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Art and Art Deadlines.com

Category: Drawing

CALL for ENTRIES: 6x6x2011 Global at RoCo

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!GIMME MORE

I am a collector at heart.  I enjoy having odd jars of condiments just a cabinet door away.  I love having kitchen gadgets and utensils that I only have reason to use once a year.  But what I most love to collect is art.  I have art stuffed in every nook and cranny of my house. 

As I type, I am watched by a little carving of late artist Bob Ross (click here for image) who came in his own little cigarette box marked “Bob in a Box” part of a series by Bob Snead that included Bob Villa, Bob Dobb and more, whom I met Founder of Redux.  This next show gives YOU a chance to be both collected and a collector!

Check out this Call for Entries from the Rochester Contemporary Art Center (RoCo) for the 6x6x2011 Global.  There is no entry fee for up to 10 submissions.  This show is all hung, looks great on your resume, and benefits a great member of the art community!

CALL for ENTRIES: 6x6x2011 Global

Click to Learn More about 6x6x2011!Help RoCo build an exhibition of artworks from ALL 50 US States and more countries than last year. Please invite everyone you know to send their artwork early.  6×6 began as a small fundraising exhibition, but has grown into an international art phenomenon. 

Last year over 5,000 artworks
from 43 US States & 22 Countries were entered in this
astounding exhibition!

 

6x6x2011: Global is the fourth exhibition of thousands of original artworks, made and donated by celebrities, international and local artists, designers, college students, youths, and YOU.  Each artwork will be 6×6 square inches and signed only on the back, to be exhibited anonymously.  All artworks will be for sale to the public for $20 each to benefit Rochester Contemporary Art Center (RoCo).  Artist names will be revealed to the buyer only upon purchase and all works will remain on display for the duration of the exhibition

Learn more about the Rochester Contemporary Art Center!ELIGIBILITY:  All hung.

DEADLINE:  May 1, 2011

PREVIEW HOURS: June 1, 2 & 3, 2011 from 1-10pm

OPENING RECEPTION: June 4, 2011 from 6-10pm, $5 opening night admission, 7:30pm raffle for buyer positions 1-20, AND 8:00pm all other buyers

ONLINE PURCHASING BEGINS: June 6, 2011 at 10am (Editor’s Note: This is my birthday.  Artwork makes a lovely gift, heehee.)

AWARDS:  3 prizes will be awarded by popular vote. Vote for your favorite artwork in the 6x6x2011 Online Gallery. Voting closes on July 1, 2011.  First Place: $360, Second Place: $120, and Third Place: $60.

For complete details, Download the Prospectus!

Learn more about the 6x6x2011 Global show!

CALL for ENTRIES: 4th Annual National in NYC

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!ROLL ME UP with…
CREAM CHEESE

Usually when I think of NYC, I think of street food vendors.  However, I can only write so much about filafel, hot dogs and pizza.  So, searching my memory for another favorite culinary delight from my last trip to New York, I thought… crepes from Suzette’s.  I love crepes, and one of my favorite places to get them is in the neighborhood with the gallery sending out this next call. 

Check out this Call for Entries from Prince Street Gallery in New York City (Chelsea) for their 4th Annual National Juried Exhibit.  Trying to check New York of your list of US states on your resume?  Here’s one of the big ones…

CALL for ENTRIES:  4th Annual National

Learn more about the 4th Annual National at Prince Street Gallery!ELIGIBILITY:  Open to artists 18 years or older living in the USA.

MEDIA:  Paintings, drawings, original prints and mixed media only. All work must be original. No giclée prints, videos or photographs will be accepted.

DEADLINE:  April 9, 2011

NOTIFICATION:  April 29, 2011

Learn more about Juror William BaileyENTRY FEE:  A non-refundable fee of $35 for up to 3 images, and $5 each for extra images up to 6 (D, E, F) for a maximum fee of $50. Kindly make checks payable to Prince Street Gallery.

JUROR:  William Bailey is represented in the collections of the Whitney Museum of American Art and the Museum of Modern Art.  Bailey was elected to the National Academy of Design and the American Academy of Arts and Letters, and is represented by the Betty Cuningham Gallery, where he had his most recent exhibition in 2010.  Mr. Bailey taught for many years at Yale, and maintains studios in New Haven and Italy.

