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Art and Art Deadlines.com

Category: Art Blog

CALL for ENTRIES: Art Biologic

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!FEED YOUR
creativity

The biology of food and nutrition both terrifies and thrills me.  I am scared that non-genetically-modified corn is virtually non-existent.  I can’t just avoid corn; it is IN EVERYTHING.  But I also believe in the healing power of eating the right foods and avoiding the wrong foods.  I love meat and cheese, but I also know the benefits, first hand, of lowering or eliminating them in your diet (watch the movie Forks over Knives if you’re interested).  This next call wants your take on the art of biology–not necessarily related to food, of course.  Take a look…

Check out this Call for Entries from SlowArt Productions with Art Biologic. The entry fee is reasonable at $35. There are no media restrictions, and the awards include both an exhibit at the Limner Gallery as well as an opportunity to have your work in the nationally-distributed art magazine, Direct Art. A New York art show AND art publication? Please don’t miss this double-duty art opportunity!

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

Learn More about the Limner Gallery online!CALL for ENTRIES:
Art Biologic

 

SlowArt Productions presents the fourth, periodic group exhibition, Art Biologic. This exhibition will focus on art inspired by nature and biology. The exhibition will be held at the Limner Gallery from May 16 – June 15, 2013.

ELIGIBILITY:
All artists 18+

MEDIA:  All art forms relating to, or gaining inspiration from nature and biology.  All artist interpretations of the theme, from the realist to the abstract and conceptual, will be reviewed and considered. 

DEADLINE: February 28, 2013

NOTIFICATION:  No later than March 31, 2013

ENTRY FEE: $35 for up to 4, $5 ea add’l.  Artists accepted to exhibit will not be charged additional fees of any kind.  Payments may be by check or money order payable to SlowArt Productions, or by credit card using PayPal.

Learn more about the Limner Gallery!SALES: All works in the show must be for sale. The gallery will take a 30 % commission on all sales. Sale price is determined by the artist.

AWARDS: Winning artists will be featured in a group exhibition at the Limner Gallery, May 16 – June 15, 2013. The exhibition will also be displayed on the Limner Gallery web site.  One artist will be awarded a two page display in Direct Art Volume #20, Fall 2013 issue. Two artists will be awarded a single page display. Direct Art is distributed to bookstores across the USA including Borders and Barnes and Noble.

Click for more information on
Direct Art magazine.

For the full guidelines, Download the Prospectus!

Download the Prospectus from SlowArt and the Limner Gallery!

CALL for ENTRIES: A.M.P.E.D.

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!PEPPER-O-MI

I vividly remember the first piece of pizza I ate.  It was Totino’s (no, they aren’t a sponsor, but they should be).  I thought it was the best thing I ever ate.  I was around 4 years old.  I still think the little cubes of pepperoni are ingenious, and I still turn to this junk food classic when I am sick.  I realize it isn’t logical to crave junk food when you’re ill, but I do.  Yes, I know this runs contrary to my whole foods mantra. Deal with it; I’m only  human.  Sometime there is nothing like a first.  I’ve eaten a lot of gourmet pizza since then, but I still have the sweetest memories of the first.  This next Call is an opportunity for you to be among this site’s first artists.  Take a look…

Check out this Call for Entries from A.M.P.E.D. (online) for their February Gallery.  The entry fee is an impossibly low $10 for up to 5 pieces.  If you are looking for a little web exposure, think about giving this one a try…

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

For complete details, Read the Full Call from AMPED!CALL for ENTRIES:
A.M.P.E.D.

ELIGIBILITY:  Open to all artists

MEDIA:  All traditional and non-traditional graphic media, including all forms of printmaking, drawing, and book arts.  All artists are encouraged to submit original prints or drawings produced within the last three years (2009-2012).

DEADLINE:  January 31, 2013

NOTIFICATION:  Non-juried.  Gallery will be available for viewing on February 1, 2013

ENTRY FEE:  $10 for up to 5 pieces

JURY PROCESS:  Non-juried.  Each artists can submit up to 5 pieces, of those 5 pieces 1  will be displayed on their homepage, and their additional pieces will be made available on your personal portfolio page.

