artists.” Membership is available by invitation or application. *Editor’s Note: Don’t let this scare you off. They are, to all their artists’ benefit, trying to build credibility with that statement; however, some of the best work I’ve ever laid eyes on is by self-taught artists. Be brave.

For complete details, visit CultureHall.com!

Learn more about the CultureHall open call!

FEATURED ARTIST: Terri Lloyd

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!SPOONFUL of
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!

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

OPEN CALL: CultureHall.com

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!DON’T LABEL ME

Generic versus name brand and heirloom versus genetically-modified and cheese food versus cheese.  The debates over what makes the grade and what doesn’t will NEVER end.  In my kitchen, I read labels and I buy the very best quality that I can afford at the moment.  I steer clear of any foods with scary ingredient lists, and I cross my fingers and hope my family enjoys their dinner.  This Call is all about the subjective question “is it good enough?”  Say some affirmations in the mirror and take the leap…

Check out this Open Call from CultureHall.com, a curated online resource for contemporary art.  This isn’t a come-one, come-all, pay your cash for exposure site.  You have to make the cut based on your own merit.  Do you have what it takes?

OPEN CALL: CultureHall.com

Learn more about CultureHall!Culturehall, a curated online resource for contemporary art, invites artists to submit work to an open application call.  From this open call, four artists will be selected for membership and inclusion in their Spring New Artists Feature.   As a member, each artist can directly share their work, accomplishments, and events with the audience of arts professionals who visit Culturehall daily.

ELIGIBILITY:  Open to all artists

MEDIA:  Open to all media

DEADLINE:  By midnight EST of May 22, 2011

ENTRY FEE:  The application fee is $35 for up to 5 images

ABOUT:  Culturehall is a curated online resource for contemporary art where selected artists can share their work with curators, gallerists, collectors and other artists.  They provide free artist portfolios with an easy to use set of web-based tools to make presenting art online simple and efficient.  Their community of artists “consists primarily* of MFA graduates, arts professionals and teaching artists.”  Membership is available by invitation or application. *Editor’s Note:  Don’t let this scare you off.  They are, to all their artists’ benefit, trying to build credibility with that statement; however, some of the best work I’ve ever laid eyes on is by self-taught artists.  Be brave.

For complete details, visit CultureHall.com!

Learn more about the CultureHall open call!

FEATURED ARTIST: Penny Perkins

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

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

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

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

 

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

FEATURED ARTIST:
Penny Perkins

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

 

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

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

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

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

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

 

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

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

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

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

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

Learn more about Penny Perkins online!

Learn More about Featured Artist Penny Perkins!

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

FEATURED ARTIST: Daniel Embree

Learn more about Featured Artist Daniel Embree!

I propose a TOAST!

Many of the artists that submit their work to be featured have deeply personal connections to their work.  In a perfect world, all artists would have that same connection; however, the world isn’t perfect. Giving a voice to artists who have  something to say has become one of the many great joys of this experience blogging experience.

As I often have to remind myself, choosing a Featured Artist is not about separating the good artwork from the bad. It has become about the challenge of picking from amongst ALL of the good work. Picking the right work at the right moment. Thanks, again, for that.  Like many of you, my life is full of chances to walk the walk, not just talk the talk.

 This month’s artist
walks and talks with an aesthetic of hope and celebration.

TClick to learn more about Daniel Embree!he Featured Artist chosen from February’s entries is artist Daniel Embree (pictured right in photo by Howard Romero). Embree’s work is a celebration of acceptance and the happiness that results. The work of Daniel Embree is like a black tie party of self-discovery and getting exactly what you deserve–at least eventually.

FEATURED ARTIST:
Daniel Embree

Though he is an emerging artist in New England, Embree’s pursuits have taken him from his home in Chicago to Utah and Los Angeles before bringing him to Boston, Massachusetts. Embree was raised in a conservative Mormon home in Chicago’s northern suburbs. His parents have always encouraged his love of art.

Dignity - a monotype by Daniel EmbreeMy mom taught me to be creative. I didn’t play with ninja turtle action figures as a kid. I made my own action figures out of clay—lizards, dragons, animals, mermaids, and giant insects. And my parents always praised my art. No matter what I was working on, it was always met with encouragement.”  By the time he was eight he was taking classes at the Art Institute of Chicago with students 3x his age. Exposure to great art and information about artists at the Art Institute fueled his own aspirations.

