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Since 2003... the 11th highest ranked art blog on the planet! And with over SEVEN million visitors, F. Lennox Campello's art news, information, gallery openings, commentary, criticism, happenings, opportunities, and everything associated with the global visual arts scene with a special focus on the Greater Washington, DC area.
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Professor Chawky Frenn from George Mason University is one of the DMV's true blue chip artists and he will be participating in PEACE WEEK, March 27-31, organized by George Mason University's Carter School for Peace and Conflict Analysis and Resolution.
To see his presentation, timing, location, and free registration, please visit: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/556872971047
Date and Time: Wed, March 29, 2023, 2:00 PM – 3:20 PM EDT
Location: Vernon Smith Hall, 5th Floor, Room 5183 3434 Washington Blvd Arlington, VA 22201
Speaker: Chawky Frenn, Professor, College of Visual and Preforming Arts, George Mason University
“WE THE PEOPLE: For Show or For Sure?” is a presentation in image and word intended to engage the audience in a soul-searching examination of our own contributions to the challenges and crises facing our country and the world: Can peace survive in a structure embedded with systemic racism in the legal system, health care, and education? Can political representation be fair when election campaigns are swamped with special interests and dark money? To what extent do our politics and policies foster divisions, conflicts, violence, and war? Can there be peace when social justice is defiled and human rights are violated? Art raises awareness, inspires change, and stimulates action by expressing repressed perspectives and contesting dominant narratives.
For information on PEACE WEEK, times and links of presentations and seminars, visit: https://www.eventbrite.com/cc/carter-school-spring-peace-week-2023-1762989
GMU Carter School: https://carterschool.gmu.edu/news-events/carter-school-peace-week/spring-2023-peace-week
Gallery B welcomes “Variety Show: A Photo Ensemble” by Creative Platform, a photography group featuring nine photographers. Experience an array of subjects ranging from the living world of plants, people, and built environments with visions that vary from subjective abstraction to straight renderings of photos. Opening reception on Saturday, March 11 from 5-8pm
Gallery B is at the site of the old Fraser Gallery at 7700 Wisconsin Avenue, NW in Bethesda.
Gallery Hours
March 9 – April 2, 2023
Thursdays – Saturdays, 12pm - 5pm
Sundays, 12-4pm
Multiple Exposures Gallery presents an Exhibition of New Photography
by Francine B. Livaditis
Gehry Reflections
Exhibition Dates
January 31–March 12, 2023
Hours
Daily 11 am–5 pm
Multiple Exposures Gallery announces the opening of a new photography exhibition by member artist Francine B. Livaditis.
The gallery is located on the third floor of the Torpedo Factory Art Center, 105 N. Union Street, in Alexandria, Virginia. Hours are 11 am–5 pm daily. The exhibit runs January 31 through March 12, 2023.
Gehry Reflections includes photographs Livaditis has made over the past dozen years capturing the interplay of light and color that can be found on the undulating, angled and curvilinear stainless-steel surfaces of buildings designed by the famed architect, Frank Owen Gehry.
The photographs in Gehry Reflections were taken at four locations: the Cleveland Clinic Lou Ruvo Center for Brain Health in Las Vegas, NV; the Museum of Pop Culture (formerly Experience Music Project) in Seattle, WA; Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles, CA and Ray and Maria Stata Center at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, MA.
Livaditis will be at the gallery between 11am-5pm on Saturday and Sunday, February 4 & 5; Sunday and Monday, February 19 & 20; and Sunday, March 12. In addition, on the evening of Friday, March 10, Livaditis will be at Multiple Exposures Gallery from 5 pm–8 pm. Please stop in to meet the artist and view and discuss her work.
In the past I've noted that "Livaditis consistently displays that sublime skill (which superficially looks so easy, but in reality is incomprehensibly hard) to make everyday scenes look new and different."
Need some woke mafia leaders to cancel this song... cough... cough... it starts like this:
C’ ‘na luna mezz’ u mare
Mamma mia m’a maritare
Figlia mia a cu te dare
Mamma mia pensace tu.
Good luck with that...
Beware of this asswipe trying to rip off artists!
From: Anthony Burrows anthonyburrows111@gmail.com
Date: February 26, 2023 at 11:16:17 AM EST
Subject: Inquiry about Artwork for Wedding Anniversary Gift
Good day,
I hope this email finds you well. My name is Anthony, and I am reaching out to you with a special request. My wife and I are soon celebrating our wedding anniversary, and I want to make it extra special by giving her a unique artwork as a gift. After researching several artists, I was drawn to your work, and I would love to learn more about the pieces you have available.
