An After Party follows at Gateway Arts Center, hosted by the 39th Street Gallery and Brentwood Arts Exchange.
Monday, May 08, 2017
Sunday, May 07, 2017
Bethesda Fine Arts Festival next weekend
Bethesda Fine Arts Festival
May 13, 10am - 6pm and May 14, 10am - 5pm
Located on Norfolk, Auburn and Del Ray Avenues, the Bethesda Fine Arts Festival will feature fine art created by 130 of the nation's best artists, live entertainment and Bethesda restaurants.
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.
Again: 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.
Cool date opportunity! See ya there!
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.
Join them for a unique shopping experience in downtown Bethesda. Browse jewelry, furniture, painting, photography, sculpture and more.
Again: 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.
Cool date opportunity! See ya there!
Saturday, May 06, 2017
Shadow/Casters at the HH
The Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden will partner with local arts organization Transformer to present "Shadow/Casters," an after-hours performance art event on the Hirshhorn's outdoor plaza Saturday, June 10, 7:30-11 p.m. Guests will be invited to explore the museum during special extended hours, enjoy a cash bar and music on the plaza, and take in four site-specific performances that creatively explore abundance, transition and community through contemporary storytelling and ritual.
Coinciding with Transformer's 15th anniversary and the approaching summer solstice, "Shadow/Casters" features one-night-only performances by Washington-based artists Jason Barnes (Pussy Noir), Alexandra 'Rex' Delafkaran, Kunj Patel and Hoesy Corona.
"Shadow/Casters" will take audiences on a visual journey through culture, time, and space with a variety of immersive performance styles, including dance and drumming. The evening culminates as the moon emerges, with a three-story tall performance that transforms the Hirshhorn's iconic round building into a physical shadow theater and creates a spectacular display of light and shadow, designed to be experienced by the crowds gathered below.
Tickets are $18, and will be available online May 9. "Shadow/Casters" is presented in conjunction with D.C.'s annual Capital Pride festival, held June 8-11, and in partnership with Smithsonian GLOBE (Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender Employees).
Friday, May 05, 2017
Silent Auction Fundraiser
The Zenith Community Arts Foundation Cordially Invites You to
A Silent Auction Fundraiser Event!
To Support ZCAF's Hands' on Workshop (HOW) Programs
Sunday, May 7, 5:00-8:00 pm
At the Washington Ethical Society
7750 16th Street NW, Washington, DC 20012
Don't miss out! ... ONLINE Auction ongoing from now until Sunday, May 7, 3:00 pm est.
Many more items are up for auction including spa treatments, legal services,
restaurant certificates, gift cards, and more.
Food for the event provided by CUBA CUBA Gallery Cafe.
Music by guitarist, Bill Freed.
Music by guitarist, Bill Freed.
Honorary Chairpersons: Ward 4 Councilman, Brandon Todd, and Councilman At-Large, Robert White
Hosted by Ron Nessen, who served as White House Press Secretary for President Gerald Ford, 1974-1977
Guest Speakers: Kay Kendall, Chairman of the D.C. Arts Commission, and Linda Donovan Harper, Board President of the D.C. Education Collaborative
Click Here to: PURCHASE 1 TICKET
Click Here to make a tax deductible in the amount of your choosing: DONATION
THANK YOU!Thursday, May 04, 2017
Austin Shull at Micro Gallery
Metro Micro Gallery Presents:
Austin Shull
Reflections on Ardor
May 6th – June 10th, 2017
Curated by Cara Rose Leepson
Opening Reception: Wednesday May 10th 7pm
