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Art and Art Deadlines.com

Category: Art Publication

CALL for ENTRIES: The Sketchbook Project

Learn more about The Sketchbook Project!HERRING
pickled, not red

My pantry is a library of food fads and favorites.  You’ll find canned tomatoes from my mother (necessary to all of my favorite dishes) and high-fat coconut milk (necessary to all quiet indulgences).  Then there is the the fruit cocktail, quince marmalade, pickled herring, kimchi, a jar of black lime & a few dried apricots left over from some food obsession or experiment that either went awry or with which I got bored.  I can’t bring myself to get rid of the non-expired food no matter how random because they occasionally inspire genius.  This next Call displays the beauty of collecting and sometimes inspires genius.  This is a beautiful idea…

Check out this Call for Entries from The Brooklyn Art Library for The Sketchbook Project (SBP 2015).  Send your work on tour of museums and galleries across North America for as little as $25!  Since the last time I mention SBP, there is now a digitized option!  Take a look…

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

Learn more about The Sketchbook Project!CALL for ENTRIES:
The Sketchbook Project

 

ELIGIBILITY:  Open to all artists

MEDIA:  Open to all media that an be contained within the confines of the 5″ x 7″ x 1″ sketchbook.  It can open to any size, but it must fold down and not exceed 5” wide x 7” high x 1” thick.  You are welcome to cut, rebind or alter the book in any other way – just please remember to keep it less than 1” thick.  Please read the media tips and tricks.

THEMES:  For a complete list of themes, click here.

Learn more about The Sketchbook Project!DEADLINE:  You must purchase your sketchbook by January 5, 2015, but the postmark deadline isn’t until March 31, 2015.

ENTRY FEE:  $25 minimum fee for a standard 5″ x 7″ x 1″ sketchbook that, once completed, registered and returned will go permanently on view at Brooklyn Art Library & travel in their Mobile Library. OR

$60 digitzed fee for a standard 5″ x 7″ x 1″ sketchbook that, once completed, registered and returned will go permanently on view at Brooklyn Art Library & travel in their Mobile Library.  In addition, it will be viewable in the Digital library, have a custom URL to share the digital link, can be added to curated Collections and can be added to a Queue.

For complete details, Visit The Sketchbook Project online!

Learn more about The Sketchbook Project!

 

 

 

CALL for ENTRIES: Paint Pulse Mag

Learn more about Paint Pulse Magazine!NUTS
to milk

My first taste of coconut milk, and I was sold.  It isn’t always that way.  Beets took 20 years to get on my good side.  But coconut milk is good in everything.  Granted, I prefer the high fat canned version, but I’m even enamored using the carton in the frig for everything from breakfast cereal to hot cocoa–and then there is the homemade ice cream, yum.  This next Call is your chance to fall in love with something on the very first try.  There is only one first, so don’t miss your opportunity…

Check out this Call for Entries from Paint Pulse Magazine (both online & print) for Issue #1!  Here’s a great chance to get in on their debut issue. $15 for entry & all disciplines considered Take a chance

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

Learn more about Paint Pulse Magazine!CALL for ENTRIES:
Paint Pulse Mag

 

ELIGIBILITY:  Open to all artists

MEDIA:  Any discipline is accepted. The lens of painting is widely interpreted so feel free to submit what you wish. *Editor’s note:  I clarified this statement with the editors of Paint Pulse.  Specifically: “all media is accepted as long as it can be loosely related to painting”.

DEADLINE:  December 31, 2014

NOTIFICATION:  Shortly after submission according to their site

ENTRY FEE: $15 for up to 3 images

AWARDS:  20 talented contemporary artists will be featured in Issue 1.  Selected artists will  receive social media attention, spotlight on the website with contact information and will also receive a complimentary magazine of the issue for which they were selected.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Learn more about Paint Pulse Magazine!

FEATURED ARTIST: Emily Mitchell

Learn more about Featured Artist painter Emily Mitchell!CORNY
fun results

The December mayhem has set in, and we’re only 3 days into the month.   And my own art has taken a back seat to other commitments and tasks once again. It seems I can’t every find the time to plot and illustrate and plan and follow through on those plans.  I vow this year will be different.  I’m putting up a real tree (rare in my household), and this month’s artist has inspired me to string popcorn in addition to my well-planned and plotted decorative theme.  And this year, art will happen IN ADDITION TO and inspite of all the holiday mayhem.  AND without all the traditional plotting and planning.  I am excited to see where it goes…

This month’s artist has spent years learning the art of letting go and production through play.   Her work reflects a deep connection to the beauty of nature without hidden agendas–just connection and PLAY.

