Your Guide to Artful Giving at The Art League

With our Black Friday sale coming up and the official start of the holiday season this week, The Art League has lots of affordable artwork and art classes that could make a perfect gift.

The three exhibits in the Gallery this month are perfect opportunities to take home something special from a local artist. “Small Works,” a juried group exhibit features small, affordably priced artworks in all media, many of them priced $100 or less. Paintings, sculptures, etchings, photos, and collage are all looking for a good home.

“Large Works,” the companion exhibit, is made up of large-format pieces that could really light up a room — as could the bold black-and-white prints in “Cold River,” Andrew Zimmermann’s solo photography show this month. Zimmermann’s photographs of Colorado winter waterways, printed via direct contact, focus on the sharp contrasts in the landscape (more info on the exhibit page).

Check out our Flickr page and the gallery below for a preview of the shows!

[nggallery id=7]
These three shows are open through December 3! Come by the Gallery and see if anything strikes your fancy. If you’re not sure what to give, The Art League also offers gift cards (for sale in the Gallery) which can be used for any purchase — artwork, a fine art class, a travel workshop, art supplies, or next year’s membership! (Check out the school catalog here.)

And finally, whether for your own tree or a friend’s, don’t forget to check out our Holiday Ornament Collection, with dozens of handmade ornaments by Art League artists! This yearly exhibit is a great place to find that unique decoration that you’ll enjoy seeing year after year.

“Madonna and Child,” a painted ornament by Amy Browning, was judged Best in Show by Christmas Attic’s Cheri Hennessy.
The Gallery’s tree.

Artful Links: Thanksgiving Edition

Art League instructor Steve Prince at the 2011 King Street Art Festival.

Happy Thanksgiving from The Art League Blog! Today, we’re thankful for our readers — to repay you, we’ve put together another edition of useful and interesting links for artists. Click away!

  • Blogging: If you have decided to start an artist blog and you’re using WordPress, Kim Bruce at Art Biz Blog has some posts on essential plugins. Perhaps the most useful for artists specifically, NextGEN Gallery is a great way to organize and share images of your artwork on your WordPress blog. (You can see NextGEN in action on this blog in this post, for example.)
  • Artist’s Statements: Online or off, you can always use a short, sweet introduction to your artwork — but writing an artist’s statement trips a lot of people up. Featured here a few years ago, but still helpful, The Abundant Artist has this guide to writing artist’s statements. (You should also come to our free Art*iculation seminar coming up January 26, 2013!)
  • Artists Helping Artists: As recommended by a commenter on one of our previous posts, this podcast hosted by painter Leslie Saeta has extensive archives covering things like commissions, social media, marketing and sales, exhibiting, and interviews with lots of different artists. Check out a list of past episodes grouped by category here.
  • Scams: If you’ve ever gotten a sketchy email from a prospective buyer, or if you want to know what to look out for, Art Scams has lots of useful resources for you: tips on avoiding fraudsters, a list of known scammers, and a host of non-scam-related resource links.
  • Happy 500th!: Michelangelo’s frescoes in the Sistine Chapel, “the most visited room in the world,” turned 500 years old on Halloween. A recent restoration was completed in the 1990s, but the breath, dust, and humidity of visitors and “drunken tourist herds” will necessitate further restorations in the future, according to the article. (You can tour the chapel damage-free on the Vatican’s website here.)

For more Artful Resources, click here.

Artist Opportunities: November 20, 2012

See below for upcoming exhibition opportunities! You can also click the banner above to see past opportunities posts.

Prince George’s County Artists
Deadline: December 7, 2012. The M-NCPPC, Department of Parks of Recreation, Prince George’s County, Arts and Cultural Heritage Division, with support from the Prince George’s Arts and Humanities Council, is pleased to announce On the Verge: Extension, Transition, Conversation,this year’s exhibition of Prince George’s County artists in the Lowe House Office building in Annapolis, during the Maryland General Assembly’s Legislative Session for 2013. This call for entries is open to all artists 18 years old or older who live, work, attend school or have studio’s in Prince George’s County, MD. Artists may submit a maximum of 5 artworks for consideration. For more details, see the announcement on Daily Campello Art News.