Reflections on Ardor presents a site-specific installation created by Washington, DC based artist Austin Shull which questions dominant tropes of romance and passion. The global allure of love and romance have been magnified by mass consumerism and often, the expectations of these sentimental feelings are skewed by reality. Utilizing a teleidoscope to abstract stereotypical romantic photographic imagery, Shull deconstructs the surface level idealism of romance and engages the viewer by questioning their own personal reflection and participation in this reimagined, seemingly romantic scene.“For instance, a common image that comes to mind when thinking about romance is a stock picture of a couple walking down the beach holding hands, or perhaps kissing as the ocean waves lap at their feet. Does this unknowingly become the imagery on which we base our desires and fantasies, and in so doing begin a search for qualities of life founded in dislocated representations.” – Austin ShullAustin Shull is a multi-disciplinary artist, native of Washington, DC and has been a resident at Arlington Art Center since 2015. He attended the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture summer of 2008, and the Whitney Independent Study Program 2007-2008. Shull received an MFA from the School of Visual Arts in 2007 and a BA from the Bard College in 2001. He has exhibited work nationally and internationally at venues including the Cooper Union, Syracuse University, International Print Center, Pratt Institute, Nurture Art, and Exit Art.Guest Curator Cara Rose Leepson brings her vision into this exhibit. She is now part of the pay it forward initiative of Metro Micro Gallery. We welcome her effort in mentoring and guiding Austin Shull in this unique space. Leepson moved to Washington, DC from Charleston, South Carolina in 2010 to pursue her MA in Art + Museum Studies at Georgetown University. Prior to joining the staff of Transformer in early 2016, she worked for a number of arts organizations in DC including Hillyer Art Space and Glenstone Foundation.Metro Micro Gallery is committed in creating opportunities that will inspire more creative collaborations and enrich our community.A experimental gallery that encourages creative collaborations and a respect for diversity through inclusive, non-conventional exhibits and showcases. A small space with big mission, the Metro Micro Gallery offers exhibits and programs to strengthen and sustain our community.
Barbara Januszkiewicz is the sponsor of Metro Micro Gallery. This is part of the outreach of her studio practice that includes mentorships within the creative community. Plus an effort in supporting public awareness for visual art practitioners. Pay it forward.
Metro Micro Gallery is located at 3409 Wilson Blvd., Arlington, VA. For more information visit www.metromicrogallery.com.
Facebook event page https://www.facebook.com/events/919101374899674/
Bettie Page for a great cause!
Wanna bid on this gorgeous Bettie Page? - all for a good cause!
Details and bidding here.
#bettiepage #thenotoriousbettiepage
Details and bidding here.
#bettiepage #thenotoriousbettiepage
New Studios in the DMV
open may 5 and 6, 10-6 pm
and
spring art walk
Friday may 5, 6-8pm
MICHELINE KLAGSBRUN
raye leith
joe hall
the tuesday night group
1662 33rd street NW in georgetown
SPRING ART WALK:
Seven galleries will host an evening stroll and a viewing of their fine art
Seven galleries will host an evening stroll and a viewing of their fine art
exhibitions in the most beautiful part of Washington, DC.
Wanna draw the figure?
Fridays, June 2 & 16 – Friday ARTnights: Drop-In Figure Drawing – The Capitol Hill Arts Workshop (CHAW) hosts a drop-in “Working from the Figure” session on Friday, June 2, 2017 and Friday, June 16, 2017 from 6:30-9:30 p.m. at CHAW, 545 7th Street, SE. Work on drawings or paintings in front of a live model in a session without formal instruction, facilitated by artist Will Fleishell. Please bring your own drawing materials. Easels are available. The session is $15 for drop-in students. For more information, visit www.chaw.org or call (202) 547-6839.
Wednesday, May 03, 2017
Call
Art Impact USA's 2017 Juried Art Exhibition at Pepco Edison Place Gallery is now ready to receive your art entry. You are invited to submit up to eight works for "Climax: The Best of the Best." There is no entry fee and over $850 in cash awards and prizes.
Submission deadline is June 16, 2017, 9:00 pm firm. Don't wait until the last minute.
The chief juror is Prof. Curlee Holton, Executive Director of the David C. Driskell Center, at the University of Maryland. Fewer artists will be chosen and more of their work will be exhibited - four pieces.
Visit this page for all the details: http://www.artimpactusa.org/climax-call.
Submission deadline is June 16, 2017, 9:00 pm firm. Don't wait until the last minute.
