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Tag: Oil Painting

CALL for ENTRIES: Oil & Acrylic

Learn more from the National Oil and Acrylic Painters Society!OLIVE
you too

Only a very small handful of my friends will abide long debates about varietal olive oils.  My favorite varietal is made from Frantoio olives. Frantoio olives are widely used in Tuscan olive oils–peppery and bitter and pungent and a bit grassy.  Just a few of my food freaky friends will stick around for these debates because we are peas in a pod.  This next Call is for peas of the painting pod.  Take a look…

Check out this Call for Entries from the National Oil and Acrylic Painters’ Society (NOAPS) for their On-Line International Spring 2014. This entry fee may seem a little high, but you don’t have to be a member.  AND, the prizes are spectacular…

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

Learn more from the National Oil and Acrylic Painters Society!CALL for ENTRIES:
Oil & Acrylic

 

ELIGIBILITY:  Open to all artists 18+

MEDIA:  Oil & acrylic painting

DEADLINE:  April 8, 2014

NOTIFICATION:  May 2, 2014

ENTRY FEE: $30 for 1, $10 ea add’l

JUROR:  Cheng Lian was born in 1955 in Shanghai, China. Part of a close-knit, highly-talented family, he learned art since he was a little boy from his father, a famous artist and professor. He graduated from China Academy of Fine Art (a famous art school in China known as Zhejiang Academy of Fine Art), and he was an honored student in the art school.

Painting by Juror Cheng Lian!As an artist Cheng has traveled to many places in China, Asia, United States, North America, Europe and South America; he uses his artist eyes observing things that he has seen like people and scenery, and he created eye catching, breath taking portraits, landscapes, and still lives with his unique style.

AWARDS:  Best of Show : $1000, 2nd Place: $500, 3rd Place: $400, Additional Awards Include: Best Landscape: $100 Best Still Life: $100, Best People: $100, Best Use of Light & Color: $100, Most Innovative: $100, Narrative Excellence: $100.

Ten artists will receive non-monetary Awards of Excellence recognition. 10 artists will receive non-monetary Merit Awards.  The TOP 150 artists will be given recognition on www.noaps.org with Name, website link and image selected.

SALES:  Selected work will post on www.noaps.org to promote sales. Requests relating to artist information or sales will be forwarded to the artist.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Learn more from the National Oil and Acrylic Painters Society!

CALL for ENTRIES: Scapes

Learn more about the Scapes competition from art-competition.net!you are the
APPLE
of my eye

One of my favorite places on the planet is my local apple orchard.  The landscape is made of meandering rows of trees as far as the eye can see in each direction.  More types of apple than I even knew existed can be found from be green perfection of the Granny Smith to the dark and cloudy pungency of the October Black.  This next Call wants to know about your favorite scape, be it land, city, sea, or in your mind.  Take a look…

Check out this Call for Entries from Art-Competition.net (online) for Scapes. Competitions support free lessons at DrawingAndPaintingLessons.com. If you are looking to increase your web exposure, this one might be for you…

Learn more from art-competitions.net!

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

CALL
for ENTRIES:

Scapes

 

ELIGIBILITY:  All artists age 18+

MEDIA: Paintings in any medium, representational to abstract.

Round series 2 by Su Dong from China!The visual narrative of the artist’s work should transport the viewer to experience the beauty, uniqueness, or fantasy of the place.

“Artists see the land untouched or touched by man, so strong is their connection and vision that they must express it back to the world as art.” –Edward A. Burke

DEADLINE: April 6, 2014

ENTRY FEE: 1 Entry for $15, up to three entries for $30, up to five entries for $60

AWARDS:  1st Place $400 in cash and $2,825 in prizes. 2nd Place $100 in cash and $175 in prizes.  3rd Place $125 in prizes.  All winners‘ art will be featured on Art-Competition.net with links to their individual websites.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Learn more from art-competitions dot net! 2

CALL for ENTRIES: 23rd OPA Nat’l

https://www.artandartdeadlines.com/5-art-contest/FOOD
photogenic
FOOD

Can we talk about food porn?  I think no one will be shocked to hear that I post pictures of my food to social media.  Yes, I am one of those people.  But what I want to know is why most people highly filter their pics.  You don’t OWE it to the restaurant to make their food look better than it is.  So, are you taking pictures of your food to document a beautiful meal or fun experience?  OR, are you just trying to “one up” your friends?  Maybe food pics should just be representational of what your really see before you–kind of like this next call…

Check out this Call for Entries for the 23rd Annual National Exhibition  from Oil Painters of America to be exhibited at the the Bennington Center for the Arts. The cost is high because you have to be a member, but the show is prestigious and the prizes are huge. Make me proud…

*Editor’s Note: If you have read the personal portion of this post, CALL for ENTRIES: 23rd OPA Nat’l, anywhere other than by email subscription or on ArtAndArtDeadlines.com, it has been published without permission and is considered theft.

