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Category: Art Exhibit

FEATURED ARTIST: Jennie Traill Schaeffer

Learn more about Featured Artist Jennie Traill Schaeffer!i choose CHEESE

With the arrival of January, I finally been able to concentrate on comfort –and yearly nesting maintenance of both my literal home and second home, this blog.  My own art is still in flux and the reduction of my belongings in in full swing.  As I prepare to purposefully downsize once again, I am happy to be liberating my belongings into the hands of others who are more interested than I in owning stuff.  As you might imagine, I seem to be divesting myself of kitchen wares the slowest.  I let go of the ice cream maker this week.  But, between you and me, I did add a digital thermometer for cheese making.  I mean really, doesn’t everyone need 6 sizes of melon ballers?  Of course.

This month’s artist both celebrates and laments our kitchen icons.  Her work explores our connection to the tools of domesticity and the roles they play in defining our roles in life–real and imagine, chosen and not.  Separating me from my mixer just got harder.

Learn more about Featured Artist Jennie Traill Schaeffer!AAAD is proud to feature the work of Jennie Traill Schaeffer.  This work calls attention to how what we own speaks to who we are.  It isn’t all pots and percolators...

FEATURED ARTIST:
Jennie Traill Schaeffer

 

Contemporary artist Jennie Traill Schaeffer holds a BFA in Painting and Art Education from Syracuse University’s College of Visual and Performing Arts.  She studied with painters Jerome Witkin, Gary Trento, and John Thompson while studying abroad in Florence, Italy.   Jennie received the “Hiram Gee Award,” given each year to a graduating senior painting major.

Jennie grew up in Easton, Pennsylvania, and comes from a lineage of happy artists (visual, musical, and performing).  She and her husband, Lee Goldberg, are happy to now call New Jersey home along with their adorable sons, Joel & Auggie–and exuberant dog, Ringo.

Perker Maestá by Featured Artist Jennie Traill SchaefferTell me about your art education–both the self-taught and the formal instruction.  “I hold a BFA in painting and art education from Syracuse University.  The technical foundations of painting I developed while in art school, but in order to continue painting in oils safely in my home while pregnant, I researched and taught myself to paint without solvents.  Over the past decade, I’ve experimented with direct painting using both brushes and knives, adjusting my style.”

How has your technique developed over the years? Does your substrate determine the texture of the final work? Do the works on paper have the same topography as the work on panel?  “A mixture of indirect and direct painting stuck with me from art school, but due to my need to remove solvents from my studio, my paint application thickened.  Now because of both time constraints in the studio due to caring for children, as well as painting mostly without a vehicle, my painting process if very direct.  However, I’ve always been attracted to the play of thick paint moving around a surface.  That visceral feeling of applying paint is one of my first memories of learning to paint.  It’s usually in the end layers when the paint is still wet and I’m able to lay in other colors, brushing in texture, when I’m happiest at the easel.  When I shift to works on paper it’s usually to switch to a drawing or printmaking medium, so that will dictate the texture of my work.”

Stainless Steel Cooker of Eggs by Featured Artist Jennie Traill SchaefferIt would seem you have a significant relationship with the kitchen. With such a prolific portfolio of cutlery, aprons, appliances & more, it has to more than just a matter of kitchen convenience.  Yes?  ‘An argument between my, then, fiancée, now husband and I.  We both love to cook, and when we were first living together and engaged, we both shared the responsibility.  He was in graduate school and I was working at an art store and setting up a studio at home.  I was trying to figure out what to paint.  After having a huge disagreement over how and when to wash our pots and pans, I painted my dishwasher, which was in view of my dining room studio.  We registered for wedding gifts, many of which were domestic kitchen appliances.  I began painting them as portraits, not sure of the meaning at the time, but attracted to their design, reflective qualities, and color.  Along the way, I realized the import of what I was painting –Icons of the Kitchen.  They are heavily marketed tools that many in my generation don’t use, but desire to have as a status symbol.  Once I was aware of this, I began donning the appliances with halos and seating them on thrones evoking references to religious paintings from the Early Renaissance.”

Master of Drink Mixing by Featured Artist Jennie Traill SchaefferSpeaking of appliance portraiture, how is it that even the spoons feel as though they are sitting for portraits?  “I love to paint portraits, but have a fear of having people sit for me and prefer to paint from life when possible.  I think the appliances fill that need for me and feel like portraits due to their scale and positioning.  They are not arranged in a typical still life grouping, but are situated on non-descript surfaces with cords and handles that have seem to suggest hands on hips. Of course the appliances seated on chairs is obvious.  In many cases, though not all, they are larger than life.”

