Artist Larry Fransen’s Kinetic Sculptures

This guest blog post is by Art League member Larry Fransen.

Currently on display in the Art League Gallery through September 8 is my kinetic sculpture, Wheels. (See and hear it in motion in the video above.) It has two wheels rotating in opposite directions, each constructed from acrylic, bicycle spokes, aluminum tubing, aluminum flat bar, and a ball bearing. Their rotation results in an intriguing movement that is ever-changing.

In addition to the movement, the sculpture has a pleasant sound and creates wonderful shadows. The movement will continue for eight hours per winding.

It has many features of a clock, such as a constant force spring as the power source (this type of spring is used in wind up clocks) and an escapement regulating the rotational movement (escapements are used in grandfather clocks). This sculpture uses an escapement invented by David Roy.

I have really enjoyed the transition from building clocks to creating kinetic sculptures. Building sculptures frees me to create greater motion with interesting shapes, colors, and materials. My first kinetic sculpture used various fluorescent acrylic colors. My second sculpture is Wheels.  I am currently building a third sculpture that has parts from ten black fishing rods, heavy black line, and ten colorful lures. Because the black line is going everywhere, I plan to call this sculpture Snagged. I am now free to have more fun.

My journey to create wonderful objects that move began over three decades ago when I put together a wood shop. Right at the start of my work in my new shop, I did not want to create stationary objects. Building clocks seemed like a challenging goal.

Larry Fransen - wooden clock

My first wooden clock was built from plywood with the teeth cut on the band saw. I took my crude clock to work to show the machinist. Most of my working career was spent creating digital speech compression algorithms at the Naval Research Laboratory (NRL) which is located across the Potomac from the Art League. The NRL machinists were not very impressed with my crude clock, and they suggested that I purchase a milling machine to cut my gears. With the purchase of a used milling machine and gear cutters, I built my first clock that was not an embarrassment. This clock as well as my other clocks are driven by a synchronous motor.

This wooden clock is a skeleton clock which attempts to show as much of the inner workings of the clock as possible. At some odd moment, I thought wouldn’t it be neat to eliminate that supporting structure that maintains the proper gear alignment. I created the first suspended clock. An early version of one of these clocks is shown here:

Larry Fransen - suspended clock

In this clock, the inner workings of the clock are suspended in a catenary from the two end points. Our suspended clocks were the first clocks that had gravity determining the position of the inner workings. With coworkers at NRL, I had been through the patenting process several times. Since I was familiar with this process, I patented the suspended concept, U.S. Patent 5,521,888. So, we now have patented art.

Larry Fransen - bicycle clock

Since these suspended clocks are constructed from sprockets and chain, I had a great desire to make one from bicycle components. The backside of my Bicycle Clock is shown here in my old studio. This clock took an entire year to finish. The supporting ends are fifteen feet apart. The rotating bicycle foot pedals are the second hand. My artistic son Michael created the lady called Esmeralda lying on the shelf.

Larry Fransen - bicycle clock

The two bicycle wheels are the hands for this clock. The reflector on the large wheel is the minute hand and the reflector on the small wheel is the hour hand. The Bicycle Clock is telling us that it is about 16 minutes before three.

This picture was taken with the clock in the 2002 Art League and Washington Square Sculpture Show on Connecticut Ave in Washington, DC. This took one of the first place prizes. This also took first prize in sculpture at an art show in the Mitchell Gallery, St. Johns College of Annapolis, MD and was shown as part of kinetic art week at the Visionary Art Museum in Baltimore, MD. The Bicycle Clock now resides in a museum called Time Story in South Korea.

Larry Fransen - Time Story
Schoolchildren viewing Bicycle Clock in South Korea.

All my clocks were driven by synchronous motors requiring that they be plugged into a wall outlet. I had a great desire to get away from this limitation. This is what led me to the present day efforts to power my sculptures with springs. In this case, I believe old tech is better than new tech. I wrote this blog post typing on a Mac using a sophisticated word processor. Go figure!

Wheels from “Structures,” open through September 8.
Wheels from “Structures,” open through September 8.

Artist Opportunities #235

This week's image is a painting by Art League instructor Susan Herron.
This week’s image is a painting by Art League instructor Susan Herron.

See below for exhibits, competitions, and other opportunities for artists. Click here to see recent posts in this category. Good luck!

“Make visible what, without you, might perhaps never have been seen.” — Robert Bresson

Sugarloaf Craft Festivals

The Sugarloaf Craft Festivals provide fine artists and contemporary craftspeople with popular and established markets where they can sell their work to appreciative patrons. There are eleven Sugarloaf shows annually in MD, VA, PA, and NJ. Jurying begins August 29 and continues until full. More about the festivals →

The Panda Project

Deadline: September 2. The DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities is pleased to join with the DC Office of Asian and Pacific Islander Affairs to invite local artists or artistic teams to provide two- dimensional design proposals for a pre-fabricated panda sculpture. More about the Panda Project →

Landscapes

Deadline: September 14. “World Aesthetic” at Gallery Underground is a national juried landscape show inspired by travels near and far; at home and abroad; continental and intercontinental; places real or imagined. More about the exhibit →

Miniatures

Deadline: September 20. The Miniature Painters, Sculptors & Gravers Society of DC holds its 81st Annual International Exhibition of Fine Art in Miniature at The Mansion at Strathmore this Fall. Download the PDF prospectus here →

Portrait competition

Deadline: November 30, 2014. Entry is open for the 2016 Outwin Boochever Portrait Competition at the National Portrait Gallery. The work entered should be understood as a portrait in the broadest sense. It may be a traditional, representational work or it may be a more experimental or conceptual portrait, but it must be based on the artist’s direct contact with any living individual(s). Self-portraits will be accepted. Each artist may enter only one portrait, and it must have been completed after January 1, 2013. Entries will be accepted in all visual arts media. More about the portrait competition →


Re-runs: The announcements below have previously appeared in this space, but there’s still time to enter!