Click through for more opportunities: Continue reading Artist Opportunities: November 20, 2012

For College-Bound Art Students: Portfolio Workshop with Ringling College

The Art League is hosting a free presentation by Ringling College of Art + Design in Sarasota, FL focusing on how to create a successful portfolio for college-bound art students. The Ringling College of Art + Design is a fully accredited instituition whose primary mission is to provide programs leading to degrees that prepare students to be discerning visual thinkers and ethical practitioners in their chosen area of art and design. High school students interested in pursuing higher education in art and design are encouraged to attend to learn more about building a portfolio and the application process.

Check out this short video from Ringling on how to create a portfolio: http://www.ringling.edu/byp.html

Tuesday, November 27, 2012 6:30 – 8:30pm
The Art League Gallery
(Located in the Torpedo Factory Art Center)

Studio #21
105 North Union Street
Alexandria, VA 22314
theartleague.org/school

Questions may be directed to The Art League School, 703-683-2323.

Support The Art League and SOHO With Your Post-Thanksgiving Shopping

Planning on doing some shopping after Thanksgiving? You can buy artwork at The Art League Gallery on Black Friday (November 23) at a 10% discount, and purchases at the Alexandria Barnes & Noble on Saturday, November 24 (or online through November 29) will benefit the Space of Her Own mentorship program! See below for details.

Pieces from “Small Works” and “Large Works.”

Continue reading Support The Art League and SOHO With Your Post-Thanksgiving Shopping

Q&A with Award Winner Marina Troy

In the November “Large Works” exhibit (on view through December 3), the Cora Rupp Award for Best in Show went to Pine Trees, a 52ʺ x 56ʺ acrylic painting by Marina Troy. Troy is no stranger to the large format, preferring the immersive experience of creating the work — but not the challenge of transportation. She also told us about her unusual favorite painting tool, her creative process, and the origin of Pine Trees in our Q&A, below.

“Pine Trees” by Marina Troy.

Does Pine Trees have any particular inspiration or significance? How would you describe the painting style and color scheme?
Marina Troy: Pine Trees had a different title when it was first produced: Dejeuner sur l’herbe. Yes, it was named as an homage to the famous Manet painting, since it reminded me of its central part, only digitized and enhanced ten times, and leading to the similar source of light in the distance. As for the painting style, I tend to describe it as uniquely my own, since I am using credit cards as a painting tool: there are somewhat nervous, spontaneous outbursts of movement, with whatever color scheme makes sense at the time. No set pattern there.

How did you start using credit cards as painting tools, and how do you use them? Is it a tool you use often?
As I like texture on my paintings, and brushes tend to “dilute” the intensity of color, I just grabbed the first thing that was handy: larger than a painter’s knife, and as flexible, credit cards (the expired ones, of course) allow me to drag the paint across the canvas, changing its intensity and shade, while preserving the individual expression of “stroke.” I dip the shorter side of a card into, often, several colors at once, and observe what will happen when it is applied on canvas. I also use it on wet paint, to thin out layers, and do some editing. I use credit cards more often than I use brushes, which come at the end, for some final “fine tuning” of a painting that I am working on. Continue reading Q&A with Award Winner Marina Troy

George’s Artistic Adventure: My Last Drawing Class

Some of my classmates and our instructor, George Tkabladze, on the last day of class.

You can read the rest of this series here.

This was the ninth and final week for my drawing class (most of which is pictured above). With one last still life setup this morning, we got another chance to tackle round shapes, straight lines, and shading to bring everything to life. You can see the results below. Continue reading George’s Artistic Adventure: My Last Drawing Class

George’s Artistic Adventure: Bringing it Together

My drawing instructor, George Tkabladze, demos for the class.

You can read the rest of this series here.

Fall term classes are almost over, but we’re still drawing up a storm in Basic Drawing, moving on to tougher projects. Last week we focused more on shading and drapery, which had been giving me lots of trouble. Our instructor, George Tkabladze, helped us a lot with that. He gave me a lot of hints, most helpful of which was how to erase the highlights of the folds to make it look a lot better: Continue reading George’s Artistic Adventure: Bringing it Together

Three New Exhibits & an Artist Talk

“Crossroads of Time” by Elena Tchernomazova. Background, left to right: “Afternoon at the Tate” by Karen Kozojet Ching and “Dancin’ Queen” by Marie Crow.
From Andrew Zimmermann’s solo exhibit, “Cold River.”