The chief juror is Prof. Curlee Holton, Executive Director of the David C. Driskell Center, at the University of Maryland. Fewer artists will be chosen and more of their work will be exhibited - four pieces.
Visit this page for all the details: http://www.artimpactusa.org/climax-call.
Tuesday, May 02, 2017
Victor Ekpuk solo at MFA
These Moments
A solo exhibition of mixed media artwork by VICTOR EKPUK
Friday, May 12th - May 29th, 2017
OPENING DAY RECEPTION
Friday, May 12th, 6pm-8pm
The artist will be in attendance.
EXHIBITION LOCATION
Morton Fine Art (MFA)
1781 Florida Ave NW (at 18th & U Sts)
Washington, DC 20009
HOURS
Tuesday - Saturday 11am - 6pm
Sunday 12pm-5pm
About VICTOR EKPUK & These Moments
What can one say about an artist like Victor Ekpuk? Graphically stunning, with a carefully crafted use of color, and evincing a commitment to the power of the line, Ekpuk's work in These Moments applies Ekpuk's enviable skill, theoretical grounding, and consistent engagement with what it means to be human in a more figurative approach. These Moments highlight thirteen works all grounded by the form, structure, and strength of the bold line's arc through space. Inspired in part by a four-month residency in Nigeria, the country of his birth, Ekpuk was struck by how central the head was in daily life in Lagos. Ekpuk explains that he was "struck by people carrying things on their heads, metaphorically or otherwise."
- Izetta Autumn Mobley, 2017
- Izetta Autumn Mobley, 2017
These Moments marks VICTOR EKPUK's third solo exhibition at Morton Fine Art. His artwork is included in the permanent collections of the
Smithsonian Institution Nation Museum of African Art, Brooks Museum,
Krannert Art Museum, US Department of State, Newark Museum, Arkansas Art Center, Fidelity Investments, The World Bank, and University of Maryland University College Art Collection.
Monday, May 01, 2017
Call for Proposals
One month left to submit your proposals for an exhibition at artspace in the first half of 2018
APPLY ONLINE
Entry Fee: $25
Deadline: June 1, 2017
Sunday, April 30, 2017
Frida Kahlo Show... and?
Over 20 years ago, The Washington Post called me "A Kahlophile since age 17", and even after all these years, that description still fits me to a tee.
Subsequently, I was lucky enough to curate two (in partnership with the Mexican Cultural Institute for the first one, and with the same Institute and the Frida Kahlo Museum in Mexico City for the second) worldwide "Homage to Frida Kahlo" shows - the first one at Georgetown's iconic Fraser Gallery, and the second one online with art.com.
Over the years, as documented here, I've done hundreds, if not thousands of works inspired, related or obsessed by Frida Kahlo, the Champagne Communist, pain-ridden lead for the title of most famous and influential Latin American artist... ever. And soon, very soon, I will be announcing another major Kahlo-related project... stay tuned!
Just found out that a new Kahlo-inspired show is about to make its debut in the DMV:
Subsequently, I was lucky enough to curate two (in partnership with the Mexican Cultural Institute for the first one, and with the same Institute and the Frida Kahlo Museum in Mexico City for the second) worldwide "Homage to Frida Kahlo" shows - the first one at Georgetown's iconic Fraser Gallery, and the second one online with art.com.
