Submit Entry to LA MobileArts Festival 2012 by July 15

Mobile art pioneers from around the world will show off their latest creations at the LA Mobile Arts Festival August 18-26 at Santa Monica Arts Studios (SMAS). The festival will be a fusion of art and technology, exhibited in 2,400 square feet of prime exhibition space in Arena 1 at SMAS.

Entries are being accepted from now until July 15, 2012.

“We welcome submissions for all the mobile arts—photography, sound- and video-based works, sculptural and performance art pieces,” said Daria Polichetti, co-founder of iPhoneArt.com (IPA) which is co-sponsoring the festival.  “We are thinking big – and encourage artists to investigate ways of going beyond traditional presentation methods.”

In addition to accepting proposals, IPA will also be reaching out to artists with ideas for solo and collaborative installations, said Polichetti. “We are looking at new printing techniques, three-dimensional installations, environmental design and much more. Funds will be made available for the projects we are most excited about.”

Santa Monica Art Studios is a major mecca for contemporary art and design in the Los Angeles area. This vast, historic airplane hangar was converted to a modern-day artists’ colony in 2003. Under its soaring roofline, artists of every persuasion come to share, create, and sell their works in studio and exhibition spaces.

At the festival, exhibiting artists will be able to set up their personal IPA iPrints store, through which they can sell prints not only to exhibit attendees but to also to art lovers worldwide.

The iPrints Store, currently in beta testing, was created by artists for artists. It will offer museum-quality printing and options such as mounting prints on eco-friendly bamboo panels. Artists will have full control over their work, including the ability to track limited and signed editions.

Some of the artists who will be taking part in this year’s festival can be seen on the 2011 IPA Mobile Grant page.

LINKS

LA Mobile Arts Festival: Submission Rules and Deadlines

The iPrints Store

iPhone Art’s 2011 Mobile Art Grant Recipients

 iPhone Art’s Manifesto

Organization Helps Emerging Artists Get Their Works Shown at Contemporary Art Fairs

ARTISTS. If you think that gallery representation is the only way to have your work exhibited at a top-tier contemporary art fair, check out the website of New Emerging Artists.

New Emerging Artists seeks to support emerging artists by providing access to major exhibitions, increased exposure, and opportunities to sell their work.

Each year, New Emerging Artists exhibits at four of the top contemporary art fairs in the U.S. They choose five emerging artists to exhibit at event.

To be considered, simply register on the New Emerging Artists website and upload three to five images of your best work.  Include a title, the medium, the dimensions, and the year in which is was created.

Artists working in all mediums will be considered, as long as you over 18 years old and over and your work is original and has been completed within the last three years. Video installations are accepted. Other works must not exceed more than 72 inches in any direction.

A $35 fee is required if you want to be considered for one of the four shows; $100 if you want to be considered for all four shows.  If your work is sold, you will receive 70% of the proceeds.

Below are the next four shows at which New Emerging Artists will be offering exhibition opportunities.

Houston Fine Art Fair
September 14-16, 2012
Apply to New Emerging Artists by June 5, 2012

Pulse Miami
December 6-9, 2012
Apply to New Emerging Artists by August 7, 2012

LA Art Show
January 23-27, 2013
Apply to New Emerging Artists by September 14, 2012

Art Pad SF
May 16-20, 2013
Apply to New Emerging Artists by March 1, 2013

LINKS

Why New Emerging Artists?

New Emerging Artists Opportunities

Art on the Marquee Unveils Its Second Exhibition

The second round of works is now being featured on “Art on the Marquee,” an ongoing project to commission public media art for display on the 80-foot-tall multi-screen LED marquee outside the Boston Convention & Exhibition Center in South Boston. The project is a collaboration between Boston Cyberarts and the Massachusetts Convention Center Authority.

The works will be screened daily (interspersed with commercial and informational content) as part of the MCCA’s longstanding neighborhood art program. All the works will be screened continuously on Sunday evenings from 8 p.m. – 9 p.m.

“This latest round of new art on the marquee is a testament to the strength of our new public art program and the unique talent in New England,” said James E. Rooney, executive director of the Massachusetts Convention Center Authority. “We truly believe that over time, as the growth of similar public video marquees grow, our collaboration with Boston Cyberarts will serve as a showcase for the rest of the world.”