ABOUT A.M.P.E.D.:  From their website: “A.M.P.E.D. (Art Media Production Entertainment & Design), is an artistic entertainment company, with emerging artists in mind. Giving creative minds a platform for their aspirations. Putting artists in cultivating environments with like minded individuals, all while producing and promoting quality bodies of work that will resonate throughout the world. Showcasing rare, and creative works. Promoting individuality, originality, and education. Our mission is to increase the visibility of artists by providing opportunities to showcase their artwork through our online exhibitions and artist portfolios. We provide direct access to artists so they can sell their work, and increase their exposure.”

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

For complete details, Read the Full Call from AMPED!

EXTENDED DEADLINE: Love + Lust

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!THE BEET
of my heart

Second chances make the world go round. For years I professed a hate for beets and asparagus.  I LOVE almost everything edible, but I had bad experiences with these two.  In hindsight, my asparagus experience had been of the gray canned variety, and my beets experience had been with the canned pickled variety as a child.  I was convinced a while ago to retry FRESH asparagus and now I am addicted.  I had a roasted beet and goat cheese salad in Arizona two years ago, and now I keep beets on hand at all times.  This next show’s deadline was originally January 10th, but it has been extended to February 12th.  Don’t miss your second chance

Check out this Call for Entries from Open to Interpretation‘s juried book competition Love + Lust. Have your work become the artistic inspiration for a literary masterpiece today! Keeping reading for details…

*Editor’s Note: If you have read the personal portion of this post, EXTENDED DEADLINE: Love + Lust, anywhere other than by email subscription or on ArtAndArtDeadlines.com, it has been published without permission and is considered theft.

Learn more about the Love + Lust Call from Open to Interpretation!CALL for ENTRIES:
Open to Interpretation:
Love + Lust

 

Open to Interpretation is a juried book competition of photography, poetry, fiction and creative non-fiction. Each book begins with a themed call for photos. The chosen photos become the literary inspiration for the writers’ submissions. A book is created that matches each winning photo with two stories or poems that offer different interpretations of the image. The unique collaboration adds new dimensions to both the photos and the written word.

ELIGIBILITY: Open to all

MEDIA: Photography

THEME: Love + Lust. Lust is an intense appetite, craving, or untamed desire. We lust for an array of things—money, power, objects, sex, or just living life. Love is a powerful affection or personal attachment and comes in a variety of forms, which can encompass romantic, sexual, platonic, narcissistic, or even religious feelings or attitudes. And sometimes love and lust overlap. What images capture these emotions for you?

Look at previous editions of Open to Interpretation!DEADLINE: February 12, 2013

NOTIFICATION: March 5, 2013

ENTRY FEE: $40 for 5, $10 ea. add’l

JUROR: After a career as a New York Fashion Editor and working along side the greats of fashion photography, Aline Smithson discovered the family Rolleiflex and never looked back. Now represented by galleries in the U.S. and Europe and published throughout the world, Aline continues to create her award-winning photography with humor, compassion, and a 50-year-old camera.

She has exhibited widely. Aline founded and writes the blogzine, Lenscratch, that celebrates a different contemporary photographer each day and offers opportunity for exhibition. She has been the Gallery Editor for Light Leaks Magazine, is a contributing writer for Diffusion, has written book reviews for photoeye, and has provided the forwards for artist’s books by Tom Chambers, Flash Forward 12, Robert Rutoed, amongst others.

AWARDS: $1000 Cover Award, $500 Judge’s Choice Award Photography and $500 Judge’s Choice Award Writing or Poetry. All participants chosen, if so desired, will have their contact info indexed in the book so as they can be contacted directly regarding their work.

For complete details, visit Open to Interpretation online!

Learn more about Waters Edge from Open to Interpretation online!

CALL for ENTRIES: Foreign Images

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by EmailEENY, MEENY
miny moe

Indian, Thai, Ethiopian food, oh my.  I’ve been driving back and forth to the Atlanta area  at least once per week to take care of my father’s estate and my grandmother’s care.  And, wow, the difference 250 miles makes.  Foreign food is limited to Mexican, Italian and Chinese in Gatlinburg, but my head spins with the options in the Atlanta area.  This next Call is interested in your foreign images.  Investigate…

Check out this Call to Artists for Foreign Images from the Linus Galleries (Pasadena, CA). The exhibit offers an online listing as well as the possibility for a showing in one of their brick and mortar galleries. Take a look…

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

Check out the Call for Entries at the Linus Gallery!CALL for ENTRIES:
Foreign Images

 

Being away from home can be
an inspiring experience.

