Monday, November 24, 2014

Call for Art - Nudes

NAKED AND NOT AFRAID

Jackson Junge Gallery is immediately seeking artists’ submissions for an exhibition titled, “Naked and Not Afraid” opening January 2015. An artist’s reception will be held Friday, January 23rd.  Submissions for the exhibition are free.

The nude figure has been a traditional genre in Western Art dating back to Ancient Greece.  Its use has varied overtime from expressing ideals of beauty, to more religious, erotic, or social connotations.  But what does it mean to be naked? Lord Kenneth Clark states in “The Nude: A Study in Ideal Form” that to be naked is to be deprived of clothes, implying embarrassment and shame. Why must nakedness be so shameful? This exhibition rebels against the societal constraints that make us conceal our true self.  “Naked and Not Afraid” reveals our vulnerabilities by courageously and proudly embracing that which makes each individual unique.

Artists in all media are encouraged to submit any work, or sketches and supporting documentation with their artistic interpretation incorporating themes involving vulnerable self-expression. Priority and preference will be given to new works of art.  Artworks must be professionally presented and ready for installation.    

Themes to consider:
·         What is the difference between being nude and naked?
·         “Implied nudity” vs. “explicit nudity”
·         What societal constraints are used to shame us?
·         What does your stripped down vulnerable self look like?
·         Self-Portraiture


How to Submit:

The following information must be included for each submission of art:
·         Name
·         Address
·         Phone and Email Contact
·         Title
·         Medium
·         Dimensions
·         Price
·         Brief Description of how it relates to the exhibition

 No more than 8 pieces may be submitted.

Send jpegs as attachments to support@j2gallery.comwith the file name as “artwork title _ artist’s last name”
The deadline for submissions is January  5, 2015. Incomplete submissions will not be considered. The jury selection begins January 6th, 2015.  If selected, artwork must be received no later than January 18, 2015.

You may also submit via our website: http://www.j2gallery.com/about/call-for-artists/special-exhibit-naked-and-not-afraid
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Thursday, November 20, 2014

Freelance Comic Artist

Contributing Comic Artist

Everyday Feminism is seeking a freelance Contributing Comic Artist who can create comics highlighting intersectional feminism for our online magazine.
You will work with the editors on the concept and draw a minimum of 2 comics per month designed to raise people’s awareness around different anti-oppression issues. The issues covered range from sexism, racism, homophobia, transphobia, classism, ableism, to fatphobia.
Contributing Comic Artists enjoy the following benefits:
  • $75 or higher payment per comic, depending on length
  • Free access to all online courses offered by Everyday Feminism
  • Joining one of the biggest and fastest growing online feminist sites that gets 3 million visitors and 5.5 million page views per month

Qualifications

  • Strong desire to use their comics to raise awareness on social issues
  • Sophisticated understanding of intersectional feminism and social justice
  • Excellent ability to combine artistic skill, insightful anti-oppression analysis, and humor to raise awareness
  • Meet deadlines and work with editors effectively
  • Curious, innovative, ask question, generate new ideas and solutions
  • Eager to learn, willing to experiment knowing it might fail, and able to admit mistakes or inexperience
  • Strong ability to work independently and as part of a team
  • Self-directed and eager to meet or exceed objectives

Apply Now

We are currently accepting applications. Early applications are encouraged since it is a rolling process.
Please send your resume, cover letter, and 5 comic samples, ideally on social justice issues, to Sandra Kim at jobs@everydayfeminism.com with ‘Contributing Comic Artist Application’ in the subject line.
In your cover letter, please include responses to the questions below:
  • What first got you engaged in feminism?
  • What does intersectional feminism mean to you and how do you try to make your feminism intersectional and inclusive?
  • What do you enjoy and/or appreciate about Everyday Feminism’s online magazine?
  • What topics do you feel confident in drawing about and why?

Everyday Feminism is an affirmative action and equal opportunity employer. Queer, trans, and differently-abled people of color are strongly encouraged to apply.

Friday, November 7, 2014

Call for Art - Small Works

Small Works Juried Exhibition

Submitted by harper on Thu, 11/06/2014 - 9:09pm
Harper College 38th Annual National Juried Exhibition. National juried show of Small Works, including all media except jewelry, film/video. Maximum 24 inches, largest dimension, including framing. Entry fee: $35, 3 digital images on CD. Juror: Allison Peters Quinn, Director of Exhibitions at the Hyde Park Art Center, Chicago. Postmark deadline: Jan 16, 2015. Exhibition: March 2015. Color exhibition catalog. Purchase awards available.  Info: harpercollege.edu/smallworks  Questions: smallworks@harpercollege.edu
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Portrait Competition - Smithsonian

2016 Outwin Boochever Portrait Competition

National Portrait Gallery - Smithsonian Institute

Who May Enter?

