Wednesday, August 22, 2012
The Amazing Spidergirl
I am almost finished with this piece from the new trompe l'oeil comic book superheroes series; to review:
Update: Here's the finished piece
- Phase One: A series of duplicate watercolor panels from the comic books
- Phse Two: Change the dialogue text in the text balloons to reflect something more interesting appropriate to the scene.
- Phase Three: Insert an electronic component into the dialogue balloons, with a Powerpoint based "back and forth" dialogue between the characters.
Update: Here's the finished piece
"The Amazing Spidergirl." Trompe l'oeil watercolors and charcoal on paper. 4x6 inches. Circa 2012. |
Opportunity for Prince George's Artists
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Tuesday, August 21, 2012
New Rockville Outdoor Art Show Opportunity
WHERE: Rockville Town Square in Rockville, MD
WHAT: Juried Fine Art and Fine Crafts Festival
WHEN: May 4 - 5, 2013
Saturday: 11 a.m. - 7 p.m.; Sunday: 10 a.m. - 5 p.m.
*Organized and managed by the Bethesda Row Arts Festival team
*Limited to 175 artists and crafters
*Estimated Attendance: 30,000
*Jury/Booth Fees: $25/$325
*Ample Parking - Metro access
*Artist amenities include hospitality for artists open entire show, ample free parking, overnight police security.
Rockville Town Square - is
a sensory delight. A popular dining and gathering place, Rockville
Town Square covers four city blocks and features more than 30 fine
shops, upscale boutiques, unique restaurants. Low-rise retail and
modern residential buildings create a very pleasing, human-scale,
town-center feel. The architecture is eclectic, ranging from art deco
to southwest to postmodern in style. Attractive brick sidewalks,
wooden and wrought-iron benches, trees and shrubbery round out the
welcoming atmosphere.
Cultural events are an
important dynamic in this affluent community on the Rockville Pike
corridor, which has the nation's highest per square foot retail sales.
Marketing
through newspapers, magazines, television, radio, web and transit is
directed to these individuals with high disposable income and interest
in art.
APPLICATIONS WILL OPEN AUGUST 27TH
APPLY VIA: www.zapplication.org
Deadline: January 20, 2013
Notification: February 8, 2013 via e-mail
Accepted Artist fees due: March 1, 2013
Email inquires to: Robin@A-RTS.org
You may also contact by telephone:
Robin Markowitz, Festival Director
301-637-5684
Monday, August 20, 2012
Thoughts on the Trawick Prize
The Trawick Prize: Bethesda Contemporary Art Awards is a visual art prize produced by the Bethesda Arts and Entertainment
District (through the spectacular generosity of Ms. Carol Trawick) that honors artists from Maryland, Washington, D.C. and
Virginia. The annual juried competition awards $14,000 in prize monies
to selected artists and features the work of the finalists in a group
exhibition. The 2012 finalists and their bios are at the end of this posting.
The 2012 exhibition will be held September 1-29 at Gallery B, located at 7700 Wisconsin Avenue, Suite E, Bethesda, MD 20814 (the former space of the Fraser Gallery). Winners will be announced September 5.
The finalists were selected by:
Dawn Gavin
Dawn Gavin was born in Bellshill, Scotland, and currently lives and works in Baltimore, Maryland. She has received a Bachelor of Arts (First Class) in Drawing and Painting, a Master of Fine Art and a Master of Science degree in Electronic Imaging from Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art and Design, Dundee, Scotland. Her work investigates issues of identity and displacement, employing a range of media from collage and installed drawings to digital video. She has exhibited her work both nationally and internationally, including the Baltimore Museum of Art, The John Michael Kohler Art Centre (Sheboygen, MI), Maryland Institute College of Art, Meyerhoff Gallery (Baltimore, MD), The DCA Visual Research Centre (Dundee, Scotland), The Philadelphia Art Alliance and The Washington Project for the Arts (Washington D.C.). She is an Associate Professor in Drawing and Foundations at the University of Maryland, College Park.
