Friday, April 29, 2016
Thursday, April 28, 2016
Art Scam Alert!
Be careful with this mutant:
From: Susan Martez (info1@barbedtapewire.com)
Dear Frien
We are interested in purchasing your product,Kindly reply us with your company business terms and conditions so that we can place a trial order ASAPWaiting for your timely replyBest regardSusan MartezPurchasing ManagerLumach Groups Company LimitedAddress: 055 Quatics blkNorth CarolinaZip:610026United state.Tele:1-870-399047204sale@lumachgroups.com
Paintings ‘stolen’ from the Internet
It’s a show called “Can t you sue ppl for stealing tweets isn’t that playjarism?” and it consists of 15 oil paintings, none of which were made by Lavoie. He didn’t even see them until the day they were installed, though he came up with the ideas, negotiated with subcontractors and signed off on every stage of the work. He did everything that a creative director and project manager would do at an ad agency, except that he didn’t have to get a client’s approval.Read here the details of this fascinating approach to 21st century art (which in variant forms has been employed by artists since the atelier was invented).
Wednesday, April 27, 2016
$25,000 reward for stolen Warhol prints
Sometime between the evening of April 6 and the morning of April 7, thieves broke in to the Springfield Art Museum and stole seven screen prints by pop artist Andy Warhol, and as of today, April 22, they are still missing. The prints were part of a series of ten prints depicting Campbell’s Soup cans and were some of Warhol’s most famous and recognizable work.Read the whole story here, and then read here why these prints can only be sold on the black market and whoever buys them has to know that they're stolen.
Tuesday, April 26, 2016
Next month...
Bethesda Fine Arts Festival
May 14, 10am - 6pm and May 15, 10am - 5pm
130 artists from throughout the United States and Canada will converge in Bethesda's Woodmont Triangle for the Bethesda Fine Arts Festival. Along with booths of fine art and fine craft, the festival will feature live musical, great eats from Bethesda restaurants and a children's activity area.
Join them for a unique shopping experience in downtown Bethesda. Browse jewelry, furniture, painting, photography, sculpture and more.
Admission to the festival is free and free parking is available in the public parking garage on Auburn Avenue. This event is held rain or shine.
Monday, April 25, 2016
$25K painting competition
Canton, OH is the birthplace of the NFL. ArtsinStark, the County Arts Council, invites any professional artist living in America to submit concept for a $25,000 commission to create a painting celebrating the fact that in 1946 --- a full year before Jackie Robinson began playing professional baseball ---- 4 African American football players brought about the permanent reintegration of pro football: Marion Motley, Bill Willis, Woody Strode, and Kenny Washington.
This call is just for a concept for the painting.
The artist selected in May will receive $25,000 to create the painting. ArtsinStark will display the painting, and also use the image to celebrate this important historical moment in other forms, including making it into a large mural for the Canton Arts District as part of The ELEVEN project. Details of call at www.artsinstark.com/91 Go to www.CallForEntry.org to submit concept by May 6. See trailer for “Forgotten Four”
Free Parking: Salon-Style Conversation at the Alper!
May 5th
5:30-7:00 pm
Join the Alper for the second session of Free Parking, a series of salon-style conversations in the Alper Initiative for Washington Art. It could get rowdy as we review the life and art of musicians in the 70s and 80s DC Punk and New Wave music scenes. Special guests Bill Warrell and Michael Olshonsky.
This event is free and open to anyone interested in discussing the art and artists of the Washington Metropolitan area. Space is limited.
More Info
Wanna go to a cool panel + closing party this Saturday?
Come talk to the critics and meet the artist for the closing of 'The Critiqued' at The Otis Street Art Project.
Zofie Lang
Christian Tribastone
Ceci Cole McInturff
Amy Hughes Braden
Jose Fernandez
Alexandra Silverthorne
Fallon Chase
Amber Robles-Gordon
Joan Belmar
Katie Pumphrey
Steven Durow
Jacqui Crocetta
Stephanie Booth
If you have not seen this show yet it's a must see. They are open Saturdays 12-5, Tue-Fri by appointment.
See the review in the Washington Post here.
Otis Street Arts Project
3706 Otis Street
Mount Rainier, MD 20712
202.550.4634
mailto:Info@OtisStreetArts.org
OtisStreetArts.org
We are honored to have our distinguished critics F. Lennox Campello, Adah Rose Bitterbaum, Michael O’Sullivan to return. We will revisit common artistic issues discussed throughout the year and the critiqued experience.Exhibiting Artists:
Doors open at 6pm
Panel 6:30-7:30pm
Party 7:30-8:30pm
Zofie Lang
Christian Tribastone
Ceci Cole McInturff
Amy Hughes Braden
Jose Fernandez
Alexandra Silverthorne
Fallon Chase
Amber Robles-Gordon
Joan Belmar
Katie Pumphrey
Steven Durow
Jacqui Crocetta
Stephanie Booth
If you have not seen this show yet it's a must see. They are open Saturdays 12-5, Tue-Fri by appointment.
See the review in the Washington Post here.
