Thursday, July 12, 2012

Fine Art Magazine's Special Hamptons Art Fair Edition

Fine Art Magazine's Special Hamptons Art Edition Out Now!
Greetings! 

Fine Art Magazine is happy to announce our special Hamptons Art Fair edition!!

Find us at ArtHamptons as we cover this year's annual event! 



View the current issue here or pick up a copy when you visit ArtHamptons  
Check out two of our most recent videos 

A Very Special Interview with Mihail Aleksandrov and Gallery Owner Alexandre Gertsman
A Very Special Interview with Mihail Aleksandrov and Gallery Owner Alexandre Gertsman

 
Fine Art Magazine - Susan Pillsbury Performing
Music Video of Susan Pillsbury Performing
"Coming Home" from our newest book The Sweetest Way Home
Want to be a Part of our Fine Art Magazine Blog?
Do you have press releases, upcoming events, or artist updates that you would like to share? Send us your material to info@fineartmagazine.com and we will share it with our 18,000 socially networked followers.


ArtHamptons
July 13 - 15, 2012

Show Times

Thursday, July 12
5:30 - 9:00 P.M.
Opening Preview Platinum Party | Benefiting LongHouse Reserve.

7:00 - 9:00 P.M.
VIP Opening Reception | Benefiting LongHouse Reserve.

Friday, July 13
11:00 A.M. - 8:00 P.M.
Benefiting Guild Hall.

6:00 - 8:00 P.M.
Pollock at 100 - A Centennial Celebration - benefiting the Pollock-Kranser House and Study Center.

Saturday, July 14
11:00 A.M - 6:00 P.M.
Benefiting the East End Hospice.

4:00 - 8:00 P.M.
Hamptons Tea Dance benefiting Empire State Pride Agenda, 4-8pm, on neighboring field (separate admission can be purchased here).

Sunday, July 15
11:00 A.M. - 6:00 P.M.
To Be Announced

Free Onsite Parking | Valet Parking $20
Location

Location

Sculpture Fields of Nova's Ark

60 Millstone Rd.
(off Scuttle Hole Rd.)

Bridgehampton, NY. 11932

-----------------------
The Sweetest Way Home
A Greyhound's Tale

We are also selling limited edition Giclee reproductions and Deluxe offset 4 color lithograph posters

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Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Call to Artists - The NMAI Art Market


Current & Future Exhibitions at The Whitney

Yayoi Kusama, Sharon Hayes, Oskar Fischinger & More
Yayoi Kusama

Whitney Museum
JULY 6–17
Yayoi Kusama, a retrospective exploring over six decades of work by the legendary artist, opens July 12. Encompassing an astonishing array of media, the exhibition includes the artist's signature patterns of dots and nets as well as many lesser-known works. Kusama's immersive installation, Fireflies on the Water, is also currently on view in the Museum's lobby gallery.
And don't miss Sharon Hayes: There's so much I want to say to you, which The New York Times called "entrancing and original." The exhibition explores the connections between love, politics, and history through found footage, video and audio recordings, and ephemera.
We hope to see you at the Whitney!

Exhibitions
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Exhibitions BACK TO TOP
Singular Visions
Through July 15
Alexander Calder
With our latest reinstallation of the permanent collection galleries, the Whitney invites visitors to slow down and experience art in a dramatic new way. Ten highlights from the collection, many of which have not been exhibited in years, are presented in their own rooms, creating spaces for intimate and powerful encounters with a single work of art. The variety of mediums and sizes from small to sprawling reveal how artists of the last five decades have stretched the boundaries of what an artwork can be. The latest rotation of works featured in Singular Visions includes Alexander Calder's Calder's Circus and Jasper Johns' Three Flags.
Sharon Hayes:
There's so much I want to say to you