Could you kindly provide me with some photos and details of your art, including their sizes and prices? I have a budget of $500 upwards and would like to find a piece that fits within this range.
I appreciate your time and expertise, and I look forward to hearing back from you soon. If you have any questions or require further information, please do not hesitate to ask.
Best regards,
Anthony
Re-posted from 2009, but still applicable:
The Six Most Common Mistakes Artists Make When Approaching Galleries
J. Jason Horejs, owner of Scottdale's Xanadu Gallery has published a book titled "Starving" to Successful | The Artist's Guide to Getting into Galleries and Selling More Art.
This book was written "to help you approach galleries in an organized, systematic and professional way." The book will also help artists avoid the six mistakes listed below.
I'll try to get a copy of this book and review it here, but meanwhile you can order the book here and below are the six most common mistakes according to Jason:
This book springs from my experiences with artists. Several years ago, I began to wonder why artists were inept talking to galleries. I quickly realized most were unsuccessful because there is very little information explaining the best strategies.
That lack of information leads to these blunders:
Mistake #1: Presenting an inconsistent body of work.
Artists generally love their freedom. They want to experiment. They love a challenge. They crave variety. All good things, except when you are presenting your work to a gallery.
The work you present to a gallery needs to be unified. It doesn't need to be repetitive or formulaic, but it must present you as a consistent artist with a clear vision.
Often I feel I am looking at the work of multiple artists as I review a single portfolio. To avoid this problem you need to find focus in your work.
If you work in several media and a variety of styles, focus on just one for the next 6-12 months. Create a body of work that feels like a "series". Once you have 20-25 gallery-ready pieces in this series, you will be ready to approach a gallery.
You can further create consistency by presenting the work in a consistent way. Use similar frames for paintings and photographs, similar bases for sculpture, similar settings for artistic jewelry. Make it very clear all of the work is by the same artist.
If you simply can't rein your style in, consider creating multiple portfolios, one for each style.
Don't confuse the galleries you approach with multiple styles in your portfolio.
Mistake #2: Producing insufficient work to sustain gallery sales.
Many artists create marketable work, but in quantities too low to make a gallery relationship viable. Successful artists are consistently in the studio creating artwork. You may be surprised to learn the results of a recent survey I conducted.
I asked artists how many new works they created in the last twelve months. Painters responded that on average they were creating 53 pieces every twelve months. Sculptors 31. Glass artists 500!
A gallery owner needs to feel confident you will replace sold art quickly and maintain high quality. They want to know if you are successful the can replenish their inventory.
Don't despair if you are far from reaching this goal. Rather, look at your creative production for the last year and set a goal to increase the production by 25% in the next 12 months.
Several suggestions to increase your productivity:
1. Dedicate time daily to your art. Maybe your schedule will only allow for two hours daily, but you will produce more by working for those two hours every day than you will by waiting for big blocks of time.
Treat your studio time as sacred. Train your family and friends to respect that time. You don't interrupt them when they are at work; ask them the same courtesy when you are in the studio.
2. Set a production goal. If I could tell you the secret to producing 50, or 100 pieces per year, would you listen? Here it is: create 1 or 2 pieces per week.
I know it seems overly simple, yet few artists work in a concerted disciplined way to achieve this goal.
(A common objection I hear to this suggestion is that quality will suffer if an artist works this quickly. In my experience, the opposite is true. A certain level of quality may only be obtained by putting miles on the paintbrush, spending hours in the darkroom, moving tons of clay or stone.)
3. Remove distractions from the studio. Move your computer to another room. Unplug the telephone. Nothing kills an artist's focus faster than the constant interruption of technology. Your inbox and voicemail will keep your messages safe while you work.
Mistake #3: Delivering a portfolio in a format inconvenient for gallery review.
Often your portfolio is your only chance to show your work to a gallery owner. Poorly formatted portfolios are rarely viewed. Your portfolio should be concise, simple, informative and accessible.
25 years ago, formatting a portfolio was simple. A portfolio was either a literal portfolio with sheet protectors and photos, or a slide sheet.
The choices have since multiplied. CD? Digital hardbound photo-book? Pdf file? Email? Which format is the most effective? None of these, actually. Each has drawbacks limiting effectiveness. They are either too much work for the gallery owner to access, too easy to delete, or too hard for you to maintain.