Chalk art

Deadline: August 29. The Golden Triangle BID is looking for an artist to create a temporary chalk illustration on a designated sidewalk. Read the call to artists here →

Art Maryland 2014

Deadline: August 31. Entry to this juried exhibit, sponsored by the Howard County Arts Council, is open to visual artists 18 years or older who live in Maryland or within a 100-mile radius of Ellicott City, MD. More about this exhibit →

Fall Foliage

Deadline: September 1 (late entry September 15). The 43rd Annual Fall Foliage Art Show in downtown Waynesboro, Virginia is October 11 and 12, 2014. More about the Fall Foliage Art Show →

Photography competition 1

Deadline: September 1. Instant DC is launching an open call for photography by D.C.-area photographers starting now through September 1, 2014. Read the call for photographers →

Inter-Generational Artist Residency

Deadline: September 5. Applicants should have an interest in educating learners of all age levels, community outreach, and generational diversity. More about the residency →

Prince George’s Sampler

Deadline: September 6. The county’s annual juried exhibit is open to all artists and curators who are 18 years of age or older who live, work, study, or have a studio in Prince George’s County, Maryland. Download the PDF prospectus →

Small Artwork

Deadline: September 10. The Maryland Federation of Art (MFA) invites all artists residing in the United States, Puerto Rico, Canada and Mexico to enter its 12th Small Wonders competition. More about Small Wonders →

Photography competition 2

Deadline: September 12. The Delaplaine Art Center, located in historic downtown Frederick, Maryland, announces the 2014 National Juried Photography Exhibit. More about the exhibit (PDF) →

Día de Los Muertos

Deadline: September 12. This exhibit at Arlington Arts Center is open to artists living in Virginia, Maryland, DC, Delaware, Pennsylvania, or West Virginia. More about the exhibit →

Smithsonian Craft Show 2015

Deadline: September 14. Applications are now open for the 33rd annual Smithsonian Craft Show, taking place in April 2015. More about the Smithsonian Craft Show →

Exhibit in Alexandria

Exhibit: September 26–27. Artists who are interested in exhibiting art at the Snyder Center on South Van Dorn Street are invited to contact Ed at [email protected]. The exhibit is scheduled for September 26 and 27. Cost per exhibitor is only $25.00 and includes a large table in each space.

Play

Deadline: September 26. This exhibit at Arlington Arts Center will examine games and play through the lens of contemporary art. More about the exhibit →

Metamorphosis

Receiving: September 28 & 29. Entry to “Metamorphosis” at Del Ray Artisans is open to members and nonmembers. The juror is Elizabeth Ann Coleman, curator emeritus at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Download the PDF prospectus →

Hillyer Open Call

Deadline: September 28. Hillyer Art Space in Northwest DC is accepting submissions for the 2015/16 exhibition season. More info here →

Northern Virginia Fine Arts Festival

Deadline: December 7. The Northern Virginia Fine Arts Festival will be held May 15, 16, and 17, 2015. More about the festival →

Metal & jewelry artists

Deadline: February 15, 2015. For the traveling exhibition “Co:Operation Garnish,” organizers are asking metalsmith and jewelry artists to form two-person working partnerships. Read the details here →

How to Paint & Print on Stained Glass

Dakota Under Glass by Joseph Cavalieri.
Dakota Under Glass by Joseph Cavalieri.

For painters with an itch to try something new, a workshop starting in two weeks explores a different way to approach the medium.

Joseph Cavalieri is a glass artist in New York who paints on stained glass, much like medieval artists did — except with modern imagery and a healthy dose of silk screen and airbrushing, too. This fall, he’s visiting The Art League to teach a five-day workshop, Painting, Airbrushing, & Silk-Screening on Stained Glass. No experience with glass is necessary!

In this blog post on cavaglass.com, Cavalieri gives nine steps to silk-screening on glass. His technique uses enamel paint that is later kiln-fired.

“Silk-screening on glass is very similar to silk-screening on paper, except for two big differences, the glass doesn’t absorb the ink, and, in my studio, I kiln fire the enamel based paint to the surface of the glass.”

Read the full post here.

For more about Cavalieri’s work with pop culture icons like the Simpsons and R. Crumb, watch this short film by Seth Wharton:

Other upcoming events with Joseph Cavalieri:

 

Q&A with Painter Leigh Culver

Champagne Autumn, watercolor by Leigh Culver, winner of the Shayna Heisman Simkin Award for Best in Show. Click to view a larger image.
Champagne Autumn, watercolor by Leigh Culver, winner of the Shayna Heisman Simkin Award for Best in Show. Click to view a larger image.