Through September 9
Sharon Hayes
Sharon Hayes (b. 1970) is a New York–based artist who uses photography, film, video, sound, and performance to examine the nexus between politics, history, speech, and desire. This exhibition brings together existing pieces and newly commissioned works, all of which articulate forms of what Hayes calls “speech acts.” The works are presented within an environment designed by Hayes for the Whitney’s third floor galleries, in collaboration with artist Andrea Geyer.
Yayoi Kusama
July 12–September 30, 2012
Yayoi Kusama
Well known for her use of dense patterns of polka dots and nets, as well as her intense, large-scale environments, Yayoi Kusama works in a variety of media, including painting, drawing, sculpture, film, performance, and immersive installation. Born in Japan in 1929, Kusama came to the United States in 1957 and quickly found herself at the epicenter of the New York avant-garde. After achieving fame through groundbreaking exhibitions and art “happenings,” she returned to her native country in 1973 and is now one of Japan’s most prominent contemporary artists. This retrospective features works spanning Kusama’s career.
Kusama's Fireflies on the Water, a work in the Whitney's collection, is being shown in conjunction with Yayoi Kusama and is on view in the lobby gallery.
Signs & Symbols
Through October 28
Adolph Gottlieb
Drawn from the Whitney’s collection, Signs & Symbols sheds new light on the developments of abstraction in American art during the 1940s and 1950s. Looking beyond Abstract Expressionism, toward the figurative and calligraphic “signs and symbols” present in much of the highly controlled work of this period, this exhibition features works by seminal artists including Mark Rothko, Jackson Pollock, and Adolph Gottlieb, among others.
Oskar Fischinger:
Space Light Art—A Film Environment

Through October 28
Oskar Fischinger
This exhibition presents one of the first multimedia projections ever made: Oskar Fischinger’s Raumlichtkunst (Space Light Art), a re-creation of his multiple-screen film events, first shown in Germany in 1926, and recently restored by the Center for Visual Music in Los Angeles. Radical in format, its display of abstract shapes and colors produces, according to Fischinger, “an intoxication by light from a thousand sources.”
. . . as apple pie
On continuous view
Stow Wengenroth
Images, like words, can trigger a cultural or emotional response to a shared national ethos. Artists have employed images—sometimes straightforwardly, often obliquely—in order to comment on a country, its people, its political or social goals, and its self-image. This exhibition explores this phenomenon through a rotating installation, drawn from the Whitney’s collection, of works on paper by a diverse group of artists including William N. Copley, Edward Hopper, Jasper Johns, Elizabeth “Grandma” Layton, Willard Midgette, LeRoy Neiman, Joseph Pennell, Charles Ray, Jaune Quick-to-See Smith, and Stow Wengenroth.
Fireflies on the Water
On continuous view
Yayoi Kusama
Yayoi Kusama’s depictions of seemingly endless space have been a central focus of her artistic career. Kusama’s Fireflies on the Water (2002)—with its carefully constructed environment of lights, mirrors, and water—is one of the outstanding examples of this kind of installation, which creates a space in which individual viewers are invited to transcend their sense of self.
Fireflies on the Water, a work from the Whitney's collection, is being shown in conjunction with Yayoi Kusama, which will be on view on the Museum's fourth floor July 12 through September 30.

Shop  BACK TO TOP
Sharon Hayes: There's so much I want to say to you
$24.95 / $19.96 for members
Sharon Hayes
This book serves as a document of Sharon Hayes’s thinking process and provides insight into the motivations and development of her projects. It features original contributions from Hayes and some two-dozen other writers, artists, and activists.
Cory Arcangel Umbrella
$28 / $22.40 for members
Cory Arcangel Umbrella
Is it a splash of rain or a solar eclipse? You decide. In either case, it will brighten up any rainy day. This brilliant design is based on a PhotoShop gradient Arcangel made for Showpaper.

