Thursday, September 05, 2024

Trawick Prize winners

The Trawick Prize: Bethesda Contemporary Art Awards folks have announced the 2024 winners. From over 400 applicants, Pedro Ledesma III of Alexandria, VA was awarded the prestigious Best in Show award, and the prize of $10,000. 

Scott Pennington of Baltimore, MD earned 2nd Place, James Stephen Terrell of Washington, DC was awarded 3rd Place, and Paloma Vianey of Washington, DC received the Young Artist Award. 

Congratulations to the winners!

The winners and finalists artwork is being shown in a group exhibit at Gallery B (the former Fraser Gallery) which will run from September 5th - September 29th. 

Gallery hours are: Thursday - Sunday, 12-5pm. An opening reception will be held on Friday, September 13th from 6pm-8pm.

Gallery B is located at 7700 Wisconsin Avenue in Bethesda. 

Tuesday, September 03, 2024

Mermeiding again...

The below mixed media painting will be at The Bethesda Row Arts Festival, which is one of the DMV’s largest outdoor fine arts festival, and one of the best in the country, and will take place September 7-8 on the streets of Bethesda Row. 

The show will showcase 185 artists in 14 media categories: ceramics, drawing/pastels, fiber/decorative, fiber/wearables, glass, graphics/printmaking, jewelry, metalwork, mixed media 2D, mixed media 3D, oil/acrylic painting, photography/digital art, sculpture, watercolor, and wood. 

It is located essentially at the intersection of Elm Street and Woodmont Avenue, two blocks from the Bethesda Metro, and there are multiple public parking garages nearby. 

Online here: https://www.bethesdarowarts.org

See ya there! I'll be in booth S104!!!

"Mermaid", mixed media painting, 16x20 inches

Monday, September 02, 2024

This weekend: Bethesda Row Fine Arts Festival!

 Over the last two decades I have written extensively about the phenomenon of gallery art fairs as the new salons of the 21st century, as art magnets where galleries congregate and collectors and curators, and celebrities, and the illuminati go to see and buy art. Furthermore, anecdotal figures from the major fairs seem to confirm that a lot of artwork is being sold by galleries at the fairs. My own experience in doing art fairs for the last 18 years confirms this fact - I have my own positive empirical evidence, albeit with the caveat that fairs still seem to be recovering from the Covidian monster..

There's another "art world" out there of fine art fairs that - because of the curious highbrow attitude of the "high art" cabal - never really gets any attention from the art media, etc.

I’m talking about outdoor art fairs that some of us know well, and many more others think they know well even though they've actually never been to any of the good ones. I am talking about the outdoor art festivals that get ranked as the top ones by Sunshine Artist magazine and others; fairs such as the Cherry Creek Arts Festival in Denver, or the Ann Arbor Arts Festival (actually four separate art fairs that draw over half a million visitors), and of course, the Coconut Grove Arts Festival in Miami, which routinely attracts about 150,000 visitors in the Miami area.

Immediately the clueless “experts” who have never been to one of these top-of-the-line outdoor art festivals will think and imagine what they visualize as an outdoor art market: dried flowers, teddy bears and watercolors of barns. 

Don't get me wrong, there are thousands and thousands of these type "art" fairs around as well - but those are NOT the ones that I am talking about.

I am talking about the cream of the Sunshine Artist Top 100 list. These are shows where only original art, not reproductions, are allowed, and photography has very severe rules (must be done by the photographer, limited editions only, signed, archival processes only, etc.). These shows are highly competitive to get in (they're juried), and usually offer quite a lot of money in prizes for the artists. The jurors vary from museum curators, art center managers, art critics, artists (I’ve been a juror myself many times), etc.

I guess I'm saying that there's some curatorial legitimacy to them as well... for the elitists amongst you dear readers.

But the real point to which I am driving here is the mathematics of attendance: thousands.

Locally in our area, there are several of these exceptional fine art outdoor festivals: The Bethesda Row Arts Festival in Bethesda, the Tephra ICA Arts Festival in Reston, and the Bethesda Fine Arts Festival in the Woodmont Triangle area of Bethesda, also attract those numbers of people and are all highly competitive.

Consider the median income in either Bethesda ($185K) or Reston ($135K), and what you get out of it is a lot of people with a lot of disposable income. As a whole, the DMV itself has a median household income of around $100K – one that ranks among the highest among the U.S.'s 25 most populous metro areas.