It can produce perspectives,
ideas and emotions that are
new to the artist and medium.

For this call for entry, Linus Galleries is looking for the artist’s interpretation of landscapes or cityscapes you consider to be exotic and foreign.

ELIGIBILITY: Open to all artists.

MEDIA: All Media including: Photography, wall sculpture, fabric, mixed media, painting, drawing. It must be wall hung. Sizes up to 12′. Video submissions will be displayed/accepted only for the online exhibition.

Learn more about the Foreign Images exhibit from the Linus Gallery!DEADLINE:
January 21, 2013

ENTRY FEE:
$35 for 3,
$5 per add’l

AWARDS: Accepted artwork for this online exhibition will be judged again for a collective live exhibition at our Pasadena Gallery. The artists will be asked if they wish to submit their artwork for the collective exhibition, which is not a requirement to being a part of the online exhibition.

SALES: 40% commission on all sales.

ABOUT LINUS GALLERIES: Linus Galleries is based in Southern California. They are located in Pasadena and Long Beach in Los Angeles County.

For complete details, Read the Guidelines!

Learn more about  the Linus Galleries!

CALL for ENTRIES: Creatures

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by EmailONIONS
will make you cry

Much of the time I spend in my kitchen is with my critters hoping for a morsel of anything I am cooking.  They seem most attracted to the kitchen when I am cooking onions and garlic–two foods dogs can’t digest.  We always want what we can’t have, eh?  This next Call wants YOU, so don’t play hard to get.  Show them your creatures…

Check out this Call for Entries for Creatures from the Kiernan Gallery (Lexington, Virginia). The entry is very reasonable, and the juror is well-documented. Take a look…

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

Learn more about the Kiernan Gallery!CALL for ENTRIES:
Creatures

 

From beloved pets to exotic wildlife, animals hold a certain fascination for photographers. They serve us as faithful guardians, trusted steeds, and loyal family members. We invoke them to highlight human traits both good and bad, but also search for our humanity within them.

Photographing both the tame and the wild, we seek kinship that cannot be communicated with words. Whether as taxidermy for study, pets for companionship, or out in the wild, for Creatures, the Kiernan Gallery seeks photographs that depict our complex relationship with the animal kingdom.

Learn more about the Creatures exhibit from the Kiernan Gallery!ELIGIBILITY:
Open to all artists

MEDIA:
All photographic media are encouraged.

DEADLINE:
January 17, 2013

NOTIFICATION:
Approx. 8 days later

ENTRY FEE:
5 for $25, each add’l $5

JUROR: Anne Berry is a Critical Mass 2012 Top 50 and a 2012 Clarence John Laughlin Award finalist. She is represented by the Catherine Couturier Gallery in Houston, and has recently exhibited at the San Diego Art Institute, the Center for Fine Art Photography, and the Fence at Photoville in Brooklyn.

Learn more about Juror Anne Berry!Publications featuring Anne’s work include Shots MagazinePhoto District News,SilvershotzThe Portfolio ReviewEsquire Russia, Lenscratch, CNN Photos, and Black & White.  Anne attended Sweet Briar College (BA) and the University of Georgia (MA). Currently Anne is working on Behind Glass, a collection of images of primates in captivity.

AWARDS: All images will be reproduced in an exhibition catalogue available for purchase. A Juror’s Choice and Director’s Choice will also be announced and both winners will receive a free copy of the catalogue.

SALES: Kiernan Gallery no longer takes commission on sold works.  But, they DO still have incentive to sell your work. The Kiernan Gallery was founded by an emerging artist, and recognizes the importance of selling work; they believe that if artists are paying a submission fee, the gallery should not also take a portion of the sale.  They do reserve the right to negotiate 20% in order to make a sale.  (updated on 1/12/12)

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Read the full call from The Kiernan Gallery website!

2012 ARTIST of the YEAR: Stephanie Mead

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!HAPPY NEW YEAR!