The competition is open to all professional artists age 18 and over who are living and working in the United States and its territories.

What To Enter?

Each artist may enter one work depicting anyone—a friend, a stranger, a relative, yourself—but it must be the result of the artist’s direct encounter with that person. While the human form must be the focus of the work, artists are invited to interpret the concept of portraiture broadly; for example, an entry might not include a face.
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 including but not restricted to: painting, drawing and watercolor, sculpture, weaving, ceramics, photography, prints, video, film, performance, and digital or time-based media.
Paintings, drawings, photographs, prints, pastels, and watercolors should be framed (strip frames on paintings are acceptable). Paintings should preferably be unglazed. Works on paper should be framed and glazed with UV filtering glass or Plexiglas. All two-dimensional work shall measure no more than 7 feet by 7 feet by 8 inches (including frame), nor should they weigh more than 150 pounds. The National Portrait Gallery will provide attachment hardware for works selected for exhibition.
Sculptures may be freestanding or wall-mounted and be composed of any sculptural medium. This includes, but is not limited to, stone, metal, fiber, clay, wood, paper, or resin. Sculptures should not exceed 7 feet (height) by 7 feet by 4 feet in size, nor should they weigh more than 150 pounds. The National Portrait Gallery will provide platforms, pedestals, or attachment hardware for sculpture selected for exhibition.
Video, film, digital and time-based media will be accepted, and special instructions for entering these works will be available in the online entry form. The online entry form MUST be completed.

How Do I Enter?

Entries will only be accepted electronically, through CallForEntries.org from August 1 until November 30, 2014:
>> Enter The Competition
(You will be leaving the Smithsonian Institution’s website and entering CallForEntry.org)
CafÉ (CallForEntry.org), a third-party art services organization “that develops technology systems that benefit the arts,“ is collecting information about artists submitting entries to the Outwin Boochever Portrait Competition on behalf of the National Portrait Gallery. Please note that CaFÉ‘s Terms and Conditions apply to artist submissions (application and images). Any data that the National Portrait Gallery receives from CaFÉ is subject to the National Portrait Gallery’s Terms and Conditions for the competition, which can be found on the Enter page, as well as the Smithsonian Institution’s Terms of Use and privacy statement, which can be found at http://www.si.edu/termsofuse and http://www.si.edu/privacy.
Entry to the competition—and submission of JPEG images—is available online for a nonrefundable registration fee of $45. Artists who wish to submit time-based media (video, film, digital animation) will find instructions for entry on the competition website.
Artists may submit a statement about their work, their particular entry, and/or the circumstances of the creation of the portrait. Dimensions and medium information will also be required.

Entry Deadlines and Schedule

Entries may be submitted beginning August 1, 2014, 9:00 a.m. MT (Mountain Time). Call for Entries closes November 30, 2014, midnight MT(Mountain Time).
Semifinalists will be notified March 20, 2015. Semifinalist work must be available for shipping to Washington, D.C. July 13, 2015.
On or about September 18, 2015, finalists will be notified of selection and non-finalists will be contacted about return of their works.
The 2016 Outwin Boochever Portrait Competition exhibition will open at the National Portrait Gallery on March 12, 2016, and will close on January 8, 2017. The Portrait Gallery is planning a national tour of the exhibition to three additional venues through August 2018. Artworks will be returned to exhibiting lenders at the close of the final venue of the exhibition.

Judging and Notification

The first round of jurying will be done online by a panel of experts selected by the National Portrait Gallery, who will select approximately 100 semifinalists. On or before March 20, 2015, the National Portrait Gallery will contact artists who have been selected as semifinalists by e-mail. Artists whose work was not selected for further consideration will also be notified at this time. Upon notification of semifinalist status, entrants will be required to sign a loan agreement. Artists will be required to sign an affadavit confirming their eligibility.
On or before September 18, 2015, approximately 50 to 60 finalists whose work has been selected for the exhibition, including those awarded prizes, will be notified by e-mail. Works not selected will be returned to the owners only to an address within the United States as provided by the artist. The public will have the opportunity to vote for the People's Choice Award during the run of the exhibition.
All works transported to Washington will be returned to the owners at the Portrait Gallery's expense.