“We couldn’t be happier with the second round of works. The artists have tackled the challenge of making works for a video sculpture, and are taking advantage of the different orientations and resolutions of the screens,” said Boston Cyberarts Director George Fifield. “And, we’re thrilled that ‘Art on the Marquee’ has captured the imagination of the city and that people are really seeing these pieces. They don’t have to go into a gallery – the work is right there in front of them – 80-feet tall!”

 About Art on the Marquee

 The largest urban screen in New England, “Art on the Marquee” offers artists more than 3,000 square feet of digital display on seven screens. The screens provide full-motion video and are seen by more than 100,000 pedestrians and motorists. The marquee is visible for a half a mile in many directions and is seen by traffic on Summer, D, and Congress streets, as well as from the surrounding hotels, office buildings and the Seaport World Trade Center.

A panel of Boston Cyberarts and MCCA staff selected the works that are featured. Calls for proposals will be issued throughout the year.

Boston Cyberarts is collaborating with digital media departments at Emerson College, Mass College of Art, and Rhode Island School of Design to create student-made work for the marquee. In the future, other colleges, universities and local high schools will be included in the initiative.

The  website (www.artonthemarquee.com) includes details about the works, artists, viewing schedules, events and future calls for artists.

 About The Artists

Francois De Costerd and Todd Antonellis: “Axiom #3: Territory”
This piece presents built and un-built environments in a series of tableaux that layer intensely color-saturated satellite and aerial photography. From an impossibly high point of view, the imagery moves, spins, zooms in and out and dissolves into the next tableau. “Territory” is part of Cycles and Ideals, an ongoing collaborative project that is a visual study of Western civilization dealing with the allure and implications of the consumer economy. www.cyclesandideals.com

Christopher Field and Sarah West: “I Am Waiting”
A visual representation of the rhythm and pattern of urban circulation on the subway and train lines of the Boston area, “I Am Waiting” uses multiple screens to highlight intersections of movement. This work features footage (both abstract and representational) of moving trains with shifting perspectives, colors and textures.  www.ckfield.com

Georgie Friedman. “Seas And Skies”
Art on the Marquee. "Sea and Skies" by Georgie FriedmanThis piece reintroduces elements of nature into the urban environment. Video of Boston’s blue sky and white clouds with a formation of circling birds on the tall vertical portion of the marquee is juxtaposed with video of the Pacific Ocean forming a series of large, crashing waves along the bottom horizontal screens. The created seascape shows its artificiality through a shift in scale and perspective as waves heave past their confines, clouds are cut off, and giant birds emerge from nowhere and then disappear. www.georgiefriedman.com

Lina Maria Giraldo: “Rain”
Art on the Marquee. Rain by Lina Marie GiraldoThis computer-generated animation represents how many bottles of water and coffee and soda cups we consume and waste every day. Bottles and cups start falling as if it they were raindrops. The way these life-size cups and bottles fall and bounce makes viewers feel as if they are literally under a shower of bottles and cups. After the screen has filled up, the viewer has the sensation of being covered in a huge mountain of bottles and cups. www.linamariagiraldo.com

Christopher GraefeLinda Dehart and Meg Brooker: “Emergence”
The Colors in Motion creative team provides architects, designers, planners and developers with transformational content sourced from traditional art forms. “Emergence” is the work of three members of Color in Motion: a painter, dancer, and digital media artist. Inspired by new large-scale vertical and horizontal digital media surfaces that break the standard aspect ratios of traditional video, Linda DeHart painted a series of abstract watercolors specifically for public displays. Digitally scanned at high resolution and artfully sequenced, the paintings provide an idea “canvas” for dancer Meg Brooker’s graceful gestures. Digital media artist and compositor Christopher Graefe wove these art forms together so that a dazzling panoply of rich colors and textures slowly transform from one composition to another. The effect is an ever-changing and intricate study of light and form that celebrates the grace and beauty of the human form in nature. www.colorsinmotion.com

Ben Houge: “Model Lightbox”
This digital collage shows photographs of backlit fashion advertisements that Houge took before moving from Shanghai to Boston. Tassels and fringes, pouty lips, and vapid eyes are extracted from their brand logos and marketing taglines, suggesting that in our intensely message-saturated media environment  images should be free to be, not sell.  www.benhouge.com