Learn more about the show from Oil Painters of America!CALL for ENTRIES:
23rd OPA Nat’l 

 

ELIGIBILITY: Artists who reside in the United States, Canada and Mexico and are 2012 OPA members or have submitted an application for membership or renewal for 2012 may apply for this exhibition.

MEDIA: Representational oil paintings of original concept and design only.

DEADLINE:
February 7, 2014 (online)

NOTIFICATION:  March 12, 2014

ENTRY FEE: $30 for 1 submission, $45 for 2 submissions(not including your membership fee of $60).

Learn more about the OPA Juried National ExhibitMore membership information can be found on the OPA website, http://www.oilpaintersofamerica.com, under the Member Services tab.

JURORS:  The awarding juror will be Master Signature member Charles Movalli.

AWARDS: Approximately 30 awards will be given, in excess of $75,000, including a $25,000 Best In Show.

SALES: Commission of 40% is required by the gallery for all paintings sold.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Download the Prospectus from Oil Painters of America!

FEATURED ARTIST: Michael O’Gorman

Learn more about Featured Artist Michael O' Gorman!‘SHROOM to go

It has been a truly surreal year for me, my personal art, and for many of my readers.  So, with fingers crossed I began reviewing the entries hoping to find a little surrealism.  Honestly, I rarely have surrealists enter, but I was hopeful.  I knew what I wanted, and what-do-you-know, I found it.   It was like finding that random mushroom on your pepperoni pizza just when you were hoping for veggies.  On behalf of AAAD, I am proud to announce this month’s Featured Artist is Michael O’Gorman.  I find this work to be endlessly complicated, but fluid.

The Application of Great Britain to the Earth by Featured Artist Michael O'Gorman!FEATURED ARTIST:
Michael O’Gorman

Michael O’Gorman is an artist from the United Kingdom who specializes in surreal oil paintings of organic and anthropomorphic subject matter, expressed through a unique ’merging’ style. He is obsessed with detail and perfection, and spends many months on a single painting, ensuring that the color gradients are smooth, that all narratives within a composition blend harmoniously, and – most importantly – that each painting is exciting and rewarding to view!

O’Gorman graduated from the University of Warwick in 2006 and works as a freelance artist and writer.  He loves to create complex, detailed artworks whose narratives can be explored and observed forever, with the viewer always discovering something new and exciting.

Memoirs of a Fertile Imagination by Featured Artist Michael O'Gorman!Are you self taught or formally instructed?  “I’m self-taught. I always doodled as a child, but it wasn’t until 2002 – when I was 17 years old – that I tried to create my first serious drawing. Four months of obsessive penciling by lamplight later, and ‘Black Water’ was finished!

“Three years after ‘Black Water,’ I taught myself to paint. I outlined some figures onto canvas with pencil and coloured them with acrylic paints. This was the beginning of my first painting, ‘Perpetual Fluidity,’ which remains my only improvised painting.

“I’m extremely glad that I avoided art lessons, since I cannot understand how surreal artists – artists whose works are assessed on uniqueness of expression – could benefit from an external mentor. I do have a university degree, but it’s in an unrelated field.”

The Medicine Tree by Featured Artist Michael O'Gorman!Is your media paint, ink, digital?  Of the twenty-eight artworks I have created to date, two are in pencil, one is in acrylic, and the rest are in oil. It didn’t take me long to graduate from acrylic to oil after completing ‘Perpetual Fluidity.’   Though I appreciated their boldness, I found acrylics a little too shallow for my tastes.  Moreover, their quick drying times maddened me; I’m a perfectionist, and I need to spend hours moving paint around the canvas until the colour gradients are seamless!