’Scapes is one of the year’s most popular shows at The Art League because of the ability landscapes have to transport us — to different spaces, times, and states of mind. The exhibit is all about exploring the spaces around us, and what they mean to us.

Leigh Culver’s Champagne Autumn, the exhibit’s best in show piece, is a perfect example. The limited point of view — just a plant against a cloudy sky — means it could be almost anywhere, so each viewer can draw on their own experiences to find the meaning. (It’s actually from River Farm, a spot just down the road from the Torpedo Factory where plein air classes have been known to visit.)

Each person who looks at it will be reminded of a different autumn, or a different time they’ve seen these colors. For the artist, it holds a great deal of meaning, as you’ll see below. For more about Leigh Culver’s art and career, read our first Q&A with her (after you finish this one).

What caught your eye about this particular spot that made you want to paint it?
Leigh Culver: I painted this from a photograph I took at River Farm, the headquarters of the American Horticultural Society. It was very late in the day and overcast. This was a crepe myrtle tree in full autumn bloom—I took pictures, underneath, looking up, from all sorts of angles to try and capture the celebratory joy of that color and those shapes against the blank sky.

What’s interesting to me is how the painting has accrued meaning over time. My mom became ill and started hospice care as I was painting it. She lamented that she wouldn’t be seeing fall foliage and wanted a painting to look at. As I was painting this and visiting her, it started to take on and embody, for me, her physical and spiritual state of mind during that time, which was a deep and moving privilege to witness. In art, red autumnal leaves have always, perhaps rather tritely, symbolized the passing of time, death, beauty, fragility, etc. But when you are in the midst of experiencing it on a personal level, it resonates.

Champagne Autumn, detail
Champagne Autumn, detail

The vantage point I chose suggested a window view she might have, lying down, looking out from the second floor, and seeing only the treetop–a limited view that concentrates vision. I wanted her to be able to lose herself in the details and for it to resonate with her thoughts and feelings during that time. She was a medical doctor and an Episcopal priest who had spent her life focused on physical and spiritual healing—she saw death as the “final healing.” So meditations on ephemeral life and beauty, decay, fragility, disappearing, community, resurrection, transformation and the mystery beyond life informed aesthetic choices I made as I painted. (But I realize for many, it just looks like a pretty tree, perhaps tossing in the wind—and that is just fine!) The title refers to the fact that my mom insisted on cocktail hour every evening right up until the end, definitely not my mode, but there was bubbling laughter and community in the midst of everything, too.

In the end, I can only see her and that time when I look at the painting. It hung at the foot of her bed when I finished it. Its place in this show feels like a tribute to her. When the juror wrote that it was “attention-grabbing,” I laughed—that was decidedly an aspect of her personality as well (and I mean that in the most loving way). One of my favorite books she read to me as a child, was about a girl named Anne, which was her name. “Anne likes red. Red, red, red. Would you like a blue dress Anne? NO. Anne likes red. Red, red, red.” And she did. Her oldest brother Brock died just a few months later. He was a writer and poet, and his last email to me was about this painting, giving it his generous avuncular support. As he, too, was in hospice, his words—“feverish leafage…its plumage, like a halcyon lush afloat among the berries”—only added to its meaning, and his understanding is now part of this painting for me too.

“In art, red autumnal leaves have always, perhaps rather tritely, symbolized the passing of time, death, beauty, fragility, etc. But when you are in the midst of experiencing it on a personal level, it resonates.”

I’m a big believer in the notion that a painting is not just the work of the person who laid down the paint. Rather, it represents a matrix of ideas, values, thoughts, and influences from many different sources. The lessons of Art League teachers Jacqueline Saunders and Deborah Ellis were also constantly in my head when I was painting this. When I paint, I always remember Jackie’s insistence on pure, unmuddied colors mixing on the page, and Deborah’s example of waiting, watching, and influencing the organic alchemy of pigment and water as it interacts on the paper over time. Both teachers have created wonderful art communities that continually enlighten, support and influence.

Since this month is all about landscapes, what do you think a successful landscape has? What goes into capturing a space?
Leigh Culver: I was glad to see that the juror interpreted “landscape” in the broadest possible sense, as one could argue that “Champagne Autumn” is more a portrait or botanical still life than a strict landscape. Certainly space is far more contained than in many of the show’s images. Successful landscapes embody a sense of place or atmosphere, and they address issues about our world, society, or the individual’s place in it. In my watercolor, I was interested in the subject’s metaphorical resonance. Any work of art is successful, to some level, if it stirs the viewer emotionally or cognitively. The greater the stir, the better! To capture a space, one has to focus on technical issues of scale, atmosphere, light, perspective, and vantage point. And one has to hone in on the details that encapsulate the essence of place, thought, or mood, and to identify what can best highlight or support those details.

What was your favorite part of working on this painting?
I loved doing the berries, or perhaps they were just empty shells by that point in the tree’s life cycle. I delighted in their varied relationships to each other. They started accruing these anthropomorphic qualities for me.

