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Category: Oil

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!

ARTIST to LOVE: Ansley Adams

WE found ANOTHER great one!

  This fantastic artist is from Rock Hill, SC!  Say “Hello” to our newest Artist to Love

Ansley Adams
Painting
The Red Horse, Oil Painting by Ansley Adams
The Red Horse
Oil Painting
ADAMS was born in the rural outskirts of Pittsburgh, PA, where she lived before settling in Charlotte, NC. Adams obtained a BA in Art & Education from Wingate University & a MFA in Painting at the University of SC. Her research on objects and the interior is drawn from the emotional memory of solitude and longing that the memory of place or thing holds for her. She is inspired by the desire to express, through ideas of shared experience, the emotional memory that these locations or 'special objects' hold.

FAVORITE FOOD: Mashed Potatoes

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

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: Anniversary

Learn more from Fresh Paint Magazine!CHERRY
on top

AAAD is rapidly approaching our 5th Anniversary (on 9/12).  And I have contemplated how to celebrate how far we’ve come.  It isn’t cake or chocolate sundaes I crave, but community–for you. Our readership has exploded over the years, and I receive unbelievable amounts of wonderful email from you.  But, I would like to see you participate HERE.  Tell each other which opportunities, galleries & competitions.  Tell each other what works, what doesn’t.  Share this site with your friends by liking & sharing our Facebook & Twitter posts.  Share our site with a new artist & help them find the opportunities you have found through AAAD.  That would be the cherry on my celebratory sundae.  Take action to create community HERE, today.  And, don’t forget to help celebrate another anniversary with this next call too.  Take a look…

Check out this Call for Entries from Fresh Paint Magazine (online) for the Anniversary Issue. Low entry fee & simply gorgeous. Show ’em your strokes…

*Editor’s Note: If you have read the personal portion of this post, CALL for ENTRIES: Anniversary, 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:
Anniversary

 

Fresh Paint Magazine is inviting artists to submit work that incorporates or interprets the idea of painting for the one year anniversary issue.

ELIGIBILITY:
Open to all artists

MEDIA:
2D Painting

DEADLINE:
September 1, 2014

NOTIFICATION:
September 5, 2014

ENTRY FEE: $15 for up to 3 images

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: Oil & Water

Learn more from the Woman Made Gallery!OIL
me up

Olive oil seems quintessentially Italian to me.  But, did you know that the top producer of olive oil, by a fairly wide margin, is Spain? I always think of it as Italian or Greek.  This next Call is not just about oil, but water too.  Take a look at this opportunity…

Check out this Call for Entries from Woman Made Gallery (Chicago) for Oil & Water, a juried painting exhibit.  This is a fantastic venue (personal experience) in a town known for having a great art scene.  Give it a try…

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

Learn more about the Oil and Water exhibit from the Woman Made Gallery!CALL for ENTRIES:
Oil & Water

 

ELIGIBILITY:  Open to all artists

MEDIA:  Open to all painting media: oil, acrylic, water color, gouache, encaustic, with the addition of m/m if desired, on canvas, wood, paper or any other 2D or 3D surface.

DEADLINE:  August 27, 2014

NOTIFICATION:  September 12, 2014

ENTRY FEE:  $30 for up to 3

JUROR:  With an MFA from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Sarah Krepp has been a noted Chicago artist for more than 25 years. She has shown nationally and internationally, and her work is included in many corporate and private collections. Locally she is represented by Roy Boyd Gallery in Chicago. In 2003 Sarah Krepp became founding and on-going director of DIALOGUE CHICAGO, an interdisciplinary critique/seminar that includes artists from painting to installation, performance, and time arts. She is the curator for Gallery 175, Chicago.

Sarah Krepp is Professor Emeritus of Art and former Chair of the Painting Program in the School of Art and Design at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.  She has over 20 years of teaching experience at The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Southern Illinois University, the Burren College of Art (Ballyvaughn, Ireland), as well as the University of Illinois.

SALES:  WMG will retain a 40% commission.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Download the Prospectus from Woman Made Gallery!