I read your method of deriving inspiration from words randomly chosen from the dictionary, but I am also interested in knowing those pieces that have personal meaning to you.  Talk to me about your favorite (non-random) piece.  My favourite piece to date is probably ‘Memoirs of a Fertile Imagination’ since I feel it encapsulates the most unique aspects of my style: An unlimited sense of flow (resulting in a non-existent focal point), anthropomorphism (giving human features to non-human subjects), and a playful tone. Its warmth always brings a smile to my face.” 

The Landscape Painter by Featured Artist Michael O'Gorman!You state that, “Working from life is plagiarism”.  That’s a pretty controversial way of explaining you’re not a fan of representational work.  What does that say about your view of photography?   “I appreciate photography to an extent, and the medium has incomparable value as a historical document. Unfortunately, while not everyone can compose music, write stories, or paint landscapes, everyone can take photographs. Consequently, photography has become the refuge of the amateur, and the online art world is now saturated with unremarkable photos that often eclipse the actual artwork.” Editor’s Note: Ouch.  Just in case you think this contest is rigged or biased, please note this is the second Featured Artist in a row that has, innocently enough, slammed some aspect of how I work.  Geez.  Guess it is good that I’m not thin-skinned.

A Corporate Ladder Deflating an Encapsulated Situation of Its Irony by Featured Artist Michael O'Gorman!What style or school of art do you think your work fits into and why?  “I’m comfortable with the surreal label, since Surrealism is an effective umbrella term for unusual artwork. I also feel that certain artworks of mine have Abstract and Visionary elements to them, though I don’t align myself with those movements.”

What artists (living and/or dead, famous or not) inspire you most?   I’m not a great art lover, and I can’t claim direct inspiration from other artists. That said, I do appreciate the works of Hieronymus Bosch, Pieter Bruegel, Salvador Dali, Jacek Yerka, and Zdizslaw Beksinski. I like artists whose works are unique and instantly recognisable – artists that don’t need to signature their paintings because no-one can imitate them in the first place.

Interview continues below Perpetual Fluidity.

Perpetual Fluidity by Featured Artist Michael O'Gorman!

You know we have to talk about food. What is your favorite? Though I’m from the UK, my mother is Italian and I was raised in a household where Mediterranean food reigned supreme: Pasta, salads, buffalo mozzarella, bruschetta, pizzas, etc.  Italian food still remains my favourite.

“I’m also a big fan of British desserts, especially fruit scones with clotted cream and homemade strawberry jam (served with English breakfast tea, of course). I honestly think I could eat that every day. In fact, when I’m elderly enough to get away with it, I probably will.”

A Multi-Instrumentalist’s Self-Performance by Featured Artist Michael O'Gorman!What about snack foods? “Probably arancini. They are balls of rice and cheese that have been fried and coated in breadcrumbs.” I have to admit, I have never heard of arancini, much less tasted it.  Fascinating.  That doesn’t happen often.

So, what’s coming up next for you? “In-between creating new artwork, I hope to put my existing artwork on sale for the first time.  I’ll also create a page on my website where people can buy prints of the original work.  After all, is a home truly a home without a framed print of a campfire transforming into a horned beast that writes algebra on an oversized blackboard pulsating with live flesh?  Definitely not!”

Michael, thank you for such a well-defined point of view and for being precisely that for which I was searching this month.

Learn more about Michael O’Gorman online!

Learn more about Featured Artist Michael O Gorman!

Save

ARTIST to LOVE: Debra Keirce

Peek-a-Boo, I See You

Say “Hello” to our newest Artist to Love, Debra Keirce!

Debra Keirce
Acrylic Painting
Center of Bombay, Acrylic Painting by Debra Keirce
Center of Bombay
Acrylic Painting
KEIRCE pursued a corporate career while building a business painting commissions—found in private collections the world over. Keirce then focused on galleries & museums. Drawn to small format, she began accumulating awards. She prefers urban landscapes & still life with a Trompe L’Oeil & photo-realism influence. Keirce paints, “colors & shapes with little or no regard to the entire subject until the very end of the painting process. One of the joys of painting is being surprised by the hyper realistic compositions that evolve from a very abstract, emotional creative zone.”

FAVORITE FOOD: Any vegetable on the planet!

