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Tag: Photoshop

CALL for ENTRIES: Patterns

Learn more about Patterns Observed or Created from Exhibitions without Walls!don’t say the
E-WORD

My family is tired of eggs (aka the e-word).  We have lost access to farm fresh eggs temporarily, and as a result, our 3 dozen eggs per week have become a chore.  And, we are not quite sure how to do breakfast without eggs.  We have the occasional pancake day, but eggs (scrambled, fried & poached) are the norm.  We are trying to figure out how to break our food patterns & consider non-traditional breakfasts.  Patterns are captivating for a reason, and this next Call wants to see yours.  Investigate this opportunity…

Check out this Call for Entries from Exhibitions without Walls for Patterns Observed or Created.  $30 Entry. Open to photography & digital art + cash awards.  Take a look…

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

 

Learn more about Patterns Observed or Created from Exhibitions without Walls!CALL for ENTRIES:
Patterns

 

ELIGIBILITY:  Open to all artists

MEDIA: Photography & Digital Art

DEADLINE:  August 23, 2015

ENTRY FEE:  $30 for up to 5, $4 ea. add’l

JURORS:  Mark Fitzgerald is a photography teacher & author based in Portland, OR. He is a Photoshop expert & teaches at Newspace Center for Photography, the Portland Art Institute & other area colleges.  Richard Rownak has won numerous photography & fine art awards thorough out his career.  His work has been featured in Petersen’s Photographic, Pacific Southwest in-flight Magazine & Pacific Palisades Post.  Ellen Fisch has shown her fine art architectural photography, Novoimago, extensively in the U.S.  Exhibitions include solo & group shows, numerous libraries & galleries in NYC & many other locations.  Becky Najafi brings to the juror panel the perspective of an interior designer. Several of her clients have utilized fine art photography & digital art in either their homes or corporate settings.

AWARDS: Best In Competition:  $650 USD + Photo Bundle awarded by Alien Skin Software which includes Bokeh, Blow-Up, Exposure 5 and Snap Art 4; an online solo-exhibition; a press release will be sent out by EWW announcing and promoting the results of this competition to contacts that include: major media outlets, trade journals, social media, selected gallery owners and/or directors, corporate art representatives, interior designers and other buying markets. 2nd Place: $100 USD. 3rd Place: $50 USD.  And,  7 Awards Of Excellence will also be awarded.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Learn more about Patterns Observed or Created from Exhibitions without Walls!

 

FEATURED ARTIST: Robyn Thompson

Learn more about Featured Artist Robyn Thompsoneyes
& EARS
wide open

Hurray!  Our first featured artist since August comes from August & September entries to the Featured Artist Contest. I needed something new, something uncommon, or maybe just to revisit something with a different eye… like flint corn once all the summer ears have disappeared.  Guess what? I got exactly that…

This month’s artist works is a an intentional painter that developed, almost by accident, into a photographer. I appreciate the exuberance and optimism in this work –an opportunity to look with a new perspective, fresh eyes, if you will.

On behalf of ArtAndArtDeadlines.com, I am proud to announce the Featured Artist chosen from the August & September entries is Robyn Thompson. I find this work to be…a nod to a little something different.

Learn more about Featured Artist Robyn Thompson! AAAD FEATURED ARTIST:
Robyn Thompson

__

RoByn began her journey as an artist by being a face painter. She soon sought larger canvases and has been exploring the world of body painting for over a decade. She very much appreciates the support of her wonderful body painting models because without their bodies she would have nothing to paint on!

She initially painted bodies for several prominent photographers before picking up the camera herself.  Now she enjoys the creative control of the process from initial sketch of the body paint design through the painting process culminating in capturing the images on her trusty Nikon.

Body Painting by Featured Artist Robyn ThompsonRoByn’s artwork has been seen in such diverse places as the cover of Time Out New York, the Tyra Banks Show, HBO’s Flight of the Concords and Time Magazine’s website.