CALL for ENTRIES: Urban Aspect

Learn more from the Principle Gallery - Alexandria!EAT
everything

Most people, in my experience, believe that big cities, like D.C., offer the best in restaurant diversity.  And, while this is perhaps true, I find the best quality food experiences are in cities just outside these areas.  Take Alexandria, VA, for example.  Located just outside D.C., you’ll find everything from farm to table fresh offerings to gourmet comfort foods.  All the aspects of urban offerings in a slightly smaller setting.  This next Call offers an urban aspect, AND it hails from Alexandria too. Take a look…

Check out this Call for Entries from the Principle Gallery (Alexandria, VA) for Urban Aspect.  Gorgeous gallery, historic & walkable location.  Don’t miss this opportunity…

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

Learn more about the Urban Aspect exhibit from the Principle Gallery!CALL for ENTRIES:
Urban Aspect

 

“Urban Aspect” will feature works of art that explore the myriad of themes and vistas found in urban life in all corners of the world. The theme is not restricted to any conventional ideas of cityscapes (though these are by no means discouraged), but rather is open so as to encourage creative and original subject matter and perspectives of urban life and locations.

ELIGIBILITY:  Open to all artists

MEDIA:  Painting

DEADLINE:  August 22, 2014

NOTIFICATION:  August 29, 2014

ENTRY FEE:  $35 for up to 4, $45 for up to 7  & $55 for up to 10

JUROR:  With an unmistakable style and talent to spare, Jeremy Mann has become well known in the art world for his moody figurative work and dynamic cityscapes. Infused with a sense of energy, atmosphere, and drama, these cityscapes exemplify Jeremy’s unique skill with compositions and color. Currently, Jeremy lives and works in Oakland, CA and holds a degree in Fine Arts from Ohio University and a Master’s from the Academy of Art University in San Francisco.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Learn more from the Principle Gallery - Alexandria!

CALL for ENTRIES: Square Foot

Learn more from the Bismark Art and Galleries Association!shiver me
Æbleskivers

I have a food bucket list.  it is a sort of dream-list of foods & food-related activities to try before I die.  Norsk Høstfest is on that list.  With the exception of danish pastries & rice pudding, Scandinavian food gets a bad rap.  I want Viking-on-a-Stick & Danish Aebelskivers, thank you very much.  This next Call comes from North Dakota, home to Norsk Høstfest.  It may just be fate…

Check out this Call for Entries from Bismarck Art & Galleries Association (Bismark, ND) for the Square Foot exhibit.  $25 entry pays for 2 canvases & having them shipped to you.  Take a look…

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

Learn more from the Bismark Art and Galleries Association!CALL for ENTRIES:
Square Foot

 

ELIGIBILITY:  Open to all artists

MEDIA:  Accepted media includes Acrylic, Watercolor, Oil or Mixed Media or any media that can be applied to a 12” x 12” canvas.  Canvases may not be altered in size and/or shape.  Artists will receive their canvas from BAGA to ensure consistency of canvases.

REGISTER DEADLINE:  June 20, 2014

FINISHED CANVAS DUE:  July 25, 2014

ENTRY FEE:  Fees are $20 for 1 entry or $25 for 2 entries. This fee covers the cost of the canvas, shipping and program printing.

SALES:  All artwork will be priced at $130 by BAGA. A 30% commission will be retained by BAGA on all sales.  *By my math, your profit after entry & commission would be $157 on 2 canvases or $71 on 1 canvas.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Learn more from the Bismark Art and Galleries Association!

FEATURED ARTIST: Jillian Platt

Learn more about Featured Artist Jillian Platt!i choose
CHOCOLATE

not dishes

I’m up to my eyeballs in my own sink of dishes, as it were.  But, I appreciated the break from deadlines and mayhem afforded by reviewing the work of those that contributed to the Featured Artist Contest.

And admittedly, what I choose to feature is often colored by whatever is piled in my proverbial sink of dishes at the moment.  With my own solo show opening in July, I am deep in historical anatomies being used in my pieces.  And what comes across my desk?  The work of a phenomenal abstract painter that also does medical illustration.

I am proud to welcome Jillian Platt as AAAD’s latest Featured Artist.  The historical anatomies I use are deliberately labored, graphic and anything but beautiful.  But this work is soft and delicate and draws me in–regardless of the subject matter.  Then there is the abstract work; I’m just lost in the sort of emotional chaos & cacophony of sound emitted by the color & texture of this work.  Enjoy.

Learn more about Featured Artist Jillian Platt!FEATURED ARTIST:
Jillian Platt

 

Early chalk drawings were the first indications of Jillian’s need for artistic expression.  Exposed to fine art at an early age & encouraged by surroundings & teachers her talents were solidified at Boston University School of Fine Art.

