Q&A with Painter Cindi Lewis

Focused, oil, by Cindi Lewis, received the Jane McElvany Coonce Award for Contemporary Realism. (click for a larger image)
Focused, oil, by Cindi Lewis, received the Jane McElvany Coonce Award for Contemporary Realism. (click for a larger image)

How can you share the experience of a concert with someone who wasn’t there? You can tell them about it, maybe play a recording — or, if you’re Cindi Lewis, you can paint it.

You might remember Lewis from her 2013 solo exhibit at The Art League, “Onstage,” or maybe from one of your Art League classes. Her ongoing series on performing musicians is about evoking non-visual sensory details in a visual medium, a “fundamentally nonverbal experience.” Last week’s Q&A was about a pastel you can almost taste and smell; today’s is about an oil painting you can hear.

Focused received the Jane McElvany Coonce Award for Contemporary Realism. We asked the artist to tell us more in this Q&A.

What does the theme of the show, “Contemporary Realism,” mean to you?
Cindi Lewis: I don’t have a formal, art-history definition of “Contemporary Realism.” To me, the term recognizes that, even in an era of abstract and conceptual art, there remains room — and an important role — for representational and realistic art. Contemporary realist artists may combine techniques and materials that have been used for centuries with others of more recent origin; what makes them “contemporary” (at least in my view) is their close and generally non-idealized focus on subject matter depicting the modern world and how we live in it.

Why are you a painter? Why oil and watercolor?
The short answer is that I simply enjoy painting. I can articulate certain things about drawing and painting that I find satisfying — the fresh beginning posed by a blank canvas and palette of fresh paint; the moment when an image starts to emerge and take on a life of its own; the opportunity to lose oneself in a process that is both stimulating and calming; the satisfaction of overcoming the inevitable challenges and difficulties to create something new and unique — but I can’t fully put the experience or the attraction into words, perhaps because it’s a fundamentally nonverbal experience.

Encore is from the same series as Focused.
Encore is from the same series as Focused.

As to oil and watercolor — I’ve tried my hand at a number of media and have enjoyed all of them but I like mixing colors, the feel of working with a brush, and the ability (even in a painting that takes a long time to complete) to begin seeing results relatively quickly compared to some other media.

What’s your goal with your series on performing musicians?
Hearing music performed live is a very different experience from listening to a recording. My objective is to capture the visual aspect of that experience — the energy and interactions of the musicians, the lighting, the equipment, the venues and audience, etc. — in a way that I hope also suggests the performances as fully experienced by all the senses.

How has the series progressed or changed over time?
The images have become more complicated in that a number of the compositions have expanded the focus beyond an individual musician to include other musicians, listeners, and/or details of the performance venues; the handling of the lighting and value contrasts has become a more important element; and the paintings have become more consistent in terms of size, scale, and paint surface.

Blues, oil, by Cindi Lewis
Blues, oil, by Cindi Lewis

What are you working on now?
In addition to continuing to work on music paintings, I’ve been to several recent workshops that have revived my fondness for plein air landscape painting. Earlier this year, I also began taking etching classes and am enjoying learning that challenging medium.

“Contemporary Realism” is on view through October 6, 2014.

Artist Opportunities #240

Painting by Art League instructor Tania Karpowitz.
Painting by Art League instructor Tania Karpowitz.

Here is your weekly digest of upcoming exhibits, deadlines, residencies, and everything else we can find. Click here for recent opportunities posts. Good luck!

“You miss 100% of the shots you don’t take.” — Wayne Gretzky

Small Artwork

Deadline: October 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 →

Large Artwork

Deadline: October 10 (extended from October 3). “Large Works” at The Art League is open to all current members. For details and size restrictions, see the prospectus. More about the exhibit →

Movement

Dropoff: October 20–25. The 5th Annual Patricia Sitar Arts Expo is a juried exhibit at the Sitar Arts Center with the theme “In Movement.” Youth, young adults, and adults can all submit work. Details and requirements for the exhibit (PDF) →

Photographs by veterans

Deadline: October 24. On Friday, November 7th, Washington ArtWorks will open “A Time of Service”, a photography show featuring images taken by United States veterans and active duty service members during their time of service. All images will be accepted in this special exhibit – all veterans and active duty service men and women are welcome to send in their favorite images to be displayed. Photographers of all levels are welcome to submit – novice, hobbyists or professionals. More about the exhibit →

Stormy Weather

Deadline: October 29. From onset to aftermath and all in between, “Stormy Weather” is the theme of Maryland Federation of Art’s (MFA) open juried exhibition. Any original 2-D artwork depicting the sights, sounds, colors, impact, anticipation, and more will be considered. More about the exhibit →

