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A food-themed FREE resource site for ARTISTS.

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Art and Art Deadlines.com

Tag: Artist Resource

CALL for ENTRIES: Small Plates

Learn more about the Small Plates exhibit from artandartdeadlines.com!yours, MINE
& ours

Food is so personal.  A client recently asked if I had any dietary restrictions so that she could be prepared for our branding consultation that will span a lunch time.  I’m allergic to parsnips, which is rarely an issue, and wheat which is always an issue.  Always.  Her response?  We grow our own heirloom corn varietals from which we grind our own corn meal for cornbread.”  Food is PERSONAL, and this next Call couldn’t be any more personal.  Your support will determine the growth of this opportunity.  Please make it personal for you too…

Check out this Call for Entries from Art&ArtDeadlines.com for Small Plates: A Response to Hunger, an exhibit of unframed small works at The Balcony Gallery (Knox, TN).  This is a tiny show that needs big support…

*Editor’s Note: If you have read the personal portion of this post, CALL for ENTRIES: Small Plates, anywhere other than by email subscription or on ArtAndArtDeadlines.com, it has been published without permission and is considered theft.

Enter the Small Plates Exhibit at The Balcony in Knoxville, TN sponsored by AAAD!
CALL for ENTRIES:
Small Plates from artandartdeadlines.com

 

“The purpose of life, after all, is to live it, to taste experience to the utmost, to reach out eagerly and without fear for newer and richer experiences.” – Eleanor Roosevelt

ELIGIBILITY:
Open to all artists

THEME: Hunger—physical, spiritual, political, emotional or creative. Food reference optional.

MEDIA: Open to all 2D unframed media that will fit in a 9”x 12” envelope.

DEADLINE:  EXTENDED TO April 18, 2016 (midnight EST)

NOTIFICATION:  Ongoing until April 19, 2016

Small Plates: A Response to Hunger from artandartdeadlines.comENTRY FEE: $5 for up to 5 images. Entry fees are waived for members in good standing of The Haggus Society.

CURATOR: R.L. Gibson, a working artist and the Editor of artandartdeadlines.com (AAAD). Trained in classical, French culinary techniques, Gibson created AAAD as a food-themed resource to motivate artists to create their own community, standards & artistic opportunities. In addition her own solo & collaborative art, Gibson has served as a gallerist, juror, teacher & arts administrator for nearly two decades.

SALES: All work will be considered for sale unless marked NFS. A commission of 30% will be taken on all sales. Unsold artwork will be returned and payment for sold artwork will be made within 30 days of the close of the exhibit.

AWARDS: Best of Show, 1st, 2nd & 3rd Place will be awarded. Note, at the curator’s discretion, ONE image from EVERY artist will go into the online exhibit with a link to the artist’s website.

For complete details, Read the Full Prospectus!

Click to Read the Full Call for Small Plates: A Response to Hunger!

 

GETTING a SHOW: Updated Resource

Getting a Show: Avoiding the Pitfalls & Pratfalls by RLGibson

 

ArtAndArtDeadlines.com began as a way to keep track of shows worth entering for artists, friends and peers– beginners, emerging & established. And over the years, I have found that established artists still make many the same mistakes I see from beginners, over and over again. As a gallerist, juror & critic, I am regularly asked why I choose one artist’s work over another.  There is never just one reason, but there are a handful of regular mistakes that influence my decisions NOT to choose work.  The obvious first issue: the art must be good, or at least promising–that should be the most important fact.  But to tell the truth, there’s a gallery or a show out there for most art– the sumptuous & the sour.  But, because the world is full of banana peels, we’ve newly updated one of our artist resources…

Getting a Show: Avoiding the Pitfalls & Pratfalls!