Are you self taught or formally instructed“I have a BA in visual arts. I barely graduated and didn’t really get much out of school. I was young and single parenting a toddler on the autism spectrum so it really wasn’t my priority. My areas of concentration were ceramic sculpture and paper making. I haven’t touched either in a couple of decades. I didn’t take a single drawing or painting class but really wish that I had. The things I learned aren’t relevant to my current work and I learned not a single thing about the marketing of art.”

Why paint bodies, such a temporary canvas?  And, was the photography a way to have a more permanent format to exhibit?  “I’ve never had a formal painting class. I was initially intimidated by the idea of painting on canvas. It’s such a permanent thing. I really embraced the temporary nature of body painting and found it very freeing. It was ok to take chances because it would all be gone tomorrow.

Body Painting by Featured Artist Robyn Thompson“I initially worked with photographers as a way to document my work. I learned photography as a way to get the images more like I wanted them. Exhibition has never been the focus. I just do what I do because I have a need to do it.

“Body painting is actually a very, very small part of what I do these days. I’ve just finished shooting an inclusive nude tarot deck using light painting. The 81 cards have models ranging from 18 to 76 and from under 100 to over 300 lbs.”

Your work is both fantastical AND oddly organic.  Talk to me about your inspiration.   “I like transformation.  I like ambiguity.  I like magic.  Body painting got its start as a magical religious thing.  I want to bring that back.”

Why the objection to touching up you work in Photoshop?  What would this technological aid change for you about what makes you work your own? 

Body Painting by Featured Artist Robyn ThompsonI think that Photoshop is often used as a shortcut or as a cheat.  When I was working with photographers, I had my body painting Photoshopped several times without permission.  I’ve seen body painters use it to fix blotchy spots or shaky lines.  I think it compromised the integrity of the work.  It is easier to fix something in post rather than do it right the 1st time. 

“My strong anti-Photoshop bias but me in the minority, but I am not alone on this.  I’ve seen instances of photos being disqualified from competitions because of unscrupulous Photoshopping.  In the light painting world, Photoshop is pretty much frowned upon.  That said, I think it’s an amazing tool.” *Editor’s Note: Since my work is dependent upon photo editing, I clearly disagree. 

What style or school of art do you think your work fits into and why?   “I don’t know where my work fits. It’s a problem for me with trying to get my work out. I feel like our current system encourages artists to be pigeon-holed within a specific medium or genre. Life is too short. I want to explore and play.

“I think doing what I’m doing feeds my soul
and likely hurts my pocketbook.”

 

Body Painting by Featured Artist Robyn ThompsonYou know we have to talk about food. What is your favorite?  I’m a chocoholic who is trying to go sugar-free so I’ve cut out chocolate among many, many things. I think for the shear sensuousness of it, nothing beats eating a mango naked. Smoked Gouda also rocks my world.”  A life without chocolate isn’t worth living, Robyn.

What about snack foods?  “Chocolate.  Hands down.  Chocolate pudding.  Ohhhhhhhhh, warm chocolate pudding with just a dash of milk.”  Either she gave up her sugar ban already or she’s snackless.  Let’s hope for the former.

So, what’s coming up next for you?  “I’ve just finished getting the tarot deck ready for publication, and I have 4 new series that I’ve just gotten the necessary supplies for. Two of them involve 3d constructions of dreams. The 3rd is a photographic series that is my take on the classical vanitas or memento mori.  And, there’s also a project that I just worked out the concepts for that involve stuffed animals from one’s childhood. Body painting and painting with light photography both continue to interest me, so I’ll keep doing that. I also remain fascinated with fractals kaleidoscopes & glitches so you can expect them to pop up somewhere.  And because, I am a madwoman, I try to do a painting a day. ”

Robyn, thanks for sending me something newI needed it.

Learn more about Robyn Thompson online!

Learn more about Featured Artist Robyn Thompson!

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The ART of Cooking: Get an Art Show

The ART of Cooking: How To Get an Art Show

Read carefully!As a Gallery Director for more than a decade, I have been asked over and over for “tricks” or “tips” to getting into group and solo shows.  Well, your art should be good, or at least promising–that should be the most important fact.  But to tell the truth, there’s a gallery out there for most art– the sumptuous, bland and the sour.