The Art League Gallery is pleasantly full this month with three new exhibits: Andrew Zimmermann’s photography show, “Cold River,” and two all-media shows for small- and large-format artwork, “Small Works” and “Large Works.”

The opening reception for both shows is tonight, November 8, at 6:30 pm — and don’t miss Andrew Zimmermann’s artist talk on Saturday, November 8 at 1:00 pm. It’s one of several events the Gallery is hosting during FotoWeek DC.

Zimmermann’s photographs, printed from 8″ x 10″ negatives by direct contact, find the sharp contrasts in Colorado’s winter landscapes. More information is on the exhibit page.

Come see these exhibits through December 3! Read on for more images from the shows — and also check out images on our Flickr site (click for “Small Works,” “Large Works,” and “Cold River”).

“The New Girl” by Sharon Boyle. Background: “Mighty Mississippi” by Pattee Hipschen.

More photos below! Continue reading Three New Exhibits & an Artist Talk

George’s Artistic Adventure: The Next Step

You can read the rest of this series here.

A belated update on my drawing and stained glass classes from last week:

In Basic Drawing, George Tkabladze had us finish the still life we’ve been working on by adding the drapery and shading in a background. I think a lot of us struggled with drapery, as is to be expected, but George had lots of suggestions for tackling the problem and making the tablecloth look round and realistic without distracting from the subject. I’m still not satisfied with the final product, but it definitely improved from the beginning of class:

Any tips on making convincing drapery that you’ve learned? For the final two classes, we’ll be working on new projects.

In Stained Glass, my panel is shaping up. Continue reading George’s Artistic Adventure: The Next Step

Artist Opportunities: November 6, 2012

Read on for this week’s opportunities. You can click the banner above to view past opportunities posts.

Sandy’s Stories
Deadline: November 19, 2012. GWU’s Gallery 102 invites submissions of original artwork for a Spring exhibition, “Sandy’s Stories: An Epilogue of Hurricane Sandy.” This exhibition will explore the internal discoveries made by individuals during the historic storm. Interested artists may send images, concepts, or questions to [email protected] by November 19 for exhibition in early Spring. For more information, download this PDF.

Residencies Continue reading Artist Opportunities: November 6, 2012

Memorial Celebration of Cora Rupp

Cora Rupp, former President and Executive Director of The Art League and Torpedo Factory Artist, passed away on October 4, 2012. Cora was a creative force in our community who touched many lives through her artistic talents and seminal work with the League. The Rupp Family will hold a memorial celebration of Cora’s life on Sunday, November 4 from 2:00–5:00 pm in The Art League Gallery. All are welcome to attend the memorial on the 4th and are also invited to share memories and condolences at [email protected].

In lieu of flowers, the family has requested that memorial gifts be made to The Art League, 105 N. Union St., Alexandria VA 22314, or at theartleague.org. The Gallery will be closed to the general public on Sunday, November 4. Cora’s full obituary is on view here.

Obama-Romney: Comparative Positions on the Arts

Yesterday, Americans for the Arts Action Fund released its newly compiled analysis of the presidential candidates’ arts policy positions. This new report is one of the many programs and publications of ArtsVote2012, the Arts Action Fund’s biennial initiative coinciding with the election cycle, that educates candidates and informs voters on issues impacting the arts and arts education. Here’s where the candidates stand:

 

 Arts Action Fund Logo
Barack Obama
Joe Biden
Democratic Nominees
Mitt Romney
Paul Ryan
Republican Nominees
Candidate would maintain or increase federal support of the National Endowments for the Arts and Humanities.

Yes
Proposed increase of $9 million for National Endowment for the Arts.

-FY 13 NEA budget request,
Rpt p.2 / PDF p. 6
-FY 13 NEH budget request,
Rpt p.11/PDF p. 14

No
“Reduce subsidies for the National Endowments for the Arts and Humanities.”

-Romney/Ryan website
Los Angeles Times article

Candidate would maintain or increase federal support of museums and libraries.

Yes
Proposed increase of $9 million for the National Endowment for the Humanities and level funding of $232 million for the Institute of Museum and Library Services.

-FY 13 IMLS budget request,
Rpt/PDF p.12

Unknown
Congressman Ryan’s House-passed budget calls for eliminating the Institute of Museum and Library Services, but it is unclear what Gov. Romney’s position is.