Learn more about the artists of the Prince Street Gallery!ABOUT THE GALLERY:  Prince Street Gallery represents contemporary figurative and abstract artists.  The gallery first opened its doors on Prince Street in SoHo in 1970. 

Prince Street Gallery originally emerged out of the Alliance of Figurative Artists and continues to broaden from its roots.  During its founding years the gallery received encouragement from The New York State Council on the Arts in the form of grants supporting exhibitions and a catalogue. 

In 1980, the gallery moved to Wooster Street where it remained until 2001 when it reopened at 530 West 25th Street in Chelsea.

For complete details, Download the Prospectus!

ART PUBLICATION: Vallum Magazine

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!QUEEN OF THE WORLD

I want to do everything.  I don’t sleep much because I cannot turn my brain off.  I am constantly thinking of the souflee I’ve never made, the exotic vacation I haven’t taken and the art I haven’t produced.  It isn’t a sad sort of sleepless anxiety.  It is an I-Want-to-Take-on-the-World-and-I-am-Running-Out-of-Time anxiety.  This next Call is a chance for you to mark a few “to do” items off your artistic bucket list.

Check out this Call for Art (among other things) from Vallum Magazine!  Here’s a chance for you to shine on the pages of a great poetry magazine.  And, if you’re a wordsmith, well, there’s that too…

ART PUBLICATION: Vallum Magazine

Founded in 2000, Vallum: contemporary poetry is one of Canada’s top, critically-acclaimed, all-poetry magazines.

Check out Vallum Magazine!Vallum has positioned itself as an avant-garde exposition of the best in poetry, providing a literary platform for established and emerging writers from Canada, the US and abroad.

Notable past contributors include P.K. Page, George Bowering, Paul Muldoon, Franz Wright, Jan Zwicky, Stephen Dunn, Les Murray, Charles Bernstein, John Kinsella, Fanny Howe, George Elliott Clarke, Andrew Motion, Erin Mouré, Peter Redgrove, Nicole Brossard and others.

Vallum publishes poetry that is sharp, engaging and exciting. It pushes boundaries and invites the exploration of different worlds and perspectives. In addition to the poetic contributions are essays, interviews, book reviews and stimulating visual art.

Vallum MagazineTHEME:  Mountains/Heights

How high can you go? Stars, mountains, ledges, high diction, big dreams, high wired… We walk straight ahead, but how do we climb? Slow or fast, where do we go when we look up?

DEADLINE:  March 1, 2011

SUBMISSIONS:  Essays, reviews, interviews, letters to the editor and art work can be sent by regular mail or through their Online Submission page.

For complete details, visit Vallum’s Submissions Page!

CALL for ENTRIES: 100th Exhibition

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!REASON TO CELEBRATE!

I have made hundreds of grilled cheese sandwiches.  I have entered hundreds of art shows.  I have made hundreds of canapes and attended hundreds of opening night receptions.  I believe that the 100 mark is to be celebrated.  This blog will soon celebrate its 300th post.  This next Call for Entries should put you in the mood to celebrate. 

Check out this Call for Entries from the Connecticut Acadamy of Fine Arts and the  Mystic Arts Center for their 100th ExhibitionThere are lots of awards so don’t miss this opportunity!

Learn more about the Connecticut Academy of Fine Art!CALL for ENTRIES:
100th Exhibition

ELIGIBILITY:  Open to all artists.  One or two works may be submitted.  Work must not have been previously shown at the CAFA or the Mystic Arts Center.  If you are not in the United States:  They do not currently have capability for converting currency or receiving international shipments.  But, if you have a contact within the US, you can work through them.

MEDIA:  All fine arts media: painting, drawing, sculpture, photography, graphics.

DEADLINE:  March 25, 2011 is the mail in deadline.  May 22 and 23, 2011 is the hand-delivery deadline.  Artists may enter up to two works.  Entries will be received Sunday, May 22 and Monday, May 23, 11AM–5PM at the Mystic Arts Center Inc., 9 Water St. Mystic, CT 06355.

NOTIFICATION:  Posted at www.ctacademy.org for mail-in entries by April 22, 2011, and carry-in entries by May 25, 2011 Editor’s Note:  Many galleries are going to posting results instead of emailing entrants.  I don’t like it either, but make sure you keep records so that you know to check their site.