ArtAndArtDeadlines.com is not intended to be used exclusively by the burgeoning artist that needs a place to start.  But, a lot of the artists that have been working for years still make the same rookie mistakes, too.  So, for the record and BEFORE the first deadlines post, I offer you The ART of Cooking:  How to Get a Show

Read the Recipe!1. Read the Recipe.  If you are trying to build your artistic resume, I recommend starting with juried group shows.  Most galleries offer an online prospectus that you can download and/or print.  Read them carefully from start to finish and follow directions.  Don't Harass the Juror!Make sure you are sending your submissions in the right size, right format, with the right payment and on time.  Make sure that you clearly understand the theme, if applicable.  If you don’t understand it, don’t submit because you’re wasting your money.

2. A Watched Pot Never Boils.  The deadline for notifications on a juried show has passed, and you haven’t received word.  Do you call?  Do you email?  No and No.  Artists are often deadline-challenged and so are jurors.  Here's a blog on napkin art...just to prove me wrong (and right)!Be patient; they’ll get back to you. 

3. Research Ingredients.  Be careful to always use quality ingredients–canvas, primers, paints.  With rare exception, hot glue and craft paint is discouraged.  It never fails that the one time you’re goofing around sketching on the back of a napkin–you’ll create a masterpiece.  A masterpiece can be copied but never duplicated.  Doodles on the back of a Waffle House napkin are not often sought after for gallery shows.  Click Here to read a blog on napkin art proving me both wrong …and right.Package Yourself for the Show AND Gallery!

4. Wear Your Chef Whites.  Self-taught artists are often treated like the dishwasher in a 5-star restaurant.  You have to prove you can cook with the best of them.  First, do your research.  Understand the gallery’s mission and previous shows.  Learn about both the gallery director and the jurors.  Google is your friend. Second, package yourself for the show and the gallery.  Do not lie on your resume (ever…and I mean it), but learn to present the side of you and your work that they want to see.

You will get rejected...It is inevitable.5. Spilled Milk.  You WILL be rejected regardless of the quality of the work.  It is inevitable.  Keep records of every entry.  Know exactly what you sent and when.  Keep all rejection letters.   When it is time to send out a submission, you can then figure out what hasn’t worked and where.  Don’t send duplicate work to the same gallery.  Send in only your best work!Sometimes you will even get an HONEST rejection letter that will teach you where your recipe went oh so wrongClick Here to read one artist’s personal rejection letters.

6. Cream Only Please.  Learn how to self edit.  Don’t send all your work to a gallery for review.  Only send the cream.  An artist does not exist whose hollandaise hasn’t curdled.  Allow yourself the freedom to create bad work occasionally…just don’t send it to a gallery, please.

Check out these Cheetos sculptures!7. No Cheetos. Photoshop is a wonderful thing. Color correction is a wonderful thing.  It is amazing what you can do to the photo you took on the grayish wall in your bedroom lit only by the single bulb suspended over your bed.  However, if your still-life oil of bananas does not glow like Cheetos in the original, don’t oversaturate it after the fact.  If your little banana souflee is juried into a show and fails to rise on arrival, it will be returned to you C.O.D.

Iron the Tablecloth--I beg of you!8. Iron the Tablecloth.  Granted, not all artists are photographers, and not all artists can afford professional photographers.  Not being a photographer does not excuse bad backdrops.  If I see one more piece of sculpture shot in front of a wrinkled tablecloth, I may lose my appetite–permanently.  Iron the tablecloth.

Check out this Blog on Sandwich Art!9. Bread Doesn’t Make the Sandwich.  The same sentiment is true of frames.  The fastest way to have your slides or CD thrown in the trash is to put a bright brass sectional frame on your work.  Either frame your work conservatively or photograph your work unframed.  I prefer to crop images tight so as not to distract the juror by framing, edges or backgrounds.  Alternately, use gallery wrapped canvas.  I’m a big fan of Cheap Joe’s Prime Extra Deep Canvas–no framing required.

These are the tips that pop to mind, but I’ll keep this post updated as a page called The ART of Cooking.  Send a link to your friends! Email me if you have any questions or suggestions.

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