Otis Street Arts Project
3706 Otis Street
Mount Rainier, MD 20712
202.550.4634
mailto:Info@OtisStreetArts.org
OtisStreetArts.org
Sunday, April 24, 2016
(Re)Invention: Art + Innovation + Disability + Design
Entry Deadline: 6/1/16
First Prize $20,000! A juried exhibition of emerging young artists with disabilities, ages 16-25, showcasing artwork created at the intersection of technology, innovation, and disability. 15 finalists share a total of $60,000 in cash prizes, with a 1st prize of $20,000.
Details here.
First Prize $20,000! A juried exhibition of emerging young artists with disabilities, ages 16-25, showcasing artwork created at the intersection of technology, innovation, and disability. 15 finalists share a total of $60,000 in cash prizes, with a 1st prize of $20,000.
Details here.
Friday, April 22, 2016
The Looking Glass: Artist Immigrants to Washington
The Looking Glass: Artist Immigrants to Washington
June 18–August 14, 2016
Opening Reception: June 18, 6-8PM
Naul Oleja, Fleeing From the Storm, 1981 |
The Alper Initiative for Washington Art presents the work of ten artists who immigrated to Washington, DC from Latin America under duress during the past fifty years, found homes in Washington, and made or are making positive contributions to our artistic culture and quality of life.
- Joan Belmar
- Jose Ygnacio Bermudez
- Lenny Campello
- Irene Clouthier
- Juan Downey
- Ric Garcia
- Muriel Hasbun
- Frida Larios
- Carolina Mayorga
- Naul Ojeda
Artists who left their homes in Chile, Colombia, Cuba, El Salvador, Mexico, and Uruguay.
American University Museum
Tel: 202-885-1300
Fax: 202-885-1140
4400 Massachusetts Ave NW
Washington, DC 20016
Admission Free
Thursday, April 21, 2016
The art of money
The recent decision to replace Andrew Jackson with Harriet Tubman, like nearly anything in the last few years, seems to have multiple political and social angles and views, depending on where your dogma lies.
The right wing should be rejoicing, as Tubman was a strong supporter of gun rights, and a vibrant activist for the Republican Party. Jackson, on the other hand, was a Democrat.
As a result, essentially a Republican has replaced a Democrat on the twenty spot... not just any Democrat, but the founder of the Democratic Party!... cough, cough.
Personally, I'm more interested in the art angle aspect of this decision, hoping against all odds that the new Tubman $20 bill will be a bit more "artsy" than existing US money.
While the US dollar is the king of the hill when it comes to money, there's a vast chasm in art appeal in American money from many other countries.
Don't get me wrong, most countries have pretty boring bills, more often than not copying the style of the US dollar. Even the dirty, rotten Commies in Cuba use the "dollar style" here and there, such as in the case of the homophobic, racist, mass murderer Che Guevara three pesos bill:
And OK, the twenty Euro bill doesn't even look like money, but more like a coupon that you get in the mail or a ticket to a soccer game, or 20% discount at AC Moore's.
But before the Euro took over, European denominations were works of art in their diverse and colorful beauty. Check out the beautiful landscape in this Spanish 1000 peseta bill:
Or art! See how Delacroix and the other figures look like rough drawing sketches from his Liberty Leading the People (La liberté guidant le people) 1830 painting?, not to mention bare tits, on this French 100 francs bill:
We will never see a woman's breasts on any American money - ever!
In Latin America, a few decades ago, most currency bills had the same style as the US dollar - but the introduction of technology to reduce fake bills also brought an opportunity to revamp their bills, and even to introduce women imagery - an interesting accomplishment in these macho societies. My favorite? Frida Kahlo in the Mexican 500 pesos bill. She's on the back, and her husband, the very ugly Diego Rivera, is on the front... cough, cough.
African countries also have gorgeous money, and plenty of females on their currency. Cameroon, in particular, has some beautiful women on their bills, although they seem to have an odd fixation with blue-eyed African women?
And then Costa Rica rocks the animal world with this super cool image of a Great White:
But to get back on topic (boring US currency design), perhaps the new $20 bill could start by taking baby steps. How about if the image of Tubman breaks the usual compositional plane of the rectangular dollar note? Have Tubman really breaking out of the composition and leading American currency to new design heights?
Nearly all the suggested designs here are boring, although a few do take my suggestion and break the compositional plane.
This image below (via) begins to really re-composition US money, although it stands a snowball's chance in hell to ever be in any bill - but it has the artistic compositional elements that I visualize (breaking the plane of the rectangle).
Baby steps...
The right wing should be rejoicing, as Tubman was a strong supporter of gun rights, and a vibrant activist for the Republican Party. Jackson, on the other hand, was a Democrat.
As a result, essentially a Republican has replaced a Democrat on the twenty spot... not just any Democrat, but the founder of the Democratic Party!... cough, cough.
Personally, I'm more interested in the art angle aspect of this decision, hoping against all odds that the new Tubman $20 bill will be a bit more "artsy" than existing US money.
While the US dollar is the king of the hill when it comes to money, there's a vast chasm in art appeal in American money from many other countries.