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

CALL for ENTRIES: Fall Showcase

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!let there be
ORANGE

Let the pumpkin mania begin.  McDonald’s is peddling a pumpkin spice latte and every grocery store, roadside stand and farmers’ market is showcasing a plethora of pumpkins and gourds from the green and gnarly to the perfectly carrot-color orbs from which a million jack-o-lanterns will be carved. Meanwhile, I’ve given in and purchased pumpkin pie scented candles, ugh.  This Fall is time for you to showcase your talents–even if it is a painting of pumpkins.  Investigate…

Check out this Call for Entries from Oil Painters of America for their Fall Online Showcase. The entry fee is only $14 per image, but the prizes are huge. You DO have to be a member ($60 annual fee), but with three online showcases per year, it works out to be about the same as other shows. Take a look…

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

Learn more about the show from Oil Painters of America!CALL for ENTRIES:
Fall OPA Showcase

 

ELIGIBILITY: You must be an Associate  or Signature Member. Artists must reside in the United States, Canada or Mexico.

MEDIA:
Representational Oil painting

DEADLINE:
December 15, 2013

ENTRY FEE: $14 per painting

JUROR:  Greg Scheibel has always felt a strong connection to the outdoors. Throughout his life he has spent a great deal of time hiking, fishing, backpacking, and closely observing his surroundings, which has led to a deep appreciation for the remote locations and unspoiled beauty of the West, which is the main inspiration for his paintings. Greg paints on location as much as possible, trying to capture an honest record of the values, color, and feel of an area. The emotional connection to nature which is the result of these field studies, is the foundation for all of his work.

Swiftcurrent Falls Glacier Park by Greg ScheibelYears of drawing, pouring over art books, collecting and studying paintings of artists he admired, and a general accumulation of life’s experiences contribute to what he puts into his paintings. Although still relatively new to the professional art world, he began selling his work in 2005 and became a full time artist in 2007, he shows his work in some of the West’s finest Galleries and has been invited or juried into a number of prestigious shows. He has received several awards for his work, and scholarships from the Scottsdale Artists School, an Award of Excellence from the OPA on 3 occasions, and was recently awarded Signature Membership in that organization.  He has been listed as an ‘Artist to Watch’ in Southwest Art Magazine, and featured in Western Art Collector.

AWARDS: $3,000 for first place, $1,500 for second place and $500 for third place along with 10 honorable mentions

For complete details, Visit OPA online!

Download the Prospectus from Oil Painters of America!

CALL for ENTRIES: Summer Showcase

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!CHOCOLATE CHIP
on my shoulder

Summer has brought a new challenge to my cooking regime–going wheat-free.  No, it isn’t a whim, it is doctor’s orders.  I have a couple of health issues that my doctor believes is being aggravated by the inflammation that naturally accompanies the consumption of wheat.  But, classic Summer fare like chocolate chip cookies can’t be stricken from the menu, or I might get stricken from my house, ha.  So, I’ll just keep trying the get it right.  This next Call is for a classic media, and you have several chances to get it right this year.  Investigate…

Check out this Call for Entries from Oil Painters of America for their Summer Online Showcase. The entry fee is only $14 per image, but the prizes are huge. You DO have to be a member ($60 annual fee), but with three online showcases per year, it works out to be about the same as other shows. Take a look…

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

Learn more about the show from Oil Painters of America!CALL for ENTRIES:
OPA Showcase

 

ELIGIBILITY: You must be an Associate Member. Artists must reside in the United States, Canada or Mexico.

MEDIA:
Representational Oil painting

DEADLINE:
August 15, 2013

ENTRY FEE: $14 per painting

JUROR:  Kim Casebeer was born & raised in Kansas.  As part of a fourth generation farm family, she has been connected to the land for a long time.  Kim still lives in Kansas and draws her inspiration from the simplicity of the Flint Hills, an area of wide open ranch land.  “It’s a simple landscape,” she says.  “It’s not grandiose.  You have to spend some time and let it speak to you.”  These days Kim also feels at home painting in Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, Wyoming and Texas.  “I think the simplicity of the Kansas landscape has helped me find the essence of other places.  I’m able to focus on what’s important in a composition.  It’s as much about what’s not in the painting as what is.”

Work by Juror Kim Casebeer!Kim received her Bachelor of Fine Arts Degree from Kansas State University in 1992.  She worked as a graphic designer and art director in order to pay the bills, while spending evenings and weekends painting until 2002, when she was able to make the leap to full-time artist.  Kim has continued to study with artists such as Albert Handell, W. Scott Jennings, Michael Albrechtsen, Scott Christensen and Matt Smith.