Learn more about Featured Artist Painter Emily Mitchell!ArtAndArtDeadlines.com is proud to claim Emily Mitchell as this month’s Featured Artist. This work spotlights home and family and parenting and human connection–life, really.  And, I really needed it.  Please let it sink it and consider it a holiday gift.

FEATURED
ARTIST:

Emily Mitchell

 

For the past 20 years, Emily Mitchell has been working as an art educator, and holds a M.A. Ed. in Art Education.  The joy of teaching artists has allowed her to thrive on inspiration from others including teaching High School Art, including AP Studio Art, at Champlain Valley Union High School in Hinesburgh, Vermont.  Mitchell had the opportunity to work with John Crowe from Massachusetts College of Art, and with Peter London, Professor Emeritus of Art Education, UMass Dartmouth.  “I am eternally grateful to them both for allowing me to simply play in my work.”

The Village by Featured Artist Painter Emily Mitchell!When not making art or managing family, Mitchell can often be found swimming with the BASS Masters Swim team, riding her bike with the kids,  battling weeds in the garden, GF baking, obsessing about acappella music, reading, or exploring a small corner of Vermont.

How has the teaching art to others informed your own approach? Has years of teaching informed your sense of play?Without question, I love making art with people, and I find that interacting with them, through is invaluable to my own art. My mind works in a very spiral manner – my train of thought will go from a process, to thinking and making connections through art history – helping others grow. Right now I teach adults and do the occasional workshop. But before this, I spent 16 years teaching K-5 in Massachusetts, and then 9-12 here in Vermont. Back in 2000, after reading “The Dot” by Peter Reynolds to my 4th graders, I saved their responses to the story, and often, when I am stuck, or frustrated, I will look at it. Its truly magic, free, full of joy, and THAT feeds me! Plus, kids are hilarious – and I learn so much from what they bring (mainly joy and abandon) to art making!”

My Friends are Leaving Soon by Featured Artist Painter Emily Mitchell!Talk to me about your paint process. For example, which comes first, the title and concept or the work?  “The process I currently use is an amalgamation of three amazing art course I have taken in my life – plus about 40 years of making art. The first was called “Vigorous Play for Artists/Teachers” and it was taught at UMASS by John Crowe.  I took the course in the summer of 1998, and it changed my life–Crowe did not talk for the entire week!  He pushed us through readings, critiques, and playful challenges, which for me, resulted in a wonderful body of artists books, and a show of my work and the work of my elementary students. The second was called “Drawing Closer to Nature” with Peter London – that one was hosted by Kirpalu.”

Garden City by Featured Artist Painter Emily Mitchell!“The third class I took just last year in January of 2013.  Flora Bowley’s e-course, Bloom True, reinvigorated all that I “knew” in terms of process, approach, but had neglected, forgotten and moved away from after 8 years of teaching more “formal” technical drawing.  Most importantly, Flora’s class helped me let go of needing to know what my work was going to look like.

“Now, I literally feel my way through my work…”

 

“…working in layers, responding to colors, patterns, textures, feelings, a word in a song… the title could come from any of those things, or simply a feeling weeks later (or if I’m hanging a show and I’m like, “Crap! I need a title fast!”).  I find that the final pieces really reflect a mood or idea in my own life, and the visual result is part of the process of understanding.”

You seem to have VISUAL connection to nature?  Is there a deeper underlying meaning or connection for you?  I spent 5 summers working at summer camp in Connecticut.  I found that this place helped me find myself more than college or traveling ever did.  It was a place of deep personal growth and connections–and it happens to be on its own private lake, surrounded by trees.  The light & sounds there are unlike any other.  I still hear them in dreams.  Now, I am lucky enough to live in Vermont (where it gets damn cold!), but there is beauty everywhere here–in the food, in the woods.

While I love the culture of cities,
I need space, air and green to fully breathe and live!

 

Horizon 2 by Featured Artist Painter Emily Mitchell!
Detail of Horizon 2 by Featured Artist Painter Emily Mitchell!