Barbara Kelly Gordon
Barbara Kelly Gordon is an Associate Curator at the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden at the Smithsonian where she focuses on contemporary international art, and especially film, video and new media. She has worked on major exhibitions ranging from a retrospective of Douglas Gordon to Visual Music to The Cinema Effect, which completes a three-city tour of Spain in 2012. During the 2011-2012 season her exhibitions include Directions : Pipilotti Rist; Directions : Grazia Toderi; EMPIRE3 (with Andy Warhol); Directions: Antonio Rovaldi and Black Box shows with Hans Op de Beeck (Belgium), Larent Grasso (France), Nira Pereg (Israel), and Ali Kazma (Turkey). Gordon, who was born and raised in Washington D.C., has lectured widely on contemporary art and recently served on the jury for Emerging Italian Artists at the Strozzi Palace in Florence, Italy.
N. Elizabeth SchlatterMy picks from the finalists to win it all?: David D'Orio or Dean Kessman - both are intelligent conceptual artists who also have the rare talent to actually deliver a concrete and interesting product married to their conceptual ideas. However, usually the winner from any sort of allegedly objective art competition is determined by the biggest and most vociferous voice, and not personally knowing any of the three jurors, I don't know who's got the biggest mouth.
N. Elizabeth Schlatter is Deputy Director and Curator of Exhibitions at the University of Richmond Museums, Virginia, where she has curated more than 20 exhibitions, including recent exhibitions of art by Carl Chiarenza, Andreas Feininger, Hans Friedrich Grohs, Sue Johnson, and Fiona Ross, and the exhibitions “Art=Text=Art: Works by Contemporary Artists,” “LEADED: the Materiality and Metamorphosis of Graphite” and “Form & Story: Narration in Recent Painting.” Prior to working at the University of Richmond, she was an exhibitions project director for the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service (SITES) in Washington, D.C. She has a bachelor’s degree in art history from Southwestern University in Texas, and a master’s in art history from George Washington University.
Another however: since five of the eight semifinalists come from the Baltimore area, I suspect that Scotland-born Dawn Gavin had the biggest and most vociferous voice over the two Sassenachs and the odds are (once again) stacked for a Baltimore-based artist to win the Trawick.
Who then? I'm betting Lillian Bayley Hoover, a brilliant and talented painter who now officially replaces Andrew Wodzianski as the "always the maid never the bride" of the major Bethesda Up! generous art prizes.
Zhu Qi Slams Uli Sigg
Two months ago, Uli Sigg, the Swiss art collector and Switzerland’s former Ambassador to China, donated 1463 pieces of his Chinese contemporary art collection to Hong Kong’s M+ museum. The bequest, which included works by 350 artists such as Ai Weiwei and Zhang Xiaogan, initially received widespread praise. Then on June 25, the Art Critic column of the Oriental Morning Post, a Shanghai-based Chinese newspaper, slammed the affair. “The donated works aren’t worth their HK$1.3 billion ($163 million) valuation.” the columnist Zhu Qi declared. “They are mostly junk.”(Via) Check the whole story here.
Two things:
- Zhu Qi needs to read some old reviews by Blake Gopnik and Jessica Dawson in order to learn the proper snarky etiquette required to label art as "junk."
- The Oriental Morning Post clearly hasn't received the memo from the PC police and are not aware that Oriental is not a cool term to use anymore.
Sunday, August 19, 2012
Volunteers for (e)merge art fair
(e)merge art fair is looking for energetic, efficient volunteers to assist with
various aspects of the fair. No
experience is necessary, but knowledge of the art field or experience with art
events is preferred. This is a valuable experience for anyone involved with
or interested in contemporary art.
(e)merge will take place at the Capitol Skyline Hotel October 4-7, 2012.
Volunteers will be invited to an orientation at the hotel prior to the event.
Whether you want to assist for a day, or for the duration of the art fair,
dedicated volunteers are essential to the success of the fair and deeply
appreciated.
If interested or have any questions please contact Irene Clouthier
at irene@emergeartfair.com
Saturday, August 18, 2012
Wanna go to an opening tonight?