White

Deadline: October 31. On Friday, January 2, 2014 Washington ArtWorks will open “White”, a juried gallery exhibition in both of their formal galleries – totaling over 2,000 square feet of exhibit space. 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. More about the festival →

Multiple eXposure Zine

Deadline: December 31. Attention writers, researchers, photographers, visual artists, and image-makers! The Multiple eXposure Project is a multimedia, multi/trans/inter-disciplinary artistic practice and research-based initiative that explores the many layers of image-making, participatory photography, visual ethnography, and performative encounter(s) between the image and the spectator. We are happy to announce that we will be publishing the very first issue of our collaborative zine and we are now accepting submissions until December 31, 2014. More about the project →

Volunteer portrait artist

Kali TV Online is an online media network focusing on Africans in the Diaspora, based in Falls Church. The network is starting a new show which is going to require a portrait artist who can volunteer as a host of the show. Anyone interested can contact Omar Kaseko via 240-374-2192 or [email protected].

Your Art-Beer-Food Trifectas for Art on Tap

Art, beer, and food — three good things that are better together! That’s the idea behind Art on Tap, coming next Friday, October 3.

Six local breweries paired their beers with a painting or print from an Art League instructor. Now, the restaurants you see below are going to create an appetizer to match! Your job at Art on Tap is to try them all and vote on the best triplet. See what’s in store below!

Details & tickets on Eventbrite

Click on any thumbnail to launch the slideshow.

Artist Opportunities #239

A mosaic by Art League instructor Anita Damron.
A mosaic by Art League instructor Anita Damron.

Here are this week’s exhibits, contests, and more! Click here to view past opportunities posts. Good luck!

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

Solo exhibits @ The Art League last chance!

Deadline: Friday, September 26. There are only a few days left to apply for an exhibit in the 2016 season at The Art League! Details and application here →

Guerrilla

Deadline: October 13. The Cade Art Gallery (at Anne Arundel Community College in MD) seeks work that makes a statement or is interventionist in some way. Artists working in chalk, stencil, sticker art, wheat pasting, fliers, posters, object-leave-behinds, notes, letters, zines, screen printing, drawing, painting, sculpture, appropriation, photography, video projection, art intervention, or any other relevant media are welcome to apply. More about the exhibit →

Flashpoint Gallery proposals

Deadline: October 14. Flashpoint Gallery showcases bold, new work and cultivates emerging and mid-career artists working in a variety of media including site-specific installations, performance pieces, new media and other experimental forms. More about submitting a proposal →

“All Hung” Open Call

Deadline: Bring one piece of artwork to Montpelier Arts Center on October 29, 2014 between 10 am and 8 pm. First come, first hung, until walls are filled. Artwork must be ready to display and appropriately matted, framed, and wired for exhibition, and outside dimensions may not exceed 35 inches in any direction. There is no hanging fee. More about the exhibit →

Pen and Brush

Deadline: Ongoing. Pen and Brush provides a platform to showcase the work of excellent female artists to a broader audience. Our galleries can accommodate a variety of group shows, solo and feature exhibitions curated by art world professionals who support our vision. More information here →

Contest: Paint a stairwell

Artists are invited to submit designs to paint two stairwells at the Pentagon Federal Credit Union. The reward for best design is $1,000. For more information, contact Vielka Asia at [email protected] with the subject line “Painting contest”.

Q&A with Pastel Artist Moira McQuillen

Meal Two, pastel by Moira McQuillen, awarded the Dee Gee Watling Memorial Award in the exhibit "Contemporary Realism."
Meal Two, pastel by Moira McQuillen, awarded the Dee Gee Watling Memorial Award in the exhibit “Contemporary Realism.”

One of the interesting things about visual art is how often it engages more than just our eyes. In the case of Moira McQuillen’s pastel painting above — winner of the Dee Gee Watling Memorial Award for pastel — the smell and taste of freshly baked summer desserts come quickly to mind. We asked longtime Art League member Moira to tell us more about her career and the recipe for the perfect still life:

What was your goal with Meal Two?
Moira McQuillen: Actually, I set it as a lesson for myself. This particular still life includes reflective metal, wet fruit, and a baked crust – very different textures.

Why chalk pastel?
I was an art major in college, working predominately in oil. I stopped painting for a bit when our children were very young and when I returned to painting, I chose pastel because it can be fast – no dry time and no brushes to wash. And I’ve always liked the flexibility and range of pastel. There are soft, buttery sticks that leave a broad swath of velvety color and hard sticks that can draw pin sharp lines.