CALL for ENTRIES: Small Plates

Learn more about the Small Plates exhibit from ArtAndArtDeadlines.com!i want some
MORE

Remember having “eyes bigger than your stomach”?  That was the automatic response to an overly large-portioned plate at my childhood dinner table.  It was then immediately followed by a lecture reminding me of children thought to be starving in a far away country that seemed, well, other worldly to a five year old.  The truth would have been more effective.  There were starving children in my own country, my own state, my own town, probably my own neighborhood.  I was fortunate not to want for food as a child.  But today, my eyes are always bigger than my stomach.  I always take on more than I can easily digest, gastronomically and otherwise, and yet I always find myself both hungry to pile on more–even while suffering the indigestion of my last turn at the proverbial table.  This next Call is proof.  In 2016, we are proud to be offering a buffet for all of you.  Take us up on this, the first of several dinner invitations to come… 

Check out this Call for Entries from ArtAndArtDeadlines.com (AAAD) for Small Plates: A Response to Hunger, a small works show, exhibited in The Balcony gallery (Knoxville, TN) located at The Emporium Center.   Grow with us…

Enter the Small Plates Exhibit at The Balcony in Knoxville, TN sponsored by AAAD!CALL for ENTRIES:
Small Plates

 

“The purpose of life, after all, is to live it, to taste experience to the utmost, to reach out eagerly and without fear for newer and richer experiences.” – Eleanor Roosevelt

Here at AAAD, we believed that the food metaphor is a perfect vehicle to inspire you to feed your creative self. We shun the demeaning cutesy-ness of the bohemian “starving artist” image as it numbs us to the real struggle of hunger & starvation worldwide.  Starvation, in a literal way, robs humanity of being human and ends even the possibility of a creative self. For SMALL PLATES, AAAD wants your views on hunger —physical, spiritual, political, emotional and/or creative. Food references are optional.

The SMALL PLATES will be exhibit will both open & close on May 6, 2016 as a part of the First Friday festivities at The Balcony Gallery, located in The Emporium Center in Knoxville, TN –a one-day show.

ELIGIBILITY: Open to all artists —any age, any gender, any location.

THEME: Hunger—physical, spiritual, political, emotional or creative. Food reference optional.

MEDIA: Open to all media that will fit in a 9”x12” envelope (aka 229 mm x 305 mm or No. 10 ½), including but not limited to: painting, drawing, fiber, collage, digital, photography, graphic design, illustration, pen and ink, printmaking, etc.

DEADLINE:  April 18, 2016

NOTIFICATION:  Ongoing by April 19, 2016

Small Plates: A Response to Hunger from artandartdeadlines.comENTRY FEE: $5 for up to 5. Entry fee waived for members in good standing of The Haggus Society.

CURATOR:  R.L. Gibson (yours truly), a working artist, also serves as the editor of artandartdeadlines.com (AAAD). Trained in classical, French culinary techniques, Gibson created AAAD as a food-themed resource to motivate artists to create their own community, standards & artistic opportunities.  In addition to producing her own solo & collaborative art, Gibson has served as a gallerist, juror, teacher & arts administrator for nearly two decades.

AWARDS:  To assist resume building, designations of Best of Show, 1st, 2nd & 3rd Place will be awarded; however, cash prizes will NOT be awarded.  Award designations will be chosen from the physical work and will be judged based on artistic merit and interpretation of the theme.  If not chosen for the gallery exhibit, please note that at the curator’s discretion, ONE image from EVERY artist will go into the online exhibit* with a link to the artist’s website. *Editor’s note: So if you follow all the rules, you can at the very least add the online exhibit to your resume, even if you are not selected for the physical exhibit.

SALES:  All work will be considered for sale unless marked NFS.  A commission of 30% will be taken on all sales. Please note, 20% commission on cash/check sales and 25% commission on credit card sales is held by Arts & Culture Alliance of Greater Knoxville.  The additional 5-10% commission is retained by AAAD.  Unsold artwork will be returned and payment for sold artwork will be made within 30 days of the close of the exhibit.

For complete details, Read the Full Prospectus!

Click to Read the Full Call for Small Plates: A Response to Hunger!

REJECTED…not dejected.

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!We regret to inform you…

You’ve gotta hate letters that start that way.  It is like biting into the perfect apple and finding a worm.  Yep, rejection sucks.  Every artist gets rejected.

While pondering how to do to expand and improve ArtAndArtDeadlines.com for the upcoming year, it occured to me that Rejection Letters are a subject of fascination for many.  Why don’t we try to take something personal and depressing and turn it into something great?

…A positive way to learn. 

That’s right readers…I want your Rejection Letters. 

Send me your letters with your name and address obscured (or I can obscure them for you), and I will build a page to catalog all the letters by gallery or show. 