In the northern suburbs, Embree was also fortunate to have access to one of the best art programs in the region; his high school had eight art teachers. Upon graduating, he had a portfolio that showed breadth, depth, and consistency. Art schools across the country were competing for his attention.

Cheers - a monotype by Daniel EmbreeI had decided I was going to an art school in Boston,” Embree recalls, “My dad took me to Boston and there was a school there that really wanted me. I fell in love with the city instantly. That was where I wanted to live.”

But that year, the Massachusetts Supreme Court legalized gay marriage.

 

“It scared me,” said Daniel, “At that time I was desperately trying to hide the fact that I was gay myself.”  Embree was dedicated to the Mormon Church. “I didn’t just want to be an artist, I wanted to be a Mormon artist. I had grown up with lots of exposure to Mormon art, and my mom was always telling me that I could create better Mormon art—I had every intent to do just that.”

Bow Tie - oil on panel by Daniel EmbreeThe fact that I grew up in a Church that did not tolerate homosexuality, went to a school that institutionalized discrimination, underwent reparative “ex-gay” therapy that didn’t work and ended up being very harmful, and was a missionary, makes my turnaround to acceptance and eventually marrying a man all the more powerful.” In 2009, Embree sought to broaden his scope and address the bigger issues inherent in his work. “I realized that really I was interested in how people treat each other,” he wrote in an artist statement, “I wanted to call attention to both our everyday interactions and how we address difficult situations.”

10 years from now I don’t want to be known as a gay artist, or as an artist who questions religion. It is true that I am a gay artist and that I do question religion, but I feel like the issues I bring into my art are bigger than both of those things, and in the future I would like to pursue them in broader ways to connect to a larger audience. Identity, authority, communication, relationships, personal struggle and acceptance are universal tropes that transcend my unique experiences.

Degradation - a monotype by Daniel EmbreeEmbree’s most recent work has such a painterly effect, I had to ask, are you a print maker or a painter?  “My work lately is definitely printmaking, but I don’t consider myself a printmaker. I am an artist, and I love to draw and paint too. I may be working on a body of paintings in the future, or I may be developing other printmaking techniques. I will work in whatever media inspires and motivates me, and fits the message I’m trying to convey.”

I am always fascinated by the motivation of printmakers to tackle a media, that by its very nature, expects perfection.  But, of course, Embree revels in the lack of perfection–strives for it even.  “The process entails rolling ink onto plexi-glass and then manipulating it before printing the remaining image onto paper. He rolls each color of ink individually and repeats the subtractive process with each color. The layers of ink stack on top of each other to create the final image.

Because the layers don’t always line up perfectlythe figures seem to quiver, as if they are moving.

The subtractive process of wiping the ink is also very gestural, and contributes to a sense of movement in the art.  Embree’s most recent work really reinforces the image of the tuxedo.  After such a struggle for acceptance, why use a shining symbol of celebration?   Initially it was inspired by the tuxedos of my wedding, but 1920’s illustrations of men in tuxedos made him connect the image to something broader.

Pleading - a monotype by Daniel EmbreeThe twenties were a time when society was grappling with a lot of the same issues I grappled with. Americans were dealing with the restrictions of prohibition. They were also coming out of the stuffy Victorian era with a lot of social rules and pressures. Despite all of this, they were discovering new cultural freedoms—questioning gender inequities and roles, social boundaries & authority.  They celebrated the end of struggle after World War I, and the rise of new technologies and prosperity. In a similar way, I am at a time in my life where things are working out and just starting to take off.  By bringing all of that into my work, I think I can share what I feel in a way that can be read by a larger audience.

Shamefaced - a monotype triptych by Daniel EmbreeBut what about the food?  This IS, afterall, a food-themed art blog. I don’t know if I just attract foodie-artists or artistic foodies. Or, maybe artists just think that food is the way to my heart because most of the artists I interview have phenomenal culinary tastes. When Embree way asked? Diplomacy.

“I love too many foods to have a favorite, but I will pick out some flavors that I like. I especially love dishes that combine unlikely or contrasting flavors together. I love the mix of bitter-sweet lingonberries with savory meatballs or sweet mango with salty coconut sticky rice. I’m a sucker for everything bitter or tart—like dark chocolate, cranberry, or grapefruit.”  And he doesn’t snack. I am suspicious of non-snacker. *snicker*

 Learn more about Featured Artist Daniel Embree!