Learn more about the 100th Exbihibition by CAFA and Mystic Arts Center!ENTRY FEE: $25/1st & $15/2nd entry (Academy members, 2nd entry free, dues paid). Make check payable to: CAFA. Fees are non-refundable.

AWARDS:  Best of Show $1000, Second Place $700, Third Place $400, Fourth Place $200, Painting $100, Sculpture $100, Drawing $100, Photography $100 and Graphics $100.  Additional awards include the Art Spirit Foundation, Dianne B. Bernhard Award for a Pastel $500, the Allied Artists of America Painting Award $100, the Simonds Photographic Award for a B & W photograph $100 certificate, the PhotoSynthesis Award for a traditional or alternate process photograph $100 Certificate and the Jerry’s Artarama award.

JURORS:  Joy M. Pepe is Professor Emerita of Lyme Academy College of Fine Arts, where she developed the Art History curriculum, implemented an Art History Minor, and was chair of the Liberal Arts Department.  She serves often as a juror, throughout Connecticut, for competitions, and exhibitions, and she gives popular lecture series on many art history topics. 

Learn more about the Connecticut Academy of Fine Art!Last year Pepe held the position of Professional in Residence in Art History at the University of New Haven, and this year she is teaching various Art History courses at the University of Hartford, Southern Connecticut State University, and Albertus Magnus College.  She holds a Masters from Wesleyn University with a concentration in Art History, and she has done doctoral studies (ABD) at Rutgers University in New Jersey.

Anne von Stuelpnagel
is Director of Exhibitions at the Bruce Museum in Greenwich, Connecticut; Since 1995 she has been responsible for the design of the 12-14 exhibitions per year of the Museum; Having worked at the Bruce Museum since 1980, her responsibilities included art, history, anthropology, and science.  She received her BFA from Blocherer School of Fine Art and Applied Sciences, in Munich, Germany with a Major in painting and a Minor in Interior Design.  Anne initiated and has carried out, for many years, the Outdoor Art Show of the Bruce Museum.  After settling in the United States, in 1977, she studied printmaking and has since worked primarily as a printmaker.

For complete details, See the Official Guidelines!

Learn more about the Mystic Arts Center!

CALL for ENTRIES: TailCast

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!TWO SCOOPS

 

I typically only post once per day.  Any more smacks of double-dipping of your time and inbox space.  I get notified everytime someone unsubscribes from this blog, and I am sincerely sorry when I found out that an artist has decided that AAAD isn’t something they want or need or have time for.  So, I am self-conscious about double-dipping… except in ice cream, of course.

So why double-dip today?  Well, I am also self-conscious about straying too far from bringing you the art deadlines and opportunities that are the whole purpose of this blog.  Last Monday I posted a housekeeping blog, earlier this morning I posted the Artist of the Year blog, and tommorrow I unveil the first Featured Artist of 2011.  That is three non-deadline posts in 8 days.  I just have to break it up with a little opportunity!

Check out this Art Contest from tailcast.com, a print-on-demand greeting card site, that allows you to design and sell a Valentine’s day card online.  There is no entry fee, and you could win $300+ and 20% commission on card sales.  Take a look!

CALL for ENTRIES:
Design for TailCast

Visit tailcast.com for complete details!What are butterflies?  Some people say they’re fluttering insects with pretty wings, others that its the feeling you get when you’re nervous or in LOVE… And what about goose bumps? Do you really only get them when you’re cold or can a secret whisper in your ear bring them on too? Is there such thing as a sexy chuckle, a secret grin or a flirty giggle?

Can you make them
happen with a card?

 

This is the challenge for you at tailcast. This time tailcast want designs to give butterflies or goose bumps and make recipients chuckle, giggle and grin knowingly on Valentine’s day.

DEADLINE:  January 29, 2011

ENTRY FEE:  None

HOW TO ENTER:  Design a card (using all 4 sides of the card)Upload your design using the full instructions found on their Call for Art pages. 

Don’t forget, readymade designs are created with personalization in mind, think about what can be done with the customers’ images and messages/text, within your design.  Click here for some inspiration, but don’t let that stop you doing something completely different.

For complete guidelines, visit tailcast.com!