Don't get me wrong, most countries have pretty boring bills, more often than not copying the style of the US dollar. Even the dirty, rotten Commies in Cuba use the "dollar style" here and there, such as in the case of the homophobic, racist, mass murderer Che Guevara three pesos bill:
And OK, the twenty Euro bill doesn't even look like money, but more like a coupon that you get in the mail or a ticket to a soccer game, or 20% discount at AC Moore's.
But before the Euro took over, European denominations were works of art in their diverse and colorful beauty. Check out the beautiful landscape in this Spanish 1000 peseta bill:
Or art! See how Delacroix and the other figures look like rough drawing sketches from his Liberty Leading the People (La liberté guidant le people) 1830 painting?, not to mention bare tits, on this French 100 francs bill:
We will never see a woman's breasts on any American money - ever!
In Latin America, a few decades ago, most currency bills had the same style as the US dollar - but the introduction of technology to reduce fake bills also brought an opportunity to revamp their bills, and even to introduce women imagery - an interesting accomplishment in these macho societies. My favorite? Frida Kahlo in the Mexican 500 pesos bill. She's on the back, and her husband, the very ugly Diego Rivera, is on the front... cough, cough.
African countries also have gorgeous money, and plenty of females on their currency. Cameroon, in particular, has some beautiful women on their bills, although they seem to have an odd fixation with blue-eyed African women?
And then Costa Rica rocks the animal world with this super cool image of a Great White:
Or this beautiful butterfly:But to get back on topic (boring US currency design), perhaps the new $20 bill could start by taking baby steps. How about if the image of Tubman breaks the usual compositional plane of the rectangular dollar note? Have Tubman really breaking out of the composition and leading American currency to new design heights?
Nearly all the suggested designs here are boring, although a few do take my suggestion and break the compositional plane.
This image below (via) begins to really re-composition US money, although it stands a snowball's chance in hell to ever be in any bill - but it has the artistic compositional elements that I visualize (breaking the plane of the rectangle).
Baby steps...
Opportunities for Artists
Opportunities
Artists Can Apply to Plein Air Festivals
Plein Air painting is a phrase borrowed from the French meaning "open air” and is used to describe the act of painting outdoors where an artist reproduces the visual conditions at the time of the painting. Maryland is home to a dozen Plein Air festivals. Below are upcoming opportunities for artists to participate:
Plein Air painting is a phrase borrowed from the French meaning "open air” and is used to describe the act of painting outdoors where an artist reproduces the visual conditions at the time of the painting. Maryland is home to a dozen Plein Air festivals. Below are upcoming opportunities for artists to participate:
- 2016 Solomons Plein Air Festival application and prospectus are available now for the September 12-18 event. Applications accepted through April 15. Click here to apply.
- Howard County Arts Council seeks artists to take part in the juried portion of Paint It! Ellicott City 2016. The annual Paint-Out is July 7-10 in Ellicott City. A minimum of $5,000 in total awards go to participating artists. Deadline is April 29. Register here.
- Art League of Ocean City’s 2016 Plein Air event is August 11-14. Registration is open. Artists will take to the boardwalk, streets, harbors, bay and marshes. Register here.
- Harford County Second International Plein Air Art Festival is Oct. 10-15. Click here to find out about future registration dates.
Wednesday, April 20, 2016
Campello at auction
This gorgeous framed 1999 limited edition print of mine just showed up for sale on the secondary market, and they're taking offers. Check it out here.
Sunbather Limited Edition Print Framed to 16x20 inches c. 1999 by F. Lennox Campello |
Tuesday, April 19, 2016
Monday, April 18, 2016
DCCAH Launches FY17 Arts and Humanities Grants
On Thursday, April 14, 2016, the DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities (DCCAH) launched its project and arts and humanities fellowship grant programs for funding in Fiscal Year 2017. Funding opportunities are available for District artists and humanities professionals and non-profit organizations.
"Public funding for the arts and humanities is an investment in our local artists and cultural organizations that actively support and grow our creative economy," said Arthur Espinoza, Jr., Executive Director of DCCAH. "These grant funds will help support a wide range of activities and programs for the benefit of District residents."
Applications for nine different grant programs are currently being accepted, with deadlines to apply beginning May 18, 2016. Grant applications are reviewed by independent panels of arts and humanities professionals and community members who make recommendations to the DCCAH Board of Commissioners.
DCCAH will offer workshops in April and May to provide assistance for applicants. Additionally, applicants may schedule a meeting with a member of the DCCAH grants department for assistance in preparing an application.
For a complete listing of grant programs and guidelines, and to submit an application, visit www.dcarts.dc.gov.
"Public funding for the arts and humanities is an investment in our local artists and cultural organizations that actively support and grow our creative economy," said Arthur Espinoza, Jr., Executive Director of DCCAH. "These grant funds will help support a wide range of activities and programs for the benefit of District residents."
Applications for nine different grant programs are currently being accepted, with deadlines to apply beginning May 18, 2016. Grant applications are reviewed by independent panels of arts and humanities professionals and community members who make recommendations to the DCCAH Board of Commissioners.