Rules

The National Portrait Gallery reserves the right at its sole discretion to disqualify any artist it finds to be tampering with the entry process or the operation of the Portrait Competition or website or to be acting in violation of the Rules of Entry.
Artists chosen as semifinalists may not alter the work entered in any way, i.e., by printing photographs in different sizes, by additional varnishing, etc. Work entered in the competition may not be sold at any time during the competition, subsequent exhibition, and tour.
Artists must have written approval to submit a work by the artist that is owned by a third party, and must provide the owner’s guarantee that (1) the owner will be bound by these rules and (2) if required the work may be placed on loan to the National Portrait Gallery for the competition, and duration of the exhibition and subsequent tour.
All exhibiting artists and prizewinners will also be required to sign a loan form for the duration of the exhibition and any subsequent tour, as well as a consent form for the use of their name, image, and artwork in connection with the Portrait Competition exhibition, publication, and all related advertising, marketing, publicity, public programs, and promotion for the exhibition.
Semifinalist works will be packed if necessary, and shipped, at the National Portrait Gallery’s expense, to Washington, D.C., for further judging from the original portraits. Work brought to and from the National Portrait Gallery for the Portrait Competition will be handled by professional art handlers and installers and all arrangements will be made by the National Portrait Gallery.
Work will be picked up only from an address in the United States and its territories, and the National Portrait Gallery will return work only to the address from which it was picked up, unless the artist notifies the National Portrait Gallery in writing of a change of address in the United States. All packing and shipping will be handled and paid for by the National Portrait Gallery, but the artist must cover any costs that exceed $3,000 one way.
If the return address is more than 50 miles distant from the original pick-up address, the artist may be required to cover the difference in shipping costs. The artist shall carry insurance for the work while in transit to and from the National Portrait Gallery. Insurance in the amount of the good-faith estimate of value determined by the artist shall be placed on all loans and carried in force from the time the work enters the custody of the National Portrait Gallery and is condition-reported until the work leaves the National Portrait Gallery at the conclusion of the exhibition, including any subsequent tour. This shall be an all-risk policy, subject to standard policy exclusions carried by the Smithsonian Institution, and all costs shall be borne by the National Portrait Gallery.
In the event of loss or damage to the work while in the custody of the National Portrait Gallery, the artist will be required to accept insurance proceeds as its sole form of remedy against the National Portrait Gallery. Works that cannot be repaired if damaged due to the nature of the materials will not be insured and the National Portrait Gallery bears no responsibility for damage or loss to such works. The National Portrait Gallery bears no responsibility for loss or damage caused by normal wear and tear or inherent deterioration of the works. Works selected for exhibition cannot be removed by the artist or owner before the end of the exhibition (and subsequent tour) and may not be sold during the course of the competition or the exhibition (March 12, 2016 – January 8, 2017) and the subsequent tour (February 2017 through August 2018).
The National Portrait Gallery is not responsible for any problems or technical malfunctions of the Internet or any website, including injury or damage to artists or to any other person's computer related to or resulting from participating or downloading materials in this Portrait Competition. If, for any reason, the Portrait Competition is not capable of running as planned, the National Portrait Gallery reserves the right at its sole discretion to cancel, terminate, modify, or suspend the Portrait Competition. Collection of personally identifiable information from artists will be done in accordance with the Smithsonian Institution Privacy Policy as posted on http://www.si.edu/privacy.

Prizes

The winner of the competition will receive a cash award of $25,000 and will be awarded a separate commission to portray a remarkable living American for the Portrait Gallery’s collection. The winning artist and the Portrait Gallery will collaborate to select the subject for the commissioned portrait. The second-prize winner will receive $7,500, and the third-prize winner will receive $5,000. Up to four additional artists may be commended for their work, and they will receive $1,000 each. The winner of the People’s Choice Award will receive $500. All finalists’ works will form a major exhibition on view at the National Portrait Gallery from March 12, 2016, through January 8, 2017 and the subsequent national tour through August 2018.