Just for Members:
Member Saturday Night

Saturday, July 14
6:30–8:30 pm

The Whitney is open late just for members! Grab a drink at the cash bar, enjoy live music, and view the latest exhibitions without the daytime crowds.
Open to all members, plus one guest.
JOIN NOW
For further information, please email memberinfo@whitney.org or call (212) 570-3641. Thank you for supporting the Whitney!
BACK TO TOP

IMAGE CREDITS
Kusama in Phalli’s Field, 1965 (detail). Photograph by Eikoh Hosoe. © Eikoh Hosoe. Collection Yayoi Kusama. Image courtesy Yayoi Kusama Studio Inc.; Ota Fine Arts, Tokyo; Victoria Miro Gallery, London
Alexander Calder (1898–1976), Fanni, the Belly Dancer, from Calder’s Circus, 1926–31. Wire, cloth, rhinestones, paint, thread, wood, and paper, 11 1/2 × 6 × 10 1/2 in. (29.2 × 15.2 × 26.7 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; purchase with funds from a public fundraising campaign in May 1982. One half the funds were contributed by the Robert Wood Johnson Jr. Charitable Trust. Additional major donations were given by The Lauder Foundation, the Robert Lehman Foundation Inc., the Howard and Jean Lipman Foundation Inc., an anonymous donor, The T. M. Evans Foundation Inc., MacAndrews & Forbes Group Incorporated, the DeWitt Wallace Fund Inc., Martin and Agneta Gruss, Anne Phillips, Mr. and Mrs. Laurance S. Rockefeller, the Simon Foundation Inc., Marylou Whitney, Bankers Trust Company, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth N. Dayton, Joel and Anne Ehrenkranz, Irvin and Kenneth Feld, Flora Whitney Miller. More than 500 individuals from 26 states and abroad also contributed to the campaign 83.36.24a-d © 2009 Calder Foundation, New York/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York; photograph © Whitney Museum of American Art
Sharon Hayes (b. 1970), still from Symbionese Liberation Army (SLA) Screeds #13, 16, 20 & 29, 2003. Four screen video projection, color, sound. Courtesy the artist and Tanya Leighton Gallery
Kusama in Phalli’s Field, 1965. Photograph by Eikoh Hosoe. © Eikoh Hosoe. Collection Yayoi Kusama. Image courtesy Yayoi Kusama Studio Inc.; Ota Fine Arts, Tokyo; Victoria Miro Gallery, London
Adolph Gottlieb (1903–1974), Vigil, 1948. Oil on canvas, 36 × 48 in. (91.4 × 121.9 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; purchase 49.2. Art © Adolph and Esther Gottlieb Foundation / Licensed by VAGA, New York, NY
Oskar Fischinger (1900–1967), still of Raumlichtkunst, 1926/2012. Three screen projection: three 35mm films transferred to high-definition video, black-and-white and color, sound; 10 minutes, looped. © Center for Visual Music
Stow Wengenroth (1907–1978), Bird of Freedom, 1942. Lithograph, 21 9/16 × 15 1/16 in. (54.8 × 38.3 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, purchase  42.13. Digital image © Whitney Museum of American Art
Yayoi Kusama (b. 1929), Fireflies on the Water, 2002. Mirror, plexiglass, lights and water, 111 × 144 1/2 × 144 1/2 in. (281.9 × 367 × 367 cm) overall. Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; purchase, with funds from the Postwar Committee and the Contemporary Painting and Sculpture Committee and partial gift of Betsy Wittenborn Miller  2003.322. © Yayoi Kusama. Photograph courtesy Robert Miller Gallery, New York







Currently Exhibiting - Marc Chagall at Leslie Sacks Fine Art

Marc Chagall at Leslie Sacks Fine Art, Brentwood
MARC CHAGALL
in commemoration of the artist's 125th birthday

July 7 - August 6, 2012

Click image below to view exhibition
LESLIE SACKS FINE ART
11640 San Vicente Boulevard, Los Angeles, California 90049
(310) 820-9448  gallery@lesliesacks.com

*DEADLINE JULY 15* - Call to Artists - Fine Arts for Ocala

Fine Arts for Ocala
presents:
 

 
46th Annual Ocala Arts Festival
Call to Artists

What:46th Annual Ocala Arts Festival 

Where:Ocala, Florida 

When:  Saturday and Sunday
           October 27 - 28, 2012           
 
           10 a.m. - 5 p.m.