Today marks another year for ArtAndArtDeadlines.com! And, I am running a little late again, but I at least I’m getting it done before Chinese New Year (February 10th this year).   I am joyfully looking forward to a new year.  2012 was a really tough year for me personally.  But, 2012 had some wonderful food highlights including pesto made from home-grown basil from my newly-planted garden as well as highlights for AAAD, including this one…

This is the day we name the
Artist of the Year for 2012.

 

When AAAD began in 2009, I was determined to cover art deadlines and really good ART. And, after I chose a few artists, I quickly realized that the Featured Artist program needed structure, or it would never really get done on any sort of regular basis. The $5 Art Contest was born.

Mixed Media by 2013 Featured Artist of the Year Stephanie Mead!The Featured Artist Page was getting crowded and adding each new artist was lessening the impact of being Featured.  I knew I had to start archiving artists yearly.  And, the idea of the Artist of the Year was born.

I now give all of our Featured Artists each year notice that on December 31st at midnight EST, the Artist of the Year would be determined by the number of comments on their individual Featured Artist blog posts.

Congratulations to
Stephanie Mead,
AAAD’s 2012 Artist of the Year

I followed up with Stephanie to find out what’s new:  “I try to balance my art and my music and my cooking (I just made another batch of chili yesterday in between preparing a submission for a fellowship in Music through New York Foundation of the Arts)The Sullied Accolades are gaining happy success in our musical career; this year we have completed an in-home recording booth and are getting much use out of it. Additionally, our music video project was screened at the 2012 Coney Island Film Festival in Brooklyn.

2012 Artist of the Year Stephanie Mead!“In the meantime, my large, mixed media, octopus piece is out on our main wall, reaching towards anyone that walks by.  She is almost finished (a long, on-going project because of the scale!), and I felt compelled after Hurricane Sandy to pick up bits of paper from the streets and insert pieces of fishing route/Manhattan waterway maps as the octopus tentacles…

“As I gain more experiences in life, the more complex and refined my art has become. I look forward to keep pushing forward. I am happy to be an artist in this life, it is my calling. I am excited for all opportunities that are coming my way.”

I have enjoyed getting to know Stephanie this year.  I found a kindred artist and musician in Stephanie, and her work spoke to both my frustration AND my optimism.  Thank you, Stephanie, for being a highlight of the AAAD year!  Get to know Stephanie Mead yourself.

Do you want to be the 2013 Artist of the Year?
It all starts with the $5 Art Contest.

CALL for PATIENCE: Received

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!I temporarily
LOST MY APPETITE

Food and art consumes a lot of my time.  I spend a portion of most of my days talking to you via ArtAndArtDeadlines.com about the food that I love and trying to inspire you to create art that YOU love.  I haven’t written a post since December 22nd.  I didn’t take a holiday hiatus; my Dad died.

On December 20th, my Dad was in a devastating car accident.  I didn’t find out until 2 days later.  On December 27th, I had to remove my father from life support.  He died 15 minutes later.  I buried him on January 3rd.

Many of you heard of my family tragedy via the grapevine, and I appreciate all of the love and support I have received.  I am digging my way out of a mountain of paperwork and morbidity, and well… a serious funk.

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!As I began cleaning out
my father’s house,

it all came back to
food and art…

Food:  Did you know that funeral homes offer catering?  Ewwww.  I know; that’s been everyone’s response.  It is a Southern tradition to have neighbors and friends deliver casseroles to the family after someone dies, but catering IN the funeral home?  No thanks. I turned down that option.

Art:  I found 36 pairs of glasses in my Dad’s house.  Diabetes had nearly robbed him of his eyesight.  I don’t know if they were all different prescriptions or if he just kept buying new a new pair each time he couldn’t remember where he put the last ones down.  I found 6 more in his crumpled car.  I keep imagining a resin cube with glasses suspended inside and the words “was blind, but now I see” etched in the side.  Dad would have been amused.

So, I have written all of this to let you know that I have not forgotten you.  I am officially returning to posting on Tuesday.  Back to food and art… it makes my world go round.  Thanks again for your kindness and love.

Stay tuned for the Artist of the Year
announcement coming soon!

CALL for ENTRIES: Nature Undisturbed 2013

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!YES, I AM
a chicken

Every once in a while, I get the urge to live off the land.  Why disturb nature with factories to process food when I grow, raise and prepare my own?  It only takes watching a documentary on ice fishing in Alaska or beheading a chicken down South, and I quickly get over the urge.  A backyard garden will have do.  This next show wants to see how you capture nature…undisturbed.  Don’t miss this chance.