– Ryan’s FY2013 budget,
Rpt p.88 / PDF p.96

Candidate would maintain or increase federal support for public broadcasting.

Yes
Proposed level funding of $445 million for Corporation for Public Broadcasting.

-FY 13 CPB budget request

No
“Reduce Subsidies for…the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.”

-Romney/Ryan website
-10/3/12 presidential debate transcript

Candidate would maintain or increase Title I funding, which includes eligibility for arts education.

Yes
Proposed to reauthorize current Title I program, with level funding.

-FY13 budget request,
Rpt p18 / PDF p 22

Unknown
Proposes to change Title I funding by expanding choice for eligible students to use federal funds to pay for public, charter, or private schools. It is unclear what impact this would have on arts education Title I funding.

-Romney education plan,
Rpt p.23 / PDF p. 24

Candidate would maintain support of national and community service, which includes eligibility for arts and music service.

Yes
Proposed increase of 1 percent to $1.1 billion for Corporation for National & Community Service agency budget.

-FY 13 CNCS budget request

Unknown
Congressman Ryan’s House-passed budget calls for eliminating the Corporation for National and Community Service, but it is unclear what Gov. Romney’s position is.

– Ryan’s FY2013 budget,
Rpt p.88 / PDF p.96

Candidate maintains current incentives for charitable giving to 501(c)(3) organizations, such as a local nonprofit arts institution.

No
The Obama plan maintains the ability for households to deduct charitable gifts, but he proposes reducing the value of the deduction from 35 percent to 28 percent for those households that make more than $250,000.

-FY 2010-13 budget request,
blog statement

No
Gov. Romney has suggested maintaining a deduction for charitable gifts, but he has also proposed combining those charitable deductions with other tax deductions, such as mortgage interest, all of which would be limited by an overall cap that could jeopardize incentives to donate.

– 10/16/12 presidential debate transcript

National party platform includes a positive position on the arts and arts education.

Yes
“We will continue to support public funding for the National Endowment for the Arts… and for programs providing art and music education…”

– 9/4/12 DNC platform, p.16

No
GOP platform was silent on these issues.

– 8/28/12 GOP platform

F11 Women’s Photo Group Exhibits Shots of Potomac

A view of the Potomac by F11 and Art League member Jo Ann Tooley.

F11, a women’s photography collective including several Art League members, will be putting up an exhibit in Alexandria’s Beatley Central Library to coincide with FotoWeek DC, a regional photography festival taking place November 9–18 with events including exhibitions, seminars, portfolio reviews, and more. The show, “Down by the River: Visions of the Potomac” will be in the Periodical Room starting November 9, 2012 and features work by nine members of the group. Continue reading F11 Women’s Photo Group Exhibits Shots of Potomac

Artist Opportunities: October 31, 2012

See below for details! You can click the banner above for past opportunity posts.

FotoWeek DC Events
The following events are from FotoWeek DC:

  • Pre-Festival Instagram Contest — Submit your best Instagram photos to our contest by November 7th -12pm EST for a chance to win Festival Passes, Seminars, Portfolio Reviews, and Launch Party tickets! Additionally, we have added a People’s Choice Category, so get your followers to VOTE and we will select our favorite images and repost every few days. To see submissions, visit our contest page. Winning work will be shown at FotoWeekCentral during the Festival!
  • FotoWeekEDU Seminars & Portfolio Reviews — Take an all-day seminar Nov 10-13 and 15-17 with one of our leading presenters. Have your work reviewed at our Portfolio Reviewon Sunday, November 11.

More events and details are on their website. The Art League Gallery is also hosting a number of events for FotoWeek — click here to see.

Ceramic Cup Show
Deadline: November 8, 2012. “Drink This! The Workhouse International Ceramic Cup Show” will showcase Continue reading Artist Opportunities: October 31, 2012

George’s Artistic Adventure: Shading and Grinding

You can read the rest of this series here.

I’m still busy with my classes at The Art League. On Wednesday, our drawing class got a crash course in shading from George Tkabladze. Having perfected — more or less — the shapes in our still lifes, we got to work bringing them to life. George showed us how to create convincingly flat forms with even shading, and to vary the shading and show reflected light to turn our circles into spheres.