NOTEWORTHY:    

*200 juried artists and 25,000+ visitors 

*Jury/Booth fees   $25/$238.50 (includes 6% tax)

*Amenities include: 
$20,000 in prize money & FAFO purchase awards
Assistance with Friday setup and Sunday take down                  
Extensive marketing campaign and local coverage with emphasis on holiday shopping                             
Free Booth sitting, overnight security & water                             
Artist Party Saturday night at Appleton Museum of Art 
Free Parking (including campers) on site 
      Artist breakfast Saturday and Sunday morning 


*NEW THIS YEAR!  
Community Purchase Awards (in addition to prize money) 
New layout (all corner booths) for better flow 
New board of directors with outstanding enthusiasm 

Now accepting applications at: www.zapplication.org 


Deadline:July 15            
Notification:August 6


For more info:  www.fafo.org
Or contact Diane Burns at fafoocala@gmail.com

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Seeking Curators & Artists - MAINSITE Contemporary Art

MAINSITE Contemporary Art 
Exhibit Proposals for Artists & Curators
The Norman Arts Council is seeking artists and curators to conceive of exhibitions in our home, MAINSITE Contemporary Art in the heart of Norman's Arts District. We have four exhibition slots available per year, each running for 6-8 weeks. We are accepting proposals for the entire space or half of the space.

Gallery Highlights:
  • Beautiful contemporary space in renovated building over 100 years old
  • 4,000 square feet of exhibition space
  • 14 foot ceilings
  • Floor to ceiling glass front onto Main Street
  • Can be divided into 2-4 distinct exhibition spaces with moveable walls
  • Full time gallery staff on site Tuesday through Saturday
  • Sound system
  • Projection capabilities
  • Staff to assist with install
  • Full use of Norman Arts Council PR and Mailing List for promotion of exhibit
The first available exhibition slot is June 2013.

Please send proposals, including a budget, to MAINSITE Contemporary Art: Home of the Norman Arts Council, 122 E. Main Street, Norman, OK 73069.

If you would like to make an appointment to see the space or discuss your ideas, please contact the Norman Arts Council at 405-360-1162.

More information on MAINSITE Contemporary Art can be found on www.mainsite-art.com.

Call to Artists - National Weather Center Art Biennale

DEADLINE: October 1, 2012!
 
How does weather affect the artistic muse? The National Weather Center at the University of Oklahoma teams up with the Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art and the Norman Arts Council to explore the theme of weather in art with the National Weather Center Biennale - the first national juried exhibition featuring art about weather. The biennale officially begins Earth Day, April 22.

Prizes totaling $25,000 will be offered to the top winners. An overall prize of $10,000 will be awarded to one work for Best in Show, with $5,000 given to the first-place winners in three categories: painting, works on paper and photography.

The National Weather Center Biennale is open to artists of any nationality over the age of 18.

Registration began April 22 on the biennale's official website at www.nwcbiennale.org. Artists may enter up to three works in any combination of categories. The entry fee is $25 for the first entry and $10 for each subsequent entry. Registration closes Oct. 1. Works selected for an exhibition to be held in 2013 will be notified in late 2012.

The exhibition of selected works, including the prize winners', will open to the public Earth Day, April 22, 2013, at the National Weather Center and will close June 2, 2013.

Additional information about the exhibition is available on the website and the biennale's Facebook and Twitter pages.

Alan Atkinson, an art instructor at OU, will serve as the exhibition curator and part of the initial selection committee. Joining Atkinson as initial jurors will be Berrien Moore and Erinn Gavaghan, executive director of the Norman Arts Council. The initial judges will select 100 works from the submitted art entries for the exhibition.

Three nationally renowned guest jurors representing national meteorology, contemporary art museums and current artists will then select the winning pieces from each of the three categories, as well as the Best of Show prize, from the initial 100 selected works. These judges will be announced at a later date on the biennale's website.

The National Weather Center's website is  www.nwc.ou.edu. Additional information about the Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art is available online at www.ou.edu/fjjma and the Norman Arts Council's website is  www.normanarts.org.