Check out this Call for Entries from Serenbe Photography Center (Palmetto, GA) for the 5th showing of Nature, Undisturbed. Here’s a chance to show your work and help out nature conservation at the same time. Bonus…they often sell a significant portion of the work! Take a look…

*Editor’s Note: If you have read the personal portion of this post, CALL for ENTRIES: Nature Undisturbed 2013, anywhere other than by email subscription or on ArtAndArtDeadlines.com, it has been published without permission and is considered theft.

Learn more about the Nature Undisturbed show!CALL for ENTRIES:
Nature, Undisturbed

 

Nature Undisturbed is a celebration of the natural world. The show brings together a diverse collection of photography showcasing the wonders of nature that many don’t take the time to see. It is the hope of the show creators that after viewing the photography, you are inspired to get out on the not-so-beaten path. Perhaps you happen to take along a camera to capture the light through the leaves and continue to enjoy that day each time you view the photo.

This is the show that brings the outside in for all to enjoy.

 

Learn more about the Nature Undisturbed show!The exhibition showcases simple, majestic, beauty in nature, wildlife & local landscapes. Each unique image echos the sentiment “a picture is worth a thousand words,” a powerful reinforcement of the importance of greenspace & habitat protection for future generations of people & wildlife.

ELIGIBILITY: Open to all artists 18 and over, amateur or professional.

MEDIA: Photography – Bl&W sepia, color, and manipulated images may be entered in any category but cannot not have been accepted to any other juried show in the year prior.

CATEGORIES: Open Category -includes all nature photography (landscapes, animals, etc) & Site Specific Category – includes photos of Flint River & Trust properties including Line Creek Area, Flat Creek Area in Peachtree City and Sam’s Lake Bird Sanctuary (GA).

DEADLINE: January 8, 2013

Learn more about the Nature Undisturbed show!NOTIFICATION: March, 2013

ENTRY FEE: Photographers may enter up to 4 images per category. There is a $25 entry fee for one category or $45 if entering both categories. Make checks payable to Serenbe Photography Center.

JUROR: Amy Miller is the Executive Director of Atlanta Celebrates Photography (ACP). Every October, ACP produces the largest community-oriented photography festival in the United States. The festival and other year-round programs are aimed at nurturing and supporting photographers, educating and engaging audiences and enriching the national (and international) dialogue on photography.

Ms. Miller earned her MFA in photography from Pratt Institute and was Gallery Assistant at Alan Klotz Gallery in NY from 1995 – 1997. She was Gallery Director at Fay Gold Gallery in Atlanta from 2000 – 2007 where she first met and worked with luminaries of fine art photography and exhibited their work at art-fairs across the US. In the last five years, Ms. Miller has participated in numerous portfolio review events, curated exhibitions, juried shows and judged competitions including Critical Mass.

Learn more about the Nature Undisturbed show!AWARDS: 1st, 2nd, and 3rd place cash prizes will be awarded in each category.   A People’s Choice Award will also be presented.  Nature, Undisturbed, Flint Riverkeeper and Southern Conservation Trust may feature winning photos in their newsletter and on their website.  The photographer retains all rights to their photos.

SALES: All exhibitors may sell their work. The artist will receive 50% of the sales price.  A portion of proceeds from the show will go to Flint Riverkeeper, Southern Conservation Trust, and the Chattahoochee Hill Country Conservancy.

For complete details, visit the Nature, Undisturbed website!

Learn more about the Nature Undisturbed show!

FEATURED ARTIST: Julie Alland

Click to subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by email for FREE!EAT A COOKIE
already

The Featured Artist Contest means different things to different people.  Some artists feel that it is validation and merely appreciate the recognition of their work. Some artists spin it into great publicity for what they do and to funnel people to their website.  This contest remains a way to help artists get outside their heads and take a look at how their inspirations and influences have really changed their work over the years. During the interview of this month’s artist, I believe her answers may have even surprised her.  It’s nice to know we can still do that here at AAAD.