Producing vintage-inspired work that isn’t sentimental takes a careful hand.  Both your color palate and your composition speak to a vintage perspective. Was that your intention?  “I am drawn to, have been fascinated, and sometimes disgusted by the era my parents group up in.  For the most part, I would not have wanted to be a woman during the earlier 20th century, but I appreciate the work women did in the home.  The color palette comes from the objects themselves, many of which are vintage-inspired in their design. The composition is vintage in that I am referencing older works of art.  But removing the sentimentality wasn’t intentional, and the pieces do evoke an emotional response from viewers.  I think the removal of the objects from their environment, along with the historical references maybe tames the sentimentality.”

St Perker by Featured Artist Jennie Traill SchaefferWhat style or school of art do you think work fits into? I’ve always found it difficult to pigeon-hole my work into a particular style.  “The subject matter is Pop Art, but the intent is more a blend of Realism, Conceptualism, and a bit of Expressionism.  I want the objects to be readily understood,  and I enjoy depicting things realistically.”

But, I am striving to convey meaning or a better understanding of who I am, who wives are, who mothers are through my work.

 

What is your favorite food addiction?  “Pasta is my ultimate love. I grew up with a half-Italian father who has perfected an amazing spaghetti sauce chocked full of garlic, onions, a terrific balance of herbs and sausage and meatballs.”

What if your favorite snack food obsession?  “I am definitely torn between chocolate and cheese.  It’s trite, but when I’m itching for a snack and the “clean” or “healthy” option just won’t satisfy me, I look for a bag of chocolate chips in the baking cabinet or aged, extra sharp cheddar.”  Chocolate vs. cheese is a question for the ages.  And I would argue if both are high quality, they are both clean and healthy.  Eat them both.

Oh Slicer of Cheese by Featured Artist Jennie Traill SchaefferWhat’s coming up next for you?  “I have a lot of ideas that I’ve jotted down, but none fully formed yet. Thoughts of kitchen icons or relics, creating more large maestás, incorporating more collaged egg shells into paintings, making a large piece painted on a bed headboard similar to an altarpiece.”

“I’m considering attempting a small lunchtime work each day featuring lunch ingredients.” 

 

“Since I had my second child, 19 months ago, motherhood and art has been on my mind a lot.  This may somehow creep into my subject matter.  At the end of 2014 I created a linocut called St. Mixer of the Bags, which I printed on reusable bags.  I would like to print a limited edition on paper, and then pursue more linocuts of my work.”

Thank you, Jennie, for reminding us that we CHOOSE
both our treasures and our trammels.

Learn more about Featured Artist Jennie Traill Schaeffer!

Should you be our next Featured Artist?
Be sure to let us know!

CALL for ENTRIES: Downeast

Learn more from Pitt County Arts Council!EAST WEST
food divide

Food, like language & art, is often just a matter of perspective.  When I say Eastern food, does that conjure images of Chinese take out or Carolina BBQ?  Does Western food conjure images of Tex-Mex or a California roll?  It is all perspective  For the record, MY answers would be BBQ & sushi.  To be clear, this next “Downeast” Call refers to the Carolina, but it is open to everyone.  And, now I want BBQ.  Pick me up some pulled pork if you go to the opening.  Take a look…

Check out this Call for Entries from the Pitt County Arts Council (Greenville, NC) for Downeast Sculpture Exhibition.  This is a multi-venue exhibit for sculpture large & small, indoor & outdoor.  A great opportunity…

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

Learn more from the Pitt County Arts Council!CALL for ENTRIES:
Downeast Sculpture Exhibit

 

ELIGIBILITY: Open to all artists

MEDIA: Open to any medium (ceramics, metals, mixed media, etc.) as long as it is 3-dimensional

DEADLINE: January 31, 2015.

ENTRY FEE:  $15 for up to 3, $5 each add’l up to 6

JUROR:  Jenny Hagar is an Associate Professor of Sculpture at the University of North Florida.  She received her MFA in Sculpture & Digital Media from San Jose State University. Interested in a variety of processes & materials, she finds inspiration in dreams, objects from her childhood, gadgets, sea life & other curiosities. Hager’s work has been exhibited around the world.

AWARDS: Indoor sculpture prizes: $500 1st Place, $250 2nd Place & $100 3rd Place.  Outdoor sculpture prizes: $2500 – Best in Show.  Read the full call for a complete list of awards.

SALES:  PCAC at Emerge will retain a 40% commission.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Learn more from the Pitt County Arts Council!