 

CALL for PROPOSALS: Rosewood Solo Show

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!BITE ME

I love it when two of things I like most collide… like those old 1970s commercials about “your peanut butter on my chocolate” versus “your chocolate in my peanut butter” for Reese’s peanut butter cups.  Well, it happened this week on our little-blog-that-could.  Featured Artist Amy Kollar Anderson sent a Call for Proposals for a gallery for whom she’s the coordinator.  I suppose I should have known…but I didn’t.  Take a look.

Check out this Call for Proposals for Solo Shows at the Rosewood Gallery from the Kettering Arts Council.  There is no entry fee, but you have to hurry the deadline is coming up!  Don’t miss this opportunity…

CALL for PROPOSALS:  Rosewood Gallery Solo Show

Learn more about the Call for Proposals from the Kettering Arts Council for the Rosewood Gallery!The Rosewood Gallery is dedicated to the encouragement and creation of new works and to the promotion of the visual arts in the Dayton, Ohio, area. Eight exhibitions are presented each year in the Rosewood Gallery, sponsored by the City of Kettering Department of Parks, Recreation and Cultural Arts, with support from the Kettering Arts Council and the Ohio Arts Council. View current exhibitions.

ELIGIBILITY:  The Rosewood Gallery specializes in the exhibition of contemporary art by emerging local, regional and national artists.

Learn more about the Call for Proposals from the Kettering Arts Council for the Rosewood Gallery!MEDIA:  All media will be considered for exhibition, including video and installation pieces.

DEADLINE:  Proposals must be postmarked byMarch 11, 2011. (Editor’s note: Co-ordinator Amy Kollar Anderson extended from March 4th on 2/25 but it won’t be updated on the site until 2/28).

NOTIFICATION:  By the end of May, 2011.

ENTRY FEE:  None

JUROR:  A selection committee composed of regional art professionals will make recommendations from submissions of work for exhibition.

For complete details, Visit the Call online!

FEATURED ARTIST: Deanna Bowdish

Learn more about Featured Artist Deanna Bowdish!PIZZA mio!

Choosing a Featured Artist is not about separating the good artwork from the bad. It has become about the challenge of picking from amongst ALL of the good work.  Thanks for that. (*Editor’s Note: The Featured Artist program was retired in 2015 and replaced by the Artist of the Day program.)

Learn more about Deanna Bowdish online!Like many of you, my life is frenzied and full of things that I love… and things that I don’t.  So, I have a soft spot for visual places to rest, for work that makes me smile.  I am tickled pink when I later find beautiful theory behind the work afterall.

This month’s artist has brought a ray of sunshine into my gray February.

 

The Featured Artist chosen from January’s entries is painter Deanna Bowdish. Bowdish’s work is a happy place.  The work is like a challenging tromp uphill through the daises… in 4″ heels.

FEATURED ARTIST:
Deanna Bowdish

 

Deanna Bowdish was born in Solon, Ohio in 1976.  As a toddler, flopping her red paint-soaked body across moms green shag carpeting, Deanna’s father was assured of his daughter’s innate sense for color and balance.  A trip to France and Italy at age 16 to study the great masters compelled Deanna to give up her parents’ hopes of her going into the medical field.  After considerable negotiations with her parents and the promise of an “employable minor,” she was able to follow her dreams and concentrate on a fine art career.  Bowdish painted in the Minneapolis metropolitan area for seven years featuring works in several shows and galleries. 

From the Ripple Series by Featured Artist Deanna Bowdish!In 2002 Deanna stumbled into the Lowcountry of South Carolina to house sit for her sister and began exhibiting at The Gallery in Beaufort, South Carolina.  Bowdish subsequently purchased The Gallery in 2004 fulfilling a long-held dream and creating one of the most dynamic and eclectic assemblies of art in the region.  

She is always experimenting with a new material or a new way of achieving a different outcome with the same materials.  She loves to challenge traditional methods and break the rules.  But when Isuggested her work might be mixed media, I found that she really considers herself a painter.  Take a look at her beautiful commissioned pieces of functional artwork pictured below at the Breakwater restaurant in Beaufort, SC. 

“I consider my work painting and myself a painter, my process just happens to incorporate mixed media right now.  Once I am happy with the painted surface, I then begin the destruction of my creation, usually the most stressful part as I am always hesitant about cutting up such a magnificent creation, but then I quickly recover and go to town with my exacto knife.”

Her work is an explosion of color and texture, creating a frenzy of energy and movement, very much like her own life.  Deanna seeks to find harmony and balance amongst the frenzy.   