Michael Lewy – “City Of Work”
This piece is part of a long-term project that uses computer graphics and animation to create a dystopian society about the nature of work. The Marquee project is an animation of an office worker riding an endless elevator juxtaposed against video of the same worker in a solitary office. www.mlewy.com

Dennis Miller: “IV”
This animated abstract video uses bright, morphing colors in a geometric design. Thick converging lines change size and angle while the animation pans outward (up and down simultaneously) from an origin precisely at the upper tip of the bottom screen. The hard angles of the work align with the unusual curves of the screens themselves. www.dennismiller.neu.edu/

Matthew Shanley: “Building Boston”
This artwork reflects Shanley’s fascination that much of Boston is built upon man-made land. Thanks to human investment and labor, what was once water is now a thriving community. Playing with the different orientations of the component screens, the work contrasts video panning across the brick and rows of windows of local Fort Point buildings with video of water with layered animations plotting out the ghosts of future streets. www.littlesecretsrecords.com

Jeffu Warmouth: “Cut”
Art on the Marquee. "Cut" by Jeffu WarmouthBlack crumpled balls of paper hanging by strings are inverted, so they appear to be struggling to fly, held in the grip of a reversed gravity, tethered to the ground by threads. The action is in slow motion so it appears more significant on the monumental screens of the Marquee. A hand holding scissors reaches in and cuts the threads one at a time. More balls “drop” i.e. jump up, held by string, and the process repeats itself, ad infinitum. www.jeffu.tv

LINKS

Art on the Marquee

About the Massachusetts Convention Center Authority

About Boston Cyberarts

RELATED POSTS

Art on the Marquee Commissions Public Media Art on Urban Screen in Boston


 

See Your Art Displayed on Times Square Billboards

If you would like to have your work seen in bright lights by hundreds of thousands of people who visit Times Square, submit your entry to the “Art Takes Times Square” competition.  The event is being conducted by Artists Wanted, Chasama, and the Times Square Alliance.

One artist will be selected to receive $10,000 cash, inclusion in a limited edition, printed “Art Takes Times Square” book, and the exhibition of a lifetime— his or her art displayed on the most iconic billboards of Times Square. The organizers of the competition will also be producing an online feature that will be sent out to hundreds of thousands of art enthusiasts around the globe.

Any creative person in the world can enter as long as you are 18 years or older.  Simply take a few minutes to upload photos of your creative work and create a free competition profile. You can submit a portfolio of up to 20 images.  (Standard entry deadline is April 30; final entry deadline is May 25.) The winners will be notified in June.

Curated by Art Enthusiasts around the World

The “Art Takes Times Square” exhibition will be curated by art lovers around the world. Visitors to the Artists Wanted website can sign up to “collect” their favorite artists and help decide who will be displayed on the massive billboards of Times Square this summer.

So if you decide to enter the competition, plan to share your portfolio with friends, family and colleagues. Use email, Facebook, Twitter and other social networking tools to encourage your fan club to collect your works. The most collected artists will have their submissions reviewed by chashama and Artists Wanted to determine the Grand Prize winner to be featured in Times Square and awarded $10,000 in cash.

Artists Wanted will also be selecting artists to feature to tens of thousands of followers on their social networking channels and e-mail list. Visit the Artists Wanted website for details on entry procedures and answers to frequently asked questions.

LINKS

Art Takes Time Square Competition

About Artists Wanted

Artists Wanted is a collaborative project dedicated to building lasting opportunities for emerging talent. Created by several New York City artists and creative organizations, Artists Wanted is dedicated to making the process of breaking into the professional art world more welcoming, dynamic, and open-ended.

Mission Statement: Artists Wanted

About Chashama

Chashama supports creativity in New York City by repurposing vacant properties. Each property is recycled as a work or show space for artists, and made available at no charge, or at highly subsidized rates. These efforts invigorate the surrounding communities with an influx of innovative programs, culture, creativity, and commerce.

Mission Statement: Chasama

About The Times Square Alliance

The Times Square Alliance develops techniques and relationships to bring temporary high-quality, cutting-edge art and performance to Times Square’s public spaces, so that it is known globally as a place where ordinary people encounter authentic, ever-changing urban art in multiple forms and media

Mission Statement: Times Square Alliance

 

Art San Diego Uses Kickstarter to Raise Funds for Art Labs

ART SAN DIEGO (ASD) has launched a Kickstarter campaign in hopes of raising $25,000 to commission 15+ art groups to create “Art Labs” in conjunction with the fair. Commissions will range from $500 to $2,000 per project.