August 18 - September 15, 2012
Opening Reception : August 18, 7-9 pm
Please join Hamiltonian on Saturday, August 18, 2012, from 7-9pm for the opening of their annual group exhibition new. (now). in which they will debut the work of their six new, distinguished Hamiltonian Fellows for 2012. They will introduce:
- Milana Braslavsky (MFA, University of Pennsylvania)
- Annette Isham (MFA, American University)
- Amy Boone-McCreesh (MFA, Towson University)
- Billy Friebele (MFA, Maryland Institute College of Art)
- Timothy Thompson (MFA, Maryland Institute College of Art)
- Jerry Truong (MFA, University of California, San Diego)
The 2012 Hamiltonian Fellows were
selected from a pool of over 160 promising artists who applied this
year. The External Review Panel, comprised of six acclaimed art
professionals, evaluated every applicant based on criteria including
artistic merit, relevance to today's art world, and the candidate's
potential to thrive within the fellowship program. Hamiltonian Gallery is located at 1353 U Street NW, Washington, DC, 20009. Gallery hours are Tuesday - Saturday, 12 pm - 6 pm. The panelists were:
- Doreen Bolger - Executive Director, Baltimore Museum of Art
- Zoe Charlton - Visual Artist, Co-Director of MFA Program, American University
- Katherine Mann - Visual Artist, Hamiltonian Fellow Alumna
- Frank Hallam Day - Photographer, Addison/Ripley Fine Art
- James Rieck - Visual Artist, Professor, Corcoran College of Art + Design
- Mollie White - Show Director, Scope Art Fair
Friday, August 17, 2012
Opportunity for PG County Artists
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Thursday, August 16, 2012
The Franz and Virginia Bader Fund
Deadline: September 15, 12.
The Franz and Virginia Bader Fund invites visual artists (excluding filmmakers, video artists, and performance artists) to apply for grants to enable recipients to develop their talent and concentrate on their art. Artists must be 40 years or older, and must live within 150 miles of Washington, DC. Three grants totaling $60,000 were awarded in 2011. Applications must be postmarked no later than September 15, 2011. Application forms are available for download from www.baderfund.org. Send email inquiries to grants@baderfund.org or call 202-288-4608. Please note that the Franz and Virginia Bader Fund no longer accepts slides. All images must be submitted in digital form. For details, see the application form, which may be downloaded from the Fund's website.
The Franz and Virginia Bader Fund invites visual artists (excluding filmmakers, video artists, and performance artists) to apply for grants to enable recipients to develop their talent and concentrate on their art. Artists must be 40 years or older, and must live within 150 miles of Washington, DC. Three grants totaling $60,000 were awarded in 2011. Applications must be postmarked no later than September 15, 2011. Application forms are available for download from www.baderfund.org. Send email inquiries to grants@baderfund.org or call 202-288-4608. Please note that the Franz and Virginia Bader Fund no longer accepts slides. All images must be submitted in digital form. For details, see the application form, which may be downloaded from the Fund's website.
Wednesday, August 15, 2012
Opportunity for Photographers
Submissions accepted: June 15–September
15, 2012.
The Center for Documentary Studies / Honickman First Book Prize in Photography is a biennial prize offering $3,000 in grant money, a solo exhibit at the Center for Documentary Studies, and most importantly, the publication of a book of photography, published by Duke University Press in association with CDS Books.
To learn more, go to firstbookprizephoto.com or send an SASE to:
CDS/THF First Book Prize in Photography
Center for Documentary Studies
1317 West Pettigrew Street
Durham, NC 27705.
Website: http://firstbookprizephoto.com
The Center for Documentary Studies / Honickman First Book Prize in Photography is a biennial prize offering $3,000 in grant money, a solo exhibit at the Center for Documentary Studies, and most importantly, the publication of a book of photography, published by Duke University Press in association with CDS Books.
To learn more, go to firstbookprizephoto.com or send an SASE to:
CDS/THF First Book Prize in Photography
Center for Documentary Studies
1317 West Pettigrew Street
Durham, NC 27705.
Website: http://firstbookprizephoto.com
Tuesday, August 14, 2012
Saturday: Procedures for Ground Loss Safety
Washington Project for the Arts and the Corcoran Gallery of Art and College of Art + Design present Procedures for Ground Loss Safety, a performance by Sarah Levitt, taking place on Saturday, August 15, from 12pm to 5pm.