Learn more about Featured Artist Deanna Bowdish!“The large surfaces are cut down into smaller components in preparation for the next stage in my process. These pieces are either woven or sewn back together depending on the final piece that I am creating. 

The ripple series is woven then mounted to a permanent surface and covered with resin.  The quilts are sewn back together using the sewing machine.  The final construction phase for both processes is quite exciting as I see a whole new painting coming to life before my eyes.”

“I feel overwhelmed by all the infromation that is thrown or forced at me; emails, mail, texts, television, tweets, facebook alerts, radio ads, billboards, its everywhere coming at me from all angles.”

My life is a game of dodgeball —
me against the information age. 

“The frenzy and frequency of this information could be crippling, but I choose to challenge the waves of information and reintroduce it in my own painted language.”

Art therapy for an optimist.
I may be in love.

 

From the Ripple Series by Featured Artist Deanna Bowdish!But what about the food?  This IS, afterall, a food-themed art blog.  I don’t know if I just attract foodie-artists or artistic foodies.  Or, maybe artists just think that food is the way to my heart because most of the artists I interview have phenomenal culinary tastes.  When Bowdish’s secret tastes were probed?  Pizza and Hawaiian kettle chips.  No joking.  Her honesty is as refreshing as her artwork.

There are a few questions I’m going to have to quit asking… What school of art do you think your work falls into?  The answer is always “an eclectic mixture,” but I think Bowdish’s influences, living and deceased, may be more telling than the amalgumation she claims.  Deceased influence?  20th century abstract expressionist painter Richard Diebenkorn.  One of her living influences?  Painter turned sculptor, Laura Lloyd.  I see how the pieces fit together.

I am really restless for Spring.  I want to walk shoeless through cold grass, and Deanna Bowdish got me as close as I can ask.  Thank you! 

Learn more about Deanna Bowdish online!

Learn more about Featured Artist Deanna Bowdish!

CALL to ARTISTS: Housekeeping

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!NUTS FOR COCONUT

I am not a good house keeper.  We must own our faults, and this fact is one of my many faults.  I don’t qualify for Hoarding or Clean House, but I also don’t dust unless my kid sneezes.  There are always 4 loads of laundry that need to be done, and I am fairly certain there is a can of coconut milk in my cabinet that expired in 2006. 

Life is too short.

 

However, I cannot afford to be a bad blog house keeper.  All of you deserve better than dusty pages and rotten Calls.  There are too many of you whose trust I have earned over the past year and a half to let things fall through the cracks.

So, I am counting on you to resist the urge to move on to checking other email or goofing off on facebook and help me out folks.  We really need to work on cleaning up a few things that are left lingering about even after the New Year:

Click to visit the Rejection Page!CLEANING LIST:

 

REJECTION LETTERS:  I had hoped that the Rejection page would be in full swing by January, but I still don’t have enough letters to start properly.  Please email your rejections letters and/or emails to me at submitart@artandartdeadlines.com

I prefer scans of printed letters, but those are rare.  Remember, sending a rejection letter qualifies you for free entry into the $2 Art Contest.

www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com loves Art Galleries!GALLERIES:  A note to all of the gallery directors that read this blog… If your gallery is mentioned in one of the rejection letters I receive, you will get a feature page on your gallery on this site. 

I always want to be fair, and this is my way of balancing the discouraging with the hopeful. I will take the gallery information from the gallery’s website as well as request input fromt he director.  I hope this encourages you to encourage your artists to send in their letters.  It is your opportunity to let artists know what you want. 

Learn more about becoming a Featured Artist!FEATURED ARTISTS:  I have offered the Featured Artists from the beginning of this site in 2009 through December of 2010 an opportunity to be chosen Featured Artist of the Year.  They can receive votes in the form of comments through January 15, 2011. 

Vote for your Favorite Artist by leaving a meaningful comment today. 

 

Click Here to see all the Featured Artists of 2009/2010.  Your comment cannot contain profanity or links to a website.  They must say something… not just a smiley face or a thumbs up.  Use your words.

Check out these twitter cookies from I am Baker!SOCIAL NETWORKS:  Many of you help promote this site on Facebook and Twitter, and I truly appreciate the support.  I do want to encourage you to consider promoting your own work and supporting www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com on Google Buzz, Digg, Yahoo Buzz, reddit and more.  The more people that read this blog, the more motivated I am.

Now the house has been swept.
The dishes have been washed.
The blog is now suitable for company.

As always, I love to hear from you…so, leave a comment or send an email with your ideas, your art, your success and your challenges.

Happy New Year from www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com!