Kim has work in many private, corporate and museum collections throughout the United States.  She is represented by American Legacy Gallery in Kansas City, Missouri; Grapevine Gallery in Oklahoma City; Hueys Fine Art in Santa Fe, New Mexico; K. Newby Gallery in Tubac, Arizona; Legacy Gallery in Scottsdale, Arizona and Jackson, Wyoming; and Strecker-Nelson Gallery in Manhattan, Kansas.

AWARDS: $3,000 for first place, $1,500 for second place and $500 for third place along with 10 honorable mentions

For complete details, Visit OPA online!

Download the Prospectus from Oil Painters of America!

FEATURED ARTISTS: Thayer & Van Patten

Learn more about Cara Thayer & Louie Van Patten!

PEARLS of plurality

The artist features had to evolve. Some days I feel like I’ve seen everything there is to be seen.  When that I happens, I go back to the basics in an effort to remember what I personally love about art.  I think about what the art that makes me want to BUY work. 

This month’s featured artist is a departure, among other reasons, because they are this month’s artists, plural.   Collaboration.   Complicated.  They are also portraitist, of sorts.  Simplicity.  Collaboration requires a perfect combination of  both ego-maniacal fanaticism and selflessness.  There isn’t a middle ground; it is a combination of extremes.  Raw perfection.  Two pearls in an oyster–distinctly different, but the same.  I am proud to announce Cara Thayer & Louie Van Patten as this months Featured Artists…

Blue Canvas Magazine Cover by Thayer and Van Patten

FEATURED ARTISTS:
Cara Thayer & Louie Van Patten

Cara Thayer was born in Panorama City, CA but grew up in Bend, OR.  She studied painting at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (not to be confused with the Art Institute of Chicago) and received her BFA in 2007.  Louie Van Patten was born in West Des Moines, IA.

They met in Chicago in events surrounding the attendance of a Pixies reunion show.

(If food wasn’t what brought them together, at least it was music.)  They both studied art at Central Oregon Community College under Bill Hoppe, who has been hugely influential on them. They have been collaborating since 2005, maintaining a day job together and painting on the side in Bend, until they went full-time with their art in 2008.

Chromatic Maladies V - part of a diptych by Cara Thayer and Louie Van PattenThey regularly show their art in Bend, Oregon and have participated in a handful of shows along the West Coast.  In 2011, they were selected to create the art for Deschutes Brewery’s annual , as well as being featured on the cover of BLUECANVAS magazine.

Talk to me about inspiration. “We are inspired by the little sweet spots of masterworks of art – – things in the margins, single frames from a film, faces and musculature in motion and in stasis. We are fascinated with flesh and the relationship between frame and canvas and skin and bone, the apertures of the face and the way intense light traces the contours of the skeleton under the skin. We are inspired by paint as paint and paint being an analogue of skin and viscera.

Saccadic II by Cara Thayer and Louie Van Patten“Our paintings could be considered to be at least quasi-biographical about paint itself, so paint and pigment are also very much a source of inspiration – – we are very medium-oriented at the moment, hopefully not to the point of the tail wagging the dog. It also just occurred to us that we’re probably a self-fueling fire as we inspire and invigorate each other. ”

What do you consider your media? Are these pieces strictly paint? “We are primarily infatuated with oil paint. We’re not sure that we’re strictly painters, though. A certain theatricality informs the work, being transduced into paint via photography. Our collaborative process first began with fiber art and work with resin and spray paint. It is likely we’ll return to more semi-sculptural fiber art at some point, especially as more opportunities for installations and public art surface. We very much enjoy working together and that is truly the only constant.”

Apertural - a triptych by Cara Thayer and Louie Van PattenClearly, portraiture has a strong influence in your work.  While I love the hands, I have to admit that I am drawn to the faces. “Portraiture does have an influence on the work, as does the general physicality of human forms, both formal and informal.  We tend to paint hands often, as they work as a portrait for people, rather than a specific person and they are also great armatures for paint.  We’re interested in faces for the apertures, as well as the effect of filling a canvas with the architecture of facial flesh.

Saccadic I by Cara Thayer and Louie Van Patten“We also enjoy the ambiguity that emerges from the truncation of the human face.  Some of the imagery emerges from the fact that we use ourselves as source material, the portraiture happens naturally, but not without intention. Creating an exaggerated representation of our process, the final image looks like two people struggling to fill the picture frame with only their face by brute force, but becoming one form instead.”  I find this an oddly poetic description of their own painting process.  Watch the video.