What are you working on now?
I’ve done more paintings of the same tree, but they don’t work in the same way. I turned fifty this year, and, unsurprisingly, I am still interested in exploring life’s fragility and resilience. I’ve been particularly taken by spherical pods of all types and wild, colorful fields of dried weeds—we’ll see where that leads. I exhibit at the River Farm each year with Salon Eight, a wonderful group of watercolorists, and we’ve been asked to paint images of cherry blossoms in celebration of the festival’s anniversary next spring. My first reaction was, “Ugh, that might just be the last subject I would ever choose to paint.” Too ubiquitous and sweet for me. But David Hockney, Van Gogh, and Joseph Rafael all managed to find quite wonderful ways to paint such blossoms. It’s been a surprising delight exploring how I might possibly capture that subject in ways that speak to me. I’m taken aback by how much I’m enjoying the process. There’s a lesson in that.

’Scapes is open through Monday, September 8.

Fall Photography Classes For All

Photo by instructor Barbara Southworth. See below for more images from our photography instructors.
Photo by instructor Barbara Southworth. See below for more images from our photography instructors.

(Jump to: fall photography classes | fall photography workshops | gallery of instructor work)

Whether you’re into film or digital, just starting out or looking for a fresh approach, there’s a photography class for you this Fall. We’re also offering a new class, Style and Momentum, with returning instructor Barbara Southworth.

Here’s everything photographic coming up in September and October, split up into classes and workshops:

9-week photography classes

The classes below meet weekly for 9 weeks, starting the week of September 15. Tuition for all of these classes is $200, except Darkroom & Film, which is $235.

Intro to Photography

Style and Momentum (new!)

Intermediate Photo I

Night Photography

Darkroom and Film

Fall photography workshops

These one- and two-day workshops focus on specific skills. Tuition is $95 for the one-day workshops and $175 for the two-day workshops.

Adobe Lightroom

Photograph Artwork

Architectural Photography

Portrait Photography

Lighting Tools

Our photography instructors

Click on a thumbnail to launch the gallery.

 

Remembering Sculptor Gretta Bader

Gretta Bader (second from left) at the dedication of the Fulbright statue in 2002. (Photo by Russell Cothren, University of Arkansas. Used with permission.)
Gretta Bader (second from left) at the dedication of the Fulbright statue in 2002 at the University of Arkansas. (Photo by Russell Cothren, University of Arkansas. Used with permission.)

Gretta Bader, a former Art League instructor who was chair of the sculpture department from 1985 to 1989, died August 1 at age 83.

Gretta’s sculpture was in collections including the National Portrait Gallery and the Kennedy Center. Subjects for her sculptures included names such as Washington Post editor Ben Bradlee, Claiborne Pell, and William Fulbright, the last of which she described as her most rewarding work in a 2002 interview with Pomona College Magazine.

“I wanted students not to be intimidated by the man, not to see him as remote—to know what a very intense human being he was and how much he liked students, how well he listened, how well he engaged them,” she said in the interview.

The Art League would like to send out its condolences and best wishes to all of Gretta’s family, friends, and students.

You can read Gretta Bader’s obituary on The Washington Post.

Bill Clinton speaks at the dedication of Gretta Bader's Fulbright statue in 2002.  (Photo by Russell Cothren, University of Arkansas. Used with permission.)
Bill Clinton speaks at the dedication of Gretta Bader’s Fulbright statue in 2002. (Photo by Russell Cothren, University of Arkansas. Used with permission.)

Q&A with Artist Diane Blackwell

The Washington Football by Diane Blackwell was awarded the Monkith Saaid Award.
The Washington Football by Diane Blackwell was awarded the Monkith Saaid Award.

In this year’s sculpture exhibit, the Monkith Saaid Award for best in show went to Diane Blackwell, a multidisciplinary artist. Juror Rosemary Luckett chose the unassuming fiber sculpture The Washington Football for the award, citing its use of color, shape, and multilayered tone.

The artist told us more about the sculpture in this Q&A:

What was your goal with this piece?
Diane Blackwell: A common theme in my work is to compare and contrast personal experiences to introduce a new understanding. With all this talk about inertia in Washington both on the political and sports playing fields, I thought I’d follow their lead and punt. The colloquialism got me thinking that the ball deserved a closer review.

What’s your creative process like?
I start with an assumption, an activity that’s been on auto-pilot, or current cultural events that need further review and question why they catch my attention.

As both a painter and a sculptor, what role do the materials you use play in your work? Do you have a favorite medium to work in?
Since I begin with a concept, I find the delivery system that is easiest to apply — sometimes it is two dimensional (acrylic, transfers, photography), other times it is construction.

The Washington Football (detail)
The Washington Football (detail)

Does the sculpture have a specific statement to make about the Washington football team’s name?
The name of the Washington football team is a racial slur. Legal activity has begun to remove the name which respondents in recent polls and surveys find offensive. It is inexcusable for the team’s owner to continue his defense of the name. Rather than take the ball and run with it by changing the name and moving forward, he has chosen to deface the reputation of the team while punting the ball through the courts.

How did you arrive at this particular shape?
I wanted an irregular shape similar to a football. I can sew. The contrast between a domestic skill and a public sports object became intriguing. After doing a maquette in foamcore, I mapped out the gouged surfaces into flat planes, sewed it together to include lacing, and signed my initials with a chain stitch.