Jillian wove art & science together in the field of medical art. Her work garnered awards both in & out of the courtroom & operating theatres.  She has explained to college students, attorneys & surgeons the cellular work of the body, the mechanisms of destruction & the steps of repair.

Expressions in abstract gently pull the viewer in allowing them private entrance into the artist world. Underlying perceptions & profound realizations of softness, emotionality and solitude reach out for the viewer’ s participation.

Abstract Work by Featured Artist Jillian Platt!Are you self-taught or formally instructed? 

“I am formally trained.  A B.F.A. in painting from Boston University & a M.S. in Medical Illustration from Georgia Regents University.  I have loved to paint and draw for as long as I can remember so…

“It was only natural
for me to study art.”

 

“The science part came in after college.  I had a bookkeeping job and wanted to find a way to make a living using my art.  I had heard about medical illustration and decided to take some science classes. One teacher, a physiology teacher, got me hooked on science.”

Illustration Work by Featured Artist Jillian Platt!Talk to me about your process. 

“It depends on the job, but for the most part medical illustration is like writing a book report. You use references, such as anatomy books, medical reports, patient records, sometimes observing surgery.  Graduate school in medical illustration includes medical school courses in anatomy, neuroanatomy, cell biology, surgery (and many others).

“When you graduate you are well prepared in how to read and incorporate all the information in those references. The hardest part is simplifying the information without losing something important and still making it visually appealing.”  Editor:  I’m sure that the amount of education & preparation required should have been obvious to me, but I simply never considered it. Wow.

Featured Artist Jillian Platt!I find myself loving both your abstract paintings AND the medical illustrations.  What brought about such a stark contrast in subject matter? 

“I fell in love with art because it is an outlet for me emotionally. With abstract painting there are no references, it can be purely emotional. Muddling your way through feelings, getting dirty, and really being in your art. It’s a huge release for me.

“Medical illustration is pretty straight forward. I’m generally creating it to serve a specific purpose so there’s not much room for expression.”

Illustration Work by Featured Artist Jillian Platt!Talk to me about your inspiration. “Human physiology is fascinating to me. How it all works together. It’s so complex and beautiful. Any time I have been hired to create medical art is a chance for me to learn.  To go into an operating room and watch, or to talk with scientists about a process they are experimenting with, is fascinating.  There’s so much creativity in science.

“Abstract art is all about emotion for me. I am a pretty private person and generally keep my feelings to myself except for a few friends. So art becomes, for me, the release.

Abstract Work by Featured Artist Jillian Platt!“Sounds corny, but I really need to be making something all the time, using my hands. Painting, upholstering, making jewelry, gardening. Something is always going on in my head that needs to get out.”

Talk to me about the two artists (one living, one dead) that have most influenced your work, and tell us why.

“My 1st art teacher, a great friend & artist named John Dyer, from NY.  He taught me how to use oil paint & the importance of light.  Also, how to really try to feel the subject matter that I was painting, the texture, color, temperature.  His style is similar to Andrew Wyeth.  Anselm Kiefer’s work is gripping.  Just to be in its presence is so powerful. It was his work that really moved me and showed me what abstract is all about.

“Dead. That would be Frances Spalding Whistler.  The way he used oil paint like watercolor and the ethereal feeling of his paintings.”

Illustration Work by Featured Artist Jillian Platt!Is there one artist whose work you simply cannot abide?  Editor: I always ask this question of artists, mostly to gauge their feelings about the public image of art.  I almost never reveal the answers, but I’ll say this… I’ve only had about 4 or 5 different answers in the past few years.  Apparently we all dislike the same people, ha.

What’s coming up next for you?  “I’m doing a mural in my friend Rachel’s dining room. I’m really exited about it. I have been working on a medical animation project for a long time now and am eager to get dirty again.”

You know we have to know about your favorite food.  You know you want to tell us…  “Sadly, at 44 years old, it’s still pizza with a lot of sauce and a coke.”  Pizza is never sad, Jillian.  Never ever.

And what about your favorite snack foods?  “Anything chocolate. I love chocolate.”  Amen.  Me too.  Did you know that there are people that dislike chocolate?  Dumbfounding, eh?

Thank you, Jillian, for being an oddly beautiful connection in what I suspect is a very small world.  Your work moves me.

Learn more about Featured Artist Jillian Platt!