What are you trying to say with your work? How does it connect to your need to explore human connection?  “Because I do not plan anything at all, I really feel like each piece is a response or story about the paint, my heart, and everyone’s desire to feel connected to others.  While the characters in the work may be realistic (birds, trees) or abstract (bubbles or circles) the connection and harmony within the space is there and somewhat intentional.  Ironically, I need to plan less in my daily life–but that’s hard to do with two busy kids!”

Nebula by Featured Artist Painter Emily Mitchell!What style or school of art do you think work fits into?  “My work is probably Realistic Expressionist, maybe?  Color is certainly predominant in the art, but so is space and depth.”

What is your favorite food addiction?  “Ok, this is going to sound really boring, but I actually LOVE salad with roasted veggies, my own greens, chicken and either goat or feta cheese. I essentially chop up whatever I have in my veggie drawer season with “slacker herbs” (aka Mrs. Dash) and a bit of oil. My husband also makes a mean maple balsamic dressing – I DO live in Vermont so any excuse to use Maple…We also have a pretty large localvore movement here in Vermont with about 10 CSAs (community-supported or shared agriculture) I can think of right around me! I have a garden, where I grow purple carrots, beans, lettuce, etc. and when possible, I do try to purchase as much meat and produce locally.”  You are a woman after my heart.  Veggies rock my world sometimes, and we certainly have goat cheese in common.  But honestly, I’m going to pick chocolate every time.

Roots by Featured Artist Painter Emily Mitchell!What if your favorite snack food obsession?  “Popcorn. I could easily eat about 12 cups of it. We make it old school with Oil in our “Whirly Pop”, and I use an herb salt on it, and when I’m feeling really VT hippy, I also toss a bit of nutritional yeast on it.”   Okay, I edit responses to questions–usually only for length.  So, most readers have NO IDEA how often I hear about nutritional yeast.  Clearly, I am going to have to give in and try it.

On a more personal note , most of my readers know I don’t’ eat gluten due to the ugly presence of Celiac disease in my household–2 of the 3 of us. So,  if you don’t mind my asking, how long have you been GF?  *Editor’s Note:  Published with full permission of the artist.  “I have Thyroid Disease, and it was suggested I try being GF to help my thyroid function. It was also suggested to ditch dairy to be truly on the anti-inflammatory free diet…but man I LIVE IN VERMONT–there is NO WAY I am bailing on cheese!  We have so much amazing cheese!  So I limit cheese and diary but skip the wheat.  Ironically, my asthma went away after eliminating wheat.”  My son’s lactose intolerance completely disappeared, and he is happy to trade gluten for cheese any day.

What’s coming up next for you?  “I have this idea for 20-30 small wood panel paintings to be displayed together – I may do this as part of an upcoming art-a-day event.  I have also been pushing myself to do two portrait drawings per month to keep the ‘classical’ drawing skills fresh!”

Thank you, Emily, for reminding us that
play is productive.

Learn more about Featured Artist Painter Emily Mitchell!

If you’re interested in becoming a Featured Artist,
Click to Learn How!

CALL for ENTRIES: Animals

Learn more from art-competition.net!corn, hay or
ALFALFA

Grass or corn or both?  Research on how to feed the animals we choose to raise after the move to the farm continues.  Most commercially-available feed consists of a high percentage of cornGMO corn.  Feeding our chickens and goats and sheep GMO corn really negates the reason behind raising our own animals.  So grass fed, right?  Why not just turn them out into the field since it has green stuff growing on it? Well, it is more complicated than that.  You have PLANT and sometimes re-plant that field of “grass” in most cases. Then, what variety do you plant.  If we are what we eat, they are what they eat.  In the end, the animal depends on the plant.  Interesting.  This next Call depends on only the animal.  Take a look…

Check out this Call for Entries from Art-Competition.net (online) for Animals.  The entry fee is as little as $15, and the prize packages are fantastic.  Don’t miss the opportunity…

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

Learn more from art-competition.net!CALL for ENTRIES:
Animals

 

ELIGIBILITY: All artists age 18+

MEDIA: Painting, drawing, mixed media, photography or digital medium

THEME: Animals” Wild, Domestic, On Land, In The Air or Under The Sea.
The image should intrigue and fascinate the viewer with the artist’s vision and interpretation of the animal’s beauty, elegance, strength, speed, delicateness, size, and or its environment.