Procedures for Ground Loss Safety asks the question: What
happens if the ground has an expiration date, if the solid foundation
on top of which we've built our homes, roads, and bridges suddenly gives
way? Taking inspiration from cheery Cold War safety films from the 1950's, Sarah Levitt will demonstrate Procedures for Ground Loss Safety,
instructing the audience through movement and sound on the appropriate
steps to prepare for sudden ground loss. Exploring the idea's literal
and metaphorical potential, the artist will investigate the relationship
between the body and the ground, utilizing the Performance Bridge's
invisible floor and proximity to the White House to further amplify the
body's new relationship to eroding foundations.
Procedures for Ground Loss Safety is part of Take It to the Bridge,
a nine-week series of installations and performances taking place
through September 15 in the new Performance Bridge located inside the
Corcoran's glass entryway on 17th Street. The Performance Bridge was first constructed at the Corcoran Gallery of Art as the stage for Holly Bass's performance Moneymaker,
a seven-hour endurance work that took place on February 11, 2012,
during the final weekend of the Corcoran's landmark fall exhibition 30 Americans. For Take it to the Bridge,
eleven artists living and working in the DC-Baltimore region will
present nine installations and performances, investigating the Bridge's
physical characteristics and pushing the boundaries of this
non-traditional space to explore a variety of social, political, and
aesthetic issues. Installations will open on Wednesday and remain on
view through the following Sunday for all museum hours. Performances
will take place on Saturdays, from 10 am to 5 pm unless otherwise noted.
The first seven weeks of the series coincide with the Corcoran's Free Summer Saturdays promotion, which run from May 26 - September 1, 2012.
Monday, August 13, 2012
Tomorrow: Chat with Lionell...
Join us on Tuesday, August 14th to chat with D.C. Commission on the Arts
and Humanities' Executive Director, Lionell Thomas.
and Humanities' Executive Director, Lionell Thomas.
Do you have a question about upcoming programs?
Log on and ask.
Log on and ask.
Do you have a question about a funding application?
Log on and ask.
Log on and ask.
Have questions about deadlines, calls to artists,
or just want to be heard?
Log on and be heard.
LIVE DIRECTOR CHAT
Tuesday, August 14th, 2012
2PM - 3PM
Sunday, August 12, 2012
George Bellows at the NAG
June 10–October 8, 2012 at the National Gallery of Art
When George Bellows died at the age of forty-two in 1925, he was hailed as one of the greatest artists America had yet produced. In 2012, the National Gallery of Art will present the first comprehensive exhibition of Bellows' career in more than three decades. George Bellows will include some 130 paintings, drawings, and lithographs. Bellows is arguably the most important figure in the generation of artists who negotiated the transition from the Victorian to the modern era in American culture. This exhibition will provide the most complete account of his achievements to date and will introduce Bellows to new generations. The accompanying catalogue will document and define Bellows' unique place in the history of American art and in the annals of modernism.
The exhibition will begin with Bellows' renowned paintings of tenement children, boxers, and the urban landscape of New York. These iconic images of the modern city were made during an extraordinary period of creativity for the artist, from shortly after his arrival from Columbus, Ohio, in 1904, up to the Armory Show in 1913, and remain his best-known works. They include Forty-Two Kids, 1907 (Corcoran Gallery of Art), New York, 1911 (National Gallery of Art), Stag at Sharkey's, 1909 (Cleveland Museum of Art), and Snow Dumpers, 1911 (Columbus Museum of Art).
Complementing the earlier signature masterpieces will be groupings that bring to light other crucial, yet less familiar aspects of Bellows' prodigious achievement, including his Maine seascapes, sporting scenes (polo and tennis), World War I subjects, family portraits, and Woodstock, NY, subjects. Drawings and lithographs will illuminate Bellows' working methods and the relationships between his various media. The show will end with paintings from 1924, the year before his sudden death from peritonitis. These last works, including Dempsey and Firpo (Whitney Museum of American Art) and The White Horse (Worcester Art Museum), will prompt visitors to contemplate the artist Bellows might have become had he lived into the 1960s like his great contemporary, Edward Hopper.
Organization: Organized by the National Gallery of Art, Washington, in association with The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, and the Royal Academy of Arts, London.
