Opportunity for Artists
You still have a few days to get your entries in for this Artomatic opportunity for emerging artists. The Heliport Gallery in the vibrant Silver Spring area announces Aeromatic: Artomatic at the Heliport.
Who’s Eligible? Any Artomatic participant who has never shown in a commercial gallery.
Jurors: David Fogel, Director of the Silver Spring Gateway Project and manager of the Heliport and Nevin Kelly, owner of the Nevin Kelly Gallery on U Street in DC.
When: Entries due January 2, 2006; show will take place in February, 2006.
How: Send up to 3 jpeg images to David Fogel. Make sure to note title, size and medium and include your phone number. JPEGS are strongly preferred by the judges but if you absolutely can't manage an electronic entry, you may send up to three slides to:
David Fogel
Heliport Gallery
8001 Kennett Street, Suite 3
Silver Spring, MD 20910.
Slides must arrive by January 2, 2006.
Friday, December 30, 2005
Jacobson's Top Ten
The CP's photography critic comes up with his top ten photography shows of the year (actually nine). An abbreviated list is below, or read the full CP article here.
1. "André Kertész" at the National Gallery of Art.
2. "Burnversions" at the Reston Community Center.
3. "Gina Brocker: Photographs From the Series ‘The Donovans and Other Settled Travellers’ " at Irvine Contemporary.
4. “Shomei Tomatsu: Skin of the Nation” at the Corcoran Gallery of Art.
5. “Noelle Tan: Latent” at the District of Columbia Arts Center.
6. “Lida Moser: 50 Years of Photographs” at Fraser Gallery Georgetown.
7. “Reflections of France” at the Kathleen Ewing Gallery.
8. “Lewis and Clark Revisited: A Trail in Modern Day,” at the Department of the Interior Museum.
9. “Barbara Probst: Exposures” at G Fine Art.
Airborne today and heading to La Florida to spend New Year's someplace sandy and warm... more later when I settle in...
And while I was gone, Alexandra Silverthorne had a few things to say about my current exhibition at Fraser Gallery Georgetown.
Read them here.
Thursday, December 29, 2005
Barlow's Top Ten
Philip Barlow is easily one of DC's best known and more involved art collectors and an avid gallery goer who gets around to more galleries than many people who write about DC art and artists. Barlow advises that:
Below is my list of the top ten gallery shows from DC in 2005. This year seemed even more difficult than last year, I had an original list of about ten others shows. The list is in order.Keep emailing me your Top Ten lists and I will publish them as time allows.
Nepotista caveats: I am on the board of DCAC and I purchased work from some of these shows.
1. Barbara Probst “Exposures” – G Fine Art – (4/2/5 – 4/30/5)
2. Chip Richardson “Set” – Fusebox (11/5/5 – 12/17/5)
3. Linn Meyers “Current” – G Fine Art – (10/29/5 – 12/10/5)
4. Jiha Moon “symbioland” – Curator’s Office – (9/10/5 – 11/15/5)
5. Noelle Tan “Latent” – District of Columbia Arts Center – (4/8/5 – 5/15/5)
6. Andrea Way “New Works” – Marsha Mateyka Gallery – (2/19/5 – 3/26/5)
7. Teo Gonzales “Recent Work” – Irvine Contemporary – (4/22/5 – 5/28/5)
8. The Empire of Sighs – Numark Gallery – (9/16/5 – 10/29/5)
9. Mary Early “Sculpture” – Hemphill Fine Arts – (11/5/5 – 12/23/5)
10. Nooni Reatig “All Real, All Steel” – NNE Gallery – (4/28/5 – 6/15/5)
I also wanted to note a couple of photography exhibits that were great for letting us see some of the Washington art world's movers and shakers in their earlier years:
Mary Swift’s Washington: The Arts Scene, 1975 – 2000 – Flashpoint Gallery – (7/21/5 – 8/27/5)
Wrinkle Free – Viridian Restaurant – October 2005
They're coming...
From yesterday's WaPo (and my posting a while back)
Fifty terrapin statues will soon appear on the streets of Washington and its suburbs in honor of the 150th anniversary of the founding of the University of Maryland.Let the ranting and raving begin!
The 100-pound turtles -- like the panda, elephant and donkey statues displayed on city streets in recent summers -- will be decorated by local artists and auctioned next fall. The money will go to student scholarships.
Monday, December 26, 2005
What Your End-of-the-Year Top 10 List(s) Says About You If you include more than three shows by artists who are also bloggers... then you must be a blogger too!
If more than six of the shows on your list are museum shows, then you have been seduced by our great DC area museums and need to get around more often.
If three or more of the shows on your list are from the same gallery or museum, then you're not getting around as much as you should before making lists.
If three or more of the shows on your list are from the same commercial gallery, then you are a hidden nepotista or a nepotista wannabe.
If all ten of your shows are from the same three or four spaces, then you don't have a clue.
If your list includes more than one show from a library or restaurant, then you're definately getting around more than I do, or you have no idea where the galleries are.
If your list only includes shows that were within walking distance of a Metro stop, then you don't have a car.
If list list includes more than one show in Bethesda, Reston, Rockville, Alexandria or Arlington, then you live in one of those areas.
If your list includes more than three embassy gallery shows, then you're going there mostly for the good food.
If your list only includes photography shows, then you are Louis Jacobson (photography critic for the City Paper).
If your list is based on which shows has the best food, then you are a grub.
If your list has more than three video shows, then you must be a Hirshhorn Museum or Whitney Biennial curator.
If all the shows on your list are by non Hispanic white male artists... well, you know what you are.
If your list does not include a single DC area show, then we know who you are.