On the Stained Glass front, I finished cutting all my glass Thursday! Continue reading George’s Artistic Adventure: Shading and Grinding

Q&A with Award Winner Marilyn Milici

In “Color Sphere,” on view in The Art League Gallery through Monday, November 5, Marilyn Milici’s painting La Banda won the Sid Platt Watercolor Award, with the juror praising its strong graphical quality and contrast between light and dark.

We had a chance to talk to Marilyn about the “very shocking” award, and she told us about the unique “pouring” method responsible for the striking contrast.

“It’s an adventurous way to paint,” Marilyn said, running through the process: drawing the picture and assigning values, masking out the whitest white, mixing three different colors — red, blue, and yellow for La Banda — wetting the paper, and pouring the colors out. After the painting dried, she masked out the next lightest layer in turn, repeating the process, and six layers later, “you have this big gloppy disgusting mess,” she said.

“La Banda” by Marilyn Milici.

Marilyn said you can’t really tell what you have until you take off the masking at the end. In this case, she had a winner. “I think this method of painting works well with simple compositions with a strong light source and value contrasts,” Marilyn said. “All us watercolorists are crazy about saving the whites, but here you need to save each successive mid tone also.” (Empty Easel has more information on pouring watercolors.)

She also told us about the origin of the painting, in a recent trip to the Andes.

“We were on a trip to Ecuador, high in the Andes (9,000 feet) when we passed numerous people hiking along the Pan-American Highway on their way to visit a religious sanctuary deep in the mountains,” she said. “At the crest of a steep incline we came upon this motley band of musicians, spurring on the obviously exhausted pilgrims. The light was beautiful, the air was thin and spirits were lifted by their enthusiasm, if not their talent.”

Marilyn said she’s worked exclusively in watercolor since starting 15 years ago, taking classes with Art League instructors like Gwen Bragg and Susan Herron. Though she’s been out of the habit of painting for about a year, she said she is trying to make herself paint.

Of Sid Platt, a longtime Art League member who started painting after a career at National Geographic, Marilyn said he was “a wonderful old crotchety coot” as well as a very bright and gifted artist. The Sid Platt Watercolor Award was endowed after his death in 2010 from donations and the proceeds from a sale of his work. Marilyn said she was honored to receive the award named for a hero of hers.

More interviews with past award winners can be found here.

Art on the Rocks Recap & Photos

Last night’s Art on the Rocks — The Art League’s third annual art-inspired cocktail party — was a rousing success, with over 200 guests enjoying cocktails created for the evening and voting for their favorite. Thank you to everyone who came, to the participating restaurants, our volunteers, and our partners: the Pink Line Project and Catoctin Creek Distillery.

Bartenders from Bastille, Chadwick’s, Columbia Firehouse, The Light Horse Restaurant, Red Rocks Pizza Napoletana, and Union Street Public House participated. (You can see them demonstrate their creations on our YouTube channel.) And when the votes were tallied, returning champion Justin Matlak from The Light Horse won again with his cocktail titled “No Comparison.”

Justin Matlak hoists his trophy, an alcohol-themed creation by Torpedo Factory artist Lisa Schumaier.

Ticketholders went home winners too, with door prizes including tickets to see the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, a ticket to the 2013 Patrons’ Show, a gift certificate for an Art League class, and a Potomac Riverboat Company package for a water taxi ride and a meal at Rosa Mexicana.

The Gassmann Duo provided jazz music, and guests used our Old Town Editions photo booth to commemorate the evening. More photos below: Continue reading Art on the Rocks Recap & Photos

Art League Happy Hour: Countdown to Art on the Rocks 2012

Art on the Rocks logo

Today’s Art League Happy Hour is a little early — call it a liquid lunch — because we want to remind you to get your tickets for tomorrow’s Art on the Rocks cocktail party!

Wednesday’s event will include live jazz, complimentary appetizers, and six new cocktails created specially for the evening by bartenders from local restaurants — all for only $35. There will also be drawings for prizes, including tickets to see the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra!

To get you pumped for tomorrow, we visited three more of the participating bartenders for sneak peeks at the cocktails they’ll be making. (Visit our YouTube channel for all the Art on the Rocks videos.)

Alexander at Red Rocks Pizza Napoletana created the Derby:

After the jump, Justin from the Light Horse Restaurant and Aisling from Columbia Firehouse make their drinks. Continue reading Art League Happy Hour: Countdown to Art on the Rocks 2012