My family moved to Washington, DC when I was in high school. We spent the month of August hiding out in the air conditioned museums downtown and I would pass the day in the National Gallery wandering between Whistler and Sargent and Cassatt. I was fascinated by Toulouse-Lautrec. The lines he drew were sinuous and alive. I’m still in love with the lines of drawing and I think of pastel as being an Impressionist medium, so those days in the Gallery clearly stayed with me.

Swing Me, pastel, by Moira McQuillen. From the October 2013 exhibit, "Body Language."
Swing Me, pastel, by Moira McQuillen. From the October 2013 exhibit, “Body Language.”

What do you think makes a good still life? What’s your favorite subject to paint?
Still life by definition is static, but something in the painting has to create energy that pulls your eye into and then around the painting. Maybe the subject matter isn’t as important as whether or not the interplay of textures and colors and shapes has created that energy.

Anything that sets your fingers itching to get painting is a good subject.

What is your creative process like, from the first idea to the finished piece?
I love when I know what I want to paint. Things move very quickly when I’m excited about the subject.

I use colored paper to mimic the under wash on a canvas and I try to let the texture and color of the paper show through. I lightly sketch in the general position of the elements of the painting. Unlike oil painting, where I would work on the whole canvas, building levels evenly, pastel requires a different approach. Because I don’t spray with a fixative, I work from the top of the paper to the bottom, moving from left to right (I’m right handed). I work the pastel with my fingers quite a bit. You can’t mix an exact color like in oil painting, so I layer colors – sometime smudging them together and sometimes scumbling the top color and leaving the under color to show.

I have an odd dislike of signing my paintings so that the signature shows. And I’m pretty bad at naming paintings – hence Meal One, Meal Two, and Meal Three.

There’s real magic in painting. Up close, it looks like absolutely nothing – just color, just lines. As you move back those little squiggles trick your eye into believing that you are seeing the curve of a cheek or a reflection on silverware. It never fails to amaze me.

Do you remember when you first wanted to be an artist?
I simply don’t remember a time in my life when I didn’t think of myself as an artist.

My mother tells this story. When I was in kindergarten, my mother was frustrated with my messy printing. She asked the teacher what she could do to make me “stay in the lines.” The teacher told my mother that I was an artist and that they could certainly force me to stay in the lines, but that I would lose my gift.

My mother became my biggest fan.

What are you working on now?
Clouds. Big, enormous clouds that fill the entire sky (and the entire painting). If I do it right, the painting will give a sense of vast distance and space.

“Contemporary Realism” is on view through October 6, 2014.

$10 off Art on Tap Tickets Through Friday!

The Art on Tap souvenir tasting glass.
The Art on Tap souvenir tasting glass. Click above to buy tickets.

Art.
Beer.
Food.

Art on Tap is coming to The Art League October 3. If you buy your ticket by Friday, September 19, you’ll save $10. But you need to act soon! Tickets purchased after Friday and at the door will be $45.

Details & tickets on Eventbrite

Art on Tap is a new, beer-centric twist on the Art on the Rocks events we’ve held in the past. We’ve had six local breweries choose a piece of artwork by Art League instructors to pair with one of their beers. Based on those pairs, seven restaurants are bringing appetizers crafted to match.

It’s a powerful combination. Hence the tagline for Art on Tap: Art, Beer, Food.

Your job is to come to Art on Tap, try the beers and appetizers, and vote for your favorite art/beer/food combo. There’s no limit on the sampling, and you’ll take home a five-ounce tasting glass with our Art on Tap logo (above.)

What are you waiting for? Get your tickets at the Early Bird price here!

Participating breweries:

Art on Tap breweries

 

Participating restaurants:

Art on Tap restaurants

 

Featuring artwork by:

  • Scott Hutchison
  • Nancy McIntyre
  • Nancy Freeman
  • Susan Herron
  • Patrick Kirwin
  • Rachel Collins
  • Ted Betts

Meet the Instructors of the Portrait & Figure Festival (pt. 2)

All 19 instructors at the Portrait & Figure Festival.
All 19 instructors at the Portrait & Figure Festival.

19 different instructors will be at next month’s Portrait & Figure Festival, including Art League teachers and some others you may not know. Last week, we profiled four of them. See below for an introduction to four more.

The festival is the perfect opportunity to experience both a broad spectrum of viewpoints and an intensive learning experience, including one-on-one coaching sessions where you can discuss whatever you want with the instructor. The festival is open to students of all skill levels who want to learn about painting, drawing, and sculpting portraits and figures!

Tuition is $335 if you register by October 1, and we’ve added a “save my spot” option for students who want to pay half now and half later.

Bill Adair

William Adair

As you might guess from the picture above, Adair is a framer. He’s also a frame historian, frame conservator, and master gilder, but that’s not all. He’s also an artist, with a sculpture in the collection of the Smithsonian.