Do you have special terminology for how you collaborate?  “We do not have special terminology, although perhaps we should consider that. Conjunctive-painting? Bilateral art-making?

Tangled-arm painting? Shiva the Destroyer?

 

“As far as we know, the actual act of painting is painfully conventional in nearly every other way, aside from the fact there are two of us.

Chromatic Maladies IV by Cara Thayer and Louie Van Patten“Years ago, when we first starting making art, we created a website called thegryllus.com, as a way to loosely reference this four-armed method of painting.  Essentially, a gryllus is a creature comprised of other creatures with nameable parts, such as a griffin.  Our use of the word may be a little off, but the basic idea is that we work as one painter, made of the parts of two significantly different people.”

You know we have to talk about food. What is your favorite? “We’re very partial to scallops with a little sriracha, as well as pan-fried Brussels sprouts with Parmesan. For Louie, it might just be NY-style pepperoni pizza dipped in pukka sauce (hot sauce made with Jamaican scotch bonnet peppers).

Saccadic III by Cara Thayer and Louie Van PattenGenerally speaking, we’re big fans of cured meats, aged cheeses, raw vegetables, and craft beer, preferably all at once. Since we seem to drink more than we eat (nothing terribly excessive, we assure you), we’ll also mention that Cara is a gin girl and Louie is a bourbon/rye/scotch kind of guy.” I’ve never been to Oregon.  I’m thinking the Thayer-Van Patten household needs to make room for a visitor. Yum.

What about snack foods? “We love smoked oysters with crackers. We also both love popcorn. Being a normal person, Louie shoves handfuls in his face like a savage, but Cara meticulously picks apart each kernel like a total weirdo. Point being, we have a very hard time sharing a bag of popcorn. It is a good thing painting doesn’t resemble popcorn-eating, at least not in any way we’re aware of.”  For the record, I avoided asking which two hands of this four-armed monster wrote the interview responses.

So, what’s coming up next for you? “Ideally, a lifetime of painting. This is something one does not have to retire from, nor should they desire to.”

Thank you, Cara and Louie for bringing me back to what I love about art–raw perfection.  The connection between you translates to canvas as a visceral tie to all that is human in art.  Lovely.

Learn more about Thayer & Van Patten online!

Learn more about Thayer and Van Patten!

FEATURED ARTIST: Heather Workman Rios

Featured Artist Heather Workman RiosBACON, my salty friend

Every once in a while, I find a kindred spirit.  Some make me laugh so hard that my beverage squirts out my nose.  Some become an inspiration & motivation. And this one just understands.  I get her point of view just like I get that bacon makes everything better.

This artist has taken a less-than-traditional upbringing and turned it into life lessons for those that crave a little sweet with their salty.  Like bacon on a cupcake.  I am proud to announce the Featured Artist  Heather Workman Rios. Her artwork captures the joy of the ideal without falling prey to the sappy sentiment that often accompanies it. I find myself smiling and having my faith renewed.  Clever girl.

Featured Artist Heather Workman Rios!FEATURED ARTIST:
Heather Workman Rios

When she was very young, Rios lived in rural West Virginia in a pink farm house with no running water.  Her parents were hippies who had a gigantic vegetable garden, and raised chickens (her best friends).   “We dressed how we wanted (often a t-shirt with nothing else), and I had no interactions with the “outside” world until I was nearly four years old.   Then we moved to Morgantown, West Virginia, and I remember going grocery shopping with my grandmother.  Everyone commented on what a ‘cute little boy’ I was, and my grandmother was outraged.

“I couldn’t understand why.  I knew I was a girl.  Why was my grandmother so upset, after all, they thought I was ‘cute’!  Not too long afterwards, my grandmother took me clothes shopping, and began making clothes for me (dresses, mostly pink), and I soon learned that pink was the “girl” color.

Your milk is poison and your mother’s milk is poison by Heather RiosMy training had begun.

“My work chronicles my perception of human nature. They are clearly tainted by my stringent regimen of old fashioned, American gender training.  They display my love/hate relationship with the American concept of what it means to be a woman.”

I love the retro feel of your imagery contrasted with the dark undertone. Talk to me about that. “I have this love/hate relationship with anything from post WW2 to the mid sixties.  It was a really strange time in America because the War was over and people were optimistic and trying to build these sweet, innocent little domestic lives.  Yet many of them were also building fallout shelters and there was still segregation and all kinds of crazy stuff was going on.  To me this era epitomizes the  struggle that is much of the content of my work.  I believe people are inherently good, but yet they have this propensity towards choosing evil.”