Do your research to find out if a show is not your cup of tea!Sharing our rejection letters could serve several purposes:

1.  COMMISERATION:  You won’t feel so alone when you get 3 rejections a week.

2.  RESEARCH:  The letters can serve as research on shows and galleries–Step #3 in the popular AAAD post The Art of Cooking also known as How to Get an Art Show.

3.  HUMOR:  Some of them are hilarioius.

4.  WARNING:  If you read between the lines, sometimes Rejection Letters can be a great warning that a gallery is just not your cup o’ tea.

So, what do you think?  Start submiting your rejection letters (and emails) to me at SubmitArt@ArtAndArtDeadlines.com.  Iwould prefer that you send the letters to me AFTER obscuring your name and contact information, but rest assured that I will take every effort to make sure this is an uplifting experience.  No one wins if you feel embarrased.

As an added incentive, I will give anyone
that sends me a Rejection Letter a FREE entry
into the $2 Art Contest for that month!

 

Learn more about the artist behind this Rejected Art, Xerographist R.L. GibsonAfter this blog post goes live, I will create a Rejection Page with this blog entry as its content until the letters roll in (assuming you’re interested).

Here’s one of my letters from the Lake County Discovery Museum’s Postcard Art Competition in 2007.  It is a kind letter (sweet, but not entertaining), but I’ll dig through to find some that are more interesting soon. 

Send your rejection letters today!

ARTIST RESIDENCY: Martignano, Italy

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GIMME S’MORE TIME

Recharging your batteries or becoming inspired…sometimes you just need some time away.  I am planning a short weekend jaunt to a neighboring mountain town to sit around a campfire, roast s’mores and act like a tourist.  I simply can’t wait…just a few days away from reality to get in touch with my inner dreamer again…the one that believes all things in life are possible.

If you need more than just a weekend away, check out this Italian Residency opportunity brought to you by the Martingnano International Residency for Artists.  Treat yourself to submersion in the culture and experience of a community that nurtures art and artists.

ITALIAN ARTIST RESIDENCY OPPORTUNITY!

Martignano International Residency for Artists – MIRA, supports international artists and promotes the cultural exchange between artistic disciplines and international experiences. At MIRA they have created a pristine environment exclusively for the interaction of the artists and their work needs.

Martingnano International Residency Program!Their institution offers 4 furnished rooms, 3 with private bathrooms, which serve as living spaces. They are all adapted with work desks for the artists to be able to create also in the comfort of their room.

The grounds are divided between 2 buildings, one having the main shared work studio, and the other permitting the artists to work freely throughout the house in order to create wherever they feel more at ease.

They assist the artists as much as possible in order for them to concentrate solely on their creating. Once a month they organize an open house in which they invite local artists and the surrounding community in order to further promote the cultural exchange between the artists and their adopted home.

Also, they are fortunate enough to be sponsored by the Comune of Martignano who have kindly donated the gallery installations at the Palazzo Palmieri, every two months, in order for their artists to have an exhibition.

Artists, critics, press and the community at large are invited to attend. If funds permit, a brochure is printed to document the exhibition.

Studios are available from one to six month periods. They have found that one month is barely enough to arrive and adapt, let alone create and exhibit.

Martingnano International Residency Program!For stays of longer than three months, the options for those non European Community Citizens are to either leave the Schengen Zone and return, or applying for an extension on the tourist visa. Please check ahead with your local embassy, and they will check on their side.

There is a monthly fee charge of between 700 and 900 Euro depending on the room chosen.

This money goes solely to the maintenance and continuous improvement of what they can offer to their attending artists.  MIRA does neither cover living / material nor travelling expenses, although they will be there to greet you either at Brindisi International Airport or the train station at Lecce, and their driver will take to the airport again at the end of your residency.

For full details, visit the MIRA residency website!

Martingnano International Residency Program

PORTFOLIO REVIEW: A Call for Solo Show Proposals in San Francisco

Subscribe to ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!I have been preaching about submitting your work for consideration for solo shows… and sometimes you guys make me look really good–like the prize winning pie at the county fair, in fact.

I posted a great call for Art Portfolio Reviews from Alphonse Berber Gallery in Berkley, California last week and clearly some of you must have listened because I just received another Call for Portfolios for Solo Shows from their San Francisco location known as Alphonse Berber Projects.

So, finish that piece of pie and check out this Call for Portfolio Review!

