Monday, May 06, 2013

Gateway Open Studio Tour & WGS Annual Open House

Gateway Community Development Corporation (CDC) presents the 9th Annual Gateway Open Studio Tour on Saturday, May 11, 2013, from 12 p.m. to 5 p.m., in Prince George's County's Gateway Arts District. 
Home to one of the D.C. metro area's most innovative and exciting arts scenes, the Gateway Arts District brings together professional artists representing almost every visual arts medium. 
The day will end with an Opening Reception and After-Party at the Brentwood Arts Exchange (5pm - 8pm) and the 39th Street Gallery (5:30pm - 8pm). Both are located at 3901 Rhode Island Avenue, Brentwood, MD.
Reserve your seat for the Open Studio Tour Complimentary Shuttle here.

And as you go around these tours, this Saturday it will be also the Washington Glass School's annual Anniversary Party and Open House....12 years and counting!  

While you're there do not forget to drop by Red Dirt and Flux Studios! It will be a great day to drop by and see what makes this area so hot for art and sculpture!


What : Washington Glass School Annual Open House and Anniversary Party
When : Saturday, May 11th from Noon to 5pm.
Where : Washington Glass School
             3700 Otis. St.
             Mt. Rainier, Md  20712
             202-744-8222

Sunday, May 05, 2013

Go Gallery-Hopping with a Contemporary Art Collector

How do you get started collecting art if you’ve never done it before? Go from art outsider to insider in a single afternoon with Laura Roulet.

 Guided by Laura, visit five or six contemporary art galleries in the bustling 14th Street-U Street NW corridor. Meet with gallery directors to learn about the art on view. Laura will show you how to approach forming a collection, how to get invited to openings, how to evaluate galleries and more. Once you’re sufficiently embedded in the scene, finish with a glass of wine on your last stop.

Details here.

Saturday, May 04, 2013

An Open Letter from Arts on the Block

Dear Fellow Artist:
 
Both of us have rarely asked fellow artists for a contribution to any the various arts organizations we‘ve been involved with over the years, unless the artist is rolling in money (an all too rare state), but we’re making an exception now. We’re both on the board of directors of a non-profit organization called Arts on the Block (AOB), and it could use a little help financing a very important part of its mission, which as an artist we think you’ll appreciate.
 
AOB's signature program involves high school students, many of whom are  economically disadvantaged, but all of whom identify themselves as creative types and lovers of art.  Mosaics are what the students (called apprentices at AOB) focus on, and over the years they have created a number of great public and private murals in the DC area. As a team the apprentices work with a public or private client to design a mosaic, and then they build it. Through this program AOB does a truly remarkable job of fostering art, life, and business skills. (You can see some to our apprentices’ work by going to the AOB website www.artsontheblock.org and clicking on Buy & Commission Art.)
 
A unique cornerstone of the program described above has been paying the apprentices a stipend while participating in the AOB program. This stipend is a important teaching tool as it adds concrete value and incentive to their creative work. The appentices have historically been paid $30 a day for their participation in the program. 
 
So why are we asking you for money now? Arts on the Block, like the vast majority of non-profit art organizations, is trying to weather the current economic woes. Unlike most non-profit art organizations AOB consistently stays out of debt;.This, however, can lead to budget cuts. Thus, we’re hoping you will contribute $30 for one of our apprentices for one day in the AOB program. We will not stop you if you’d like to finance 2 days for $60, or even a  whole week for $150. But, again, We’re hoping you will at least  consider financing an outstanding young artist for one day’s participation in the of Arts on the Block program.
 
 
Or you can mail a check to:
 
  Arts on the Block
  11501 Georgia Ave.,  Ste 104
  Wheaton, MD   20902-1952
 
Whatever you can give will be greatly appreciated.
 