CALL for ENTRIES: A Year in Review 2010

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!GOOSE ME

In addition to running the ever popular ArtAndArtDeadlines.com empire (hee), I create art of my own and hold down a day job as a Marketing Director.  I frequently get asked what it would take for me to throw up my hands and give in to my desire to do nothing but cook and make art.  The Goose would have to lay the Golden Egg.  I have a 10 year plan, but the golden egg would make it a 10 second plan.  Maybe this Call will be your golden egg.

Check out this Call for Entries for A Year In Review 2010 from Artists Wanted.  The entry fee is a low $10 per piece, and the Grand Prize package is almost impossible to believe.  Take a look…

CALL for ENTRIES: A Year in Review 2010

Artists Wanted:  A Year In Review 2010 is an international, all-medium-encompassing open call for art.  Their mission is to present a range of technique, style and narrative that captures the best emerging artists of the previous year.

Learn more about A Year in Review 2010 online!They believe that great talent deserves endless attention, and they will do all they can
to present your work
to the world.

During the first week of March, New York City will host artists, galleries, critics and curators from all over the world. Let this be your opportunity to shine in the spotlight of a feature booth at SCOPE, the premier showcase for international emerging contemporary art and one of the most influential presences in the expanding global art market.

Learn more about A Year in Review 2010 online!ELIGIBILITY:  Open to all artists from around the world who are 18+ years.

MEDIA:  Sculpture, Installation, Painting, Drawing, Photography, Design, Illustration, Film, Video, Performance, sound & more! Conceptual proposals also welcome.

DEADLINE:  Entries must be submitted before January 28, 2011. Late entries must be submitted no later than February 4, 2011 and may be subject to a late entry fee.

ENTRY FEE: Price for entry is $10 per image, you can submit 8 or more images for a flat rate of $79 (maximum of 15 images).

Learn more about A Year in Review 2010 online!AWARDS:

The Grand Prize Package:  A feature spot at SCOPE New York 2011, next to the top figures in the global art scene, $10,000 cash grant, includes $5,000 to create new work; $5,000 to spend however you want; Hotel accommodations and airfare to and from New York City for the event; A publicity campaign in New York City promoting you and your work; An online video feature garnering lasting exposure for your work; and Art-star treatment at the official SCOPE After-Party produced by Artists Wanted.

Learn more about A Year in Review 2010 online!The People’s Choice Award: $2,000 cash grant; An online feature bringing international exposure

The Category Awards: $1,000 and internationally-broadcasted online features by Artists Wanted will be awarded to one winner in each of the following categories: Fine Art (Painting, Drawing, Sculpture & Installation), Motion & Sound (Film, Video, Performance & Sound), Design & Illustration, and Photography.

The Art of Elysium Award: $10,000 donation made to The Art of Elysium on the winner’s behalf; and an online feature bringing international exposure

Learn more about A Year in Review 2010 online!JURORS:  Entries will be reviewed by a talented panel of judges, who are leaders in their fields, dedicated to creative expression and fully supportive in the effort to identify and recognize emerging artistic talent all across the globe. Go ahead, the judges are waiting for you to amaze them. Click here to learn more about the judges.

For complete details, visit the Artist Wanted website!

Learn more about A Year in Review 2010 online!

CALL for ENTRIES: Juried NYC Art Competition

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!HOLY BAGEL, BATMAN!

The holy grail for most of the emerging artists I know is a solo show in New York City.  The myth of the NYC show as the tipping point for wealth, success and fame is as idealized as NYC diners, bagels and street hot dog vendors. 

Don’t misunderstand, I LOVE diners, bagels and hot dogs.  I recognize that none of them will change my life, but I will enjoy one and all if you offer me one.

Check out this next Call for Entries for the 2011 National Juried Competition from the First Street Gallery in New York City.  The entry fee is a standard $35, but the grand prize …a solo show.  Don’t miss this opportunity!

CALL for ENTRIES:
2011 National Juried Competition

Learn more about NYC at Walking off the Big Apple!First Street Gallery in New York, NY seeks entries for an exhibit, June 22 – July 16, 2011.  Learn more about NYC at one of my favorite blogs, Walking Off the Big Apple.

ELIGIBILITY:  Open to U.S. resident artists at least 18 years old.  Exception: Artists currently represented by First Street Gallery. 

MEDIA:  Eligible works include oils, acrylics, watercolors, mixed media, pastels, drawings, prints and sculpture in any medium. No photography, video, film, or installations. No mechanically reproduced artwork (computer, printer, giclees, etc.).