When George Bellows died at the age of forty-two in 1925, he was hailed as one of the greatest artists America had yet produced. In 2012, the National Gallery of Art will present the first comprehensive exhibition of Bellows' career in more than three decades. George Bellows will include some 130 paintings, drawings, and lithographs. Bellows is arguably the most important figure in the generation of artists who negotiated the transition from the Victorian to the modern era in American culture. This exhibition will provide the most complete account of his achievements to date and will introduce Bellows to new generations. The accompanying catalogue will document and define Bellows' unique place in the history of American art and in the annals of modernism.
The exhibition will begin with Bellows' renowned paintings of tenement children, boxers, and the urban landscape of New York. These iconic images of the modern city were made during an extraordinary period of creativity for the artist, from shortly after his arrival from Columbus, Ohio, in 1904, up to the Armory Show in 1913, and remain his best-known works. They include Forty-Two Kids, 1907 (Corcoran Gallery of Art), New York, 1911 (National Gallery of Art), Stag at Sharkey's, 1909 (Cleveland Museum of Art), and Snow Dumpers, 1911 (Columbus Museum of Art).
Complementing the earlier signature masterpieces will be groupings that bring to light other crucial, yet less familiar aspects of Bellows' prodigious achievement, including his Maine seascapes, sporting scenes (polo and tennis), World War I subjects, family portraits, and Woodstock, NY, subjects. Drawings and lithographs will illuminate Bellows' working methods and the relationships between his various media. The show will end with paintings from 1924, the year before his sudden death from peritonitis. These last works, including Dempsey and Firpo (Whitney Museum of American Art) and The White Horse (Worcester Art Museum), will prompt visitors to contemplate the artist Bellows might have become had he lived into the 1960s like his great contemporary, Edward Hopper.
Organization: Organized by the National Gallery of Art, Washington, in association with The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, and the Royal Academy of Arts, London.
Saturday, August 11, 2012
Congrats! ... And an NBC gaffe?
Congrats to the US Women's B-ball team on their fifth consecutive Olympic gold!
Gaffe to NBC talking head Mary Carillo, who when referring to US basketball superstar Diana Taurasi, brings us the fact that "she's Italian, even though her parents are from Argentina..."
Come again?
Now, if you've ever been to Argentina, then you know that this huge nation is very diverse, almost as much as the US, when it comes to its European ancestry, and also that Argentines of Italian ancestry make up the largest historical block of immigrants to Argentina, so a slight majority of Argentines are of Italian ancestry, which reflects powerfully on the Italianate accent of their Spanish language. Case in point: if we look at the last names of the 15 players in the strong Argentine Olympic team we see that out of the 12 players, five have Italian surnames, five have Spanish and two have German... that's pretty much the Argentine demographic make-up plus a lot of Welsh in the city of Trelew, Argentina (founded in 1886 by Welsh settlers) and a lot of Scots in Patagonia.
And to trip over the fact that the daughter of Argentines, now in the US, is now Italian (again) instead of... what? See how difficult and silly this Latino label is?
Those of you who know me well, and those of you who know me through my writing, know that one of my pet peeves is the usage of "labels" to box people and art, or art and people, into easily distinguishable categories.
One such label is the American invention of the Hispanic (now apparently not a PC term because technically it includes two European nationalities) or Latino label to pass for ethnicity and often and always wrongly for race.
What does that mean in art? And what does it mean to "Latino" artists? Does it mean anything?
If you want to hear my opinion on the subject then start by penciling in October 11, 2012, where starting at 5PM I will be presenting a lecture titled "On Identity in the Arts: What Does It Mean to be Latino?" at Montgomery College in Silver Spring, MD.
Gaffe to NBC talking head Mary Carillo, who when referring to US basketball superstar Diana Taurasi, brings us the fact that "she's Italian, even though her parents are from Argentina..."
Come again?