Alphonse Berber Gallery opened Alphonse Berber Projects in Union Square, San Francisco on June 4, 2010.  Located at 575 Sutter St, it is housed in a multi-level building dedicated to showcasing the most contemporary artworks.  Alphonse Berber Projects presents single-artist exhibitions and features the widest possible range of mediums.

Art Portfolio Submission Guidelines:

Images: Please send a digital or physical portfolio of no more than 10 images. If digital, please send high quality jpegs or tiffs.

Fee: Alphonse Berber requires a $30 fee to accompany the submission package. Include a SASE envelope, and mail your submissions to:

Alphonse Berber Gallery!Alphonse Berber Gallery
Attn: Artist Submissions
575 Sutter St.
San Francisco, CA 94102

Submission review takes a one month turnaround period. Please, no phone calls before or after review.

For more information, Visit their Site.

Artists’ portfolios will be returned to them by mail after review, or kept for further consideration with artists’ permission.

Alphonse Berber Gallery is not responsible for any lost, missing, or damaged materials.

NETWORKING: State Art Organizations – Alabama to Missouri

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See what your blogger has been cooking!One of the most valuable assets to a cook is the money to buy groceries, but money won’t help if you don’t have anywhere to cook.  State art agencies often provide both funding and the opportunities to use it.  I believe that state art agencies are under used by artists, and as a result, are often among the first to lose their funding during budget cuts. 

Start Cooking!

In an effort to take away your excuses, here are all 50 of the state art agencies in two halves.  This is Alabama to Missouri; the second half is forthcoming.  Contact them today.  Pour over their sites.  Download grant applications.  Don’t complain about the food until you’ve tried it.

Be the feather in the cap of your state’s art foundation, council or agency.

Alabama!1. Alabama State Council on the Arts & the Alabama Artists Gallery, 201 Monroe Street, Montgomery, AL 36130-1800. Telephone: 334/242-4076, FAX: 334/240-3269. The purpose of the Alabama Arts’ mission is to promote the arts in Alabama, especially arts education, including fine arts, dance, folk arts, drama and music.

alaska600x

2. Alaska State Council on the Arts, 411 West 4th Avenue, STE 1E, Anchorage, AK 99501-2343, Telephone: (907) 269-6610, Toll-free: 1-888-278-7424, Fax: (907) 269-6601, TTY: 1-800-770-8973.  Arizona!The Alaska State Council on the Arts is a state agency that fosters the development of the arts for all Alaskans through education, partnerships, grants and services.

3. Arizona Commission on the Arts, 417 W. Roosevelt Street, Phoenix, AZ 85003-1326, Phone: (602) 771-6501, Fax: (602) 256-0282, email: info@azarts.gov.  The mission of the Arizona Commission on the Arts is an Arizona where people broaden, deepen and diversity their engagement with the arts, as creators, audiences and supporters, in ways that are satisfying and integral to their lives.

Arkansas!4. Arkansas Arts Council, 1500 Tower Building, 323 Center Street, Little Rock, AR 72201-2606, Phone: (501) 324-9766, Fax: (501) 324-9207, TDD: (501) 324-9811, email: info@arkansasarts.com.  The Arkansas Arts Council advances the arts in Arkansas by providing services and grants-in-aid supporting arts endeavors that encourage and assist literary, performing and visual artists in achieving standards of professional excellence. They also provide technical & financial assistance to Arkansas arts organizations.

California!5. California Arts Council, 1300 I Street, Suite 930, Sacramento, CA 95814, Phone: (916) 322-6555 / (800) 201-6201 , Fax: (916) 322-6575, Email: webmaster@cac.ca.gov.  The California Arts Council, a state agency, has the mission to advance California through the arts and creativity with an emphasis on children and artistically underserved communities.  The agency encourages widespread public participation in the arts; helps build strong arts organizations at the local level; assists with the professional development of arts leaders; promotes awareness of the value of the arts; and directly support arts program for children and communities. Colorado!