DEADLINE:  Received by March 31, 2011

NOTIFICATION:  May 15, 2011

ENTRY FEE:   The fee is $35 for 1 – 3 works. $5 for each additional work up to 10 works total. Entry fees are non-refundable.

AWARD:  A Solo Show

 

COMMISSION:  The gallery will take no commission on any work sold . Work not for sale must be marked “N.F.S.”. No “P.O.R.” sales.

Regatta by Juror Paul ResikaJUROR:  Paul Resika is a highly-respected American painter. Using bold colors and recurring motifs inspired by nature and the world around him, his work merges the representational with the abstract.

At 19, he began studying with Hans Hoffman.

Represented by Lori Bookstein Fine Art in NYC, he has exhibited extensively in galleries and museums around the world including galleries in Madrid, Rome, London and Venice and the Corcoran Gallery of Art, The National Museum of American Art, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, and the National Academy of Design, where he is an Academician. 

Resika’s numerous awards and honors include a Guggenheim Fellowship.

For complete details, visit the First Street Gallery website!

Learn more about the 2011 National Juried Competition from First Street Gallery!

FEATURED ARTIST: Madeleine Avirov

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!CONCEALED
TREASURE

The $2 Art Contest has been a journey for me as both an Editor and an artist. I have learned that I must recognize my taste and bias as an artist while tempering it with impartiality as an Editor.  

Choosing a Featured Artist is like cooking for a large family gathering.  You have to honor where your talents lie, but you have to remember that sometimes your family just wants a turkey with traditional stuffing  on Thanksgiving regardless of how good your Oysters Rockefeller may be.

I truly have a soft spot for portraiture, as it influences my personal work; however, I also love the intimacy and vulnerability it gently masks.  I find a treasure in every portrait…sort of like the pearl in an oyster as a matter of fact.  During the holidays, I thought we could all use a reminder of things to be treasured–people most of all.  So, Oysters Rockefeller it will be. 

Click to learn more about Madeleine Avirov!The Featured Artist chosen from November entries is Madeleine Avirov.  Avirov’s work has a sadness balanced by the love and care that only an insider could have into the inner reaches of each subject.  While I love her landscape and abstract work, I find Avirov’s portraiture touching and worthy of an individual audience.  

FEATURED ARTIST:
Madeleine Avirov

Avirov, studied figure painting at The Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, IL, portraiture at the Richard Halstead Studio in Evanston, IL, and Studio Art & Illustration at Kent State University in Kent, OH. 
 
 But after all this study, Avirov drew a simpler picture of her direction for me: “My subjects follow two tracks that are beginning to merge. One is darkly colored and moves backward into the past through urban terrain that Philip Roth called ‘a timeless Depression set in a placeless Lower East Side.’  Here I work with the figure as a kind of still-life element, placing my father, for example, into settings whose contents reflect and contain his particular misfortunes in order to tell a story.”
Old Jew with Bird (detail) by Madeleine Avirov 2009“The other track moves outward into landscape, not to replicate any particular place, but more to conjure a remembered dimension in which things are rearranged, local color is heightened, dimmed, ignored, and the surface in places remains broken and unfinished—all in keeping with a broken world.” 
 

I was struck by Avirov’s process.  While as artists so many of us are trying to forge our own paths and break new ground with materials and media, why would Avirov work so hard to conquer the techniques of the Old Masters? “I build up the surface of the canvas transparently—in dozens of layers in some places, in others abrading or letting the ground show through.  By laying down patches of color to build form architecturally (a method I constructed from studying the texture of tree bark and from looking at Cézanne, the Spanish realist Antonio Lopez Garcia, and the English figurative painter Euan Uglow).

“First, in the same way that all genuine knowledge includes recognition—a backward glance—however interpreted, any new media or technique worth anything is in some sense built on what came before it.”

Ma by Madeleine Avirov 2004“When he was 75, the literary critic Northrop Frye understood that at that point in his life ‘discovery [could] come only from reversing one’s direction, going upstream to one’s source.’   He added ‘that at a certain point searching for the unknown gives place to trying to remove the impediments to seeing what is already there.’

“I am 55, but a dozen or so years ago, I began to feel similarly compelled. There are centuries of craft, of painstaking trial and error, that have produced works I revere, and I could not reject what I had not tested for myself.” 
 
