Official Art Competition seeks illustration portfolios from professional visual and graphic artists. This is the first stage of the process in attaining artwork to be used to represent the next spring festival. Cash awards available. No entry fee. For more information, contact: National Cherry Blossom Festival, 1250 H St., NW, Ste. 1000, Washington, D.C. 20005; Phone: (877) 442-5666; email: [email protected]; or check website: www.nationalcherryblossomfestival.org.
Month: July 2010
How To Write An Artist’s Statement That Doesn’t Suck
Are you updating your artist’s statement/resume? Gearing up for the upcoming Solo Artist Jurying?
Check out this post from the Abundant Artist for some helpful tips on improving your artist’s statement!
Artist Housing at Loree Grand in DC
Cultural Development Corporation is currently accepting applications for live/work apartments at Loree Grand – 250 K Street NE, Washington. Many 1- bedroom units available, with limited studio and 2-bedroom units. All apartments feature stainless steel appliances, individual washer and dryer and individual heating and cooling. The building also features a rooftop garden, private courtyard, community room and fitness center. Applications, rent schedule, FAQ, virtual tours and more can be found at www.culturaldc.org. Units will be leased on a first come, first serve basis to applicants that meet the artistic and financial eligibility.
Arts Funding News
The U.S. House Interior Appropriations Subcommittee, which sets the initial funding level for the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA), approved a $2.5 million increase for the NEA in its FY 2011 spending bill. Chairman Jim Moran (D-VA), a longtime champion of arts and culture, presided over his first Interior spending bill as chairman of the subcommittee. It is significant that Chairman Moran has proposed an increase for the agency in light of a spending freeze on federal discretionary funds and a lower budget request by the administration. Please write to thank Chairman Moran for his leadership.
Arts in Education Week
Everybody Wants to Rule the World
In celebration of its 40th Anniversary, Smithsonian Magazine recently published a list of “40 Things You Need to Know About the Next 40 Years”. Nestled between predictions of scientific breakthroughs and political triumphs is an article written by Hirshhorn Museum Director, Richard Koshalek, which delves into the future of contemporary art.
Koshalek believes that by 2050, artists will play an even larger part in society. Technology will become more and more important in the arts, as a way of creating new art forms, reaching wider audiences, and influencing change.
We will see new types of artists emerging as technology evolves. This does not mean, however, that established forms of expression will be abandoned. Artists working in painting and sculpture will adapt to the changing artistic environment, which fosters increased creativity.
Technology will broaden the audience for art. We will see greater accessibility and communication between artists and their audiences. Koshalek also encourages artists to take a greater role in social decision-making and change–to use their creative minds for the greater good.
Koshalek’s predictions for art in the next 40 years are extremely hopeful. How do you think technology will change art? Where do you see art going in the next 40 years?
CMDupré’s Alice Opening at National Harbor

Great opening last night at our National Harbor space! Everyone should check out the NEW Alice, open through Labor Day.
Patrons’ Show Donations
First Annual Youth Arts Festival of Alexandria
Great Opportunity for Young Artists!
Children through age 19 are encouraged to enter original artwork for display at the festival.
Arts activities will also be made available for children to explore their own creativity.
To participate, download application materials here.
July All-Media Membership Exhibit
Gallery Talk: How to Start A Blog with Solo Artist Megan Coyle

Touchstone Gallery Has Space for Four New Members!
Get in on the Ground Floor of the new TOUCHSTONE GALLERY. Only four new memberships still available. Guys in hard hats wielding hammers and wires are putting the finishing touches on Touchstone’s new modern gallery at 901 New York Avenue NW, an attractive street-level space in the heart of Washington, DC. It’ll be fantastic! Members Benefits: a biennial solo show, monthly member shows, artist bins, gallery website/online artist pages/store, fulltime director.
Contact Ksenia Grishkova now [email protected] or 202 347-2787. She’ll answer questions and explain our flexible jury process designed to accommodate your individual circumstances and location. http://www.touchstonegallery.com.
CM Dupre’s Alice at The Art League at National Harbor
CM Dupre’s new series Alice will be featured at the new Art League Gallery space in National Harbor, MD from July 20 – September 5, 2010. Opening reception: Tuesday, July 20, 6:30-8:30 pm.
Who else has continued to lead such an eventful and fascinating existence as Alice? Compared to saints, heroes, screen stars, musicians and artists, intellectuals, inventors, politicians, she’s given us more: in elaborate chains of circumstance, indelible processes of redefinition, psychological growth and exorbitance. Her strengths arose from curiosity and imagination. There is no doubt that Alice IS—and more—she is transformation.
So the titles tell part of her story. “Alice is the Variable ‘X’,” “Alice is a Leaping Metaphor,” “Alice is the Deus ex Machina,” “Alice Is and Alice Isn’t”: clues to Alice’s potential and her increasing influence (initiated by the spell-bound gaze of Lewis Carroll). Her potential is step-by-step, beginning in childhood calculations, punctuated rebuttals, word-games, chance meetings, and entry into several worlds at once. They award her perceptions while creating her as virtual abundance—a hybrid artwork in an interrogatory space.
The second series takes Alice’s motivated forces further than self-identity and the Self as inscribed, as expression, as contour-context, or as a subject-summary.