6. Colorado Council on the Arts, 1625 Broadway, Suite 2700, Denver, CO 80202, Phone: 303.892.3802, Fax: 303.892.3848.  The Colorado Council on the Arts, a state agency, combines state funds with federal funds from the National Endowment for the Arts, and invests in communities across the state to ensure that the cultural, educational and economic benefits of the arts are enjoyed by thousands of Colorado youth and millions of Colorado citizens and visitors every day.  The mission of the Colorado Council on the Arts is to promote the cultural, educational and economic growth of Colorado through development of its arts and cultural heritage. Connecticut! 7. Connecticut Commission on Culture & Tourism, One Constitution Plaza, 2nd Floor, Hartford, Connecticut 06103, Phone: 860-256-2800, Fax: 860-256-2811.  The Connecticut Commission on Culture and Tourism was created in 2003 to bring together arts, historic preservation, film and tourism.  Its mission is to preserve and promote Connecticut’s cultural and tourism assets in order to enhance the quality of life and economic vitality of the State.  Delaware!8. Delaware Division of the Arts, Carvel State Office Bldg., 4th floor, 820 North French Street, Wilmington, DE 19801, Phone: 302-577-8278, Fax: 302-577-6561, Email: delarts@state.de.us.  The Delaware Division of the Arts, a branch of the Delaware Department of State, is dedicated to nurturing and supporting the arts to enhance the quality of life for all Delawareans. Together with its advisory body, the Delaware State Arts Council, the Division administers grants and programs that support arts programming, educate the public, increase awareness of the arts, and integrate the arts into all facets of Delaware life. Florida! 

9. Florida Division of Cultural Affairs, R.A. Gray Bldg, 3rd Floor, 500 South Bronough Street, Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0250, Phone: 850.245.6470, Fax: 850.245.6497.  The Division of Cultural Affairs promotes the arts and culture as essential to quality of life for all Floridians.  They believe that arts and culture change the world for the better by significantly contributing to the economic vitality of communities, enriching the lives of participants, and educating people of all ages. Georgia!

10. Georgia Council for the Arts is a state agency with the mission to provide access to the arts for all Georgians. The agency strives for 100% statewide coverage in the support of arts programming through grants, which are competitive applications for funding that are adjudicated by peers.  The charter also encourages the agency to provide services such as programming that supports the arts, artists, and the arts organizations of Georgia. Among these services, GCA maintains and loans pieces from Georgia’s State Art Collection, supports arts organizations, and partners with other state agencies to provide general support for the arts.Hawaii!

11. Hawaii State Foundation on Culture and the Arts, 250 South Hotel Street, 2nd Floor, Honolulu, Hawai`i 96813, Telephone: (808) 586-0300, Fax: (808) 586-0308, TTY: (808) 586-0740.  The foundation’s mission is to promote, perpetuate, preserve and encourage culture and the arts, history and the humanities as central to the quality of life of the people of Hawaii.  In addition, the foundation also offers national and international opportunities for Hawaiian artists. Idaho!

12.  Idaho Commission on the Arts, Mailing Address: P.O. Box 83720, Boise, ID 83720-0008, Street address: 2410 North Old Penitentiary Rd., Boise, ID 83712, Phone: 208/334-2119 or 800/278-3863 Fax: 208/334-2488.  The Idaho Commission on the Arts endeavors to provide quality experiences in the arts for all Idahoans. It is charged by state law to “stimulate and encourage throughout the state the study and presentation of the arts and public interest and participation therein…” The Commission must also “encourage and assist freedom of artistic expression essential to the well-being of the arts.” The Commission is both a service organization with a professional staff offering technical assistance and training, and a funding organization providing financial assistance. Illinois!

13. Illinois Arts Council, James R. Thompson Center, 100 West Randolph, Suite 10-500, Chicago, IL 60601, Phone: 312-814-6750, Toll Free: 800-237-6994, TTY: 888-261-7957, FAX: 312/814-1471, email: iac.info@illinois.gov.  Illinois Arts Council Mission Building a strong, creative, and connected Illinois through the engagement of all Illinoisans in the pursuit of, participation in, and enjoyment of the arts. Mission: They believe in active engagement with all Illinoisans, ensuring that residents of all ages and abilities have the opportunity to participate in, and experience, the arts and culture. Indiana!

14. Indiana Arts Commission, 100 North Senate Avenue, Room N505, Indianapolis, Indiana 46204, Phone:  317-232-1268, Fax: 317-232-5595, email: IndianaArtsCommission@iac.in.gov. On behalf of the people of Indiana, the Indiana Arts Commission advocates engagement with the arts to enrich the quality of individual and community life. The Arts Commission encourages the presence of the arts in communities of all sizes while promoting artistic quality and expression. The Arts Commission advocates arts development opportunities across the state, and stewards effective use of public and private resources for the arts. Iowa!It stimulates public interest in, and participation with, Indiana’s diverse arts resources and cultural heritage. The Arts Commission works to enhance public awareness of the arts, life-long learning opportunities, and arts education programs.