 Favorite Food?  It’s either bread or fruit, the first peach of summer, warm bread on a cold day.  In search of renewal and comfort, I say wearing my armchair pyschologist’s chef’s hat.

Racism: When Kids Learn by Madeleine Avirov 2003I find that portraiture can often be difficult to sell.  The buying public often feels compelled to personally know the person in the art with which they choose to share their lives.  When I asked how Avirov dealt with that obstacle, she answered with a straight forward pragmatism that, frankly, took me by surprise.

“I’ve sold far more of the work that I uneasily categorize as landscape. The short answer to how I deal with it is that, essentially, I don’t. More and more, I divide my time between writing and painting, and, lately, the months I’ve given to any one painting I’ve been giving to landscape. But even in the years when I was consumed with the figure, I did so because I could not do otherwise, and paid the bills with editing work and illustration.”

How do you classify your own work?  “I also say there that it’s an ever-shifting mix of realism, surrealism, expressionism that is grounded in and is moving more and more toward abstraction, even imageless-ness. Any given work is driven by its content, but all the decisions I make about it refer to formal conventions. The story told, the emotion conveyed, are secondary even as they hover at the edge of these decisions.”

The Hippocratic Face 3 by Madeleine Avirov, 2010In addition to her figurative and landscape work, Madeleine is also a writer.  her next big project is a book.  The book’ss working title, The Hippocratic Face, refers to Hippocrates’ description of the appearance of the dying.  See work of the same name pictured right. It was conceived as a consideration the 90-year-span of the artist’s mother’s life in the light of her final days and weeks, in the hospital and in hospice, as well as an examination of the cultural obsession with extending life against all reason.

Thank you Madeleine for sharing your work with us. 

I felt a little like an eavesdropper in the hallways of your life while reviewing your work.  It was a privilege to be granted such an intimate view.

Learn more about Madeleine Avirov online!

 

Want to be a Featured Artist on www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com?
Check out the
$2 Art Contest

 

CALL for ENTRIES: NE National Exhibit

 

NICELY BROWNED!

In 3rd grade, I took “European Art Lessons” for one hour per week.  They weren’t like sauer kraut, foie gras or kidney pie that immediately hint at their origin.  I never figured out exactly what made the lessons European, but I did learn if you overwork soft pastels, you will end up with a brown mess.  They were worth their cost in wiener schnitzel.  I hope this next Call will inspire you to create some un-brown work.

Check out this Call for Entries for the 7th Annual Northeast National Pastel Exhibition from the Arts Center + Old Forge.  Membership is not required but could be a great opportunity to add to your personal arts community.  Take a look…

CALL for ENTRIES:
7th Annual Northeast National Pastel Exhibition

The Arts Center/Old Forge will present it’s 7th annual Northeast National Pastel Exhibition.  It has fast become a highlight of their annual exhibition calendar with thousands of visitors a year from the Northeast and beyond enjoying this varied and colorful display.

Learn more about the Northeast National Pastel ExhibitionThe Northeast National Pastel Exhibition has succeeded in educating and thrilling exhibit goers with works from some of the nation’s foremost pastel artists.  As the exhibition grows, so does its reputation.  More artists than ever have submitted work in the hopes of being selected last year.

DEADLINE:  February 4, 2011

ENTRY FEE:  Entry fee for two entries, $25-$40 depending on membership & how you choose to enter.

SUBMISSIONS:  Click here for the Prospectus and Entry Forms.

JUROR OF SECLECTION:  Wende Caporale is a nationally recognized leading pastel and oil portrait artist.  Her special ability for capturing likenesses of children and families has brought her much acclaim including the New York Times praising Wende as a leader in the field. 

Learn more about Juror Wende Caporale online!Wende is the author of the book Painting Children’s Portraits in Pastel which has been selling worldwide since its publication in 2001.  

In addition, her work has been featured in American Artist, International Artist, The Pastel Journal, Portrait Highlights and Pastel Artist International magazines.  Wende’s work has been shown in museums and national exhibitions, garnering awards and honors including a designation of Master Pastelist from the Pastel Society of America. 

JUROR OF AWARDS:  Lucy Petrie is recognized primarily for her highly realistic images, each marked by vivid color and intensity.   Dr. Petrie studied art and was selected for her first juried show in 2004. 