Now, if you've ever been to Argentina, then you know that this huge nation is very diverse, almost as much as the US, when it comes to its European ancestry, and also that Argentines of Italian ancestry make up the largest historical block of immigrants to Argentina, so a slight majority of Argentines are of Italian ancestry, which reflects powerfully on the Italianate accent of their Spanish language. Case in point: if we look at the last names of the 15 players in the strong Argentine Olympic team we see that out of the 12 players, five have Italian surnames, five have Spanish and two have German... that's pretty much the Argentine demographic make-up plus a lot of Welsh in the city of Trelew, Argentina (founded in 1886 by Welsh settlers) and a lot of Scots in Patagonia.
And to trip over the fact that the daughter of Argentines, now in the US, is now Italian (again) instead of... what? See how difficult and silly this Latino label is?
Those of you who know me well, and those of you who know me through my writing, know that one of my pet peeves is the usage of "labels" to box people and art, or art and people, into easily distinguishable categories.
One such label is the American invention of the Hispanic (now apparently not a PC term because technically it includes two European nationalities) or Latino label to pass for ethnicity and often and always wrongly for race.
What does that mean in art? And what does it mean to "Latino" artists? Does it mean anything?
If you want to hear my opinion on the subject then start by penciling in October 11, 2012, where starting at 5PM I will be presenting a lecture titled "On Identity in the Arts: What Does It Mean to be Latino?" at Montgomery College in Silver Spring, MD.
Opportunity for Artists
Deadline: August 31, 2012
The Howard County Center for the Arts is seeking proposals
from artists for Art Maryland 2012, a biennial multi-media juried
exhibit. The juror for Art Maryland 2012 is my good bud Philippa Hughes, Founder and
Chief Contrarian of The Pink Line Project. A minimum of $1,000 will be
awarded by the juror. The exhibit will be on view from October 26 –
December 14, 2012 with a reception and remarks by Ms. Hughes on October
26 from 6-8pm.
Entry is open to all artists 18 years or older, residing in Maryland or within a 100-mile radius of Ellicott City, MD. Artists may submit digital images of up to three works completed in the last two years and not exhibited previously in the HCCA galleries. All work must fit through a standard doorway measuring 54” x 80” and fit appropriately in the HCCA galleries. The Center’s two galleries total over 2000 square feet, with 9 ½ foot high walls, professional track lighting and hardwood floors. There is a $25 Art Maryland entry fee. The fee is waived for current Howard County Arts Council members.
Art Maryland 2012 is the eighteenth multi-media statewide juried exhibit sponsored by the Howard County Arts Council. The exhibit began in 1984 as Maryland’s Best, an annual show running through 1989 and open to all Maryland artists. In 1990, when the show became a biennial, its name was changed to Art Maryland. Since the Baltimore Museum of Art ended its Maryland biennial exhibits in the early 1990s, Art Maryland has been a premier juried showcase for artists in the region. In 2000, Art Maryland expanded to include Delaware and Southeastern Pennsylvania in addition to Maryland, Virginia, and Washington D.C.
For more information or to download a prospectus, visit www.hocoarts.org/exhibits.php
Entry is open to all artists 18 years or older, residing in Maryland or within a 100-mile radius of Ellicott City, MD. Artists may submit digital images of up to three works completed in the last two years and not exhibited previously in the HCCA galleries. All work must fit through a standard doorway measuring 54” x 80” and fit appropriately in the HCCA galleries. The Center’s two galleries total over 2000 square feet, with 9 ½ foot high walls, professional track lighting and hardwood floors. There is a $25 Art Maryland entry fee. The fee is waived for current Howard County Arts Council members.
Art Maryland 2012 is the eighteenth multi-media statewide juried exhibit sponsored by the Howard County Arts Council. The exhibit began in 1984 as Maryland’s Best, an annual show running through 1989 and open to all Maryland artists. In 1990, when the show became a biennial, its name was changed to Art Maryland. Since the Baltimore Museum of Art ended its Maryland biennial exhibits in the early 1990s, Art Maryland has been a premier juried showcase for artists in the region. In 2000, Art Maryland expanded to include Delaware and Southeastern Pennsylvania in addition to Maryland, Virginia, and Washington D.C.
For more information or to download a prospectus, visit www.hocoarts.org/exhibits.php
Community and Web Relations Assistant
Howard County Arts Council
8510 High Ridge Road
Ellicott City, MD 21043
p: 410.313.ARTS
f: 410.313.2790
Friday, August 10, 2012
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