This month’s artist works in a media with which I am not familiar. Her work is both industrial and organic.  It has the duality of being both stark AND somehow soft and comforting.  On behalf of ArtAndArtDeadlines.com, I am proud to announce the Featured Artist chosen from the November entries to the $5 Art Contest is Julie Alland.  Her artwork seems to freeze a moment in time. And, while Alland has a hand in the composition and an expectation of the outcome, she isn’t in complete control of the work.  It’s a little like life, don’t you think?  With the new year approaching, I encourage each of you to have a hand in the composition of your life and art, but don’t keep to tight a grip on the end result.  Let Julie be your inspiration…

Learn more about Featured Artist Julie Alland!

FEATURED ARTIST:
Julie Alland

 

Julie Alland is a sculptor who lives and works in San Francisco.  Raised in New York State, Alland earned a BFA from Antioch University in Ohio, specializing in photography.  After moving to San Francisco in 1985 Alland became fascinated with found objects, and although she’d had little formal training in sculpture, her interest turned to working in three dimensions.  Casting became a fundamental part of Julie’s work in 1993 after teaching herself mold making and casting in order to bring an idea to realization.   In 2002, Julie enrolled in a kiln casting class taught by C. Matthew Szosz at Public Glass in San Francisco. The class was her first experience casting glass.

A detail from the Desire Path Revisited Series by Featured Artist Julie Alland!The unique physical properties and technically challenging nature of casting glass motivated Alland to take her work in a new direction. She continued to hone her glass casting skills during several summer sessions at the Pilchuck Glass School. Julie’s first class at Pilchuck: Survey of Glass Techniques, taught by Karen Lamonte in 2003, introduced her to sand casting. Interest in developing a distinctive visual vocabulary led Alland to focus on experimenting with the technique in subsequent years. This exploration resulted in the method she uses to produce her sand cast work today.

Clearly, your work took a sharp left turn from your education in photography.  Tell me how (and if) photography still influences your work.  “My first impulse is to say that photography hasn’t influenced my work one bit. Now that I think about it, (thanks for bringing it up) maybe it has after all.  Much of the imagery in my work suggests forms of life — usually only seen via photographs taken in the deep sea or through a microscope.  Another trait my work shares with photography is the importance I place on composition.”  I suspect my love of photography is what initially drew me to your work, Julie.

The Transmigration of Memory - sand cast glass by Featured Artist Julie Alland!Talk to me about the process you use.  How much control do you really have over the finish product? “My technique consists of creating abstract images by bending wire and wrapping it around sticks (inclusions). A mold is made by pushing a three dimensional shape into a sand mixture. The wire and sticks are placed in the mold, then molten glass is poured over them. The hot glass burns out the organic elements and a void in the shape of the wood remains in its place. Gasses escape from the metal and wood, bubbles and sometimes ash rise up into the glass.

“The beginning stages are quite controlled: Making inclusions, planning where they’ll be placed in the mold, as well as preparing perfect, clean, sand molds. The flowing and loose quality of the later stages of a piece need to be balanced out by initial restraint — otherwise it ends up being a blobby mess.  I’ve experimented with my process and practiced it enough to have arrived at a comfortable balance between control and unpredictability (most of the time).  That said, some castings turn out to be flops.  Sometimes failure occurs because randomness overshadows intent but the opposite is also true.  Exerting too much control can result in a boring piece — it’s a bit disappointing if beneficial accidents don’t happen.”  I think we can all relate–too much control always results in boredom.

Shell - kiln cast glass by Featured Artist Julie Alland!What do you consider your media? Do you consider it sculpture or specifically glass? “I call myself a sculptor who works mainly in cast glass. I also do printmaking, works on paper and mixed media on panels. I tend to approach non-sculptural media in a sculptural way. ”

Talk to me about inspiration.  I notice your earlier glass work, like the egg crates & ice trays, has a more whimsical feel while the current work has a more serene and ethereal feel.  “My conceptual (earlier) work was inspired by a fascination with industrial design as well as ideas related to social commentary and observations of human behavior.  Also, during that period, I had just started learning to cast glass and discovered that it’s very difficult.  Problem solving is quite compelling to me so I was seeing how far I could push myself technically within the confines my philosophical framework.