Art price tags at these local fairs range from $100 to $20,000. As such, there's a somewhat comparable universe of prices to the DC area gallery market, as an example.

And I submit that a lot of the people who attend one of these outdoor fine art festivals do not have the "formation," as a Communist would say, to dare set foot in a white cube gallery... and have probably never heard of Art Base Miami Beach.

Nearly all of these huge and highly successful outdoor arts festivals (as far as I know) only allow individual artists to sell their work at the fairs, and their entry fees are about 1/100th of the entry fees of the “other” art fairs.

Wanna see one? The Bethesda Row Arts Festival, which is the DMV’s largest outdoor fine arts festival, and one of the best in the country, will take place September 7-8. The show will showcase 185 artists in 14 media categories: ceramics, drawing/pastels, fiber/decorative, fiber/wearables, glass, graphics/printmaking, jewelry, metalwork, mixed media 2D, mixed media 3D, oil/acrylic painting, photography/digital art, sculpture, watercolor, and wood. It is located essentially at the intersection of Elm Street and Woodmont Avenue, two blocks from the Bethesda Metro, and there are various public parking garages close to the show itself. 

Online here: https://www.bethesdarowarts.org

See ya there! I'll be in booth S104!

Sunday, September 01, 2024

From the Washington Post

The WaPo's Art editor, Jonathan Fischer, responds to my previous discussions on the end of the "Galleries" column:

“Thanks for reaching out. I’ve seen the coverage and understand why people are anxious and confused. 
We decided to end this specific column, but we will continue to cover the local art scene, including galleries, with criticism and more – including from Mark. 
As a general matter, it’s worth pointing out that we have an editor dedicated almost wholly to visual art – Steven Johnson, at steven.johnson@washpost.com – and he’s very eager to be kept in the loop on shows, events, news and more. I’m also here for questions, feedback, pitches and more.”

My current OTC article

 Read it here.

Many times over the last few decades I’ve used this column to send a shout out to hard working artists who do not wait to be “discovered”, but who are always on the move, taking advantage of opportunities both around the DMV and elsewhere – they follow the maxim that the best place for art that one creates in on someone else’s walls.

Friday, August 30, 2024

Umi... where ya been all my life?

This column is all about art - until I find a great restaurant to recommend to you constant readers (getting close to seven million!).... drumroll!!!

Umi Sushi & Seafood Buffet

This place is out of control!!! In a good way! No... in an amazing way!

I am about to eat this little Alien


WOW!!! I've been to dozens and dozens of buffet style restaurants all over the world, and this new one in Rockville Pike, in the Greater Washington, DC region (or as locals call it: the DMV - a term that I invented) is taking buffet style to a new level.

We went for lunch - the son unit and I, around 2:30pm or so - I note this because I am told that there are usually long wait lines closer to real lunch/dinner hours.

It's an everything buffet, not just seafood: sushi, lots of seafood, lots of meats, lots of a variety of Asian cuisine (Japanese, Chinese, Filipino, etc.), fresh fruits, soups, ice cream, desserts (Asian and western) and a hot pot section that is even better and fancier than most specialty hot pot restaurants.

The service is impeccable, with an army of waiters! 

Our waitress was Fiona (pretty sure not her real name) and she was really good! Friendly and hard working! And ahhhh... suspect that Fiona is not her real name... cough... cough...

The sushi is constantly being made and is fresh and of a huge variety, including some that I'd never seen before, such as sushi with avocado stripes? It was DA BOMB!

As a "cobarde" for hot foods, these giant shrimp looked delicious but probably at the nuclear level of spicy!

There were at least three or four shellfish dishes for lunch! Mussels, clams, etc. There were also crab legs and full, whole crabs, snails, etc.


When I lived in Spain, one of my fave dishes were these guys below - an I am happy to report that the way that Umi cooks them is delicious!


There were also the usual, kinda, sorta dishes that tells you that this joint is the "real thing" as evidenced by the below splendor known as chicken feet... cough... cough...


And also an Asian take on escargots...


Desserts were also ample and diverse!


Go eat at UMI! 1471 Rockville Pike, Rockville, MD 20852

(240) 430-8000 -- Closes at 10:30 PM - Tell them DC ART NEWS sent ya!

Thursday, August 29, 2024

The son unit is 15!