15. Iowa Arts Council, 600 E Locust, Des Moines, IA 50319-0290.  Phone: 515-281-6412, Fax: 515-242-6498, TTY: 800-735-2942.  The mission of the Iowa Arts Council is to enrich the quality of life for Iowans through support of the arts.  The vision of the Iowa Arts Council is that Iowans recognize the arts are essential to their quality of life. Kansas!

16. Kansas Arts Commission, 700 SW Jackson, Suite 1004, Topeka, Kansas 66603-3774, Toll Free in Kansas: 866-433-0688, Phone: 785-296-3335, Fax: 785-296-4989, email: kac@arts.ks.gov.  The mission of the Kansas Arts Commission is to provide opportunities for the people of Kansas to experience, celebrate and value the arts throughout their lives.  KAC serves artists, nonprofit organizations, schools and government agencies through grants to support the arts in communities. They also provide seminars, workshops and one-on-one consulting in business development, grantwriting, strategic planning, marketing and other areas of nonprofit arts management.   Kentucky!

17. Kentucky Arts Council, 21st Floor, Capital Plaza Tower, 500 Mero Street, Frankfort KY 40601-1987, Phone: 502-564-3757, Toll Free: 888-833-2787, Fax: (502) 564-2839, email: kyarts@ky.gov.  The Kentucky Arts Council creates opportunities for Kentuckians to value, benefit from and participate in the arts. The agency facilitates the delivery of the arts throughout the commonwealth through matching grants, arts marketing programs, awards, events and services. Major areas of emphasis are: support for arts organizations, individual artist recognition and development, arts in education, community arts support and marketing and promotion of Kentucky arts products in regional, national and international markets.Louisiana!

18. Louisiana Division of the Arts, 1051 North 3rd Street, 4th Floor, Rm #420, Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70802, Grants Help Line: 225-342-8180, email: arts@crt.state.la.us, Fax: 225-342-8173.  Mission Statement:  The Louisiana Division of the Arts in cooperation with the Louisiana State Arts Council is the catalyst for participation, education, development and promotion of excellence in the arts. It is the responsibility of the Louisiana Division of the Arts to support established arts institutions, nurture both emerging arts organizations and overall cultural economy, assist individual artists, encourage the expansion of audiences and stimulate public participation in the arts in the State of Louisiana. Maine!

19.  Maine Arts Commission, 193 State Street, 25 State House Station, Augusta, Maine 04333-0025, Auto attendant: 207-287-2724, Fax: 207-287-2725, TTY: 1-877/887-3878, e-mail: MaineArts.info@maine.gov.  Mission: The Maine Arts Commission shall encourage and stimulate public interest and participation in the cultural heritage and cultural programs of our state; shall expand the state’s cultural resources; and shall encourage and assist freedom of artistic expression for the well being of the arts, to meet the needs and aspirations of persons in all parts of the state. Maryland!

20. Maryland State Arts Council, 175 W. Ostend Street, Suite E, Baltimore, Maryland 21230, Phone: 410-767-6555, TTY: 1-800-735-2258 or 711, Fax: 410-333-1062, email: msac@msac.org.  The mission of MSAC is to encourage and invest in the advancement of the arts for the people of our State. The goals of the Council are to support artists and arts organizations in their pursuit of artistic excellence, to ensure the accessibility of the arts to all citizens, and to promote statewide awareness of arts resources and opportunities.