A detail from the Desire Path Revisited Series by Featured Artist Julie AllandSometimes I miss exploring the concepts behind my earlier style of work but for the most part I’m glad to have moved on.  The older pieces are lost-wax kiln castings.  The technique allows you to reproduce objects with a lot of precision but is very slow, boring, and labor intensive.

What inspires me most is the act of investigating: Researching images or techniques, discovering and learning a process, using unfamiliar materials or tools.   Sometimes new ideas or ideas with potential to be brought to a higher level are an unexpected by-product of experimenting with materials.”

What style of art do you find unbearable to own?  Anything “pretty” which is hard to define because that word means something different to everyone.  On the other hand, an example comes to mind… certain Renoir paintings would be very difficult to live with.”  Fascinating.  I think many would would proffer the opinion that your work is “pretty,” although not necessarily in a Renoir sort of way.  Again, fascinating.

Dermatoglyphics 1 - kiln cast glass by Featured Artist Julie Alland!You know we have to talk about food. What is your favorite? “If I had the metabolism of a hummingbird my favorite would be comfort food– homemade macaroni and cheese, NY pizza, an old-fashioned doughnut or a vanilla malt milkshake. But… since I have the metabolism of a sloth, my favorite healthy compromise is eating a big salad for dinner.” Julie, you had me at mac-n-cheese, but I share your big-salad reality.

What about snack foods?  “Sloth-Julie eats pretzels. Hummingbird Julie would eat barbecue potato chips or cookies.”  I hope you don’t keep your hummingbird in a cage all the time.  Eat a cookie.

So, what’s coming up next for you?  “More experimenting with sand casting as well as another glass technique called fusing. Imbedding words or images and/or bubbles in my pieces and developing ideas for work about memory and cognition.  Also, I enrolled in a Bullseye glass workshop (in Emeryville, CA) called “Image Transfers for Kiln Glass”.  The class is taught by an artist I’ve admired for a long time, Carrie Iverson.  It meets in January and will most likely spark exciting ideas for new work.  I can’t wait!”

Thanks, Julie, for awakening both the mad scientist AND the zen yogi in us all…you are an inspiration for the coming new year.

Learn more about Julie Alland online!

Learn more about Featured Artist Julie Alland!Learn more about Featured Artist Julie Alland!

CALL for ENTRIES: Spirit of Place

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!RESTAURANT
of the mind

Food always has carries place memories for me.  I’ve told you before that I dream of Memphis when I eat BBQ & jambalaya makes me long for New Orleans.  It isn’t unlike the smell of turkey roasting reminding someone of Thanksgiving.  Food, smell & place are all about living in the moment, aware of your history, but fully present in the NOW.  This next Call is all about the spirit of place.  Embrace this…

Check out this Call for Entries from the Maine Media Workshops + College for the Spirit of Place 40th Anniversary Photo & Video Contest.  The entry fee is standard, but the prizes are great.  This could be a great opportunity!

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

Learn more about the Spirit of Place Exhibition!CALL for ENTRIES:
Spirit of Place

 

Spirit of Place embodies geography, connections, stories, memories and presence. To celebrate our 40th Anniversary, they honor the spirit of place. From around the globe to Midcoast Maine. They invite photographers and  video makers to submit their visual interpretation. Landscapes, seascapes, people/culture, abstract expression – show them what Spirit of Place means to you.

ELIGIBILITY:  Open to all artists

Learn more about the Spirit of Place Exhibition!MEDIA:  Photography and video

DEADLINE:  February 1, 2013

NOTIFICATION:  March, 2013

ENTRY FEE:  Photography:  Before December 15, 2012: $25 for 3 images, $5 each additional  and December 16, 2012 through February 1, 2013:
$35 for 3 images, $5 each add’l.  Video:  Before December 15, 2012:  $25 for one video, $10 each additional. December 16, 2012 through February 1, 2013:  $35 for one video, $10 each add’l.

JURORS:  For a complete list of jurors, Click Here.

AWARDS:  4 Grand Prize winners, 7 Category winners & up to 88 Honorable mentions will be awarded.  Prizes include:  (2) $2,500 cash prizes, Free Tuition to Maine Media Workshops, Gift Certificates to B&H Photo Video Pro Audio, Exhibition of Top Winning Images at Maine Media Gallery and Published eBooks of Winners.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Learn more from Maine media Workshops and College!