Monday, June 18, 2012

Call to Artists - Cottonwood Art Festival

Cottonwood Art Festival
There's An Art to Having Fun!
 Call to Artists 
 
What: Fine Arts Festival

Where: Richardson, Texas

When:  Saturday and Sunday
            Oct 6-7, 2012
            10 am - 6 pm
  
NOTEWORTHY: 

*Bi-annual event in May and October

*Ranked among the nation's top art festivals every year

*240 participating artists

*Jury/Booth Fees - $30/$425

*Free Parking

*Night security and uniformed police officers during the show

*Friday Night Artist Party

*Boothsitters

*Boy Scouts on site to help unload and load

*Thursday night load in for local artists

*Strong community support

Click HERE to watch our video: What Artists Say About Cottonwood!   

Cottonwood Art Festival takes place in Richardson, Texas, an affluent suburb just seconds from Dallas.  This event is held in a beautiful, shady park setting. It's professionally run by very attentive staff/volunteers who pay attention to artists' needs and treat the artists with southern hospitality. Strong community support, loyal patrons, educated collectors and acquisitive art lovers make for large crowds and one of the finest art festivals in the country. 


Now Accepting Applications:

Deadline:
June 22, 2012

Notification:
July 2, 2012

Payment Deadline:
July 20, 2012

Must apply at www.zapplication.org

For more Information:

You may also contact:
Serri Ayers
Festival Director

Call to Artists - ArtFest Fort Myers 2013

ArtFest Fort Myers 2013
Southwest Florida's Premier Art Festival   
Call to Artists  

WHAT: 13th Annual Juried Fine Art Festival

WHEN:  February 2 - 3, 2013
              Saturday & Sunday
              9 a.m. - 5 p.m. 

WHERE:  Downtown Fort Myers Riverfront, Fort Myers, FL

NOTEWORTHY:
  • 200 participating artists. 
  • Jury/Booth Fee: $35/$385 - Double booths available $770 - Numerous corner booths also offered at no extra cost.
  • Award winning marketing program valued at $150,000 creating 5 million impressions targeting art buying patrons.
  • Active social media year-round to engage art patrons. 
  • $5,000 in award money plus "invited status" for following year.
  • Commemorative poster and t-shirt image selected from a festival artist.
  • Opportunity to advertise in festival publications.
  • Option to participate in Friday Night Opening Party (60 artists).
  • Artist amenities including drive up access for Friday set up, booth sitters, complimentary breakfast, indoor restrooms, behind booth storage, designated artist parking & discounted hotel rates.
  • Professional jury panel of five changes each year, creating a show with approximately 90% new artists annually.
  • For additional details, visit www.ArtFestFortMyers.com 
Each February, over 65,000 art lovers and collectors attend ArtFest Fort Myers to enjoy and purchase the work of 200 fabulous artists from across the country. Our downtown riverfront park and yacht basin are the perfect backdrop as artists booths line the wide boulevard, without the interference of food, sponsors or loud music. New and cutting edge art combines with more traditional work to create an amazing outdoor selling gallery, with no dead end artist spaces allowed!  A true community event, our team of professional staff, with exceptional attention to detail, and 300 dedicated volunteers focus on a successful weekend for you. Apply now and make ArtFest Fort Myers a part of your Florida winter season!

NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS:  

Application deadline
September 13, 2012 on www.zapplication.org 

Jury:
October 5, 2012 

Notification:of Acceptance: 
October 19, 2012

Booth Fees Due:
November 1, 2012

Email inquiries to: 
Jeanne.Seehaver@ArtFestFortMyers.com
Or call 239-768-3602

Marc Chagall - Nassau County Museum of Art



Marc Chagall
Museum Galleries To Become a Treasure House of
Chagall’s Works, Including First Local Showing of
1957 Bible Series of Hand-Colored Etchings