Alice’s role goes on from a reality-fantasy condition that can begin to remark on the world through her infinite varieties and shifting shapes—that give her fame and fortune—onto different terrains, times, places, including for instance, the year 2010 of inclusion.
Her inner complexities become a sifting, sieving, filtering drama that stretches out beyond Alice in Wonderland, the proverbial Looking Glass, or Alice Liddell, flowing onto a world stage of reciprocal cycles and surrounds of meaning: the air that is breathed by others, cures found only in the unknown, in the shade of mourning and memory. Alice begins to search through living archives, finding in them an inconsolable poetics as she discovers varied replacements to the ‘unknowable sublime,’ presentable for now in the most compelling language of all, imagery.
Location: The Art League at National Harbor is located at 120 American Way, Oxon Hill, MD 20745.
Hours: Wednesday–Friday, noon–7:00pm; Saturday–Sunday, noon–6pm.
Exhibitions and events are free and open to the public.
Target Gallery Exhibition Opportunity: 5 x 5 Exposed
Exhibition Dates: November 6 – 21, 2010
Deadline for Entry: September 13, 2010
The gallery will be participating in the FotoWeek DC 2010 Festival by hosting our biennial small works show, this year with an emphasis on photo based mediums. All artwork must not exceed 5 inches in any direction, inclusive of frame.
Our juror is Kathleen Ewing, owner of Kathleen Ewing Gallery, which specializes in photography. She represents over 40 contemporary photographers and maintains an inventory of 19th and 20th century vintage photographs. She was the Executive Director of The Association of International Photography Art Dealers, from 1991 to 2007 and is also the Executive Director of the Art Dealers Association of Greater Washington.
You can now apply online, follow the link below:
<http://www.torpedofactory.
For a hard copy of a prospectus, send a SASE to:
Target Gallery
Torpedo Factory Art Center
105 North Union Street, Alexandria, VA 22314
Call: 703-838-4565 x 4
Email: targetgallery@torpedofactory.
http://www.torpedofactory.org/
Visit World-Class Glass Exhibits with Jimmy Powers
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Join internationally known stained glass artist and Art League instructor Jimmy Powers as he guides you through a day filled with incredible visual delights in Richmond, VA on Sunday, August 1.
First we’ll visit the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts and view the Tiffany: Color and Light exhibit – the only US viewing of this exhibit celebrating one of America’s greatest artists, Louis Comfort Tiffany. The exhibition focuses on his primary achievements – the innovative techniques and artistry he developed to achieve original and spectacular effects in glass. Among the exhibition’s more than 180 objects are examples of the leaded-glass windows and lamps, for which he is best known, as well as blown-glass vessels and decorative objects such as mosaics, jewelry, bronzes, paintings, watercolors, architectural elements, and silver. Click here to read more about this exhibit. We’ll then go to the Lewis Ginter Botanical Garden for the exhibit, Glorious Glass in the Garden: The Art of Hans Godo Frabel. This world-class exhibit by the renowned glass artist will feature more than one hundred pieces ranging from the realistic to the whimsical. Prestigious collectors of Frabel’s glass creations include Queen Elizabeth II, the Emperor and Empress of Japan, and President Jimmy Carter. Click here for more details about this exhibit.
A motorcoach will depart the Torpedo Factory Art Center at 7:00 am. Cost: $105. Includes a boxed lunch and guided tours through both exhibits. Time to explore and visit the museum gift shops is included.
Spaces are extremely limited as Tiffany: Color and Light closes on August 15!
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City Gallery’s First Annual Regional Juried Exhibit
This is a great opportunity! Visit their website for the entry form and prospectus: http://www.citygallerydc.com/
Exhibit Opportunity!
Call for Exhibitors: Juried art fair with awards
THE BOOK (R)EVOLUTION
11th Biennial Pyramid Atlantic Book Arts Fair and Conference
The 11th Biennial Pyramid Atlantic Book Arts Fair and Conference presents an exciting weekend of events which will examine the evolution of the book as art and the latest innovations and interpretations of this versatile form. For the first time, this year’s Book Arts Fair will also include a contemporary print component, which will examine the print form as an independent medium as well as its relationship to the book.
November 5-7, 2010
Silver Spring, MD (Washington DC Metro Area)
Fair exhibitor application due July 12!
Apply now at www.zapplication.org.
Details available on the website: http://
Confirmed Speakers:
– Peter Bushell, Associate Professor of Graphic Design, School of Art,
Illinois State University
– Deborah Cornell, Chair of Printmaking, School of Visual Arts, Boston
University
– Steven Daiber, Proprietor of Red Trillium Press
– Harry Lee Poe, Charles Colson Professor of Faith and Culture, Union
University & President of the Board of Directors, Edgar Allan Poe Museum
– Tony White, Head of the Fine Arts Library, Indiana University Bloomington
& Field Editor for Artist’s Books and Books for Artists, CAA.Reviews
– Guild of Book Workers, Potomac Chapter
Films:
– Between the Folds
– Proceed and Be Bold!
– Typeface
– Who Does She Think She Is?
More details forthcoming on the Book Arts Fair website and blog!
http://www.
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