Campello's works are more than one-liners, though. They're also explorations of one of Campello's pet topics: race. In Las Siete Fridas (The Seven Fridas), he's envisaged Kahlo as Nordic, Arab, African, punk, Native American, Vulcan, and Beatle. The drawing was inspired by the 1980 census, the first to offer a complex menu of ethnicities for each American's self-identification. "This was my way of poking fun at the census and our governmental need to put labels on people," Campello explains on a nearby card. Las Siete Fridas was recently acquired by Seeds of Peace, an organization that promotes cross-cultural understanding. --- Pamela Murray Winters, Washington City Paper
Just found out that a new Kahlo-inspired show is about to make its debut in the DMV:
Exhibit:
Frida en Nosotros
Artworks inspired by Frida Kahlo
May 5- May 29
DMV area artists pay tribute to Frida Khalo as a transcendent Latin American cultural icon. Each artist has taken her image or imagery related with her as a starting point to explore how she relates to their own ethnic traditions and customs. Featured artist are Marily Mojica, Osbel Susman-Peña, Nicole Oxendine, Ric Garcia, Marla Mclean, David Amoroso, Gus Rodriguez, Kate Heneghan, Jobi Jovanka Magana, Juliana Vallejo, Shyama Kuver, Cluadio Olivos, Eloy Areu, Sergio Olivos
Reception:
Opening Night and Cinco de Mayo Celebration
Friday, May 5
5 pm-12 midnight
Happy Hour
Tapas, Vino y Margaritas
Location:
2309 18th Street, NW
Washington, DC 20009
An artistic culinary initiative in Adams Morgan, where art, music and Spanish food traditions fuse into a cultural experience. Patrons can enjoy art exhibits in the restaurants' basement gallery space and then pair the experience with a good glass of wine and a variety of tapas or a dinner that samples Spanish and Cuban cuisine traditions.
Saturday, April 29, 2017
Guerrilla Framing Techniques - Number One
Me: Custom framing is expensive!
You: Everybody knows that Lenster!
The average price for custom framing around the DMV is brutal - and sometimes complicated (or made complicated by frustrated designers posing as framers or artists who have seen too many Roccoco framing in museums.
Unless you're Frida Kahlo, generally speaking, the job of a frame for a work of visual art is first and foremost to protect the art.
Period.
And in the 21st century, and most of the 20th, the simpler the better; the less noticeable the frame, the more that the art is noticed.
If you have plenty of sheckels, then a good framer will do a great job. The best and least expensive framer around the DMV is Apex (703/914-1000, ask for Khalid and tell him Lenny sent you)
For the vast majority of artists, a frame should not cost as much as repairing your car's transmission.
You: Can you get to the technique part already?
Most artwork is done on geometric substrates; even if you cut paper or stretch your own canvas, most of the times it is either a square or a rectangle; ovals went out ages ago; in fact they were never really in... cough, cough.
In the USA, these art substrates come in standard sizes that apply not only to the substrates (paper, canvas, board, wood, etc.), but also to mats, frames, and glass.
Thus, if you work on a standard size substrate to start with, you're almost home, because then you can eliminate the middle man to getting your work on a wall: the custom framer.
An 8x10 substrate will fit into an 11x14 pre-cut mat and into an 11x14 pre-cut frame; and 11x14 substrate will fit into a 16x20, a 16x20 into a 20x24 and so on.
Around the DMV, both Ikea and AC Moore's have ridiculously affordable prices for acceptable, minimalist frames. With AC Moore's if you sign up for sales alerts, you'll be bombarded with coupons (the best one is their 25% off for your purchase - including sales items; otherwise you get their 55% off regular price coupon emailed to you every 30 seconds). Practically every frame at Ikea is a minimalist frame, but be careful because many of them are European size standards, which are different from US; however, Ikea frames generally come with acid-buffered mats, with is a nice "bennie" to have.
By the way, if you need a lot of frames in the same size - let's say two dozen frames, then I suggest that you find the ready made frame that you like and that will accommodate your work (this usually works for photographers), turn it over and see who makes the frame and then contact the manufacturer (if it's in the USA) and see if they will sell you the frames directly. There's usually a minimum order to "qualify" for this option, and thus situations may vary according to your needs.
If you want to do artwork in other than standard sizes, then more power to you, and framing just got a little pricier, but there's also a technique.
First find a ready made frame that is bigger than your odd shaped artwork and visualize the artwork inside the frame. If the proportions are agreeable to you (let's say you have a rectangular work which can be matted with both sides and top the same and bottom "heavy" - that is perfectly acceptable.