July 21—November 4, 2012

 
“If we had nothing of Chagall but his Bible, he would be for us a great modern artist."
Art Historian Meyer Schapiro [Columbia University]

“The Bible is life, an echo of nature, and this is the secret I have endeavored to transmit."
Marc Chagall

Two years ago, Ambassador Arnold Saltzman, the founding president and current executive vice president of Nassau County Museum of Art, proposed a highly ambitious undertaking—an exhibition that would make the museum’s galleries a treasure house of works by Marc Chagall. The museum’s former director, Constance Schwartz, was enlisted to organize an extraordinary exhibition of Chagall’s work, more extensive than any other previously seen in this area, and including paintings being shown to the Long Island public for the first time. Saltzman and Schwartz reached out for important loans from the many collectors, galleries and museums that they had established relationships with over the years. These efforts have resulted in Marc Chagall, a major exhibition that features significant paintings and a large selection from Chagall’s series of 105 hand-colored etchings of Bible stories that he produced in 1957. These etchings have never before been seen on Long Island. Marc Chagall, opening at Nassau County Museum of Art on July 21, 2012 and remaining on view through November 4, 2012, is supported by the Saltzman Family Foundation and The David Berg Foundation.

The works selected for the exhibition demonstrate how Chagall, throughout a long and distinguished career, incorporated facets of his early Russian-Jewish heritage into multilayered works. Chagall’s storytelling paintings portray a fantastic pictorial world where heaven and earth seem to meet, and couples are always in love. It’s a world where people and animals—cows, goats, donkeys, horses and birds—float upside down or sideways, irrespective of the laws of gravity. Chagall’s hypersensitive imagination is palpable as he shares with the viewer his memories of family in brilliantly colored works set amidst the houses and streets of his native Vitebsk.

The Bible etchings on view in Marc Chagall are on loan from the Haggerty Art Museum of Marquette University in Milwaukee. Chagall’s biographer, Franz Meyer, wrote: “Chagall’s ties with the Bible are very deep indeed; the forms that people its world are a part of his own inner life, part of the living Jewish heritage, and thus are archetypes of a greater, more intensive world.”  In Marc Chagall—The Graphic Works, Meyer speculates that the significance of the Bible in Chagall’s work was rooted in his early childhood experiences in Russia.

Marc Chagall (1887-1985) was the eldest of nine children born to a poor Russian-Jewish family in the village of Vitebsk. His artistic talent was evident early with a distinctive style of images from childhood emerging during his studies with Leon Bakst in St. Petersburg. Working in Paris from 1910 to 1914, Chagall began to produce paintings inspired by Russian folklore and village life. During World War I, Chagall returned to Russia, ascending to the post of Commissar for Fine Arts in Vitebsk. It was there that he produced works that were to become his most famous—images in strong, bright colors depicting otherworldly states that fused fantasy, nostalgia and religion. He returned to France permanently after World War I, save for the years of the Nazi occupation when he fled to the safety of New York and its environs.

The museum is offering several exhibition-related programs to enhance understanding and enjoyment of the Chagall exhibition. Artists of the 20th Century: Marc Chagall is a 50-minute film screening daily from July 21 through November 4; the film explores Chagall’s Russian-Jewish roots. Lunchtime lectures on the exhibition will be offered on August 23, September 20 and October 25, On October 6, Director Emerita and Guest Curator Constance Schwartz discusses the exhibition; she will be joined by art collector Ambassador Arnold A. Saltzman, the museum’s founding president. On September 15 a Klezmer Band presents a concert of the spirited music heard at Jewish weddings and celebrations in the Russia of Chagall’s youth. Art historian and author Charles A. Riley II, Ph.D. returns to the museum on October 13 with a talk about Chagall’s artwork for the performing arts, especially opera and dance. Children’s programs in connection with the Chagall exhibition include Friday morning readings of Eastern European folklore on July 27, August 3 and August 10, followed by a family-friendly exhibition tour and supervised art activities. Show Us Your Collections! on August 18 will encourage youngsters to share their prized possessions and create new art with a variety of materials. Discover Chagall’s Childhood World on October 20 features a real petting zoo to echo the animal characters seen in Chagall’s paintings of his native Village of Vitebsk; children will be guided in creating pastel representations of their own neighborhoods. Log onto nassaumuseum.org/events for details on these and other programs at the museum.