In my book I will show an example of a perfect portfolio. Easy to maintain, easy to share. Successful.
A couple of things to keep in mind with your portfolio:1. Your portfolio should contain no more than 20-25 of your most recent works. You should not create an all-inclusive portfolio. A gallery owner does not want to see your life's work. They want to see your best, most current, most relevant work.
2. On each page you should include pertinent, relevant information about the art. Include the title, the medium, the size, and the price. Don't include the date of artwork creation.
3. Place your bio, artist's statement, and resume at the back of the portfolio, not the beginning. Your artwork is the most important feature of the portfolio, don't bury it behind your info. Limit press clippings, and magazine articles to 2-3 pages.
4. Include 2-3 images of sold artwork. You should try to include at least one photo of your artwork installed. These images will establish your credibility more rapidly than any resume ever could.
In "Starving" to Successful I will teach you how to create a powerful portfolio. Your new portfolio will end up in gallery owner's hands, rather than in the garbage can.
Mistake #4: Lacking confidence and consistency in pricing.
One of the greatest challenges facing you as an artist is knowing how to correctly value your work. Many artists price their work emotionally, and inconsistently. Galleries can't sell wrongly priced art.
Worse, nothing will betray an unprepared artist like not knowing how to price his/her work.
Many artists mistakenly under-price their work. They do this because they feel they are not established. They do it because their local art market won't sustain higher prices. They do it because they lack confidence in their work.
In the book I will help you come up with a consistent, systematic formula for pricing your art.
Is your work priced correctly?
Mistake #5: Approaching the wrong galleries.
My gallery is located in an art market dominated by Southwest and Western subject matter. My gallery stands apart from most of the galleries in Arizona because I have chosen art outside the norms. Yet I am constantly contacted by Western and Southwestern artists. They seem surprised and hurt when I turn them away. They could have saved us both some discomfort by researching my gallery before approaching.
Which markets should you approach first? How should you research the galleries? Is it safe to work with galleries in out-of-state markets?
"Starving" to Successful will teach you how to create a list of qualified, appropriate galleries to contact (I will also teach you how to approach them).
Mistake #6: Submitting art through the wrong channels.
Conventional wisdom, and even some highly respected art marketing books will advise you to send your portfolio with a cover letter to the gallery. You may also hear it's best to call a gallery and try to make an appointment to meet the owner. You might visit a gallery's website to learn of their submission guidelines.
In my experience, these methods all guarantee failure. I will share with you a more direct, simpler approach; this approach will tremendously improve your chances of success. The approach is no secret, and yet most artists don't employ it.
Find the solutions to avoiding all these mistakes in the pages of "Starving" to Successful.
In addition to learning how to avoid the mistakes listed above,"Starving" Artist to Successful Artist you will also see clearly how to effectively organize your work, build your brand as an artist, communicate effectively with your galleries, and much more.
I will give you concrete steps you can take to systematically prepare for gallery relationships.
EVENT REMINDER. Public Dialogue: Rebecca Rutstein, March 2, 6 pm in the de la Cruz Gallery at Georgetown University.
Rebecca Rutstein, Shimmer, 11 x 64 x 4", powder coated steel, LED lights, motion sensors, 2018 Permanent Collection of the Georgia Museum of Art. |
Multidisciplinary artist Rebecca Rutstein works at the intersection of art, science, and technology. For over twenty years she has created paintings, sculptures, interactive installations and public artworks inspired by the natural world. Her talk will explore the evolution of her work, her partnerships with scientists (including microbiologists, ecologists, geologists and molecular biologists) and the value and synergy of interdisciplinary exchange.
Co-sponsored with the Georgetown University Earth Commons. Reception to follow. The Maria & Alberto de la Cruz Art Gallery is located at 3535 Prospect St. NW Washington, DC 20007.
"The black is indolent and lazy, and spends his money on frivolities, whereas the European is forward-looking, organized, and intelligent."
-- Che Guevara
"The black is indolent and a dreamer; spending his meager wage on frivolity or drink; the European has a tradition of work and saving, which has pursued him as far as this corner of America and drives him to advance himself, even independently of his own individual aspirations." -- Che Guevara
"Mexicans are a band of illiterate Indians" -- Che Guevara
Rather than forging existing paintings, Wolfgang produced hundreds of original works that skillfully imitated the styles of deceased European artists including Max Ernst, Fernand Léger, Kees van Dongen and André Derain. His wife Helene then sold them as previously undocumented works, sometimes for seven-figure sums. The pair claimed to have inherited their art collection from Helene's grandfather, who they said had acquired it from a Jewish gallerist fleeing Hitler's Germany.
