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Art and Art Deadlines.com

Tag: Woman Made Gallery

CALL for ENTRIES: The Project

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!DINNER for TWO

I should enjoy cooking with my family, right?  Ummhmm, I was afraid you might say that.  I have let go of so many of my control-freak tendencies, but in the kitchen, it still has to be my way or get-out-of-the-way.  My husband does most of the cooking alone, but loves me anyway, luckily.  Yearning for a way to create artwork outside your normal solitary creative process?  This Call may be just what you need…

Check out this Call for Entries from the Woman Made Gallery in Chicago for The Project!  I love interactive and/or collaborative work… and who doesn’t love a theme?  Surely not one of my readers!

Visit the Woman Made Gallery!CALL for ENTRIES:  The Project

 

ELIGIBILITY: Open to all women artists

MEDIA:  Any media that involves persons outside the typical gallery sphere in its creation and/or its exhibition–work that is interactive, interdisciplinary, and/or collaborative.

DEADLINE:  June 17, 2011

Visit the Woman Made Gallery online!NOTIFICATION:  July 6, 2011

ENTRY FEE:  The regular entry fee for all juried group exhibitions is $30. You may submit up to three images plus one detail view per image.

SUBMISSIONS:  Enter & pay online!

JUROR:  Mary King is a professional artist and educator with a BFA from the University of Chiago and an MFA from Western Michigan University. Represented by Denise Bibro Fine Art in New York, her work is in various collections including the Anderson Fine Arts Center, Indiana, Blue Cross Blue Shield, Michigan, and the Carnegie Center for the Arts.

For complete details, download the Prospectus!

Click to enter your artwork at the Woman Made Gallery!

 

CALL for ENTRIES: Abstractions

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!POETIC PIZZA

Abstraction is defined as the process or result of generalization.  In my house, the dinner discussion goes a little like this: “What do you want for dinner?” Which is often followed by “I don’t know.  What do you want for dinner?”  Which is then further followed by: ” Well, I know I don’t want pizza.”  By the way, this abstract dinner notion of I-don’t-know-but-I-don’t-want-that, usually ends in pizza for dinner.  Poetic, eh?  Here’s a way to have a more productive abstract notion…

Check out this Call for Entries called True Poetry: Abstractions from the Woman Made Gallery in Chicago. I’ve shown at Woman Made before, and I always admire the curatorial eye of their jurors. The fee is reasonable, and you know I love a theme. Take a closer look…

Wave After Wave by Juror Sandra PerlowCALL for ENTRIES:
True Poetry: Abstractions

Abstract art uses a visual language of form, color and line to create a composition which may exist with a degree of independence from visual references in the world. 

Western art was, from the Renaissance up to the middle of the nineteenth century, underpinned by the logic of perspective and an attempt to reproduce an illusion of visible reality.

Visit the Woman Made Gallery!The arts of cultures other than the European had become accessible and showed alternative ways of describing visual experience to the artist. By the end of the 19th century many artists felt a need to create a new kind of art which would encompass the changes taking place in technology, science and philosophy.

The sources from which individual artists drew their arguments were diverse, and reflected the social and intellectual preoccupations in all areas of Western culture at that time.

Visit the Woman Made Gallery!Abstraction indicates a departure from reality in depiction of imagery in art. This departure from accurate representation can be only slight, or it can be partial, or it can be complete.

Abstraction exists along a continuum.

Even art that aims for verisimilitude of the highest degree can be said to be abstract, at least theoretically, since perfect representation is likely to be exceedingly elusive.

Time Turned by Juror Sandra PerlowArtwork which takes liberties, altering for instance color and form in ways that are conspicuous, can be said to be partially abstract. Total abstraction bears no trace of any reference to anything recognizable. In geometric abstraction, for instance, one is unlikely to find references to naturalistic entities.

Figurative art and total abstraction are almost mutually exclusive. But figurative and representational (or realistic) art often contains partial abstraction.  Both Geometric abstraction and Lyrical Abstraction are often totally abstract.  Among the very numerous art movements that embody partial abstraction would be for instance fauvism in which color is conspicuously and deliberately altered vis-a-vis reality, and cubism, which blatantly alters the forms of the real life entities depicted.