DEADLINE:   December 15, 2014

NOTIFICATION: December 19, 2014

ENTRY FEE: $15 for 1, $30 for 3, $60 for 7

AWARDS: 1st Place $500 cash & other awards valued at $5200. 2nd place – $125 cash & other awards valued at $1625. 3rd Place – $75 Cash. 4th Place – $50 cash.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

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CALL for ENTRIES: Seeing the Land

Learn more from art-competition.net!tired
BUT HUNGRY

Living off the land is labor-intensive & complicated.  As my husband I began planning for gardening our own little plot of land, my head swims with seed varieties, planting schedules, crop rotation, organic pest control, bee pollination  & seed preservation.  The advantages of having an agricultural degree is all too clear now.  And then there is the livestock–goats and sheep and chickens.  Farm country looks a little less serene to me now when they whiz past my window on car trips.  But when I fall asleep, I still dream of fresh beets, cabbage & carrots.  Wrong–I know.  This next Call wants to know how YOU see the land.  Take a look…

Check out this Call for Entries from Art-Competition.net (online) for Seeing the Land — a landscape photography show.  The entry fee is as little as $15, and the prize packages are fantastic.  Don’t miss the opportunity…

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

Learn more from art-competition.net!CALL for ENTRIES:
Seeing the Land

 

ELIGIBILITY: All artists age 18+

MEDIA: Landscape Photography

THEME:    The work can interpret the various conditions of the land of our earth, its beauty, mans impact on it, a mythological view, spiritual feeling or the disruption to it by nature.  The work can express any aspect of the land from beauty to science to fiction as a representational or non-representational image.

DEADLINE: November 17, 2014

NOTIFICATION: November 24, 2014

ENTRY FEE: $15 for 1, $30 for 3, $60 for 7

AWARDS:  1st Place $500 cash & other awards valued at $5200.  2nd place – $125 cash & other awards valued at $1625. 3rd Place – $75 Cash. 4th Place – $50 cash.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

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CALL for ENTRIES: City Life

Learn more from Don't Take Pictures!pass the
OUZO

City life means access to international food.  I’m meant to live in the country.  It is just the way I am wired.  My town has a population of approximately 3500 people.  The downside?  The only thing close to international fare is Thai (which I love), Mexican, Italian & Japanese.  When someone suggests a trip to Asheville (about an hour from me), I start salivating for the taste of goat skewers.  I don’t see bumper to bumper traffic or crowded parking lots or tall office buildings.  That’s my perspective.  This next Call wants YOUR views on city life.  Take a look…

Check out this Call for Entries from Don’t Take Pictures (art publication) for City LifeDon’t Take Pictures is a biannual print, online & tablet-ready magazine. NO entry fee; PLUS, they are one of our sponsors! Make us proud…

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

Learn more from Don't Take Pictures!CALL for ENTRIES:
City Life

 

Don’t Take Pictures exists to showcase the work of emerging photographers. In addition to publishing photographers in print & online in their monthly columns, they are now publishing online quarterly exhibitions.

ELIGIBILITY:  Open to all artists

MEDIA:  Photography

DEADLINE:  November 21, 2014

ENTRY FEE:  None

AWARDS:  Inclusion in the upcoming City Life exhibition. The exhibit will be published online from November 25 – February 24.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Learn more from Don't Take Pictures!

FEATURED ARTIST: Anna Agoston

Learn more about Featured Artist Anna Agoston!CHAMPAGNE, PLEASE
hold the pie

‘Tis the season of the pumpkin.  And because I live in the Great Smoky Mountains, it is also the season of the over-saturated photograph.  So many people come to the region to see the over-the-top leaf colors, that local photographers want to give them a piece of that color to take home with them.  For me, I’m okay the the decay of it all.  Dropping leaves will give way to a brown and gray-dappled stick forest that will soon be frosted with snow and infused with crisp air.  You can have the pumpkins & neon trees, thanks.

Learn more about Featured Artist Anna Agoston!I am not alone though. The work of this month’s artist proves that someone sees growth in the very structure of it all, not just in the window-dressing of color.  The work is black and white, but the presence of color is unmistakeably present.

ArtAndArtDeadlines.com is proud to claim Anna Agoston as this month’s Featured Artist. This work spotlights nature’s abundance and ceaseless growth.  These images are representative on the surface, but leave the viewer with an abstract notion of structure.  Just stunning…

FEATURED
ARTIST:

Anna Agoston

 

Anna Agoston is resident of Brooklyn, New York, but she was born and raised in Paris, France.  Always passionate about art, she qualified as an architect DPLG (government-certification) at the Ecole d’Architecture Paris Malaquais, and went on to earn the M.Arch.II degree in architecture at Harvard University’s Graduate School of Design

Untitled 46 by Featured Artist Anna Agoston!