 Best,

Richard Dana and June Linowitz

Friday, May 03, 2013

MCA announces Curate Maryland

Sponsored by Maryland Citizens for the Arts, Curate Maryland is a new series of "on-the-ground" experiences designed to highlight and promote the arts in cities and towns from across the state of Maryland. 
 
Each Curate Maryland event will spotlight a selection of one town's local arts organizations while fostering dialogue about issues that concern arts advocates at all levels of governance. The series is a site-specific celebration, one city or town at a time, for art lovers from around the state.

The first Curate Maryland event is May 18 in Hagerstown, and features visits to The Washington County Arts Council, The Maryland Theatre, Maryland Symphony Orchestra, Washington County Museum of Fine Arts, with performances, tours, refreshments and workshop discussions throughout.  

The event is free with RSVP to Brian Francoise at 410.467.6700 or at brian@mdarts.org.

Thursday, May 02, 2013

Potomac Vallery Watercolorists


A little while ago I had the pleasure of selecting the prizewinners for the Potomac Vallery Watercolorists at the beautiful Green Spring Gardens, and although over the years I’ve had the honor and pleasure (and luck) of judging my fellow artists many, many times (by my last count almost 300 times now!), one fact is always a constant and solid, never-changing, ever-present, add some more metaphors for “you can count on this” fact: It is never easy!

A second constant is that I am always refreshed and surprised by the spectacular diversity and pluralism of visual ideas that artists can deliver. This is the main reason that I really, really like putting together, organizing and jurying art shows.

And even after all these years and all these shows, I was still astounded by the quality and wide ranging of sources used by the artists who gave me the honor to review their work for this beautiful show at Green Spring Gardens. And in case you don't already know this: the most difficult (technically) of all visual arts media is watercolor. The difference between a great watercolor painter and the rest of us is that a great watercolor painter knows how to incorporate their mistakes into the final painting.

And I can honestly say that this was not only one of the most difficult (and most fun) shows to whittle down to a select few prizewinners, but also one which truly puts together a remarkable sampling of the evolving capacity of the artistic mind to educate, entertain, baffle, lead, record, interpret, upset, delight and make us proud to be part of the visual arts component of the human race. 

The exhibition also underscores a mostly overlooked fact in this age of post-modernism: the wondrous ability of the visual arts to be both beautiful and yet remain contemporary.

This show also surprised me by how far the artists went to explore contemporary issues of all flavors as they related to the focus of the subject matter (generally speaking... flowers) and driven by the gorgeous garden settings – in some cases by delighting the viewer with a fresh and delightful take on traditional subjects such as Toni Bragg's "Bulb of a Different Sort" which delivered the visual beauty of one of my all-time favorite things on this planet (garlic) and in others by cheering the gargantuan power of color married to enviable technical skill as in Kate Niner's "Pasta for Dinner" (which won the Best of Show)... memo to Kate: You need a website!

When you come and see this show, you will walk away (as with any group show) with a variety of thoughts all fighting to control your private reaction to it. You may have come with a pre-conceived idea of seeing "flower" art and trying to understand what people mean by adding that adjective in front of the word "art." 

But you will walk away also with multiple new reactions, hopefully including a realization that art, regardless of the label, should and must always stand as art, first and foremost. And you will also walk away with the refreshing and never-ending breath of fresh air that good art injects into our daily lives.

Come see this show and join me in applauding the always-evolving skill and intelligence of contemporary artists who wield brushes, pencils, charcoal sticks, palette knives, computers, metal, stone, found objects and ideas to punch the solar plexus of our minds with ideas and reactions.

 Green Spring Gardens
4603 Green Spring Road
Alexandria, VA
April 29 - June 24, 2013

Reception: Sunday, May 5
1 - 3 p.m., Horticulture Center

Wednesday, May 01, 2013

Tuesday, April 30, 2013

The Doc gets good news...

Dr. Alida Anderson and Little Junes at National Airport - April 2013
Congrats to my amazing wife, Dr. Alida Anderson, who just got tenured at American University!