MEDIA: Open to two- and three-dimensional semi-abstract, non-objective to pure abstract works in all media by women artists from the international community.

SUBMISSION ONLINE:Submit jpgs of up to three of your works on their website. Please include an artist statement and a $30 entry fee.

While Walking by Juror Sandra PerlowJUROR: Sandra Perlow is a prolific artist interested in abstraction and pictorial space. She earned her BA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, and an MA from the Illinois Institute of Design.

Perlow has shown her work internationally, including at Linda Warren Gallery, Harper College, Jean Albano Gallery, and the Rockford Art Museum. She is an active contributor to WMG and serves on its Advisory Board.

DEADLINE: February 9, 2011

NOTIFICATION: March 12, 2011

For full details, Download the Prospectus!

CALL for ENTRIES: The American Dream

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RED, WHITE & RHUBARB

How often have you heard the sentence, “What’s more American than pie?”  Honestly, I’m not a huge fan.  I know you are shocked that I am not over the moon about any food; however, apples just aren’t my thing.  I like raw Granny Smith apples with a generous dash of salt, but I just don’t want them cooked.  Let start a new saying, “What’s more American than rhubarb pie?”  You heard it here first, folks.  This next Call from the Woman Made Gallery is also looking to redefine the idea of American.

Check out this Call for Entries called The American Dream: A Juxtaposition from the Woman Made Gallery in Chicago.  I’ve shown work at Woman Made before, and I always admire the curatorial eye of their jurors.  The fee is reasonable, and you know how I love a theme.  Take a closer look…

Visit the Woman Made Gallery!CALL for ENTRIES:
The American Dream

It has been since the Founding Fathers declared in 1776 that “all men are created equal” and Americans were granted the privilege of “certain unalienable rights” such as “Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness” that people began to search for the abstract notion of ‘The American Dream.’  

The American Dream is a philosophy that has grown out of the perspective of the people living it and has become as individual as those who still seek to pursue it and understand it.

Visit the Woman Made Gallery!The American Dream: a Juxtaposition seeks to define our current interpretation of ‘The American Dream’ while acknowledging what this dream exposes our minds, bodies, and environment to. 

MEDIA:  This exhibition is open to all media that address the hopes, promises, and prosperity of ‘The American Dream’ as well as the inconsistencies and consequences of ‘The American Dream’.

Online Submissions: Submit jpgs of up to three of your works on their website.  Please include an artist statement and a $30 entry feePlease note the deadline is FIVE days away.  You don’t have time to mail an entry…use the online submission.

Juror: Catherine Blackwell Peña  (BFA/MFA) is a working artist and educator. Her artwork blends photography, installation, public art, and sculptural elements in works that challenge the viewer to reposition their perspective physically and mentally. Reoccurring themes in her work are humans altered relationship with nature and the boundaries and limits of our built environment.

Peña’s work has been exhibited in-group shows in Seattle, New York, Chicago, Memphis, St. Louis, Boulder, Las Vegas, and Kansas City.  Outside of her studio practice, Peña is dedicated to teaching, and exploring Public Art and Social Practices not only through educational settings but also in collaborations with nonprofits and community organizations.

Peña currently teaches at Memphis College of Art and Christian Brothers University in Memphis, TN and also acts as a Public Art Workshop Coordinator for Le Bonheur Children’s Hospital.

Entry Deadline: October 20, 2010

Notifications:  November 10, 2010

For full details, Download the Prospectus!

CALL for ENTRIES: Gender Definition

Click Here to Subscribe to ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!I am a product of a Southern upbringing and all the loveliness–and baggage–that goes with it.  As a woman in the South, we are often expected to be in charge in the boardroom, have dinner on the table by 7…and do it all in heels and pearls.

Gender issues have been the subject of art for as long as art has been a subject.  “Girl, Please!” is a Call for Entries from the Woman Made Gallery in Chicago and is a great exhibit opportunity to re-examine gender issues from a slightly different perspective.

Take a look…

Call for Entries:
Girl, Please!