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

CALL for ENTRIES: Spring Showcase

Learn more about the Spring Online Showcase from Oil Painters of America!’tis the
SEASON

It is ramp season in the Smoky Mountains.  I am thrilled to have a locally-grown, fresh vegetable of any sort after the winter of snow & ice we just endured–even if it gives us all dragon breath.  If you aren’t familiar, ramps are spring onions with a strong garlic smell and onion flavor.  They are called “spring leeks” elsewhere.  We’re using them in salads, soups, casseroles and atop nearly every dish consumed in my house right now.  You name it, we’re finding a way to eat them.  Another sign of Spring is this next Call.  Maybe this one is for you…

Check out this Call for Entries from Oil Painters of America (OPA) for their Spring Online Showcase. $14 entry & huge awards.  You DO have to be a member ($60), but great benefits exist for oil painters.  Take a look…

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

Learn more about the show from Oil Painters of America!CALL for ENTRIES:
OPA Showcase

 

ELIGIBILITY: You must be an Associate Member. Artists must reside in the United States, Canada or Mexico.

MEDIA:
Representational Oil painting

DEADLINE:  May 15, 2014

NOTIFICATION:  May 22, 2014

ENTRY FEE: $14 per painting

JUROR:  Tim Deibler has had a life-long passion for art.  After studying with many of the local artists during high school, he chose to go to the Art Institute of Colorado. After graduating, he worked in the commercial art & video production fields until going full time as a fine artist in 1992.  He has won 5 Awards of Excellence at the OPA’s National Juried Show.

Golden Dawn by juror Tim DeiblerBorn and raised in Oklahoma, Deibler’s passion for landscapes, mountains in particular began after seeing the 1956 movie The Mountain as a young boy.

“Every time I look out the window or walk outside I’m in the mountains, making it much easier for me to observe the constant moods and nuances of nature. My goal is to portray what I’m experiencing in nature, I want the viewer of my work to say ‘I’d like to be there’.”--Tim Deibler

AWARDS: $3,000 for 1st place, $1,500 for 2nd place & $500 for 3rd place along with 10 honorable mentions

For complete details, Visit OPA online!

Download the Prospectus from Oil Painters of America!

CALL for ENTRIES: 58th Juried

Learn more from the Stockton Art League!unlimited
QUANTITIES

I’ve learned not to limit myself with numbers.  One protein, 1 starch, 1 veggie is simply an outline, not a rule.  Ask Baskin Robbins®–they once thought 31 flavors was the end all be all.  Heinz® used to boast 57 varieties; they now have over 5,700.  This next Call is number 58, and I’m confident it won’t be the last.  Take a look…

Check out this Call for Entries from the Stockton Art League (California) for the 58th Juried Exhibition at The Haggin Museum.  What more can you ask than over $5,000 in total cash awards?

*Editor’s Note: If you have read the personal portion of this post, CALL for ENTRIES: 58th Juried, anywhere other than by email subscription or on ArtAndArtDeadlines.com, it has been published without permission and is considered theft.

Learn more from the Stockton Art League!CALL for ENTRIES:
58th Juried

 

ELIGIBILITY:  Open to all U.S. artists

MEDIA:  Acrylics & Oils, Water Media, Mixed Media & Graphics, Sculpture & Pastel

DEADLINE:  June 12, 2014

NOTIFICATION:  July 2, 2014

ENTRY FEE:  For Non-members, $25 for 1, $15 ea. add’l.  For SAL members, $15 for 1, $10 ea. add’l.  There is a limit of 6 entries per artist.

JUROR:  Dale Laitinen is an active workshop instructor and signature member of the National Watercolor Society and Watercolor West. Dale graduated from San Jose State University with a degree in Art in 1975, and has been a full-time practicing artist since 1985. Dale has been featured in The Artist’s Magazine, Watercolor Magic, Watercolor Magazine, Drawing Board Magazine and several books.

Work by Juror Dale Laitinen!His paintings were featured in the October 2013 Southwest Art. Laitinen has two instructional videos, and this year is launching “Bristle” his online art magazine. His water-media and oil paintings were recently exhibited in a two person show at Petroglyphe Gallery in Mokelumne Hill, California, where he shows regularly. He is a past juror of many National and regional exhibitions including Watercolor West, Kentucky Watercolor Society, Utah Watercolor Society, Watercolor Society of Oregon, Red River Watermedia Show, Magnum Opus and many others.

AWARDS:   $1,000 Best of Show, $500 1st Place & $250 2nd Place

SALES:  The Stockton Art League will charge a 30% commission on sales to support exhibition costs.

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Learn more more about this Juried Exhibit at the Haggin Museum!