Nassau County Museum of Art, governed by a privately elected Board of Trustees, is chartered and accredited by New York State as a not-for-profit, private educational institution. The museum’s programs and exhibitions are made possible through the support of Nassau County under County Executive Edward P. Mangano and the Nassau County Legislature, as well as memberships, admissions, special events, private and corporate donations, as well as government and foundation grants.

Educational programs at the museum are made possible through the generosity of The New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Andrew Cuomo and the New York State Legislature, the DeWitt Wallace Fund for Youth - a donor-advised fund at the Long Island Community Foundation, Bank of America, David Lerner and Associates, and Nassau County Museum of Art Ball and Benefactors Dinner. Additional generous educational support is provided by Capital One Bank, Milton & Sally Avery Foundation, North Shore Autism Circle, The Ridenour Endowment Fund, and TD Bank Foundation.

Nassau County Museum of Art is located at One Museum Drive in Roslyn Harbor, just off Northern Boulevard, Route 25A, two traffic lights west of Glen Cove Road. The museum is open Tuesday-Sunday, 11 a.m.-4:45 p.m. Docent-led tours of the exhibition are offered at 2 p.m. each day; tours of the mansion are offered each Saturday at 1 p.m.; meet in the lobby, no reservations needed. Tours are free with museum admission. Family art activities and family tours are offered Sundays from 1 pm; free with museum admission. Call (516) 484-9338, ext. 12 to inquire about group tours. Admission is $10 for adults, $8 for seniors (62 and above) and $4 for students and children (4 to12). Members are admitted free. There is a $2 parking fee on weekends (members, free). The Museum Store is open Tuesday through Sunday, 11 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Call (516) 484-9337 for current exhibitions, events, days/times and directions or log onto nassaumuseum.org.

Call to Artists - Bonita Springs National Art Festivals


Center of the Arts of Bonita Springs
presents:  

Bonita Springs National Art Festivals

Call to Artists


WHAT:  3 Fine Art and Fine Craft Events

WHERE: Promenade at Bonita Bay, Bonita Springs, Florida

WHEN: Saturday and Sunday
           January 12-13, 2013
           February 9-10, 2013
           March 9-10, 2013

NOTEWORTHY:

*3 separately juried events.
Artists may participate in one, two or three events.

*Long history of excellent sales.

*Each show limited to 211 juried fine artists and craft persons.

*Jury/Booth Fees ($30/$400); a few larger spaces available at extra cost.

*Cash Awards.

*Friday setup and drive up to your space to unload.

*Artist amenities.

*For more details about the shows, click HERE
These highly regarded festivals offer artists the opportunity to present their fine art and fine craft in a high traffic area during the busiest time of the winter season.  Bonita Springs, adjacent to Naples is populated by upper-income residents. Quality of the work exhibited attracts knowledgeable art lovers and buyers.  These festivals have all the characteristics for success: location, venue, audience and ambiance and are consistently top-ranked among all outdoor shows nationwide!

                     Click HERE to watch a video about
Bonita Springs National Art Festivals!
 

NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS:

Deadlines:

January Festival: September 1, 2012
February Festival: October 1, 2012
March Festival: November 1, 2012


For more details, artist's prospectus, entry form and festival layout map, visit:
http://artinusa.com/bonita/app/
 
Email inquiries to:
artfest@artinusa.com

You may also contact:

Barry Witt
239-992-1213

For additional information about the Center for the Arts of Bonita Springs:
http://www.artcenterbonita.org/
 

Friday, June 1, 2012

The Vimeo Festival + Awards


THE VIMEO FESTIVAL

JUNE 8TH + 9TH, VIMEO HQ + ROOT


Imagine a space shuttle countdown about to reach we have liftoff — that’s where we stand in relation to the 2012 Vimeo Festival + Awards! In less metaphorical terms, they are happening very, very soon: June 7-9 in New York City. The Awards show is already sold out, but you can still get involved in our weekend of wonder:

Enjoy a quintessentially cultural weekend in NYC: Listen to inspirational speakers, learn all sorts of new filmmaking skills, and watch the world’s best videos with us. Tickets start at just $40, and we even have sweet discounts for Plus and PRO members. Register now >

Plan every waking moment of your weekend with our handy guide to all the talks, workshops, screenings, and special events, including:

+ A conversation about the glory of failure with acclaimed director/actor Ed Burnsand renowned producer Ted Hope

Director Profiles with documentary geniuses Steve James and Lucy Walker

+ A guide to getting started with the gear you’ve got with cool filmmaking dudeCasey Neistat

Explore all that's happening this year >

The results are almost in — we just announced the finalists for this year’s Vimeo Awards, with four videos duking it out for top honors in each of 13 categories. Lay eyes on all the finalists’ videos >

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

New paintings from Imaginary Surrealist Daniel Merriam



WHAT | New paintings from Imaginary Surrealist Daniel Merriam, The Greatest Show on Earth

WHERE | AFA, 54 Greene Street @ Broome

EXHIBITIION | May 26th - June 20, 2012

RECEPTION | May 26th from 6-8pm, rsvp@afanyc.com

MORE INFO | Heidi Leigh at heidi@afanyc.com or 212.226.7374

GALLERY HOURS | Mon. - Sat., 10am - 7pm and Sun., 11am - 6pm

PREVIEW | Here


Although life in the circus depends on discipline, struggle and sacrifice, it is divergent thinking that is the catalyst for the magic. This show is dedicated to the performer and the double lives they must lead.

"It has been said by many artists that art is often the result of a struggle. I can attest to this based on years of devoting my abilities to an art form heavily reliant on discipline. Both the body and the mind are fully employed in such an effort.  In my case it is the urge to create ever upstaged challenges both in my paintings and my real life as well, that gets me from frenzy to frustration to exhaustion.  I strive to work sculpturally and architecturally as I paint. Each time the environment becomes more of an obstacle as I encounter the physical limitations inherent with being human."

Born in 1963 in a rural town in Maine, Daniel Merriam is one of seven artistic children. He taught himself to paint at a very young age, and used his art as a method of reflective play throughout his childhood. He went on to study mechanical and architectural design at Central Maine Vocational Technical Institute. While still in school, he applied his dimensional skills and passion for architecture to his family's design and construction business.In 1986, Merriam shifted his focus solely to fine art, and later that year had his first solo exhibition in Maine. Since then, his exhibitions throughout the United States & Europe  have been lauded and achieved critical acclaim. Merriam's work is included in countless private collections and in such public collections as The Riverside Museum of Art in California, The Gesundheit! Institute in Virginia, the Manhattan Club in New York, and the Merrill Lynch collection.

Fine Art & Craft Fair

Art in the Park 
Fine Art & Craft Fair
June 2 & 3, 2012
10am - 5pm
Heckscher Park, Huntington

Rain or Shine - Free Admission


About 70 artists and craftspeople will show and sell original works of art and handmade crafts such as paintings, photographs, ceramics, jewelry, sculpture, woodwork, glasswork, wearable art, and more. Prizes will be awarded to artists and craftspeople for superior artistry and craftsmanship.
  
This year, join the excitement as Long Island radio station 94X along with a panel of judges select Huntington's First "Idol" through a talent competition. From pre-submitted video auditions, ten finalists will perform separately at the event for their chance to claim the title of Huntington Idol at Art in the Park on Saturday June 2nd from 1pm to 3pm.
Contestants may submit their entries at 
  
The event will also feature live art demonstrations by Art League instructors and live music throughout both days.  Raffles will run both days to benefit visual arts education programs at the Art League of Long Island.  
 