DCCAH will offer workshops in April and May to provide assistance for applicants. Additionally, applicants may schedule a meeting with a member of the DCCAH grants department for assistance in preparing an application.
For a complete listing of grant programs and guidelines, and to submit an application, visit www.dcarts.dc.gov.
Sunday, April 17, 2016
Opportunities
Mid Atlantic Arts Foundation through its Creative Fellowships program annually supports residencies for writers, composers, and visual artists at the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts. The visiting artist is provided with a private studio, room and board, and the company of other artists from around the nation, for an intensive period of self-guided creative exploration and development. In addition to sponsorship support, a modest travel subsidy is awarded to the selected artist.
Interested artists in Delaware, Maryland, New York, and West Virginia should apply directly to the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts. More information is available here.
Interested artists in Delaware, Maryland, New York, and West Virginia should apply directly to the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts. More information is available here.
The next deadline for applications is May 15, 2016.
Saturday, April 16, 2016
Richard Weiblinger: Hard work pays off
A common complaint from artists is "lack of exhibition opportunities." I usually address this in my Bootcamp for Artists seminar, but (at least in the DMV) there are plenty of exhibition opportunities.
Empirical data? Look at the enviable number of yearly shows that DMV area photographer Richard Weiblinger has been part of since 2011. Check out his work here.
Hard work pays off.
- Delaplaine Visual Arts Center Frederick, MD Solo invitational exhibition November 2016
- ArtSpace Herndon Gallery group invitational juried exhibition Herndon, Va. September 2016
- "Water" SE Center for Photography juried exhibition Greenville, South Carolina April 2016
- "Red" A. Smith Gallery invitational juried exhibition Johnson City, Texas April 2016
- "Blossoms of Hope: Moving Forward" 7th Annual juried invitational exhibition Columbia, MD April 2016
- Weinberg Center for the Arts solo invitational exhibition Frederick, MD April 2016
- Marymount University Barry Gallery Arlington, Va. two person invitational exhibition January - March 2016
- 47th Annual LAG juried exhibition at Montpelier Arts Center Main Gallery March 2016
- Circle Gallery juried invitational exhibit Maryland Federation of Art, Annapolis, MD Janaury 2016
- “Maryland State of Mind” Maryland General Assembly Maryland House of Delegates Lowe House Office Building Annapolis, MD January -April 2016
- "Magical Realism" The Arts Barn juried invitational exhibition Gaithersburg, MD December, 2015
- Washington Artworks Gallery Rockville, MD juried invitational Exhibition Decemberl 2015
- Montpelier Art Center Library Gallery Solo invitational exhibition September 2015
- "Au Naruel" DelRay Artisans Gallery juried invitational exhibition Alexandria, VA August, 2015
- Washington Printmakers Gallery juried national small works exhibition Washington, DC August 2015
- University of Maryland The Art Gallery: Maryland Federation of Art juried invitational exhibition College Park, MD June 2015
- McLean Project for the Arts juried invitational exhibition Mclean, VA. June 2015
- Hill Center Galleries juried exhibition Washington, DC June 2015
- "Transformations" Pyramid Atlantic Art Center juried invitational exhibition Silver Spring, MD May 2015
- Gallery at Penn Place juried invitational exhibition Bethesda, MD May 2015
- Washington Artworks Gallery Rockville, MD solo invitational Exhibition April 2015
- "My Little Town" Photoworks Gallery, invitational juried exhibit Glen Echo, Md April 2015
- ArtSpace Herndon Gallery "Fine Art Photography Exhibit" Herndon, Va. March 2015
- "Focal Point" Circle Gallery juried invitational exhibit Maryland Federation of Art, Annapolis, MD March 2015
- “The Guild” Maryland General Assembly Maryland House of Delegates Lowe House Office Building Annapolis, MD February 2014
- “What’s On Your Mind” Strathmore Mansion Gallery North Bethesda, MD 24th Annual Strathmore Fine Arts juried exhibition February 2015
- "The White Show” Washington Artworks Urban by Nature Gallery Rockville, MD juried Exhibition January 2015
- Montpelier Arts Center Main Gallery PAL 24th Annual Juried Exhibition Laurel, MD December 2014
- “Focus” Delaplaine Visual Arts Center Frededrick, MD juried Exhibition Juror: Frank Van Riper August 2014
- Glenview Mansion Gallery Rockville, MD invitational Exhibition September 2014
- Hill Center Galleries Washington, DC juried Exhibition Juror: Phiip Kennicott Art Critic The Washington Post October 2014
- “Beach Comber Art” AnnMarie Art Center Dowell, MD juried Exhibition August 2014
- “Florally Inspired” Dorchester Center for the Arts Cambridge, MD invitational Exhibition June 2014
- University of Maryland Art Gallery "MD Art at College Park" College Park, MD juried Exhibition June 2014
- "A Burst of Color” Washington Artworks Urban by Nature Gallery Rockville, MD juried Exhibition May 2014