While at Harvard, Agoston studied fine art photography under Professor Jim Dow of the Department of Visual and Environmental studies, and photographed her first series, “Dorm.”

In October 2013, Anna made her lifelong passion, fine art photography, her main professional occupation.

Are you self-taught or formally instructed as a photographer?   I am a self-taught artist. I went to architecture school. I did take a couple of classes in photography, but I learned most of what I do at home and on my own.”

Will you talk about your process?  Do you go out and look for material to photograph, or are you strictly an opportunist?  “I am always on the lookout for my subjects. I walk around looking at plants and studying them. When I find a subject, I take pictures, and often go back the next day to take more. I often discover what it is that I love about my subject while taking the picture. Untitled #46 (pictured left) is an example of a subject of which I took hundreds of photographs before getting the right shot.”

Untitled #29 by Featured Artist Anna Agoston!Why does your work focus on nature?  Why not faces, animals or even architectural elements.  That’s a great question! In March 2013, I was laid off from a stressful and time-consuming job.  Buds, stems and leafs were sprouting.  And it was as though I had never seen spring before!  I needed to somehow contain this new excitement in my art.

“As I took photographs I started to understand just what it was that I loved in my newly-identified subject.  I loved the shapes, the textures, and the fact that natural elements evoked human behaviors.”

Most artists have something to say—something they are trying to get across to viewers. You have stated that you “want them to see and feel things independently”.  Can you tell me why?

“I believe I have a lot to say.” 

“But I choose to say it with the image and without the use of a title.  I believe that words channel people’s perception, and I want people to see and feel things without being influenced.”

Untitled #145 by Featured Artist Anna Agoston!What style or school of art do you think work fits into?  I think of my work as abstract, because there is a departure from reality.  I take photographs of living elements found in nature, but I distill certain aspects of the element.  The distilled or abstracted is what I show to the viewer.”

Is there any artist, living or dead, that has most influenced your work?  Constantin Brâncuși’s work was about the idea, and the essence of things. He distilled the essence from the environment.”

What if your favorite food? After all, it IS a food-themed blog?  I love a thin slice of toasted rye, with a little butter, a sliver of smoked salmon and lemon. Add champagne and it’s simply perfect!”  Oh, this sounds delightful!

How about snack foods?  “I don’t snack.”  Um, okay.  I never know what to say  other than, “Really? Why? That makes me so sad.”

What’s coming up next for you? I have my twelfth juried group show this year coming up at the Vivid Solutions Gallery from November 7 to December 19, 2014.  I am excited as the exhibition will take place during FotoWeek DC. The exhibition will feature two of my photographs as well as my self-published book ‘Untitled Vol.1’.”

Thank you, Anna, for seeing growth even in decay.

Learn more about Featured Artist Anna Agoston!

If you’re interested in becoming a Featured Artist,
Click to Learn How!

CALL for ENTRIES: Winter Juried

Learn more from Fresh Paint Magazine!plump
NOT PRICKLY

I always wonder who first looked at an artichoke and said, “Yum.  We should try to eat this.  It looks delicious, no?”  Um, no.  I love them, but they don’t look appetizing.  There are some foods you know are going to taste good, like peaches, whipped cream & fresh-baked cobblers.  This next Call is for a magazine that looks appetizing as well.  Every time it arrives, I can’t wait to dive in because the covers are beautiful, and the weight of it feels lush in your hands.  Don’t miss this one…

Check out this Call for Entries from Fresh Paint Magazine (online) for Juried Winter Issue.  Low entry fee & simply yummy.  We are proud to have them as sponsors of this sight.  Show ’em YOUR strokes…

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

Learn more from Fresh Paint Magazine!CALL for ENTRIES:
Winter Juried

 

ELIGIBILITY:
Open to all artists

MEDIA:
2D Painting

DEADLINE:
November 30, 2014

NOTIFICATION:
January 9, 2015

ENTRY FEE:  $25 for up to 3 images

JUROR:  Alicia Puig is an art historian who specializes in Modern and Contemporary Art with a focus on Latin American Art, protest/political art, and the medium of printmaking. She completed the coursework for her MA in Art History from the Tyler School of Art at Temple University earlier this year and now works at Bridgette Mayer Gallery.  Alicia has written for Printeresting.org and Motivos magazine and has also contributed essays to several exhibition catalogs.  In addition, she was one of the assistant curators of the exhibition “Charles Searles: In Motion,” held at the Tyler School of Art during the spring and summer of 2013.