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Artists Wanted - Self 2012: A Creative Competition Awarding $25,000 in Prizes




Artists Wanted
Self 2012:
A Creative Competition Awarding $25,000 in Prizes
+ Gallery Exhibition in NYC
+ $13,500 in Grants
+ 2 Page Magazine Spread
This is your moment to be discovered:
http://www.artistswanted.org/self/?f=self2012liq2
Within each work you create is a story of who you are as an artist.
We're looking for a special creative talent to bring to the forefront of the art world. Whether your work reveals an aspect of your personality, expresses your point of view, addresses a personal journey, and/or explores your unique identity, each artwork you create carries a part of your story.
This is about you. Learn more at:
http://www.artistswanted.org/self/?f=self2012liq2
Get your art reviewed by an esteemed panel of jurors from:
+ Galerie Lelong
+ Auckland Art Gallery
+ Para/Site Art Space
+ Public Art Review
+ and more...

THE CONSERVATORY ORCHESTRA IN CONCERT


THE RICHARD B. FISHER CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS AT BARD COLLEGE PRESENTS THE CONSERVATORY ORCHESTRA IN CONCERT ON THURSDAY, MAY 31 
Special Concert Performed in Preparation for the Conservatory Orchestra’s Tour of China in June


 ANNANDALE-ON-HUDSON, N.Y.—The Bard College Conservatory of Music presents the Conservatory Orchestra in concert, conducted by Leon Botstein, music director. The performance takes place in the Sosnoff Theater of The Richard B. Fisher Center for the Performing Arts, on Thursday, May 31 at 8 p.m. Admission is free and open to the public. For ticket information contact the Fisher Center box office at fishercenter.bard.edu or call 845-758-7900

The program includes Mahler’s Symphony No. 5 in C-sharp minor; Mozart’s Concerto in E-flat major for two pianos; and the world premiere of Conservatory alumnus Shen Yiwen’s The Sorrowful Song of Drunken Exaltation. Soloists for the performance include Ming Aldrich-Gan and Wei Zhou, piano; and Julia Bullock, soprano
This special free concert is given in preparation for the Conservatory Orchestra’s tour of China in June. The Bard Music Festival and Bard College Conservatory of Music join forces to launch a concert tour that will take them to premiere venues in Taipei, Hong Kong, Shanghai, Beijing, Tianjin, Guangzhou, and Wuhan. Drawing on 22 years’ experience with the annual Bard Music Festival—devoted each year to the exploration of the world of a single composer—the tour merges the fresh talent of the Bard Conservatory with the Bard Music Festival tradition of innovative programming. 

For more information about additional events, including concerts and master classes, go to www.bard.edu/conservatory.

Call to Artists - One of a Kind Show Chicago


One of a Kind Show Chicago 
 
Call to Artists

What:  12th Annual Holiday Shopping Event featuring Fine Art and Fine Craft

Where: The Merchandise Mart in Downtown Chicago

When:  December 6-9, 2012

NOTEWORTHY:
  • 60,000 affluent consumers who LOVE to shop
  • One of the busiest shopping weekends of the year
  • Ideal location in the heart of downtown Chicago
  • Premium indoor environment with all inclusive hard wall booth package
  • Attentive staff and ease of show operations
  • Unparalleled show marketing encompassing substantial print and online advertising, direct mail, e-blasts, street banners, and media hits generating over 10 million impressions
  • Exceptional artist promotional opportunities for pre-show, show and post-show exposure
The 12th annual One of a Kind Show Chicago is an extraordinary holiday shopping event featuring fine art and craft from a juried selection of North America's most talented artists.  The 4-day show is scheduled during one of the busiest shopping weekends of the year and provides an outstanding opportunity for exhibiting artists to sell to tens of thousands of qualified and enthusiastic shoppers in an ideal location and premium environment.  The show has consistently been ranked as one of the country's top twenty fine art and fine craft shows by Sunshine Artist Magazine.