- Maryland Federation of Art Circle Gallery Annapolis, MD juried Exhibition April 2014
- 37th Annual Art on Paper Maryland Federation of Art Circle Gallery Annapolis, MD juried Exhibition March 2014
- “Unique Visions” Hodgson Art Gallery Frederick Community College Frederick, MD Solo Exhibition March 2014
- “Warmer” Whitaker Gallery Hood College Frederick, MD invitational Exhibition March 2014
- Montpelier Arts Center Main Gallery LAG 45th Annual Juried Exhibition Laurel, MD March 2014
- ArtSapce Herndon Fine Art Photography juried exhibition Herdon, VA March 2014
- Strathmore Mansion Gallery North Bethesda, MD 23rd Annual Strathmore Fine Arts juried exhibition March 2014
- “Love is in the Air” Photoworks Gallery Glen Echo, MD juried exhibition March 2014
- “A Case of the Reds” Maryland General Assembly Lowe House Office Building Annapolis, MD January 2014
- “Color in January” iDorchester Center for the Arts Cambridge, MD invitational Exhibition January 2014
- Maryland Federation of Art Circle Gallery Annapolis, MD juried Exhibition January 2014
- “A celebration of Color” Washington Gallery of Photography Rockville, MD juried Exhibition January 2014
- Montpelier Arts Center Main Gallery PAL 23rd Annual Juried Exhibition Laurel, MD December 2013
- “Up Close and Personal” BlackRock Center for the Arts Main Gallery Solo Exhibition November 2013
- Maryland Federation of Art Circle Gallery Annapolis, MD juried Exhibition September 2013
- Maryland Federation of Art Circle Gallery Annapolis, MD 13th Annual American Landscapes juried Exhibition August 2013
- “Local Color 2013” Artists' Gallery Columbia, MD juried Exhibition July 2013
- MD Art at College Park University of Maryland Art Gallery College Park, MD juried Exhibition June 2013
- Maryland Federation of Art Circle Gallery Annapolis, MD juried Exhibition 2nd Place Award May 2013
- “Drawing for Art” Strathmore Mansion Gallery North Bethesda, MD juried exhibition April 2013
- Montpelier Arts Center Main Gallery LAG 44th Annual Juried Exhibition Laurel, MD March 2013
- Maryland General Assembly Lowe House Office Building Annapolis, MD “On The Verge” invitational Exhibition February 2013
- “Points of View” Strathmore Mansion Gallery North Bethesda, MD juried exhibition January 2013
- “Nature in Focus” Howard County Center for the Arts Ellicott City, MD invitational Exhibition January 2013
- Maryland Federation of Art Circle Gallery Annapolis, MD juried Exhibition January 2013
- Montpelier Arts Center Main Gallery PAL 22nd Annual Juried Exhibition Laurel, MD December 2012
- Delaplaine Visual Arts Center Frederick, MD 2nd Annual Juried Photography Exhibition November 2012
- “Focus on Color” The Arts Barn Gaithersburg MD invitational Exhibition November 2012
- “Under the Influence” Harmony Hall Arts Center Gallery Fort Washington, MD invitational Exhibition October 2012
- “Let There be Color” BlackRock Center for the Arts Main Gallery Solo Exhibition October 2012
- York Art Association Woodward Gallery York, PA 42nd Annual Juried Exhibition October 2012
- “Xl-XS University of Maryland Art Gallery College Park, MD juried Exhibition August 2012
- Maryland Federation of Art Circle Gallery Annapolis, MD “12th Annual American Landscapes juried Exhibition August 2012 Jurors Choice Award
- “Unique Visions” Bernice Kish Gallery at Slayton House Columbia, MD Solo Exhibition September 2012
- Maryland Federation of Art Circle Gallery Annapolis, MD juried Exhibition July 2012
- Maryland Federation of Art Circle Gallery Annapolis, MD juried Exhibition May 2012 Honorable Mention
- Gallery West Alexandria, VA 15th Annual National juries Exhibition June 2012
- “Photographic Visions” Ratner Museum Bethesda, MD invitational Exhibition June 2012
- Gettysburg College Schmucker Art Gallery Gettysburg, PA 9th Annual ACAC Juried Exhibition June 2012
- “Lotta Art” School 33 Art Center Baltimore, MD invitational Exhibition April 2012
- Art Association of Harrisburg Harrisburg, PA invitational Exhibition April 2012
- Montpelier Arts Center Main Gallery LAG 43rd Annual Juried Exhibition Laurel, MD March 2012
- Maryland Federation of Art Circle Gallery Annapolis, MD “35th Art on Paper” National juried Exhibition March 2012
- “Focus on Color” Gardiner Gallery Delaplaine Visual Arts Center Frederick, MD Solo exhibition February 2012
- “Memories from all Directions” Maryland General Assembly Lowe House Office Building Annapolis, MD invitational Exhibition January 2012
- “Small Wonders” Maryland Federation of Art Circle Gallery Annapolis, MD National juried Exhibition December 2011
- “Visions” Washington Gallery of Photography Rockville, MD Juried Exhibition November 2011 Maryland Federation of Art Circle Gallery Annapolis, MD juried Exhibition June 2011
- Academy Art Museum Easton, MD “Focus on Flowers” Solo exhibition June 2011
- Maryland Federation of Art Circle Gallery Annapolis, MD juried Exhibition May 2011
- Fraser Gallery Bethesda, MD 10th International Fine Art Photography Exhibition March 2011
- Montpelier Arts Center Main Gallery LAG 42nd Annual Juried Exhibition Laurel, MD March 2011
- Strathmore Mansion Gallery North Bethesda, MD “20th Annual Fine Arts Exhibition” juried exhibition February 2011
Friday, April 15, 2016
Opportunity for Artists
Deadline: May 31, 2016.
