"Art doesn’t have to be shown in New York to be validated. That requirement is long gone..."Read the whole article here.
Saturday, March 30, 2013
Saltz on the Death of the Gallery Show
Jobs in the Arts
Various job opportunities at the Guggenheim Museum: NYC, USA.Deadline: asap.
http://www.guggenheim.org/new-york/about/jobs/full-time
Current available positions at The Museum of Modern Art, MOMA NYC: NYC, USA.Deadline: asap.
http://www.moma.org/about/jobs
Current available positions at The Whitney Museum of American Art, NYC. USA.Deadline: asap.
http://whitney.org/About/JobPostings
http://www.guggenheim.org/new-york/about/jobs/full-time
Current available positions at The Museum of Modern Art, MOMA NYC: NYC, USA.Deadline: asap.
http://www.moma.org/about/jobs
Current available positions at The Whitney Museum of American Art, NYC. USA.Deadline: asap.
http://whitney.org/About/JobPostings
LATINO/US Cotidiano
Civilian Art Projects' director Jayme McLellan has been working with the Embassy of The Kingdom of Spain to help promote the LATINO/US Cotidiano exhibition. They've worked hard to produce the show, and props to Bridget Sue Lambert
who printed all of the photographs. Opening details at the bottom.
'LATINO/US Cotidiano'
A national traveling exhibition and photobook visualizing the U.S. Latino experience today through 12 of the most talented photographic voices working internationally.
SPAIN arts & culture is pleased to present a national traveling exhibition and book, LATINO/US Cotidiano. Literally meaning "everyday life," Cotidiano is a dynamic look at the rapidly changing nature of the Latino experience in America.
The Hispanic population in the U.S. has reached the 50 million mark, making the Latino community the largest minority in the country for the first time. One out of every six Americans is now of Hispanic origin, an impressive social transformation with enormous political, economic, and cultural consequences. Outdated stereotypes, racial profiles, and past cultural archetypes no longer accurately reflect a nation enriched by a growing and diverse population. But what does it look like today?
To better understand this culturally shifting phenomenon, SPAIN arts & culture commissioned Claudi Carreras, one of the foremost experts on IberoAmerican Latino photography, to research and gather the strongest photographic voices working today on issues of Latino identity. For LATINO/US Cotidiano, Carreras selected established and emerging photographers of Latino descent who embrace the theme and also excel at their craft: Carlos Alvárez Montero, Sol Aramendi, Katrina Marcelle d'Autremont, Calé, Ricardo Cases, Livia Corona, Héctor Mata, Karen Miranda, Dulce Pinzón, Susana Raab, Stefan Ruiz, and Gihan Tubbeh.
Join us also for a book presentation, Q&A and signing on April 3, 2013 at 6 pm at the National Portrait Gallery with Associate Curator of Photographs Frank Goodyear, LATINO/US Cotidiano curator Claudi Carreras, and photographers Ricardo Cases and Susana Raab, moderated by Carlos Tapia, Professor at American University.
WHEN | ||||
| ||||
WHERE | ||||
Former Residence of the Ambassadors of Spain | ||||
2801 16th St NW | ||||
Washington, D.C. 20009 | ||||
Map it | ||||
+ INFO | ||||
This event on spainculture.us | ||||
RSVP | ||||
RSVP required for the Opening Preview:contact@spainculture.us Free and open to the public. |
Friday, March 29, 2013
More bucks for DC public art
The D.C. Commission
on the Arts and Humanities (DCCAH) has just announced a proposed
$2.3 million increase to the city's public art budget in the most recent
Capital Improvements Plan by Mayor Vincent C. Gray. The proposed budget
increase, which will take effect in FY 2014, will allot a $5 million
annual capital allocation for public art over the next six years.
The DCCAH administers public art in the District through its DC Creates! Public Art
program. This program, which is funded by the city's Capital Budget
purchases, commissions, and installs artworks for public sites
throughout the District of Columbia, including parks, libraries,
community centers, government offices, bridges and other public venues.
The collection includes more than 100 permanently sited and integrated
works and over 2,600 portable works in District Government offices.
"The mayor's $2.3 budget
increase is a significant investment in making the District of Columbia a
world-class arts and culture destination," said Lionell Thomas,
Executive Director of the D.C. Commission on the Arts and Humanities.
"Investing in the aesthetic qualities of this city provides for a
improved quality of life, creates cultural attractions as well as
develops a sense of place in our neighborhoods."
Sleepout at the Capitol Skyline Hotel
Pencil it in: April 20
DC's own WPA is hosting an art-filled, art-music-and-film-fueled sleep-out at the Morris Lapidus-designed Capitol Skyline Hotel!
DC's own WPA is hosting an art-filled, art-music-and-film-fueled sleep-out at the Morris Lapidus-designed Capitol Skyline Hotel!
There will be installation art by Megan Blafas, embarrassing opportunities in karaoke with Jeremy Flick, and performances by the very cool Calder Brannock, Maida Withers' Dance Construction Company, chukwuma agubokwu, and the very fair and talented Kathryn Cornelius!
Get your tickets here !
Thursday, March 28, 2013
When sailors drink...
Here's a puzzle that has confounded Sailors for decades... even the brightest among us.
You are on a Horse, galloping at a constant speed.
On your starboard side is a sharp drop off.
And on your port side is an Elephant traveling at the same speed as you.
Directly in front of you is a galloping Kangaroo and your horse is unable
to overtake it.
Behind you is a Lion running at the same speed as you and the Kangaroo.
What must you do to safely get out of this highly dangerous situation?
After years of research, the DoD has come up with the answer to this rather odd, but unusually common situation... been there and done that.... scroll down for the answer...
Hey Squid!!! Get your drunk ass off the merry-go-round!
Hey Squid!!! Get your drunk ass off the merry-go-round!
Trawick Prize Deadline is Monday!!!
The deadline for TheTrawick Prize: BethesdaContemporary Art Awards is next Monday!
This annual juried
art exhibition awards $14,000 in prize money annually to
the top four artists. A group exhibition of the finalists’ work will take
place in September 2013 at Gallery B in downtown Bethesda. With a top prize of $10,000, The
Trawick Prize is one of the largest and most prestigious contemporary art awards
in the nation.
The 2013 competition will be juried by
Cynthia Connelly, Visual Arts Curator at Artisphere in Arlington, VA; Alexander
Heilner, Associate Dean of Design and Media Studies at Maryland Institute
College of Art in Baltimore; and Vesela Sretenović, Senior Curator of
Modern and Contemporary Art at The Phillips Collection in Washington, D.C.
Artists must be 18 years of age or
older and residents of Maryland, Virginia or Washington,
D.C. Original painting,
drawing, photography, sculpture, fiber art, digital, mixed media and video are
accepted. The maximum dimension should not exceed 96 inches in any
direction. No reproductions. Selected artists must deliver artwork to the
exhibit site in Bethesda, MD. All works on paper must be framed to full
conservation standards. Each artist must submit five images (10 for 3-D work),
application and a non-refundable entry fee of $25.
Artists may apply online or download
an application at http://www.bethesda.org/bethesda/trawick-application.
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