AWARDS:  One full color page or more that includes an image, contact information, and a statement. Selected artists will be chosen for a virtual studio visit or interview.  A complimentary issue of Fresh Paint, promotion through their social media network and exposure through their partnership with local art organizations and venues.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Learn more from Fresh Paint Magazine!

CALL for ENTRIES: Water

Learn more from Art-Competition.net!WATER
from above or below?

So we are still trying to figure out the logistics of building our own farm.  We’re excited.  We are hoping to move early 2017.  We are working on alternative methods for everything: building, fencing, furniture, electric & sewer.  Then there’s the issue of water.  I can’t WATER goats and chickens and lamb or US without the water portion of the equation.  And while a stream is lovely, there are laws about permanently diverting water that merely goes through your property.  So my options are well water or cistern water.  Both have to be pumped and filtered for different reasons. Decisions, decisions, decisions.  This next Call recognizes water as the essence of life.  I’m thirsty…

Check out this Call for Entries from Art-Competition.net (online) for Water.  Competitions support free drawing lessons. If you are looking to increase your web exposure, take a look at these prizes…

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

Learn more about the Mind Spirit and Emotion exhbiti from Art-Competition.net!CALL for ENTRIES:
Water

 

ELIGIBILITY: All artists age 18+

MEDIA: Open to any painting, drawing, mixed media, photography or digital medium.

THEME:  Work should connect the viewer with the essences of life: water. The work can reflect on the simplicity of a single drop to the power of a raging ocean. It is the most powerful force on earth.  It can humble us in the wake of a storm, provide us with endless energy.  It is necessary for our survival.  It can be the most destructive force on earth, and its beauty cannot be denied.  All life on earth is connected by the need for water.  Artists throughout history have captured it in all of its forms: drops, rain, storms, streams, lakes, rivers and oceans.

“I have always believed in establishing the sky tone, in general, as soon as possible. In sea painting the rest depends upon it because of the element of reflection.” — Frederick Waugh

Learn more from Art-Competition.net!DEADLINE: 
October 12, 2014

NOTIFICATION:
October 17, 2014

ENTRY FEE:  1 Entry $15,  3 Entries $30 and  7 Entries $60

AWARDS:   1st place prize value = $5,700. 2nd place prize value = $1,7503rd Place: $75 in Cash and 4th Place: $50 in Cash.  The 1st, 2nd, 3rd and 4th place winner’s art will be featured in Art-Competition.net “Winners Showcase” with links to their websites.  The 10 Honorable Mentions artists and their artworks will also be displayed in the “Honorable Mentions” section of the Art Competition website.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

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CALL for SUBMISSIONS: Portfolio

Learn more from F-Stop Magazine!pink or
PLANTED

Pungent seems to be the portfolio view of my kitchen.  While taken individually you’ll find the full gamut of flavors from subtle pink salt to fresh pulled mozzarella, the overall impression most people would have after a quick kitchen tour would probably be more accurately represented by a jar of anise and potted mammoth basil plant.  What does your portfolio say about you?  The next Call asks this very question.  Take a look…

Check out this Call for Entries from F-Stop Magazine for their Portfolio Issue #68.  No Entry Fee.  Opportunities to show a portfolio-sized example of your work are rare. Be sure to tell them you found F-Stop through artandartdeadlines.com. We know you will make us proud…

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

Learn more from F-Stop Magazine!CALL for SUBMISSIONS:
Portfolio

Please be sure to follow the
guidelines closely!

ELIGIBILITY: Open to all artists

MEDIA: Photography

DEADLINE: November 15, 2014

PUBLICATION: December 1, 2014

ENTRY FEE: None

ABOUT F-Stop: F-STOP MAGAZINE is an online photography magazine featuring contemporary photography from established and emerging photographers from around the world. Each issue has a theme or an idea that the unites the photographs to create a dynamic dialogue among the artists. Founded in 2003 and published online, bi-monthly.

For complete details, Read the Guidelines!

Learn more from F-Stop Magazine!