Face Value: Rutgers University - A portrait is a likeness of an individual which may be portrayed through painting, sculpture, photography or drawing. The image will usually consist of the face and sometimes other aspects of the sitter’s physical presence which reflect the stature, character and/or temperament of the individual. This group exhibition will draw on contemporary portraits to explore notions of ‘value’ which are embedded in the tradition of portraiture. In this age of social media the ubiquitous ‘selfie’ has democratized the portraiture process; any and every one can create a picture of a person. So what then does it mean for an artist to create a portrait? What are the motivations behind the work? What values, messages and meanings can be communicated through the portraiture process?
Please see website for complete details: http://artgallery.newark.rutgers.edu/artistcalls/
Face Value: Rutgers University - A portrait is a likeness of an individual which may be portrayed through painting, sculpture, photography or drawing. The image will usually consist of the face and sometimes other aspects of the sitter’s physical presence which reflect the stature, character and/or temperament of the individual. This group exhibition will draw on contemporary portraits to explore notions of ‘value’ which are embedded in the tradition of portraiture. In this age of social media the ubiquitous ‘selfie’ has democratized the portraiture process; any and every one can create a picture of a person. So what then does it mean for an artist to create a portrait? What are the motivations behind the work? What values, messages and meanings can be communicated through the portraiture process?
Please see website for complete details: http://artgallery.newark.rutgers.edu/artistcalls/
Thursday, April 14, 2016
Fine Lines Paint Jam
On April 30th from 12-7pm at 514 Rhode Island Ave NE, a 900 ft. long wall will be turned into a canvas divided between 100 artists from around the country. The painting will take place amid a backdrop of live music, free arts tutorials, art galleries, a bunch of other local arts organizations, food trucks, arts exhibitions, and a photo competition with a prize of $500.
Admission is free.
They're essentially turning an empty lot into a free playground for the arts and they’re welcoming other arts orgs, cuultural orgs, and vendors ranging from SpacyCloud and RedBull just to name a few.
More details later.
The Argument
For TBT... I was 14 or 15 when I did this piece...
These two women lived together in my neighborhood in Brooklyn; they were Roma people and thus we were always told to stay away from them by all the neighborhood mothers - of course, we did the opposite and they were my friends, and always seemed very mysterious to me as a teen.
They had no furniture in their apartment, slept in mattresses on the floor, always seemed to have a million people passing through, etc.
I did this piece from memory after dropping by one day and found them yelling at each other in their language... the naked one used to actually walk around the place nude in the summer (ahhh! the 70s), which was one of the main reason I used to hang around there... cough, cough
These two women lived together in my neighborhood in Brooklyn; they were Roma people and thus we were always told to stay away from them by all the neighborhood mothers - of course, we did the opposite and they were my friends, and always seemed very mysterious to me as a teen.
They had no furniture in their apartment, slept in mattresses on the floor, always seemed to have a million people passing through, etc.
I did this piece from memory after dropping by one day and found them yelling at each other in their language... the naked one used to actually walk around the place nude in the summer (ahhh! the 70s), which was one of the main reason I used to hang around there... cough, cough
The Argument c. 1970-1971, ink on paper, 16x20 inches By F. Lennox Campello |
Wednesday, April 13, 2016
USS Kitty Hawk "Big Wave"
This is why is takes a special kind of backbone to make an American sailor (and a metal lady of the sea)... And what's that helo doing there?
Does anyone know where the love of God goes. When the waves turn the minutes to hours… –Gordon Lightfoot, “The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald"
This Saturday: Meet the Artists' Closing Reception!