This has the makings of one of the top photography shows of the year!
The OAS AMA | Art Museum of the Americas announces America’s Crossroads, an exhibition opening at the OAS F Street Gallery (1889 F Street, NW, Terrace Level) featuring six artists in a visual dialog. Carlos Bautista Avila (Mexico), Rene Campos Navarro (Mexico), Luis Delgado (United States-Mexico), Gisele Martins (Brazil), Cirenaica Moreira (Cuba), and Diana Ramirez Lopez (Mexico) provoke through their work mixed responses as they reflect, manipulate, rethink, and question on a local level who we are in the Americas. The people in the Americas share a common history that is manifested in local terms, becoming a conglomerate of different cultures of an ever-dynamic changing history of native Americans, settlers, and migrants.
La Industrial, lavanderÃa Habana de la serie Metálica, 1998-1999 Cirenaica Moreira |
Exhibition Opening: Thursday, February 23 4:30-6:30pm
HOURS: By appointment only, Monday-Friday 10AM-5PM
LOCATION
OAS General Secretariat Building, Terrace Level
1889 F Street NW
Washington, DC 20006
ADMISSION: Free
In October, Wendy Halsted Beard from Wendy Halsted Gallery in Birmingham, a suburb of Detroit, was charged with wire and mail fraud after investigators said she took consignments from victims who either never had their artwork returned, never received proceeds from any sales, or both. Beard is also accused of selling works and not delivering the art after receiving payment.
Since I'm in a rare mood this week, I want to award a special "Assholes of the Month" to the six members of the Loudoun County School Board, which "on Tuesday voted not to release an independent report into how the school division handled the sexual assault of two students at different high schools in 2021. The assaults spurred a special grand jury investigation that resulted in criminal charges against the division superintendent and public information officer."
The six asswipes (out of 9 members) who voted against releasing the details of the investigation, clearly do not cappish that the board represents the interests of the parents and then the "other side." May the bluebird of happiness shit on their birthday cakes for the rest of their lives.
New York Congressperson Alexandra Ocasio Cortez gets the nod this week as I finally understand what "AOC" means = "Antipatica O Comemierda" as she blasts religious ads in Superbowl.
For more than 60 years Dulaney Plaza has been a cornerstone of the Towson community, serving the needs of residents, visitors and students. The Plaza began as a single family-owned retail store selling automotive parts, and over the years has flourished into the mixed-use hub it is today - with four generations (and counting) of that same family as a part of the management team, guiding the development and expansion of the center. Now the Plaza is a community of over 30 office tenants, a vibrant marketplace for food, attire, and daily life. 828 Dulaney Valley Road is an integral part of the Towson ecosystem, adapting to the ever changing tastes and trends of those who rely on the Plaza for every-day goods, a quick bite, or change of fashion.
TOTAL PROJECT BUDGET: Current project budget is $10,000, but may be negotiated after selection.
PROJECT DESCRIPTION: Dulaney Valley Plaza is inviting artists to submit proposals for a public mural. Wall space is 73’ by 9’4 ½” vertical (687.37 SQF), located on Dulaney Valley Road. Each concept must take into consideration these dimensions once scaled. The mural does not necessarily have to cover the entire available space and may only occupy a portion of the available space depending on artist vision and budgetary restrictions.
The Dulaney Plaza branded logo must feature into the mural in a notable capacity, but incorporation and presentation is left to artist discretion. Otherwise themes, imagery, and composition are also left to artist discretion but depictions/representations of local (Maryland/Baltimore County) flora and fauna, landmarks, history and tenant businesses of the plaza (barring the usage of branded logos) are preferred.
DEADLINE: Deadline for submissions is April 7th 2023.
APPLICATIONS: Mail applications to: Lauryn Lukin 828 Dulaney Valley Road Suite 5 Towson, MD 21204. Digital proposals to lauryn@taubprop.com. Proposals may also be hand delivered to [Lauryn Lukin 828 Dulaney Valley Road Suite 5 Towson, MD 21204]. All formats will be accepted. Included in the application and sent work should be an artist bio and artist statement alongside the applicant's name and address.
SELECTION CRITERIA: Maryland based and artists originating from Maryland are welcome; however, there are no other limiting factors, all skill levels and backgrounds are welcome. Selection will be performed by a juried panel.