Apply via Zapplication: www.zapplication.org 

Application Deadline:  June 4, 2012

Notification:  June 25, 2012

For more details:
www.oneofakindshowchicago.com

Contact:
Kim Runner, Director of Sales
krunner@mmart.com
312.527.7642
 

Tag You're It

The show will feature twenty of America's most talented young artists selected from a pool of 7,500 applicants. It is the last show curated by the current team and will serve as a celebration of a new chapter for the organisation.

Bells & Whistles by Guy Goldstein

ROOSTER GALLERY, 190 ORCHARD STREET, NYC
OPENING RECEPTION: THURSDAY, MAY 31, 6 - 8PM
EXHIBITION DATES:  MAY 31 - JULY 8, 2012

Rooster Gallery Contemporary Art and Residency Unlimited (RU) invite you to the opening of JARO 1 featuring 2 solo shows by RU artists in residency Guy Goldstein and Erin Dunn. JARO 1 is the first in a cycle of jointly organised  exhibitions. Each year, Residency Unlimited and Rooster will offer the possibility to RU artists in residency to present new work at Rooster's premises in the Lower East side..   The term Jaro is a double reference to “year” in Esperanto and “caravan" in the Kichagga language. Time and displacement are integral to the concept of artists in residency.

On the ground level, Bells & Whistles by Guy Goldstein features a new sound piece  alongside works on paper. Goldstein's investigates how to create meaning in a saturated  consumer driven society. The process leading to the sound installation derives from a precise set of conditions. The artist enters printed material information in his computer that he collects from a wide range of sources in New York (e.g. restaurant menus, health leaflets, political flyers, fashion catalogs). He then reads this information out loud and records his voice on the computer. These spoken lists constitute the foundation of the multilayered sound piece that Goldstein will update continuously over the course of the exhibition.

The perception of the audience will be put to test by these surrounding sonic elements, which can be distorted and stretched, thus becoming either completely abstract at a given time, or clear and informative at another. The sound speakers are scattered on the gallery floor with the printed lists randomly displayed on top. The friction produced by the contact of the paper with the sound waves emanating from the speakers inevitably produce rustling effects. By incorporating an aleatory element into the rational world of ordering, the artist challenges the notion of narrative.

Working in tandem with the sonic installation, "Bells and Whistles" presents a series of drawings. Realized in graphite, they feature sonic elements and urban constructions that co-exist and collide thus providing the viewer with a similar sense of fast paced living.

In the lower level of the gallery, Rapture’s Adagio by Erin Dunn presents a complex installation of painting, sculpture and a stop motion animation that synthesizes techniques and materials employed with self-produced digital recordings. The starting point for Dunn is her readings about the life of Chiara de Montefalco (or ‘Saint Clare of the Cross’) who experienced ecstasies of ‘Jesus placing a cross in her heart.’ Upon her death, four nuns dissected her heart and were the first to discover the four chambered human heart - the cross is in quadrants.

Dunn is inspired to explore metaphysical and psychedelic divinity in relation to the body. Just like the Dervishes who get caught up in ecstatic raptures, the emotional intensity of the “sisters” in the animation is  triggered by whirling dances and hallucinatory music, immersing the viewer in an alternative landscape for imagination.

The complexity of Dunn’s creative process bears similarities to fluxus solutions. The paintings are realized with precise airbrush draftsmanship combined with loose and wild encaustic marbleization. The result is a set of ambiguous mandalas and unnamable entities with many sets of eyes, simultaneously angelic and demonic that swim through sky, sea and beyond.

Likewise, the sculptures share a sense of extreme strangeness with the unusual combination of materials, such as foam, wire, plastic and human hair.