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

Social Media Art Workshop


Monday, April 24, 2017

Art of Connecting

Thursday, April 27 | 7:00 until 9:00 pmFriday, April 28 | 10:00 until 11:30 am
MPA@ChainBridge, 1446 Chain Bridge Road, McLean

Please join MPA at MPA@ChainBridge for the Art of Connecting. Anne Marie Marenburg, an MPA ArtReach instructor and National Gallery of Art docent will guide parents on creating enriching and enjoyable experiences with art from preschool to high school and beyond. Ms. Marenburg will provide parents tools to facilitate meaningful connections between their children and art objects they encounter. Utilizing these tools will in turn help to deepen the bond between parent and child while strengthening core skills such as reading comprehension and critical thinking at any age.


An exhibition by J.T. Kirkland will be on view and his works will contribute to the discussion. 


RSVP Here

Sunday, April 23, 2017

Call for Entries – The Wearable Hat Show with Steven Krensky

If you are a DMV area artist, gallerist, art dealer, college/university art faculty, museum director or curator, and do not know who Steven Krensly is, then you are woefully out of tune with the DMV art scene.

Krensky is easily one of the most visible faces at nearly every DC area art opening or event - not just because he's a good looking feller (which he is), but mostly because of his haberdashery... and also one of the DMV's premier art collectors.

To say that the Krenskiester stands out in a crowd is a gross under-estimattion.

Krensky is really plugged into the scene - he attends nearly every student/MFA art show around the region, and often discovers artists waaaay before most gallerists, curators, etc.

And as a result, he also has the planet's largest art collection focused (mostly) on DC area artists. And when I say large... I mean humongous collection: 100s and 100s of artists.

Anywhooooo.... Krensky, together with his wife Linda, also often dabbles in curating some exhibitions and he's got a really interesting call for artists for his next one:
Artists and Makers Studios is proud to host The Wearable Hat Show – with Steven Krensky at both A&M locations

This exhibit, curated by Steven Krensky and a mystery juror, will offer artists in the metro area an opportunity to make a statement through the art of the hat. Pick a hat form, any hat will do. Paint it, stitch it, weld it, glue it, glass it, bead it, weave it together with wire or string or any old thing. Your hat can be a reflection of your daily creative process, make a political statement, it can be whimsical, flattering, or funny. It must be functional, but need not be comfortable. Your hat must be for sale!
Artists whose work has been selected will be shown at both locations – the Reception Gallery at Parklawn, and in our Wilkins Avenue Merge Gallery for this month long exhibit. Hats will be pinned to the walls, or displayed on pedestals, at the gallerist’s discretion. Artists & Makers Studios will take a nominal 25% commission on sales from this exhibit. The artist should insure their own work for the duration of the exhibit if necessary.
Submission Requirements
****Submissions due on or before August 1st before 4pm, notification by August 9th.
Accepted work must be delivered to/and picked up from the assigned gallery, no shipments of artwork will be accepted.
Delivery date deadline, Sept 5th – 10-4 (Parklawn or Wilkins in Rockville)
Opening, Sept 8th from 6-9pm
Show ends Sept. 27th
Pick-up of unsold work Sept. 28th, 29th, 30th – 10-4
Artists may submit up to 5 jpegs of their work for consideration. The curator will choose works appropriate for public display from among all of the works submitted, and will include as many artists as possible. An artist may have one or more works accepted for exhibit. All work must be available for sale, and functional.
All entries must be submitted electronically in JPG format only. Email your images along with the completed form below to: judith@artistsandmakersstudios.com Please type Hat Show and your last name in the email subject line. For example: Hat Show/heartsong.
Images should be sized at no more than 1024 by 768 pixels, and less than 1 megabite in disk space size. Image file names must include artist’s last name and title of the piece in the following format: 
(ArtistLastName_ImageTitle.JPG) example: vanGogh_StarryNight.jpg
Click here to get a pdf of HAT Call for Entries 2017

Friday, April 21, 2017

Wanna go to a closing reception tomorrow?

CLOSING RECEPTION - SATURDAY APRIL 22, 4-6pm
"THE RED DOT"
WORKS BY HARRIET LESSER

Thursday, April 20, 2017

The end of the JPG?

Virtual reality has hit the mainstream seemingly overnight. 
The New York Times posts daily 360° videos and has a virtual reality app, 200,000 developers are registered with Oculus to create VR games, and the Hirshhorn created a VR version of Yayoi Kusama’s Infinity Mirrors exhibition. These organizations, among others, are seeing the incredible potential of VR technology.  
Virtual reality offers two unique advantages. First, it can be used to experience a space—like a gallery—in an incredibly realistic manner without setting foot in it. Second, it offers entirely new experiences that no one has ever had before. Arts organizations are beginning to take advantage of the former, and artists are exploring the latter. 
While VR may not change the way galleries are run immediately, keeping an eye on the digital landscape will inform the future of your gallery’s programming. There are steps you can take now, investments both small and large, to prepare your gallery for what’s to come—and generate excitement about your program in the short term.
Read this fascinating (and important article) via Artsy here.