If you’re curious what frame history entails, Adair curated two exhibits that answer that question. The first frame exhibit in this country — “The Frame in America, 1700–1900” — opened in 1983, with a followup, “The Frame in America: 1860–1960,” in 1995.

Bill Adair’s Innovator Talk at the festival is titled “Reframing the Conversation.”

Michael Grimaldi

Study for Interior, Michael Grimaldi
Study for Interior, Michael Grimaldi

Grimaldi is one of four instructors visiting from the Art Students League of New York, and he teaches at a number of other schools as well — most notably, the Janus Collaborative School of Art, which he co-founded.

In 2004, Grimaldi traveled to the University of Buenos Aires to complete an independent study at the Department of Anatomy in the Facultad Medicina. His first breakout session will be on “Anatomical, Morphological, and Biomechanical Approaches to the Figure,” followed by “Curvilinear Perspective: Theoretical & Practical Adaptations to Interpretation of Space.”

To read a review from a recent workshop student, check out this blog post.

Ephraim Rubenstein

My Father, Ephraim Rubenstein
My Father I, pastel, by Ephraim Rubenstein

Remember last week’s post, where we mentioned that Costa Vavagiakis’s work was on the cover of Drawing magazine? If you opened that issue up, you’d also find a silverpoint drawing by his colleague, Ephraim Rubenstein, in an article about a New York exhibit on silverpoint. (See both drawings in Rubenstein’s blog post.)

Rubenstein, a New York native, taught at the University of Richmond for many years, as well as RISD and MICA. Currently, he’s on the faculty of The National Academy of Design School of Fine Arts and The Art Students League of New York.

You can read reviews of several of his recent exhibits at the George Billis Gallery website.

He draws and paints in numerous media, but Rubenstein’s talk at the festival will focus on pastel. “The Figure in Pastel: a Bridge between Drawing & Painting” is scheduled for Saturday afternoon.

Scott Hutchison

Melt by Scott Hutchison
Melt by Scott Hutchison

You’ve likely seen Hutchison’s work, whether at the “Influence & Inspiration” exhibit, the Drawing Marathon in 2012, or other Art League events. But have you seen it in motion?

Animation is the subject of much of Hutchison’s recent work, including this summer’s solo exhibit, “In Sequence,” at the Blackrock Center for the Arts. The animations take different directions and use different media including oils and graphite, but are always riveting to watch.

You can see many of the animations on the artist’s website, here, and hear his innovator talk, “Animation: the Portrait in Motion,” at the Portrait & Figure Festival.

Artist Opportunities #238

Jesse Turnbull - M’aidez
A still from M’aidez, a stop-motion animated short by Art League instructor Jesse Turnbull.

See below for exhibits, fairs, and fellowships to apply for. Click here to view past opportunities posts. Good luck!

“Rocket science is tough, and rockets have a way of failing.” — Sally Ride

Chalk artists

Deadline: September 27. Announcing the 2nd Annual Battle of the Artists, a street painting festival held on Battle Street in historic Old Town Manassas, VA. Artists are being sought to create art on the pavement using chalk pastels. There is no entry fee, and all art supplies are provided. $100 will be awarded to the “People’s Favorite” painting. This event takes place in the middle of the Manassas Fall Jubilee. Thousands of people will be in attendance. More about the event →

5×5(×5)

Deadline: October 3. Back by popular demand, this small works show at the Target Gallery is a juried exhibition that invites artists to submit work that cannot exceed 5” in any direction. This is an all media exhibition open to all artists nationally and internationally. More about the exhibit →

VMFA Fellowships

Deadline: November 7. Fellowships from the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts are offered for professionals, graduate students, and undergraduates. Applicants must be legal residents of Virginia. More about VMFA fellowships →

Bethesda Arts Festival

Deadline: December 5. The Bethesda Fine Arts Festival (May 9–10, 2015) features 130 booth spaces. The Bethesda Arts & Entertainment District advisory committee will select the artists. All original fine art and fine craft is eligible to apply. More about the festival →

Thank You For a Record-Breaking Fundraiser!

Ice Cream Bowl Fundraiser

A little rain on Saturday couldn’t stop the Ice Cream Bowl Fundraiser from having its most successful weekend ever, with 1,445 bowls sold!

(At about 1 ½ pounds per bowl before firing, that’s over a ton of clay.)