The Exhibition

The Outwin Boochever Portrait Competition 2016 is scheduled to be on view at the National Portrait Gallery from March 12, 2016 through January 8, 2017. A national tour is being planned with three venues through August 2018. The exhibition will comprise approximately 50 selected portraits, including the prizewinning entries.
The up to seven top artists who have been shortlisted for an award will be expected to attend the presentation ceremony in March 2016. The National Portrait Gallery will reimburse these artists for standard travel and lodging costs, subject to prior approval by the National Portrait Gallery. All artists whose works are exhibited will be invited to attend the opening reception.

Rights

Ownership of all portraits submitted for the Portrait Competition, including copyright, will remain the property of the artist, but it is a condition of entry that the artist shall grant to the National Portrait Gallery the irrevocable, royalty-free, worldwide right to use and reproduce all exhibited works for the exhibition publications, public programs, publicity, promotion, research, postcards, prints, posters, and other products, in all formats, including but not limited to electronic distribution on websites and social media accounts maintained by the National Portrait Gallery and the Smithsonian, in connection with the Portrait Competition and resulting exhibition.
Distribution can occur either through printed or electronic media. The artist is required to secure a written model release from the subject to enable the National Portrait Gallery to use and reproduce the portrait. Semifinalists will be provided with a form for this purpose. The winning artist will be required to transfer ownership of, and assign all rights, including copyright, in the commissioned portrait to the National Portrait Gallery, but the National Portrait Gallery will grant the artist a license to reproduce the portrait for use in his or her portfolio for noncommercial, portfolio purposes.
The commissioned portrait will be submitted to the National Portrait Gallery’s Commission for approval of its inclusion in the National Portrait Gallery’s permanent collection. By participating in this contest, artists agree to be bound by these rules, including all eligibility requirements. All interpretations of the rules and decisions by the National Portrait Gallery relating to the rules and the Portrait Competition are final.

Click here for more information. 

Monday, November 3, 2014

Resources for Artists



Associations:
AIGA, the professional association for design, http://www.aiga.org/
The Society of Children's Book Writers and Illustrators -Illinois Chapter, http://www.scbwi-illinois.org/index.html
International Game Developers Association, http://www.igda.org/
National Association of Independent Artists, https://naia-artists.org/
College Art Association, http://www.collegeart.org/
Association of Teaching Artists, http://www.teachingartists.com/
Illinois Art Council, http://www.arts.illinois.gov/
Chicago Artist’s Coalition, http://www.chicagoartistscoalition.org/
Naperville Art League, http://www.napervilleartleague.com/
Elmhurst Artist Guild, http://www.elmhurstartistsguild.org/
Oak Park Art League, http://www.oakparkartleague.org/
Nature Artist Guild, http://natureartistsguild.com/

Online Resources:
Chicago Artist Resource, http://www.chicagoartistsresource.org/
Self Employment in the Arts, http://www.selfemploymentinthearts.com
Professional Artist Client Toolkit, http://www.artpact.com/
New York Foundation for the Arts, https://www.nyfa.org/
Empty Easel, http://emptyeasel.com/

Online Stores for Artists:

Events:

Local Art Centers:
Beverly Arts Center, http://www.beverlyartcenter.org/
Hyde Park Art Center, http://www.hydeparkart.org/
Riverside Art Center, http://www.riversideartscenter.com/
Lillstreet Art Center, http://lillstreet.com/
Art Center Highland Park, http://www.theartcenterhp.org/
Evanston Art Center, http://www.evanstonartcenter.org/
Brickton Art Center, http://www.bricktonartcenter.org/
South Chicago Art Center, http://www.happyartcenter.org/
Zhou B Art Center, http://www.zhoubartcenter.com/
Bridgeport Art Center, http://bridgeportart.com/
Chicago Art and Design Center, http://chicagoartanddesigncenter.com/
Addison Center for the Arts, http://www.addisoncenterforthearts.com/
Frankenstone Art Center, http://www.frankenstonea.com/
Cedarhurst Center for the Arts, http://www.cedarhurst.org/
Contemporary Art Center – Peoria, http://www.peoriacac.org/
David Adler Music and Arts Center, http://www.adlercenter.org/
Fine Line Creative Arts Center, http://www.finelineca.org/
McLean County Arts Center, http://www.mcac.wildapricot.org/
Chesterton Art Center, http://www.chestertonart.com/

Art Fair Resources:
Illinois Art Fair Directory, http://illinoisartfairdirectory.org/
Amdur Productions, http://amdurproductions.com/
Art Fair Insiders, http://www.artfairinsiders.com/

Freelance Job Websites:
Freelance Jobs Chicago, http://freelancejobschicago.com/