FEATURED ARTIST of the YEAR: Emily Mitchell

Fig Newtons by Artist of the Year Emily Mitchell!HAPPY NEW YEAR!
food & art

It is January again, and we can’t believe it is 2015 already.  I am joyfully looking forward to a new year. 2014 was a year of growth for my family, my art, and for AAAD.  There were wonderful food highlights including a renewed interest in baking and continuing to fight the appearance of processed, fake foods.   I appreciate that some of you are tackling the same issues–like fig newtons.  The fig newtons, at left, are a self-proclaimed fail by painter Emily Mitchell.  And AAAD covered some fantastic opportunities in 2014 and even more fantastic artists.

Today, we name the
2014 Artist of the Year!

 

Get Close by 2014 Featured Artist of the Year Painter Emily Mitchell!When AAAD began in 2009, (YES, we are starting year SIX!) I was determined to cover art deadlines, and more importantly, artists producing 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. That is how the Featured Artist Contest was born.

The Featured Artist Page was getting crowded and each post was lessening the impact of being Featured. I had to start archiving artists yearly.  And, the Artist of the Year was born.  I now give all of our Featured Artists each year notice that at the end of the year, the Artist of the Year will be determined by the number of comments on their individual Featured Artist blog posts.

Congratulations to
Emily Mitchell,
AAAD’s 2014 Artist of the Year

The Dragonfly Gift by 2014 Featured Artist of the Year Painter Emily Mitchell!I followed up with Emily to find out what’s new:  “I’m hoping to start a new series with insects.  I’d like to do about 20-25 of them in a similar approach to my work but probably with some more mixed media-colored pencils, papers, perhaps. Oh!  And I’d like to do a few give a ways this year! I’m also doing a few workshops for some teachers and art associations. “

And new foods? Are there any new tasty morsels inspiring you? “So, since going GF, I really really miss Fig Newtons. I love/loved them, and they were my daily coffee accompaniment each morning.  They also made great training food when I did triathlons. But the ones I have found that are on the shelf are not stupendous.  So I have begun making my own. It’s laborious, and they are ugly!  Like, really ugly.  But so far they taste good. And much fresher than the original.” Editor’s note:  The food pic above ARE Emily’s figgy fail.  I think they look yummy.  All hail the ugly food!

I have enjoyed getting to know you, Emily. I am inspired by your sense of yourself. I love you adapt in life and how that carries over to your work.   I appreciate that your fans and peers loved you enough to make you the Artist of the Year even though your feature was the last one of the year.  Thank you, Emily, for ending 2014 with a bang!  If you missed her original Feature, check it out and get to know Emily Mitchell yourself.

Learn more about 2014 Artist of the Year, Painter Emily Mitchell!

Do you want to be the 2015 Artist of the Year?
It all starts with the Featured Artist Contest.

CALL for ENTRIES: Colour Burst

Learn more from the PH21 Gallery!JUST SAY NO
the brown has gotta go

I’m growing weary of brown foods.  We don’t often fry anything in our house, and we don’t eat wheat.  But, because we try our very best not to eat processed or artificially-colored food, the color in our diets almost solely depends on fresh vegetables.  There isn’t an abundance of beautifully colored veggies in season right now.  And, I can only eat so many servings of spinach and so many servings of sweet potatoes.  Bring on the beets, please.  Spring is coming.  Spring is coming.  Spring is coming.  I know it is.  In the meantime, lets all direct our rainbow-coloured desires to this next Call.  Take a look…

Check out this Call for Entries from PH21 Gallery (Budapest, Hungary) for Colour Burst. This is a great international opportunity. You can enter 3 images for only $17.90 (€15), & you don’t have to ship your work. The deadline is fast approaching, don’t miss this one…

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

Learn more from the PH21 Gallery!CALL for ENTRIES:
Colour Burst

 

ELIGIBILITY:  Open to all artists

MEDIA: Photography fitting the theme–broadly construed as the significance of colours is independent of generic or stylistic constraints.

DEADLINE:  January 11, 2015 midnight (UTC+01) *NOTE: This is between 4 to 8pm in the US depending on where you live.

NOTIFICATION: All entrants will be notified 7-10 days after the deadline.

ENTRY FEE: €15 ($17.90) for 3, €20 ($23.86) for 5, & €25 ($29.83) for 7.

Learn more from the PH21 Gallery! JUROR: Zsolt Bátori is a philosopher of art and photographer, living in Budapest. He has taught philosophy of art & photo theory courses at various universities in the U.S. & Hungary.  Zsolt is also the founder & director of PH21 Gallery.

AWARDS: 1 juror’s choice & up to 3 honorable mentions will be selected. The juror’s choice receives 3 free entries for an upcoming exhibition.