That’s a record for this fundraiser, and we want to thank everyone who came out to purchase a handmade bowl, as well as the ceramic artists who made each one. This fundraiser goes to support our ceramics department.

ice-cream-bowls-2014-1

ice-cream-bowls-2014-5

Ice cream wasn’t the only thing happening at our booth — we also took the opportunity to expand our Community Canvas. Young artists, especially, took to the project, using paint, charcoal, and anything else to add their piece to the puzzle. The new Community Canvas, part of our 60th anniversary celebrations, will be installed at the Madison Annex and unveiled at Artfête in November.

community-canvas-king-st-5

community-canvas-king-st-2

community-canvas-king-st-1

And everybody who bought a bowl and ice cream this weekend was entered to win this bowl by Art League ceramicist David Flohr, which one lucky ticketholder is taking home.

ice-cream-bowl-prize

Thank you again to everybody who came out!

“Washington From Light to Night,” Mapped

Web Bryant’s exhibit “Washington From Light to Night” looks at Washington, DC with a new perspective. Since you won’t find these locations on a tourist map, we’ve made a map showing their locations. (Click for the full size image.)

Washington From Light to Night

Exhibit catalogs are for sale in the Gallery for $20, featuring reproductions of all 15 of these paintings, plus Edge of the Watergate. The other titles are:

  1. Key Bridge Sunset
  2. Georgetown Steps
  3. Under the Whitehurst
  4. Tuition
  5. Executive Office Building
  6. The Doctor’s View
  7. Afternoon Rush
  8. Main Street USA
  9. Independence Avenue
  10. August Afternoon
  11. Sears House
  12. Seven Seconds
  13. Night Diners
  14. Washington Modern
  15. Another Wet Snow

“Washington From Light to Night” is open through October 6. To view the original map, Washington, the beautiful capital of the nation, visit the Library of Congress website.

This Weekend: Ice Cream & Art on King Street

Handmade ice cream bowls.

Ice Cream BowlsEnjoy ice cream and art with The Art League this weekend at the King Street Art Festival! We’re holding our Ice Cream Bowl Fundraiser, where you can pick your favorite bowl made by an Art League ceramic artist and a scoop of ice cream from Del Ray’s Artfully Chocolate. We’ll also have a table for anyone who wants to contribute to our Community Canvas art project.

When: Sept. 13, 10:00 am–4:00 pm & Sept. 14, 11:00 am–4:00 pm
Where: King Street Art Festival, Market Square (corner of King & N. Fairfax)
Why: Because ice cream is delicious, the bowls are lovingly handmade by Art League artists, and proceeds support the League’s ceramics department
How: $15 for your choice of bowl and a scoop of ice cream

We’ll see you there, rain or shine! For details, click here.

Last year's community art project.
Last year’s community art project.

Ice Cream Bowl Fundraiser

Light and Realism in the Gallery

“Washington from Light to Night”
“Washington from Light to Night”
From Contemporary Realism: Untitled, terra cotta, by Josh Band (foreground)
From Contemporary Realism: Untitled, terra cotta, by Josh Band (foreground)

Contemporary Realism / Washington From Light to Night
Through October 6
Opening reception tonight!

It’s been a busy year in The Art League Gallery, where our artists have been diving into recent art history for such exhibits as “Abstract Expressionism Revisited,” “Pop Art,” and “The Feminist Movement in Art.” Only two exhibits remain in the special 60th anniversary series, starting with September’s “Contemporary Realism.”

Dorothy Moss of the National Portrait Gallery juried this exhibit, which features a contemporary look at representational art.

In the solo room this month, painter Web Bryant takes a different look at the DC sights we know so well, exploring how they change in the light over the course of a day.

“Contemporary Realism” and “Washington from Light to Night” are open through October 6. Come join us tonight at Second Thursday for the opening reception! It begins at 6:30 pm.

Some more art from these exhibits:

Another Wet Snow, oil, Web Bryant
Another Wet Snow, oil, Web Bryant
“Washington from Light to Night”
“Washington from Light to Night”
Lighthouse on the Chesapeake (detail), oil, by Lynn Mehta
Lighthouse on the Chesapeake (detail), oil, by Lynn Mehta
Roxanne and Peanut, acrylic, by Lisa Neher
Roxanne and Peanut, acrylic, by Lisa Neher
Reliable, oil on panel, by Dennis Crayon
Reliable, oil on panel, by Dennis Crayon
Cotton Candy, oil on canvas, by Ray Burns
Cotton Candy, oil on canvas, by Ray Burns
Opening, acrylic, by Mark Coffey
Opening, acrylic, by Mark Coffey
Cherry Blossoms on Cliff; steel wire, limestone, and acrylic, by Thomas Mulczynski
Cherry Blossoms on Cliff; steel wire, limestone, and acrylic, by Thomas Mulczynski
Georges, oil on board by Margaret Cerutti, and Pen and Eraser, collage by Janice Peterson
Georges, oil on board by Margaret Cerutti, and Pen and Eraser, collage by Janice Peterson
“Contemporary Realism”
“Contemporary Realism”
“Washington from Light to Night,” mapped. (Illustration by Web Bryant)
“Washington from Light to Night,” mapped. (Illustration by Web Bryant)

Meet the Instructors of the Portrait & Figure Festival

All 19 instructors at the Portrait & Figure Festival.
All 19 instructors at the Portrait & Figure Festival.