What are you working on now?
2D: combining Warhol and Duchamp.

3D: I have some paper based materials and am waiting for the concept to crystallize.

Happy, acrylic, by Diane Blackwell. From April's “Pop Art” exhibit.
Happy, acrylic, by Diane Blackwell. From April’s “Pop Art” exhibit.

Artist Opportunities #234

This week's image is by The Art League's new photography instructor, Barbara Southworth.
This week’s image is by The Art League’s new photography instructor, Barbara Southworth.

Here are all the new opportunities we could find this week. You can click here for recent posts in this category. Good luck!

“I take rejection as someone blowing a bugle in my ear to wake me up and get going, rather than retreat.” — Sylvester Stallone

Art in City Hall last chance!

Deadline: Friday, August 22. This edition of Art in City Hall is open to Members of The Art League, Del Ray Artisans, the Torpedo Factory Artists’ Association, Empowered Women International and Convergence Art Center. Enter online here →

Exhibit in Alexandria

Exhibit: September 26–27. Artists who are interested in exhibiting art at the Snyder Center on South Van Dorn Street are invited to contact Ed at [email protected]. The exhibit is scheduled for September 26 and 27. Cost per exhibitor is only $25.00 and includes a large table in each space.

Art materials

Event: August 23. Deadline to reserve vendor spot: August 20. More than 20 vendors, along with many artists in the Torpedo Factory’s 82 studios will be selling or trading a variety of art supplies for use across all visual media. Details on the Torpedo Factory’s website →

Chalk art

Deadline: August 29. The Golden Triangle BID is looking for an artist to create a temporary chalk illustration on a designated sidewalk. Read the call to artists here →

Día de Los Muertos

Deadline: September 12. This exhibit at Arlington Arts Center is open to artists living in Virginia, Maryland, DC, Delaware, Pennsylvania, or West Virginia. Artworks submitted should respond to the theme of Día de Los Muertos. More about the exhibit →

Window Wonderland in Baltimore

On behalf of Harbor East Management Group, Maryland Art Place is pleased to announce the third annual “Window Wonderland” project, a storefront, holiday initiative within the Harbor East corridor. Collectively, MAP & Harbor East are seeking unique, holiday presentations/installations to be placed in a variety of retail locations. Storefront installations will be on view from Friday, November 14, 2014 – Friday, January 2, 2015. More about the project →

Play

Deadline: September 26. This exhibit at Arlington Arts Center will examine games and play through the lens of contemporary art. AAC is looking for artists working in a variety of media. Out-of-the-box exhibitions concepts that employ new technologies like augmented reality and mobile applications are also encouraged. More about the exhibit →

Northern Virginia Fine Arts Festival

Deadline: December 7. The Northern Virginia Fine Arts Festival will be held May 15, 16, and 17, 2015. It is a competitive, juried, outdoor event that showcases the best contemporary fine art and craft from around the country. More about the festival →

Metal & jewelry artists

Deadline: February 15, 2015. For the traveling exhibition “Co:Operation Garnish,” organizers are asking metalsmith and jewelry artists to form two-person working partnerships. Read the details here →

Where in the World Are These ’Scapes?

’Scapes map
Click to view the map on Pinterest.

It seems like each year, our artists travel more and more in search of inspiration for the annual ’Scapes exhibit. To give you an idea of just how far we’re willing to go for a good ’scape, we’ve started pinning the artwork from this show onto a map, which you can view here.

Artists: if you had a piece accepted to ’Scapes but you don’t see it up on the map yet, let us know where to put it! Email [email protected].

Next Week at The Art League: August 17–23

August 17–23

Next week here at The Art League: learn about Gallery membership, exchange art materials, and don’t forget to enter Art in City Hall!

Portrait & Figure Festival

Artist Orientation

Art in City Hall

Art Materials Market

Q&A with Painter Peggy Weed

Old House, oil, by Peggy Weed
Old House, oil, by Peggy Weed

Some of the artwork in the annual ’Scapes exhibit reaches to distant locations around the globe, but other landscapes are close to home. Peggy Weed’s Old House, an oil painting, depicts a kind of place many of us are familiar with: somewhere we pass almost every day but know nothing about, just imagining the people and things that called it home.

Old House won the Chameli and Amiya Bose Memorial Award for the best oil or acrylic painting in the exhibit. We asked the artist to tell us more about this ’scape.

Where is Old House?
Peggy Weed: I have a small house out in the mountains of Highland County in Monterey, VA. There are only two roads leading into Monterey and I pass the old house I painted every time I go out there — it’s between Bridgewater and Circleville, VA on Rt 42.

What made you want to paint it?
Every time I pass one of these old houses, usually part of an abandoned farm, I think of the pride and joy the original owners must have felt when they lived there. I also wonder about all the life that went on in and out of the house — people sitting on the front porch watching the world go by — kids playing — the fathers working on the chores of the farm — and I want the viewer to see the beauty it once had and still does to me.

Two Pears
Two Pears and Free Range by Peggy Weed, from the 2014 Patrons’ Show Fundraiser.

Free Range

What makes a successful landscape painting, in your opinion?
A successful landscape to me is one that puts the viewer in the landscape and lets them wander about, taking in all the beauty and interesting parts of the painting.