Show Dates: March 11 - April 23, 2016
MEET THE ARTISTS CLOSING RECEPTION: Saturday, April 16, 2:00-6:00 pm
At 1429 Iris Street NW, Washington, DC 20012
ZENITH GALLERY Hours: Wednesday-Saturday, Noon-6 PM
Featuring: Kim Abraham, Jan Paul Acton, Doba Afolabi, Mason Archie, David Bacharach, Andrea Barnes, Bert Beirne, Harmon Biddle, Francesca Britton, Lenny Campello, Katie Dell-Kaufman, Renee duRocher, Elissa Farrow-Savos, Patty Porter Firestone, Richard Fitzhugh, Robert Freeman, Carol Gellner-Levin, Cassandra Gillens, Julie and Ken Girardini, Margery Goldberg, Stephen Hansen, Len Harris, Chris Hayman, Philip Hazard, Tony Henson, Frank Holmes, David Hubbard, David Jackson, Hubert Jackson, Robert Jackson, Peter Kephart, Gloria Kirk, Joan Konkel, Michael Madzo, Chris Malone, Paul Martin Wolff, Donna McCullough, Hadrian Mendoza, Davis Morton, Reuben Neugass, Carol Newmyer, Tom Noll, Keith Norval, Katharine Owens, Emily Piccirillo, Alison Sigethy, Gavin Sewell, Sica, Ellen Sinel, Bradley Stevens, Charles Taube, Jennifer Wagner, Marcie Wolf-Hubbard, Mary Voytek, Curtis Woody, Joyce Zipperer and more!
Tuesday, April 12, 2016
Spitoidal Mucasoids
Spitoidal Mucasoids: When you brush your teeth, and then spit out the saliva + toothpaste mixture, and do not rinse it down the drain with water. Later on, as it dries up and becomes impossibly hard to chip away, it becomes a spitoidal mucasoid.
Try to Google that... I've just invented it.
Try to Google that... I've just invented it.
Monday, April 11, 2016
Sunday, April 10, 2016
Opportunity for Artists
Deadline: May 2, 2016
This is an Open Call for proposals for an exhibition in the summer of 2016 at Alexandria's Target Gallery.
This call is open to all artists from North America working in all visual media. Proposals for exhibitions by both individuals and groups will be considered. The jurors this year are Phil Hutinet and Victoria Milko.
Apply here.
Target Gallery 105 N. Union St. Alexandria, VA 22314
This is an Open Call for proposals for an exhibition in the summer of 2016 at Alexandria's Target Gallery.
This call is open to all artists from North America working in all visual media. Proposals for exhibitions by both individuals and groups will be considered. The jurors this year are Phil Hutinet and Victoria Milko.
Apply here.
Target Gallery 105 N. Union St. Alexandria, VA 22314
Saturday, April 09, 2016
Art in the New Plutocracy
Art is no longer the mere status symbol it was in the age of Morgan. Instead, as Cohen’s exploits show, art has become an instrument for generating wealth and political influence in the interests of an audacious plutocracy. In this sense, we are indeed being ruled by art in a way we have not been before, and its price now comes at a direct social cost.Read the article here.
Friday, April 08, 2016
DMVers: Go to Emulsion Opening Tomorrow!
You wanna know the definition of a hard working artist?
DMV artist Judith Peck!
She has work in three shows opening this Saturday, April 9 --- Emulsion 2016 at Gallery O on H in Washington, DC, at The Walker in Kansas, and the inaugural show at the Lemon Tree Gallery in Cape Charles, Virginia!
Go Judith!
DMV artist Judith Peck!
She has work in three shows opening this Saturday, April 9 --- Emulsion 2016 at Gallery O on H in Washington, DC, at The Walker in Kansas, and the inaugural show at the Lemon Tree Gallery in Cape Charles, Virginia!
Go Judith!
And now UVA wants to censor art...
And now it is UVA's turn to try to censor some artwork...
Some members of the University of Virginia community want a piece of art—a mural—censored, altered, or completely painted over because it depicts students and professors partying together.
The behaviors of the fictional characters in the painting would likely violate Title IX, said UVA music professor Bonnie Gordon, a vocal critic of the mural, in an interview with newsplex.com.Details here.
Thursday, April 07, 2016
Wednesday, April 06, 2016
Downton Abbey Paintings
Like the Downton Abbey TV series? You you gotta see DMV area artist Marsha Stein's series of paintings on the subject.
See them here.
See them here.
Tuesday, April 05, 2016
Gallery censored by landlord in Lafayette, LA
Nicole,So begins the email received by artist Nicole Touchet, an email "signed by a project coordinator with Property One Inc., the company that manages Gordon Square, the historic hotel-turned-office complex at the Jefferson-Vermilion intersection in the heart of Downtown. The UL Lafayette alumna had opened her eponymous gallery, Gallerie Touchet, in a small side space facing Vermilion Street 11 months before, hosting exhibitions of up-and-coming local artists including her own work."
You have to take down the nude pictures you have in your gallery. Part of the agreement to rent you the space was to not display nude pictures.
Many times in the past I have taken the side of "he who owns the walls" when these sort of issues come out.
However, in this case, as this article points out, the "condition" (No. 5 on Touchet’s lease with Property One) doesn't say anything about nudes, unless Property One thinks that Touchet's loosely painted nudes are so hot that they'd cause a fire:
Lessee warrants and represents to Lessor that the Leased Premises exclusive of common area shall be continually used and occupied only for the purpose of general office use. Lessee shall conduct its business and control its agents, employees, invitees and visitors in such a manner as is lawful, reputable and will not cause any nuisance or otherwise interfere with, annoy or disturb any other tenant in its normal business operations or Lessor in its management of the Building. Lessee shall not commit or suffer to be committed, any waste on the Leased Premises, nor shall Lessee permit the Leased Premises to be used in any way which would, in the opinion of Lessor, be hazardous on account of fire or otherwise which would in any way increase or render void the fire insurance on the Leased Premises or Building.A lawyer might say that the lease says that the space will be "used and occupied only for the purpose of general office use," but then again, Touchet had used the space as a gallery for 11 months and Property One didn't complain.