There’s a veritable legion of portrait and figure artists coming to our first-ever Portrait & Figure Festival next month. 14 are Art League veterans and four are visiting from the Art Students League of New York. (A fifth, Dan Thompson, teaches both places!)

The festival is the perfect opportunity to experience both a broad spectrum of viewpoints and an intensive learning experience, including one-on-one coaching sessions where you can discuss whatever you want with the instructor. The festival is open to students of all skill levels who want to learn about painting portraits and figures!

Tuition is $335 if you register by October 1, and we’ve added a “save my spot” option for students who want to pay half now and half later.

19 different instructors will be at the festival. If you’re unfamiliar with their work, here’s an introduction to a few of these skilled artists:

Costa Vavagiakis

Three portraits by Costa Vavagiakis: Arthur, Self-Portrait, and Gioia.
Three portraits by Costa Vavagiakis: Arthur, Self-Portrait, and Gioia.

Vavagiakis has his work featured in the Winter 2014 issue of Drawing magazine. You can see him in an Art Students League of New York video, below, or in his self-portrait (above, center).

His breakout session is titled “Toned Method: toned paper & drawing instruments for fast portraits.”

 

Sharon Sprung

The Art Student, oil on panel, by Sharon Sprung.
The Art Student, oil on panel, by Sharon Sprung.

In 2005, Sprung’s portrait of a waitress acquaintance was included in the Outwin Boochever Portrait Competition at the National Portrait Gallery. (You can read about that portrait here.)

Her breakout session is on “The Features of the Face: Eyes, Nose & Lips.” You can see a little of her approach in this video:

 

Joe Mullins

A facial reconstruction by Joe Mullins.
A facial reconstruction by Joe Mullins.

Mullins is a Forensic Imaging Specialist at the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children, where he does forensic work on unidentified crime victims. In 2011, he reconstructed a 2,500-year-old mummy’s face for the Smithsonian exhibit, “Eternal Life in Ancient Egypt.” He teaches a class where students sculpt a head by reconstructing from a replica skull.

At the festival, he’ll be giving a talk on Facial Reconstruction for the Artist.

 

Danni Dawson

Three portraits by Danni Dawson.
Three portraits by Danni Dawson.

A painter and sculptor, Danni Dawson’s hundreds of portraits include the official portrait of Supreme Court justice Sandra Day O’Connor. Dawson has been teaching for The Art League since 1971, and apprenticed with portrait artist Nelson Shanks.

At the festival, Dawson will give a master demo, participate in the opening keynote and panel discussion, and give a talk with Paul Lucchesi on Sharing Creative Process & Partnership.

 

Artist Opportunities #237

New Jersey Avenue 2012 by painting instructor Bryan Jernigan.
New Jersey Avenue 2012 by painting instructor Bryan Jernigan.

Apply for some exhibits today! Click here for recent opportunities posts. Good luck!

For information about upcoming (free!) professional development seminars at The Art League, click here.

“To practice any art, no matter how well or badly, is a way to make your soul grow. So do it.” — Kurt Vonnegut

Political art

Deadline: October 3. Lines Drawn: America’s Artists Look Beyond the Politics of Red and Blue is a juried exhibit of artwork that relates to, or provides evidence of, the failure of our elected officials to address social, economic and/or political issues. The winning submissions will be exhibited and offered for sale at Charles Krause/Reporting Fine Art Gallery in DC. More about the exhibit →

Fisher Gallery

Deadline: November 7. The Rachel M. Schlesinger Concert Hall and Arts Center invites proposals from artists or art groups to present exhibitions in the Margaret W. and Joseph L. Fisher Art Gallery for the calendar year 2015. Artists must reside in the Northern Virginia/Maryland/District of Columbia Metropolitan area. Exhibitions may be solo or group. Read the call to artists →

Black History Month

Deadline: December 7. “Light of the Ancestors” is an art exhibit during Black History Month at Pepco Edison Place Gallery in DC. The curator is Carolyn S. Goodridge. More about the exhibit →


 

Last chance! The exhibits below appeared here before. Their deadlines are in the next week.

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

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 →

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 →

Next Week at The Art League: Receptions! Ice Cream!