Why are you a painter? Why oil, specifically?
I’m a painter because I love to paint, and doing so with oils is the most rewarding and the easiest way to me, in that you can always come back into the painting and change things that bother you about the piece. I also love to draw — working with graphite, charcoal, red chalk — I love it all and am always trying to improve.

What’s your creative process like, from an idea to a finished piece?
Sometimes something will hit me suddenly and I feel I must try to paint it at that moment! If it’s a still life, I’ll usually take photos until I really like what I see. Other times, I’ll think for a long time about an idea or an object that I know I want to paint, especially if I have photos I can work from, like with the old house painting. I’ll often ask a couple of painter friends to give me a little critique on whatever it is I’m doing — from there it always gets better, but sometimes it gets put away in the closet for another day.

What are you working on now?
Right now I am working on two small still life paintings of things recently found in a consignment shop.

Reception Thursday for ’Scapes and Structures

Scapes 2014

Scapes 2014

’Scapes / Structures
Through September 8
Opening reception: Thursday, August 14, 6:30–8:00 pm

Every summer, our walls take a vacation and travel the world for ’Scapes — The Art League’s annual not-your-parents’-landscape show — and we break out the pedestals for the annual sculpture exhibit. This year, it’s going by the name Structures.

Wheel by Larry Fransen, foreground.
Foreground: Wheel, a kinetic sculpture by Larry Fransen
Under Pressure (detail) by George Tkabladze
Under Pressure (detail) by George Tkabladze

’Scapes was once called The American Landscape Exhibit, but in recent years it’s become an international, all-media exploration of spaces big and small: traditional landscapes alongside man-made cityscapes, close-up views, and abstracted interpretations of places around the planet. We’ll be adding some of those places to the map on this Pinterest board.

This year’s sculpture exhibit brings 16 stellar examples of 3-D work by Art League artists, denoted by the blue cards. You’ll find sculptors using traditional materials along with found objects like guitar strings, golf clubs, and porcupine quills. Stacy Cantrell crocheted the life-size Aphrodite of DC, seen at the top of this post.

Structures was juried by Rosemary Luckett, and Olivia Kohler-Maga juried ’Scapes.

Tomorrow is also Second Thursday, which means it’s your chance to celebrate at the opening reception and meet the artists! The opening reception starts at 6:30 pm. There are also some Torpedo Factory visiting artists giving presentations in the main hall starting at 5:00.

You’re probably aware there’s also a third Art League exhibit open right now — Influence & Inspiration, on view at the Athenaeum down the street (preview here). You can attend that opening reception in a few weeks, on Sunday, September 7.

Champagne Autumn by Leigh Culver, winner of the Shayna Heisman Simkin Award for Best in Show
Champagne Autumn by Leigh Culver, winner of the Shayna Heisman Simkin Award for Best in Show
Old Home by Peggy Weed, winner of the Chameli and Amiya Bose Award for Oil or Acrylic
Old Home by Peggy Weed, winner of the Chameli and Amiya Bose Award for Oil or Acrylic
Boys Camp, Bath County Landscape (detail) by Gail Saour
Boys Camp, Bath County Landscape (detail) by Gail Saour
Ain't I A Woman by Kathlyn Avila
Ain’t I A Woman by Kathlyn Avila

Artist Opportunities #233

Pierced Copper Bowl - Michael Brehl
Pierced copper bowl by Art League instructor Michael Brehl.

Below: this week’s batch of exhibits, competitions, events and more to try for. You can click here for past opportunities posts. Good luck!

“You can’t wait for inspiration. You have to go after it with a club.” — Jack London

Paintings

Deadline: August 21. The Maryland Federation of Art (MFA) invites all artists residing in United States, Puerto Rico, Canada and Mexico to enter Strokes of Genius: National Juried Painting Competition, which is open to original works created through any painting medium. More about Strokes of Genius →

Paint the Town

Deadline: August 22. Montgomery Art Association’s Labor Day weekend Paint the Town Art Show 2014 is a judged art exhibit at the Kensington Armory. This art event includes a 3-day art exhibit and sale (August 30 – September 1) and a Plein Air painting contest open to both adults and children on Saturday, August 30. Artists must be aged 18 and older. One work must be based on a subject within the 20895 zip code of Kensington (abstract interpretations OK). Read more on the Montgomery Art Association website →

Fall Foliage

Deadline: September 1 (late entry September 15). The 43rd Annual Fall Foliage Art Show in downtown Waynesboro, Virginia- October 11 and 12, 2014. Each October this outdoor fine art exhibit fills the streets of this picturesque Blue Ridge town. We traditionally bring in 20,000 visitors and sell nearly a quarter million dollars of art over the weekend. More about the Fall Foliage Art Show →

Small Artwork

Deadline: September 10. The Maryland Federation of Art (MFA) invites all artists residing in the United States, Puerto Rico, Canada and Mexico to enter its 12th Small Wonders competition. 2-D work may not exceed 11” in any one dimension including outer edge of frame. 3-D work may not exceed 7” in any one dimension. More about Small Wonders →


Re-runs: there’s still time to make the deadlines for these opportunities:

Post-Photography & Mixed-Media

Deadline: August 18. Target Gallery explores the future of photography with the exhibition “Post-Photography: Beyond the Print.” Submissions are open to all-media artwork that involves an innovative approach to the photographic medium, including, but not limited to, photo-manipulation, stop-motion video, mixed media collage, artist books, photographic sculpture, alternative process photography and GIF art. More about the exhibit →

Art in City Hall ’14–’15

Deadline: August 22. Online entry only. This installment of Art in City Hall has no theme. Entry is open to members of The Art League, Del Ray Artisans, the Torpedo Factory Artists’ Association, Empowered Women International, and Convergence Art Center. Artists can also join one of these organizations (except for the TFAA, which has juried membership). More about Art in City Hall →

Art Maryland 2014

Deadline: August 31. Entry to this juried exhibit, sponsored by the Howard County Arts Council, is open to visual artists 18 years or older who live in Maryland or within a 100-mile radius of Ellicott City, MD. The juror for the exhibit, which runs from October 31–December 12, is Julia Marciari-Alexander, the new Executive Director of the Walters Art Museum. More about this exhibit →

Photography competition 1

Deadline: September 1. Instant DC is launching an open call for photography by D.C.-area photographers starting now through September 1, 2014. We are partnering with the Washington School of Photography, which is graciously hosting a free opening night celebration October 3, and showcasing the exhibition for an entire month. Read the call for photographers →

Inter-Generational Artist Residency

Deadline: September 5. The Barrie School and Winter Growth, an adult day and assisted living facility, are teaming up with The Art Gallery of University of Maryland to offer this exciting teaching artist opportunity. This Artist in Residence position is ideal for someone committed to engaging the community in an experiential art installation project. Applicants should have an interest in educating learners of all age levels, community outreach, and generational diversity. More about the residency →

Prince George’s Sampler

Deadline: September 6. The county’s annual juried exhibit is open to all artists and curators who are 18 years of age or older who live, work, study, or have a studio in Prince George’s County, Maryland. Juror: Myrtis Bedolla. Download the PDF prospectus →

Photography competition 2

Deadline: September 12. The Delaplaine Art Center, located in historic downtown Frederick, Maryland, announces the 2014 National Juried Photography Exhibit. All photographs, black and white, color, non-silver, computer-manipulated are eligible. More about the exhibit (PDF) →

Videos at the Institute for Women and Art

Deadline: September 12. The Institute for Women and Art seeks entries for the Momentum: Women/Art/Technology online festival of video works called MTV: Momentum Technology Videos. Submissions are through Vimeo. More about the project →

Smithsonian Craft Show 2015

Deadline: September 14. Applications are now open for the 33rd annual Smithsonian Craft Show, taking place in April 2015. More about the Smithsonian Craft Show →

Alexandria Animals Pet Photo Calendar Contest

Deadline: September 15. The Animal Welfare League of Alexandria’s (AWLA) annual fundraiser is a great way to support the AWLA while getting a chance to show off your animal companions! Entries and voting takes place from July 15 to Sept. 15. Prizes are awarded based on fundraising totals. More about the contest →

National Small Works Show

Deadline: September 22. The first national juried exhibition at Main Street Arts (Clifton Springs, NY) will be an exhibition of small works (12″ or less in any direction). Open to artists working in all media excluding film/sound and installation art. This exhibition is open to all U.S. residents at least 18 years of age. More about the exhibit →

Metamorphosis

Receiving: September 28 & 29. Entry to “Metamorphosis” at Del Ray Artisans is open to members and nonmembers. The juror is Elizabeth Ann Coleman, curator emeritus at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Download the PDF prospectus →

Hillyer Open Call

Deadline: September 28. Hillyer Art Space in Northwest DC is accepting the 2015/16 exhibition season. Hillyer presents monthly exhibitions and each accepted artist is given a room in the three-room gallery space to present their work. More info here →

 

Art League Sculptor Talks Public Art Project on WJLA

Heron by Charles Bergen
Heron by Charles Bergen

Charles Bergen is an Art League member whose found-object sculpture, Heron, is part of this month’s “Structures” sculpture exhibit. He’s also part of an exciting public art project happening downtown, and recently appeared on the news to talk about it!

Via ABC 7:

Three years ago, Capitol Hill resident Stephen Young was walking through his neighborhood with his two young children, when he found himself saying, “E Street, we’re crossing E Street, ‘E’ for elephant.”

That’s when the “Capitol Hill Alphabet Animal Art Project” was born.

Project Manager Hannah Jacobson and Project Artist Charles Bergen stopped by the NewsChannel 8 to discuss how the initiative is bringing the community together and helping to educate kids.

Here’s the video: (if it doesn’t play, watch it on WJLA’s website here)

Next Week at The Art League: August 10–16

August 10 to 16 at The Art League

What’s happening next week at The Art League? A lot!