El comienzo de mi muerte by Heather Rios!Do you consider yourself a painter? Something else? “To me, it’s not really about the media but about the content.  I’ll use whatever I feel fits the need of work I want to make.   I tend to reach for paint the most, probably because of it’s plasticity.  About 90% of my art is oil on wood panel.   I sometimes use bits of collage or cut-out paper.  I sort of like to keep people guessing as to which elements are collage and which are painted, but most of it is paint.  I’ve done sculptures and printmaking, and other mixed-media works also.” 

I’m a sucker for portraiture. Why do people feature so prominently in your work? “It’s funny because even though I spent most of my childhood in nature, the most interesting things to me, even out in the forest, were the man-made– in the form of artifacts that we never found.   I am just fascinated in general with human beings.

The assassin by Heather Workman Rios!“I attempt to look at modern humans from an outside perspective–like an anthropologist studying an extinct people group.  Material culture intrigues me– clothing, hairstyles, toys, etc.

“The human body really hasn’t changed that much in thousands of years, but our material culture changes constantly, and we impose an enormous amount of meaning on many of our objects.”

You know we have to talk about food. What is your favorite?  “It has to be bacon.  My favorite combo at the moment is bacon with fried plantains.”

Bacon really goes with everything–especially vegetables.

 

“I’m Italian and my husband is Puerto Rican, so I’ve been trying to combine our food together into new recipes.  So far I’ve discovered we have a mutual love for pork and garlic–but I don’t eat garlic unless he eats it too.” Wise move, sister.

Wasted time and horrible miscalculations by Heather Workman Rios!What about snack foods? “Anything Italian, anything fresh or crunchy.  Cheese is good…and bacon!” Italian, cheese and bacon.  I love you, Heather Rios.

So, what’s coming up next for you? “I don’t really have any big plans for my life right now.  I just plan to keep making art and see what happens.”  Once a hippie, always a hippie?

Thank you, Heather for giving me a dose of salty and sweet along with a wicked smile.  You have reminded me WHY I keep producing work.

Learn more about Heather Rios online!

Learn more about Featured Artist Heather Workman Rios!

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CALL for ENTRIES: Oil Painting

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!SAUCE ME UP

My father found steak sauce personally offensive.  He thought that the use of steak sauce was a not so subtle indication that his grilling skills were not up to par.  “The steak is perfect as it is,” he would say at every grilling opportunity.  I suppose it is a lesson learned.  Sometimes a steak is a steak, and a steak should be good enough.  Representational art, FOR ME, can sometimes be likened to a sauceless steak, wonderful as it is…just not my preference.  I know some of you do fantastic representational work, and I have a twinge of guilt that I don’t post more shows for you.  Hopefully this one will make up a little ground…

Check out this Call for Entries for the 21st Annual National Exhibition of Representational Oil Painings from Oil Painters of America to be exhibited at the Evergreen Fine Art Gallery in Evergreen, Colorado. The cost is high because you have to be a member, but the prizes are huge.  Make me proud…

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

CALL for ENTRIES: 21st Annual National Exhibition of Representational Oil Paintings

 

Learn more about the show from Oil Painters of America!ELIGIBILITY:  Artists who reside in the United States, Canada and Mexico and are 2012 OPA members or have submitted an application for membership or renewal for 2012 may apply for this exhibition.

MEDIA:  Representational oil paintings of original concept and design only.

DEADLINE:  February 24, 2012

NOTIFICATION:  March 21, 2012

ENTRY FEE: $30 for 1 submission, $45 for 2 submissions(not including your membership fee of $60). More membership information can be found on the OPA website, http://www.oilpaintersofamerica.com,  under the Member Services tab.

JURORS:  Ken Cadwallader, Signature Member and OPA Board Member, will serve as chairman of a Jurying Committee consisting of five Master Signature or Signature members of OPA.  The awarding juror will be internationally renowned Master Signature member Quang Ho.

AWARDS:  The total awards will be in excess of $75,000, including a $25,000 Best In Show.

SALES:  Commission of 40% is required by the gallery for all paintings sold.

For complete details, Download the Prospectus!

Download the Prospectus from Oil Painters of America!