Calendar for September 7 to 13

Next week at The Art League is packed, starting Sunday with the “Influence & Inspiration” exhibit reception at the Athenaeum. Then there’s the September exhibit reception at The Art League, receiving for September’s exhibit, workshops at the School, and the start of the Ice Cream Bowl Fundraiser at the King Street Art Festival! Here’s what’s in store:

Influence & Inspiration

Contemporary Realism

Key Bridge Sunset, oil, by Web Bryant
Key Bridge Sunset, oil, by Web Bryant

Gallery reception

Workshops

Ice Cream

Enjoying ice cream from Artfully Chocolate at the 2013 Ice Cream Bowl Fundraiser.
Enjoying ice cream from Artfully Chocolate at the 2013 Ice Cream Bowl Fundraiser.

The 2014 Art Camp Photo/Video Scrapbook

Sharing everything that happened at Art Camp this year would take another summer. So instead, here’s a short scrapbook with some photos and videos from the past few weeks. If you have photos of your own, please share them in the comments below!

Above, you can see the process and results of an environmental art lesson in Sculpture Camp. Rebecca Adams’ students started by learning about artist Andy Goldsworthy, then planned sculptures using natural materials before heading outside to construct them in a park.

What else happened this summer? Let’s see …

One of the activities in Basic Art Camp was a mixed-media carousel made with cardboard and paint. Campers cut out their own cavalcade of animals.
One of the activities in Basic Art Camp was a mixed-media carousel made with cardboard and paint. Campers cut out their own cavalcade of animals.

carousel-2 carousel-3

Campers in Nick Barnes' Jewelry Camp made everything you see here.
Campers in Nick Barnes’ Jewelry Camp made everything you see here.

jewelry-camp-1

There were several teen workshops, too. These photos are from a day of life drawing and painting in Bev Ryan's workshop, Painting and Drawing for Teens.
There were several teen workshops, too. These photos are from a day of life drawing and painting in Bev Ryan’s workshop, Painting and Drawing for Teens.

teen-drawing-1 Teen Drawing

Basic Art Camp is always something different. Here you can see papermaking with natural elements, and one of the mixed media sculptures kids were making across the room.
Basic Art Camp is always something different. Here you can see papermaking with natural elements, and one of the mixed media sculptures kids were making across the room.

paper-making

One of the popular activities in Fiber Camp was making these felted egg critters.
One of the popular activities in Fiber Camp was making these felted egg critters.
Yes, this guy has a headset and a strong sense of style.
Yes, this guy has a headset and a strong sense of style. Check out those colors!
Here's a look at some of the action in the clay studio during Ceramics Camp. Kids throw pottery on the wheel, build it by hand, and fire and glaze it, too.
Here’s a look at some of the action in the clay studio during Ceramics Camp. Kids throw pottery on the wheel, build it by hand, and fire and glaze it, too.
Clay Animation Movie Camp starts with character creation, then scripting and shooting the movie. Voicing the characters is the last step.
Clay Animation Movie Camp starts with character creation, then scripting and shooting the movie. Voicing the characters is the last step. Below is “Beached,” one of this summer’s films.

Art Camp 2014 may be over, but registration for 2015 will be starting in February. To get information on kids classes and camps, click here to join our email list or update your email preferences. Just be sure to check the box marked “youth classes & Art Camp”!

Watercolorist Carolyn Gawarecki on Albuquerque Night

Albuquerque Night by Carolyn Grossé Gawarecki was selected by the juror for the Potomac Valley Watercolorists Founders' Award. (click for larger image)
Albuquerque Night by Carolyn Grossé Gawarecki was selected by the juror for the Potomac Valley Watercolorists Founders’ Award. (click for larger image)

Carolyn Grossé Gawarecki‘s watercolors are well known to anyone who’s visited The Art League over the years — any time over the past 50 years, in fact. Carolyn is a long-time member in the Gallery, has taught at The Art League School and many other places, founded the Potomac Valley Watercolorists, and has been in countless exhibitions, of which The Art League’s ’Scapes is the latest.

Since she is the founder of the organization, it’s perhaps not surprising that Carolyn’s work caught the eye of the exhibit’s juror and was selected for the Potomac Valley Watercolorists Founders’ Award. Juror Olivia Kohler-Maga awarded Albuquerque Night for its broad, dramatic expanse of sky combined with engaging details in the city. We asked the artist to tell us a little more about her approach to watercolor:

What made you want to paint this scene?
Carolyn Grossé Gawarecki: During a visit to a friend’s home in Albuquerque I was admiring the night view from their yard in the nearby mountains. The lights from the city were illuminating and reflecting off a mass of low lying clouds and sparkling in the thin air. I remembered the mood and then painted my interpretation after returning home. I tried to figure out how to get the effect so I decided to paint the picture wet in wet. First I threw some liquid mask in the area of the distant city to preserve the whites before I wet the paper. Then I splashed on the paint trying to make the clouds bold and dramatic with soft edges. I made the land areas very dark but with soft edges also. When the paper had dried, I removed the mask and then splattered some reds and yellows for the city lights. Voila, my night scene!