Fall Classes

Opening Reception

Solo Info Session

Take a Sneak Peek at “Influence & Inspiration”

Athenaeum exhibit preview

“Influence & Inspiration”
The Art League Faculty Celebrates 60 Years
August 7–September 21 at the Athenaeum

This special exhibit of artwork by Art League instructors past and present is opening Thursday, but today, here’s a preview to pique your interest. Installed in the beautiful space at the Athenaeum, just down the street from The Art League, the show includes names like Sam Gilliam, Lou Stovall, Kurt Schwarz, Danni Dawson, Ted Reed, and Rob Liberace.Athenaeum exhibit

athenaeum-preview-2

athenaeum-preview-3

You can see recent, older, and brand-new work from the decades of history at The Art League School — or, until the 1980s, “The Art League Workshop.” There’s also a video with testimonials from students and faculty members.

athenaeum-preview-1

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athenaeum-preview-6

You can see the exhibit starting Thursday, and it’s open Thursday through Sunday until September 21. The opening reception will be Sunday, September 7. For full details and the Athenaeum’s hours, click here.

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Artist Opportunities #232

Drawing by Alex Beck
Image by Alex Beck, a new Art League instructor who will be teaching Gesture Drawing.

Here are new exhibits and more to apply for. You can click here to view past opportunities posts. Good luck!

“The art form is to become one with the hurdle, to make it your friend.”
— Renaldo Nehemiah, world-record hurdler

Arts Club of Washington

Deadline: September 1. The Arts Club of Washington has a call for artists for the 2015–16 exhibition season. Exhibitions are scheduled monthly from September 2015 through May 2016. Read the full call for artists →

Online “Residency”

Deadline: September 1. The Digital Fabrication Residency is a hands-on online intensive incubator for visual artists, designers and creatives with the desire to incorporate digital fabrication into their work to achieve highly specialized production for individual projects and public art commissions. More about the residency →

Franz & Virginia Bader Fund

Deadline: September 15. The Franz and Virginia Bader Fund makes grants to visual artists aged 40 and older who live within 150 miles of Washington, DC. At least one grant is awarded annually. More about the Bader Fund →

Alexandria Animals Pet Photo Calendar Contest

Deadline: September 15. The Animal Welfare League of Alexandria’s (AWLA) annual fundraiser is a great way to support the AWLA while getting a chance to show off your animal companions! Entries and voting takes place from July 15 to Sept. 15. Prizes are awarded based on fundraising totals. More about the contest →

Portrait Competition

Deadline: November 30, 2014. Entry is open for the 2016 Outwin Boochever Portrait Competition at the National Portrait Gallery. The work entered should be understood as a portrait in the broadest sense. It may be a traditional, representational work or it may be a more experimental or conceptual portrait, but it must be based on the artist’s direct contact with any living individual(s). Self-portraits will be accepted. Each artist may enter only one portrait, and it must have been completed after January 1, 2013. Entries will be accepted in all visual arts media. More about the portrait competition →

More

For many more opportunities with deadlines that haven’t passed, see last week’s post.

Meet This Year’s New Instructors!

Registration for Fall classes starts Monday, August 11!

If you haven’t browsed the brand-new online catalog yet, you can do that here. You’ll find a number of new instructors in the mix this school year, teaching drawing, painting, photography, mosaics, clay animation, and fashion illustration:

Jesse Turnbull
Jesse Turnbull

Jesse Turnbull

clay animation

artist website / faculty page

Jesse will be teaching Clay Animation this Fall. He’s an illustrator and designer as well as a sculptor, and this summer he submitted his stop-motion animated short, M’aidez, to film festivals.

Anita Damron
Anita Damron

Anita Damron

mosaics

artist website / faculty page

Anita Bucsay Damron will be teaching the mosaics classes and workshops at The Art League. Anita’s also a painter, and you’ve probably seen some of her mosaics in exhibits at The Art League Gallery. For more examples of her mosaics, visit her website.

Delphine Lee
Delphine Lee

Delphine Lee

fashion illustration

faculty page

Delphine is a New York-based fashion designer with a BFA from Parsons School of Design. She has designed for J.Crew, Calvin Klein and other fashion companies for over 10 years.

Bryan Jernigan
Bryan Jernigan

Bryan Jernigan

painting

artist website / faculty page

Born in Arkansas and raised in Oklahoma, Bryan is now a member of The Art League as well as the Arlington Artists Alliance, where he has served as president and board member. This September, he joins the illustrious group of artists teaching abstract painting at The Art League.

By Stephen Gosling
By Stephen Gosling

Stephen Gosling

photography

artist website / faculty page

Stephen received his Documentary & Fine Art Photography degree from Liverpool John Moores University. His portrait subjects include political types, regular people, and professional athletes.

Alex Beck
Alex Beck

Alex Beck

drawing

artist website / faculty page

Painter and illustrator Alex Beck studied at the Ringling College of Art & Design and currently lives in Arlington. He’ll be teaching Gesture Drawing in the Winter and Spring. Follow the link above to look at his Tumblr.

For the full Fall catalog, click here.

Next Week at The Art League: August 3–9

Ted Reed Oil Painting

What’s going on next week at The Art League? The return of our popular August exhibits, and the debut of a special exhibit at the Athenaeum!

Note: An earlier version of this blog post jumped the gun and gave the incorrect date for the August reception. As always, the opening reception will be on Second Thursday, August 14. The Gallery is still open late every Thursday, until 9:00 pm. Sorry for any confusion.

Influence & Inspiration

Artwork receiving

Art Camp

P.S. There’s only a little more than a week until you can register for Fall classes! Search the new catalog here.