Massachusetts! 21. Massachusetts Cultural Council, 10 St. James Ave., 3rd Floor, Boston, MA 02116-3803, Phone: 617-727-3668, Toll Free (in MA only): 800-232-0960, Fax: 617-727-0044, TTY: 617-338-9153, email: mcc@art.state.ma.us.  The Massachusetts Cultural Council (MCC) is a state agency that promotes excellence, access, education and diversity in the arts, humanities, and interpretive sciences to improve the quality of life for all Massachusetts residents and contribute to the economic vitality of Massachusetts’ communities. Michigan! 22. Michigan Council for Arts and Cultural Affairs, 702 West Kalamazoo Street, P.O. Box 30705, Lansing, MI 48909-8205, Phone: 517-241-4011, Fax: 517-241-3979, email: artsinfo_at_michigan.gov, TDD: (517) 373-1592.  The Michigan Council for Arts and Cultural Affairs serves to encourage, develop and facilitate an enriched environment of artistic, creative, cultural activity in Michigan. Goals: Strengthen arts and culture; support arts education; recognize, reflect and celebrate cultural pluralism and broaden cultural understanding; establish and facilitate communications networks; increase visibility and awareness of the arts and culture; encourage new, creative and innovative works of art; and expand and develop funding resources.Minnesota!

23. Minnesota State Arts Board, Park Square Court, Suite 200, 400 Sibley Street, Saint Paul, MN 55101-1928, Pone: 651-215-1600, Toll-free: 800-8MN-ARTS  (800-866-2787), Fax: 651-215-1602, TTY: 711 or 800-627-3529, E-mail: msab@arts.state.mn.us.  Mission: The Minnesota State Arts Board will serve as a leading catalyst for creating a healthy environment for the arts that fosters broad public participation in, and support for, the arts in Minnesota; promote artistic excellence and preserve the diverse cultural heritage of the people of Minnesota through its support of artists and organizations; act as a responsible steward of the public trust; and work with the statewide network of regional arts councils to ensure accessibility to arts activities for all Minnesotans. Mississippi!

24. Mississippi Arts Commission501 North West St., Suite 1101A, Woolfolk Building , Jackson, MS 39201, Phone: 601-359-6030, TDD: 800-582-2233, Fax: 601-359-6008.  To serve as a catalyst for arts development at the local level, the Commission must foster networks of local leaders, artists of all disciplines, arts volunteers and patrons; consult on community arts development, performing, visual and literary arts, folk arts, and arts education; provide training in arts management, arts education planning, arts facilities planning and communitywide cultural planning; and promote broad-based public awareness of the importance of the arts in education and community life.  Through the arts, diverse communities of all sizes can better identify shared values, create vibrant public spaces, and enhance the effectiveness of schools. The arts also attract visitors who leave with a strong, positive image of Mississippi. Fostering excellence in the arts provides the inspiration to generate a higher quality of life for all citizens. Missouri!

25. Missouri Arts Council, 815 Olive Street, Suite 16, St. Louis, MO 63101-1503, Phone: 314-340-6845 or toll-free (866) 407-4752, TDD: 800-735-2966, The Missouri Arts Council  is dedicated to broadening the appreciation and availability of the arts in the state and fostering the diversity, vitality and excellence of Missouri’s communities, economy and cultural heritage. 

Click here for the State Art Organizations update from June 21, 2010.

ARTIST TIP: Marketing & The Artist

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Don't just make lemonade, make mojitos!I receive forwards of shows and calls and artist tips on a regular basis.  Some are wonderful; some are too basic to pass along.  I try to filter them to offer the best and brightest to you because I know how busy you are.

A few days ago, I received a list of press contacts of reporters searching for subjects to interview from my friend and Austin-based writer Dean Lofton.  Among them was The Abundant Artist.  I knew instantly upon reading the tagline “dispelling the starving artist myth” that we were like-minded. 

Click Here to visit The Abundant Artist!

At the heart of The Abundant Artist is an opportunity to pay for an art marketing consultant.  And, while you may or may not be ready for that step, I recommend that you subscribe to the weekly email newsletter.Visit Ann Rae's Blog! 

I subscribed, and in my introductory email was offered an interview with Ann Rae, a California painter know for both her vineyard paintings and phenomenal success through unique marketing strategy. 

You’ll need the password to hear the interview, so sign up for the email list today.  It is worth it.  I promise.  If you are one of those artists that bristle at the idea of marketing your artwork or thinking of your artwork as a business opportunity–don’t visit this site…You won’t like what you hear.  You should stay home and muse to yourself about being under-appreciated.

Lesson learned?  Find your voice.  I’ve found my voice.  How ’bout you?


ArtAndArtDeadlines.com is a free service–forever and always. But clicking on a sponsor’s ad can help you find additional Art Deadlines and help this service remain free. I’ve filtered the ads so they are mostly about art. I hope you find something intriguing! Thanks for your support!