Once you have the frame, go to a framer and have them cut you a mat that has the outside dimensions of your frame and have them cut a window that fits your work. Now you are only paying them to cut a custom mat, rather than paying them to do that as well as creating a custom frame and glass from scratch. It should reduce your costs by about 80%.
Then just bring your matted work home, pop it into the frame and as the Brits say: "Bob's your uncle."
You: Everybody knows that Lenster!
The average price for custom framing around the DMV is brutal - and sometimes complicated (or made complicated by frustrated designers posing as framers or artists who have seen too many Roccoco framing in museums.
Unless you're Frida Kahlo, generally speaking, the job of a frame for a work of visual art is first and foremost to protect the art.
Period.
And in the 21st century, and most of the 20th, the simpler the better; the less noticeable the frame, the more that the art is noticed.
If you have plenty of sheckels, then a good framer will do a great job. The best and least expensive framer around the DMV is Apex (703/914-1000, ask for Khalid and tell him Lenny sent you)
For the vast majority of artists, a frame should not cost as much as repairing your car's transmission.
You: Can you get to the technique part already?
Most artwork is done on geometric substrates; even if you cut paper or stretch your own canvas, most of the times it is either a square or a rectangle; ovals went out ages ago; in fact they were never really in... cough, cough.
In the USA, these art substrates come in standard sizes that apply not only to the substrates (paper, canvas, board, wood, etc.), but also to mats, frames, and glass.
Thus, if you work on a standard size substrate to start with, you're almost home, because then you can eliminate the middle man to getting your work on a wall: the custom framer.
An 8x10 substrate will fit into an 11x14 pre-cut mat and into an 11x14 pre-cut frame; and 11x14 substrate will fit into a 16x20, a 16x20 into a 20x24 and so on.
Around the DMV, both Ikea and AC Moore's have ridiculously affordable prices for acceptable, minimalist frames. With AC Moore's if you sign up for sales alerts, you'll be bombarded with coupons (the best one is their 25% off for your purchase - including sales items; otherwise you get their 55% off regular price coupon emailed to you every 30 seconds). Practically every frame at Ikea is a minimalist frame, but be careful because many of them are European size standards, which are different from US; however, Ikea frames generally come with acid-buffered mats, with is a nice "bennie" to have.
By the way, if you need a lot of frames in the same size - let's say two dozen frames, then I suggest that you find the ready made frame that you like and that will accommodate your work (this usually works for photographers), turn it over and see who makes the frame and then contact the manufacturer (if it's in the USA) and see if they will sell you the frames directly. There's usually a minimum order to "qualify" for this option, and thus situations may vary according to your needs.
If you want to do artwork in other than standard sizes, then more power to you, and framing just got a little pricier, but there's also a technique.
First find a ready made frame that is bigger than your odd shaped artwork and visualize the artwork inside the frame. If the proportions are agreeable to you (let's say you have a rectangular work which can be matted with both sides and top the same and bottom "heavy" - that is perfectly acceptable.
Once you have the frame, go to a framer and have them cut you a mat that has the outside dimensions of your frame and have them cut a window that fits your work. Now you are only paying them to cut a custom mat, rather than paying them to do that as well as creating a custom frame and glass from scratch. It should reduce your costs by about 80%.
Then just bring your matted work home, pop it into the frame and as the Brits say: "Bob's your uncle."
Friday, April 28, 2017
Frida Kahlo at a steal!!!
C'mon blogosphere! You're making me look bad!
Anybody like Frida? This very cool painting that I did in art school and which sold originally almost 15 years ago, showed up at an auction house a while back and it is almost over and as of this morning it was available for around $120!
This painting sold for $1200 in the 1990s!
Follow the link! And bid already!
http://www.invaluable.com/catalog/searchLots.cfm…
#fridakahlo #frida #picasso #pablopicasso #fridapainting #lennycampello #artauction
Anybody like Frida? This very cool painting that I did in art school and which sold originally almost 15 years ago, showed up at an auction house a while back and it is almost over and as of this morning it was available for around $120!
This painting sold for $1200 in the 1990s!