SALES: Gallery commission is 25%. Exhibition prints will be kept on file for future sale and promotion for the photographer, unless the photographer prefers some other arrangement. In case of a sale inquiry the photographer will be contacted. (Submitted photographs, however, do not have to be for sale, & exhibit prints won’t be sold; they are for exhibition and promotion purposes only.)

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Learn more from the PH21 Gallery!

CALL for ENTRIES: Lines

Learn more from the Darkroom Gallery!LINING UP
for dinner

As linear foods go, I make a mean grilled eggplant lasagna.  I don’t usually fall for the layered foods like 7-layer dips and trifles, but lasagna is the exception.  Most people are replacing the meat when they use eggplant in lasagna, I’m really replacing the noodles.  While I can find wheat-less pasta of most types, lasagna noodles have eluded me.  So, eggplant makes a gorgeous replacement.  I make it in a glass plan just to get the composition perfect.  Ridiculous.  This next Call is a far better use of a line obsession.  Take a look…

Check out this Call for Entries from the Darkroom Gallery (Essex Junction, VT) for Lines. They always have a low entry fee ($24) & a great juror.  And the theme leaves lots of room for interpretation. Take a look

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

Learn more from the Darkroom Gallery!CALL for ENTRIES:
Lines

 

Lines are powerful compositional elements that control the way eyes move through an image. The effect that lines have on an image varies. Horizontal lines convey a sense of width, stability, calm, lazy, security, relaxation, constancy and timelessness. Whereas vertical lines convey a sense of strength, height, integrity, solidity, dominance, power, peace & tranquility, substance or permanence.  This Call is for images that utilize lines in innovative and dynamic ways. — from darkroomgallery.com

ELIGIBILITY: Open to all artists 18+

MEDIA: Photography (line-themed)

DEADLINE: January 21, 2015

NOTIFICATION: January 28, 2015

ENTRY FEE: Up to 4 for $24 (online)/$29 (email)

JUROR: Dr. Rebecca Senf is the Norton Family Curator of Photography, a joint appointment at the Center for Creative Photography and the Phoenix Art Museum. She curates three exhibitions a year for the Doris and John Norton Gallery for the Center for Creative Photography in Phoenix.

Learn more about the Darkroom Gallery online!Senf grew up in Tucson and went to undergraduate school at the University of Arizona, studying the History of Photography. She spent ten years in Boston, Massachusetts where she earned a Ph.D. in Art History at Boston University. In Boston she worked on the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston’s major exhibition Ansel Adams from The Lane Collection, for which she also co-authored the exhibition catalogue. In October of 2012 her book Reconstructing the View: The Grand Canyon Photographs of Mark Klett and Byron Wolfe was released by University of California Press. Recent projects include exhibitions on the photographic book and in the next few months she will open two exhibitions focused on platinum photography.

AWARDS: All selected entries are included in a full color exhibit catalog & gallery exhibition. Juror’s Choice: 30×48″ image banner. People’s Choice – a free future entry. Honorable Mentions receive free exhibition catalogs and free entry in a future exhibition.

SALES: Free matting & framing of accepted entries, subject to standard sizes. For commission details, go to the bottom of the Submissions page!

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Learn more from the Darkroom Gallery!

*Editor’s Note: It is important to let Darkroom Gallery know you found their Call on artandartdeadlines.com. They are friends & sponsors of AAAD, and I always want them to know they have our support…

CALL for ENTRIES: Benjamin’s Buttons

Learn more from The Chait Galleries Downtown!the cornball
TRUTH

Iowa = Corn.  I have no doubt Iowans are justifiably proud of their corn.  But, I could not BELIEVE they reintroduced my favorite food with a twist –Caprese Salad on a Stick.  The Iowa State Fair debuted this genius idea in 2014.  How did I miss this one?  I ended up using it at my own art opening less than a month later.  This next Call is another reasons Iowans should be proud.  Investigate this opportunity…

Check out this Call for Entries from The Chait Galleries Downtown (Iowa City, IA) for Benjamin’s Buttons–Faces of Intensity.  I love this theme, and the gallery space is truly gorgeous.  Take a look…

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

Learn more from The Chait Galleries Downtown!CALL for ENTRIES:
Benjamin’s Buttons

 

How do you judge intensity? What experience can you portray through portraiture that captures the spirit and invites viewers to share emotion and understanding? What do you envision when someone’s buttons are pushed to or beyond their limits?