Painting a good watercolor requires a lot of planning with sketches and even more thinking of the process that particular picture will require. Paint it in your mind before putting brush to paper. Always plan the values with a good value study before painting.

What makes a good landscape?
A good landscape needs a touch of something a little different in color, texture, subject, approach or technique, and good design like most any other good painting requires. With Albuquerque Night I wanted to do a bold, strong, dramatic painting that would stand out with some twinkling colorful lighting effects.

Albuquerque Night (detail)
Albuquerque Night (detail)

What was on your palette for this painting?
I use Winsor Newton transparent watercolors with a few opaques. This painting needed several blues; Winsor blue, French Ultramarine, Cobalt Blue, plus Burnt Sienna, Alizarin Crimson, Raw Sienna, Winsor Yellow.

Why are you a watercolorist?
I started watercolor in my early twenties. I had two little children, no place to store wet oils, my husband was a grad student. So the medium appealed to me because it was fast, clean, and easy to take around and store. The more I used the watercolors, the more I liked them and developed a facility for the medium. Then I also started some classes for local friends and things just sort of snowballed. It turned out I was a good teacher and living in the Boulder, CO area, the landscape material was all around me.

What are you working on now?
Currently I’m on a hiatus since I’d been in a debilitating car accident and am struggling to return to my normal activities. So I’m looking to decide what to do in the field and where to begin. My palette has been refilled and is ready.

’Scapes and Structures are both open through this Monday, September 8. You can read our interviews with some of the other artists in these exhibits here.

Artist Opportunities #236

Cups by ceramics instructor Allison Severance.
Cups by ceramics instructor Allison Severance.

Exhibits, jobs, and other opportunities for artists. Click here to view recent posts in this category. Good luck!

“Creativity takes courage.” — Henry Matisse

Illustrator wanted

A start-up children’s book venture is seeking an artist. This is an excellent opportunity to bring exciting stories to life involving cats and children. All levels of experience from beginner to expert are welcome to apply. Contact Pam Clapp at 703-765-4763 or [email protected].

Southeast Craft Exhibition

Deadline: September 22. Artspace invites artists working in a variety of craft media to enter the Fine Contemporary Craft Exhibition of the Southeastern US, a biennial national juried exhibition. Eligible media include functional or sculptural works in the following: basketry, ceramics, fiber, furniture (any media), glass, jewelry, metal, mixed media, handmade paper and wood. Eligible ties to the Southeastern US include birthplace, residence, or education based in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, and West Virginia. More about the exhibition →

Large Works @ The Art League

Deadline: October 3. For “Large Works” at The Art League, image size must be no smaller than 27″ × 39″. Stretched canvas can be no smaller than 28″ × 40″. There is no maximum size, but works must be able to fit in the Gallery doors and weigh no more than 40 pounds. “Large Works” is online entry only; receiving for “Small Works” is November 3 and 4. Read the exhibit prospectus →

Fall Lecture Series

This fall’s free lecture series at The Art League begins with an artist resume workshop and a presentation on getting press coverage for artists. Find more information and register here →


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

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 →

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

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 →

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 →

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 →

Portrait competition

Deadline: November 30, 2014. Entry is open for the 2016 Outwin Boochever Portrait Competition at the National Portrait Gallery. More about the portrait competition →

Memorial Exhibit for Jim Burford

A mixed-media painting by Jim Burford.
A mixed-media painting by Jim Burford.

Jim Burford, a longtime Art League drawing and painting instructor, passed away in July. He also taught at Marymount University, where the Jim Burford Memorial Exhibition will open September 5.

‘“He was a very energetic, popular professor who loved teaching,” said Judy Bass, a professor of fine arts and director of [Marymount’s Barry Gallery]. “He had a great personality and was very accessible.”’

Read more on marymount.edu and on the Barry Gallery’s page. The exhibit opens Friday, September 5, at the Barry Gallery at Marymount (2807 N. Glebe Road in Arlington). The opening reception is Friday from 5:00 to 7:30 pm, and the exhibit is open through October 9. The exhibit and reception are open to all, so please share with students and anyone else who knew Jim Burford!

His obituary can be found here.

By Jim Burford
By Jim Burford