Follow the link! And bid already!
http://www.invaluable.com/catalog/searchLots.cfm…
Frida Kahlo: Picasso Style Oil on Board, c. 1980 F. Lennox Campello |
#fridakahlo #frida #picasso #pablopicasso #fridapainting #lennycampello #artauction
Thursday, April 27, 2017
Stolen art
“It is absurd that the University of Oklahoma would act as if they have done a noble thing by returning a piece of stolen art to France. From the moment that the University of Oklahoma discovered the painting was stolen, university administration, led by President David Boren, has fought tooth and nail to prevent this painting from returning to its rightful owner. In order to accommodate a wealthy donor, President Boren went as far as spending hundreds of thousands of dollars to keep the art away from its rightful owner – a family that was nearly destroyed during one of the darkest periods of humanity,” said Rep. Mike Ritze.Read the story here.
Wednesday, April 26, 2017
Rockville openings
Artists and Makers Studios 2 Presents "anti-land" with Gregory Logan Dunn "Tulipmania" with Patty Hankins
Artists and Makers Studios 2 on Wilkins Avenue in Rockville will present one exhibit in the main galleries for the month of May.
"anti-land" with artist Gregory Logan Dunn will be featured in the Main and Merge Galleries on the second floor. Work in this solo exhibit represents a new group of paintings that continue to pursue traditional themes in the artist’s work: opacity versus transparency, multiple layers of paint accumulating on the surface while leaving visible existing layers underneath, through holes and rips from the layers above. Mystery, introspection, transformation, absolution. This process is highly personal - it has been an experience Dunn creates, individual and bereft of social or political commentary. Apolitical no more. Negative charges are fired in opposition saturating the American mindscape with polarizing fallout that land like lit fuses in the landscape of the national consciousness. What is fired across the aisle falls out onto the land, and it poisons, burns. There is no harvest in anti-land. "Tulipmania" with Patty Hankins of the Montgomery County Camera Club will open in the Photographers’ Hall, along with exhibits in New Master’s Gallery, Gallery 209, and artists’ open studios to round out the evening."anti-land"
"Tulipmania" Opening Reception
6:00 PM – 9:00 PM, Friday, May 5th, 2017
Artists and Makers Studios 2
12276 Wilkins Avenue
Rockville, MD 20852
Additionally AM presents three exhibits in three galleries for the month of May at the Parklawn location in Rockville, just 9/10’s of a mile from the buildings on Wilkins. "Navigation/Immigration" with Alonzo Davis, "Waterborne" with Cindy Packard Richmond, and "This Ain’t Yo Mama’s Textiles" with Melanye Coleman, along with resident artists’ open studios.
These exhibits at both locations open Friday, May 5, and continue through Wednesday, May 25th, 2017. Viewing hours are 10:00 AM – 4:00 PM, Tuesday-Friday, 10:00 AM – 4:00 PM Saturdays, and Sundays/Mondays by chance or appointment.
Kahlo quote
"I used to think I was the strangest person in the world but then I thought there are so many people in the world, there must be someone just like me who feels bizarre and flawed in the same ways I do. I would imagine her, and imagine that she must be out there thinking of me too. Well, I hope that if you are out there and read this and know that, yes, it's true I'm here, and I'm just as strange as you."
― Frida Kahlo
― Frida Kahlo
Tuesday, April 25, 2017
Opportunities
Strategic Goal is to encourage young artists to pursue their own innovative approaches in global art perspective.
Awards will be given for the top 5 chosen winners in the Painting and Sculpture, Contemporary Media Art, and Architecture and Design. The finalists are provided with one round trip ticket and 3 nights' stay in the conference hotel in Vienna, Austria.
No Entry Fee
Details: http://gamma2017.weebly.com
Awards will be given for the top 5 chosen winners in the Painting and Sculpture, Contemporary Media Art, and Architecture and Design. The finalists are provided with one round trip ticket and 3 nights' stay in the conference hotel in Vienna, Austria.
No Entry Fee
Details: http://gamma2017.weebly.com
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