In any event, she plans to close the gallery (her lease is up), but I wanted the prudes at Property One know that their ignorant, outdated, and assholish actions have been been heard in the nation's capital region and will forever be part of their footprint in Al Gore's Internet for now on.
Monday, April 04, 2016
Teresa Oaxaca at The Art League
Many years ago, I was at the old Washington Post building meeting with the then WaPo Chief Art Critic. He was going through dozens and dozens of postcards and letters (this was at the dawn of the email age), and he'd glance at them, and then drop them into a waste basket... there was a 99% rejection rate at first glance. I sat there, a little hypnotized by the sad reality of the event.
Years later, after having written about DMV area artists for almost three decades, like most art critics, writers and symbiots of the visual arts, I am also now bombarded with emails, news releases, post cards, letters (yep! old fashion snail mail) and other assorted paraphernalia designed to let me know that an artist is showing somewhere.
And like most people and that former WaPo art critic, time management is a delicate issue, and thus over the years I’m fairly sure that I’ve actually only seen about 1% of the shows that I have actually been interested in, or which have caught my attention.
A while back, one of those shows which snared my interest was an embassy show by a “new” – or at least new to me – artist whose work (at least online) seemed to be quite good.
It wasn’t just that it “looked” quite good because of the subject matter (it did), or that it looked like the artist had some really good painting skills (it did), or even because it was eye catching in a different frequency from most works (it was) that I would usually be exposed to.
And thus, I decided to pay a visit to this embassy show (these days it involves arranging for baby sitters, planning the drive, and there's very little room for error, etc.), and to say that the work at the embassy show floored me is an understatement.
In fact, it forced me to put my nose close to the canvas; it forced me to step backwards and far away to see how the tight compositions worked together; and it even scratched my inner eye and forced me to look around to ensure that I hadn’t been transported to the past, or perhaps to the future of contemporary realism.
Teresa Oaxaca was the artist, and her paintings and etchings were the subject that dazzled my eyes, seduced my imagination, punched the solar plexus of my mind, and filled my curiosity with inquiries about all that revolved around the paradox-filled universe of this "new to me" artist.
Oaxaca’s compositions are described as spontaneous. “When a person comes to me, they occupy a space in my mind. Arrangements form from there until I excitedly see and conceive the idea for the piece. The design is both planned and subconscious. For this reason, I surround myself with Victorian and Baroque costumes, bones, and other things in which I find fascinating. I want subject matter to always be at hand, always around me.”Years later, after having written about DMV area artists for almost three decades, like most art critics, writers and symbiots of the visual arts, I am also now bombarded with emails, news releases, post cards, letters (yep! old fashion snail mail) and other assorted paraphernalia designed to let me know that an artist is showing somewhere.
And like most people and that former WaPo art critic, time management is a delicate issue, and thus over the years I’m fairly sure that I’ve actually only seen about 1% of the shows that I have actually been interested in, or which have caught my attention.
A while back, one of those shows which snared my interest was an embassy show by a “new” – or at least new to me – artist whose work (at least online) seemed to be quite good.
It wasn’t just that it “looked” quite good because of the subject matter (it did), or that it looked like the artist had some really good painting skills (it did), or even because it was eye catching in a different frequency from most works (it was) that I would usually be exposed to.
And thus, I decided to pay a visit to this embassy show (these days it involves arranging for baby sitters, planning the drive, and there's very little room for error, etc.), and to say that the work at the embassy show floored me is an understatement.
In fact, it forced me to put my nose close to the canvas; it forced me to step backwards and far away to see how the tight compositions worked together; and it even scratched my inner eye and forced me to look around to ensure that I hadn’t been transported to the past, or perhaps to the future of contemporary realism.
Teresa Oaxaca was the artist, and her paintings and etchings were the subject that dazzled my eyes, seduced my imagination, punched the solar plexus of my mind, and filled my curiosity with inquiries about all that revolved around the paradox-filled universe of this "new to me" artist.
All of Oaxaca’s paintings will be shown within unique frames that the artist designed, built, and painted herself. She feels that the individually designed frames truly complete the one-of-a-kind piece.
Do not miss this show... More later.
Update: Ms. Oaxaca will be doing a demo in the Art League Gallery on the 13th and they will be live streaming on their YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_ZYoRm8aY5w
Sunday, April 03, 2016
Tim Vermeulen opens in LA
Congrats to DMV artist Tim Vermeulen, whose solo show Alphabet, (inspired by the 1727 New England primer) opens April 9 at the George Billis Gallery in Los Angeles.
Tim Vermeulen, J. Job Feels the Rod, Yet Blesses God. 2016, oil on panel, 19 x 23 inches framed |
You can see the show online here.
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