Learn more about Juror Lucy Petrie online!Since 2004, she has won numerous awards in national and international competitions, including many at the Northeast National Pastel Exhibition, for which her work has been selected in all six previous years. 

In 2007, Lucy was elected to Pastel Society of America signature membership, and in 2009 Lucy received the Master Circle Award from the International Association of Pastel Societies (IAPS).  Her paintings have appeared in The Pastel Journal, American Artist and more.   “Painting is about learning how to see and using that skill to unravel the mystery of representing what’s seen on the paper. I am continually thrilled by the visual feast of the world.”  continues below

Learn more about the Arts Center Old Forge online!

AWARDS: Creative Spirit Award $1,000
Alexander/Rosenau Award $500
Judge’s Choice Award $300
Outstanding Genre Award $275
Outstanding Landscape Award $200
J. Mabon Childs Memorial Award $200
Adirondack Pastel Society Outstanding Still Life Award $100
Julie Tabbitas Moore Award $100
Kelly Weal Memorial Award $100
Karen Jensen Memorial Award $100
Outstanding Portrait Award $100
Outstanding Small Format Award $100
Outstanding Still Life Award $100
Rooney ETC. Award $100
Vermont Pastel Society Award $100

For all the details,
visit the
Arts Center + Old Forge website!

CALL for ENTRIES: Urban Situation in NYC

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

I ATE THE WHOLE THING!

Vacation time is over, and I am in a food coma.  I may never look at sweet potato casserole the same way again.  For those of you that survived the holidays without a permanent taste aversion, this next call is another opportunity in NYC.

Check out the Call for Entries from The Ernest Rubenstein Gallery and the Educational Alliance called The Urban Situation.  The entry fee is very low, but the number of slots they have to fill is equally low.  Could be a great opportunity, but do your homework so you know what kind of work they want!

CALL for ENTRIES:  The Urban Situation

The Ernest Rubenstein Gallery – Educational Alliance is seeking submissions for “The Urban Situation” a group exhibition of 20 artworks.  Open to artists working in any 2-dimensional medium (not photography). Opening reception Thursday, Feb. 10, 6-8pm. 

Learn more about the Ernest Rubenstein Gallery!The Urban Situation is a constant backdrop for artists whether abstract or figurative, conceptual or post-modern. The particular energy, light, scale, stress, grit, incident or inhabitants of the urban environment provide source material for all genres.

ELIGIBILITY:   There is a limit of 3 entries per artist. Entrants must be at least 21 years of age. Selected artists are responsible for all shipping arrangements both to and from the exhibit.

MEDIA:  Painting, drawing, and collage maximum 60”x 48” are eligible.

Learn more about the Educational Alliance online!DEADLINE:  December 30, 2010 at 5pm

NOTIFICATION:  January 201, 2011

ENTRY FEE:  There is a $25 submission fee (for up to 3 images) by credit card, Money Order or check payable to the Educational AllianceYou may pay by credit card by calling  646-395-4235 before January 4, 2011.

About the Educational Alliance:  The Ernest Rubenstein Gallery is a distinct and impressive public space at the core of The Educational Alliance, a settlement house on the Lower East Side.  In recent years a wide range of artists have participated in exhibits including: Polly Appelbaum, Lynda Benglis, Peter Halley, Yvonne Jacquette, Peter Halley, Joyce Kozloff, Robert Kushner, Glenn Ligon, Carrie Moyer, Tom Otterness, Sheila Pepe, Judy Pfaff and Kiki Smith.

Mark Rothko is among the many artists that have taught at the art school!The Art School & Gallery provides instruction and cultural enrichment to people of all ages.  In the gallery, they present exhibits of emerging and established artist, alumni and student artworks.  The art school offers courses in: ceramics, drawing, painting, photography, sculpture and welding for beginning to experienced artists.  Started in 1895 to provide arts enrichment to young immigrants and neighborhood residents it soon became known for its quality program attracting people from all over the city.  Among the artists who studied or taught there are Louise Nevelson, Adolph Gottlieb, Mark Rothko, Barnett Newman, Jules Olitski, Leonard Baskin, Peter Blume, Chaim Gross, Ben Shahn and Moses Soyer.

For full details, Download the Prospectus!