Exhibition Dates: November 5 – December 23, 2010

We are all born naked, the rest is just drag” -Rupaul

Visit the Woman Made Gallery!Gender is a performance, an act that is perpetuated and maintained by societal norms and expectations, but how, and to what extent does it define us? “Girl, Please!” seeks to push and transcend the definition of gender while also exploring its relation to individual character amongst collective expectations. Bearing in mind Rupaul’s statement, drag in this case is not disco, but rather an illustration of feminity and masculinity in shades of grey.

Visit the Woman Made Gallery!Open to all genders! Artwork in all media may not exceed 72” horizontally, frame included. Please include an artist statement and a $30 entry fee.

Online Entries Submit jpgs of up to three of your works on our website.

Mailed Entries Mail slides or cd with images of three of your works, completed entry form, and a $30 entry fee to Woman Made Gallery, 685 N. Milwaukee Ave., Chicago, IL 60642.

Visit RuPaul online!Jurors: Kristen Carter and Emanuel Aguilar

Kristen Carter is WMG’s Gallery Coordinator. She is a graduate from DePaul University, and has a BA in History of Art and Architecture with a minor in Studio Art, in addition to studying Art History and Fine Art in Florence, Italy. Carter is a Ph.D candidate in Art History at the University of British Columbia as of September 2010. She is also a member of the Keeper Team for ArtSlant Chicago where she writes monthly reviews about art exhibitions in Chicago, and writes for the online art magazine, Jettison.

Emanuel Aguilar is assisting Woman Made Gallery with its exhibition programs. In addition he volunteers his marketing skills to the organization. He is a Fine Arts Major at Columbia College with concentration in Identity Politics and a Minor in Marketing, and he studied in Florence, Italy at the Lorenzo De Medici University. Aguilar works for Chicago’s Jean Albano Gallery and A & D Gallery. He has curated several exhibitions, and helped found the online arts magazine, Jettison.

Entry Deadline: August 11, 2010

Notifications: September 8, 2010

CALL FOR ENTRIES: Printmaking

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Click Here for a Prospectus!I want you to know that I am listening. 

By examining the statistics for Art & Art Deadlines.com (AAAD), I have realized that you don’t seem to care for long lists of deadlines broken up by month.  Guess what?  I don’t like posting them either.

Instead, the hits on this site seem to indicate that you like being able to search by deadline month and year, but you prefer being given a show or two at a time. 

I am excited about this revelation.  I love being able to offer you shows as I trip across them instead of huge lists.  The result–you’ll get more posts, and I feel less pressure.  Wonderful!

Here is a great opportunity for female artists from the Woman Made Gallery in Chicago.  

Visit the Woman Made Gallery!Woman Made Gallery is a tax-exempt, not-for-profit organization founded in 1992. Its goal is to support women in the arts by providing opportunities, awareness and advocacy. It specifically accomplishes this through exhibitions which raise public awareness and recognition of women’s cultural contributions. 

From 1992 through 2010 WMG has programmed 163 group shows, 104 invitational/solo shows, 36 Artisan Gallery exhibitions, and eight off-site shows. More than 6500 women artists have exhibited their work since WMG was established.

You know how I love a theme, and WMG always provides one.  This call has a looming deadline, but you can enter online making it much more convenient for all those procrastinators out there.  Here’s the call, in brief.  Follow the link for the prospectus.

CALL FOR ARTWORK: Category: Printmaking (pdf)
http://www.womanmade.org/entryform.html
Exhibition Dates: July 9 – August 26, 2010
Invitation to women artists to submit artwork that challenges the boundaries of traditional handprint media, including intaglio, lithography, relief, monoprint and silkscreen. Please include an artist statement and a $30 entry fee.
 
Online Entries Submit jpgs of three of your works on their website.
 
 
Visit the Woman Made Gallery!Juror: Debora Wood.  Debora Wood is senior curator at the Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art, Northwestern University, where she takes the leading role in developing the Museum’s exhibitions and collections. She has been at the Block Museum since 1999 and her area of focus is in twentieth-century art and the history and study of prints. Wood has a BFA from Cornell University and an MFA in printmaking from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. She is author of the exhibition catalogues for Imaging by Numbers (2008) and Marion Mahony Griffin (2005), and contributing author to catalogue Paths to the Press: Printmaking and American Women Artists, 1910–1960 (2006).
 
Extended Entry Deadline: March 24 , 2010
Notifications: April 14, 2010
  
 

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