How do you judge intensity? What experience can you portray through portraiture that captures the spirit and invites viewers to share emotion and understanding? What do you envision when someone’s buttons are pushed to or beyond their limits? — from the prospectus

ELIGIBILITY:  Open to all artists 18+ residing in the U.S.

MEDIA:  Open to all 2D and 3D media accepted except photography. 2D artwork must not exceed 16 inches on any side, including frame. 3D artwork should not exceed 12 inches on any side.

Learn more from The Chait Galleries Downtown!DEADLINE:
January 23, 2015

NOTIFICATION:
January 28, 2015

ENTRY FEE:  $30 for up to 3, $10 ea. add’l

AWARDS:  Best in Show $400
& Honorable Mention $250

SALES:  Work that is sold during the show will generate a 50% commission to the artist, which will be paid by the 20th of the month following the date the sale occurred.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Learn more from The Chait Galleries Downtown!

ARTIST to LOVE: Laura Mabbutt

We found another great artist to celebrate!

This time it is a feltmaker! Say “Hello” to our newest Artist to Love

• • • • • • • • •

Laura Mabbutt
Designer/Maker of Felt Objects
Necklaces made from Merino wool & copper piping by Laura Mabbutt
Necklaces
Merino wool & copper piping
MABBUTT has been making felt for 10 years specializing in sculptural wet felt techniques & creating fashion & home accessories & sculptural forms from undyed wools & natural fibers. Her aim is to raise awareness of the material & its natural properties, creating unique, contemporary & desirable objects. Mabbutt's work has been exhibited in many venues including the Mall Galleries, London & The National Centre for Craft & Design. Laura also takes satisfaction in teaching the craft of feltmaking to others & is available for demos & workshops.

FAVORITE FOOD: Veggie Roast Dinner

Are you an Artist to Love? Be sure to let us know!

• • • • • • • • •

CALL for ENTRIES: Flowers, Plants & Gardens

Learn more from Art-Competitions.net!sweet or
SOUR?

I dream of lemons & olives–and corn, of course.  While dreaming of my future garden, I am excited at the prospect of growing non-GMO corn.  But, I also have fantasies of the produce I love most like lemons and olives, neither of which is native to my climate.  Is it just enormous hubris on my part to believe that if I try to grow them in a walipini that they will automatically surpass the quality of the native-grown varieties that I buy after their long trip to my local grocery store?  What is it about humans that makes us want to manipulate plants?  This next Call wants to see how you successfully manipulate plants in your art.  Take a look…

Check out this Call for Entries from Art-Competition.net (online) for Flowers, Plants & Gardens.  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: Flowers, Plants & Gardens, anywhere other than by email subscription or on ArtAndArtDeadlines.com, it has been published without permission and is considered theft.

Learn more from Art-Competitions.net!CALL for ENTRIES:
Flowers, Plants & Gardens

 

ELIGIBILITY: All artists age 18+

MEDIA: All 2D Media – painting, drawing, mixed media, photography or digital medium

THEME:   Flowers, Plants & Gardens – Individual interpretations of plants.  The work can reflect on nature’s remarkable abundance and diversity in the wild, in a garden, or an individual plant and or the beauty or complexity of a single leaf or petal.

DEADLINE:  January 12, 2014

NOTIFICATION:  January 16, 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!

Learn more from art-competitions dot net! 2

CALL for ENTRIES: Black & White

Learn more from F-Stop Magazine!what is
BLACK & WHITE
and read?

Please stop eating fake foods.  Every time I make a statement like that, I lose subscribers. But I care about your health like I care about my own.  It is black & white, but I pick my battles.  I won’t try to talk you into organic produce (although it is recommended), but I can beg you to stop eating fake food.  No cheese food.  No imitation vanilla.  No caramel coloring or stuff you can’t pronounce.  This next Call is a Black & White issue as well.  Take a look…

Check out this Call for Entries from F-Stop Magazine for their Portfolio Issue #69.  No Entry Fee.  And an opportunity to join the Hotshoe community FREE.  Be sure to tell them you found F-Stop through artandartdeadlines.com. One of our Featured Artists made it into their current Portfolio issue.  We know you will continue to make us proud…

*Editor’s Note: If you have read the personal portion of this post, CALL for SUBMISSIONS: Black & White, 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:
Black & White

Please be sure to follow the
guidelines closely!

ELIGIBILITY:
Open to all artists

MEDIA:
Photography

DEADLINE:
January 15, 2015

PUBLICATION:
February 1, 2015

ENTRY FEE:  None

AWARDS:  This issue is sponsored by Hotshoe the photography club for black and white photography.  The selected featured artist will receive a 1 year PRO membership at Hotshoe.org.

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!

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!