Projects selected for the “Art Lab” designation will run during the ART SAN DIEGO event (September 6-9) in various locations in Balboa Park and throughout San Diego. They can be sited at indoor or outdoor public spaces, but must invite participation by the general public.

ASD organizers plan to release an RFP in late April, seeking proposals related to all disciplines,  including visual art, performance art, multimedia art, fiber arts and online/virtual art.

For 2012, event organizers will be seeking proposals for projects that promote a Creative Clash. For example, they will be seeking Art Lab projects that:

  • Engage art communities to work across disciplines and cultures exploring ways to activate cities and the urban environments through artistic interventions.
  • Establish unique partnerships and result in unusual and unanticipated collaborations.

“We are looking for projects that break into the public realm in surprising ways, reaching people beyond traditional limitations of class, age, race and education,” explained Ann Berchtold, co-founder of ASD. “‘Art Labs will feature single and multi-artist exhibitions, performance, urban multimedia installations, cooperative gallery and institution events and exhibitions, and music performances at locations around town.”

“Art Labs” will be promoted as a key part of ART SAN DIEGO and ARTS MONTH. Artists who are confirmed by mid-July will be featured in the show catalog which achieved over 80,000 impressions (print and online readership) in 2010. “Art Labs” will also receive special promotion through our email distribution list of over 10,000 collectors, our social network channels, iPhone apps, and interactive map.

The 2011 ASD fair had 19 “Art Labs” sites from North Park to Tijuana to the Airport, with some locations hosting multiple projects. Approximately 250 artists, curators and volunteers were involved.

The Kickstarter campaign was launched to support 2012 Art Labs because “All of us at Art San Diego understand the importance of compensating artists for their work.” said Berchtold.  “We feel very strongly about it and want to set the stage with a commitment that all future local non-commercial art involvement in the fair be fairly compensated – either through commerce at the fair or commissions.”

LINKS

About Art San Diego

Kickstarter Campaign: Art Labs at Art San Diego

Occupy Wall Space 2: Art Show Promotes Love, Art, and Houston Artists

This week, I’ll highlight ways that artists, designers, and photographers are using Valentine’s Day as a way to promote more personalized and meaningful gifts.  Let’s start with a Valentine’s Art Show and Market in Houston designed to benefit area artists.

A Celebration of Many Facets of Love

With all the turmoil, struggle, division, and inequality in the world, maybe what the world needs now is an art show to pay tribute to love in all its forms. At least that’s what Houston photographer and antique dealer Gordon Greenleaf believes.

So, when he decided to do a follow up to the first “Occupy Wall Space” art show he held last November, he settled on Sunday, February 12 as the date and chose this theme: “Occupy Wall Space 2 – For Love and Art, A Valentine’s Market.” The event will be held at Rudyard’s British Pub, 2010 Waugh Drive, Houston, from 4 to 8 pm.

Greenleaf started the “Occupy Wall Space” show as a way to help local artists sell their work with no upfront gallery fees or deducted commissions. The first event was an impromptu show at Cecil’s Pub in Houston. Artists were charged nothing to show their work, and kept all of the proceeds from their sales.

“It is difficult enough for aspiring artists to make a little return on their art,” says Greenleaf. “Of course, art galleries need to make money to stay alive and viable. And most Houston galleries do a great job and have the Houston art community’s best interests at heart. But some just charge the artist for wall space and then really don’t do much to promote the show or get buyers in.”

Greenleaf believes his event will actually help the art galleries and the entire art community by directing people to other places that the artists show their work.

“But primarily my goal is to put a little extra money in the artist’s pocket and promote their talent,” he says. “And by showing at some unusual, non-typical venues, the art gets to some people who may not otherwise seek out the galleries.”  If the public can buy works from up-and-coming artists at more affordable prices, Greenleaf regards it as a situation that benefits everyone.

Greenleaf reports that his first Occupy Wall Space show brought in a large number of people and most of the artists sold work.

For the Big-Hearted and Broken-Hearted

Some people ask him if the Occupy Wall Space moniker represents a political affiliation. “Absolutely not,” Greenleaf says. “Alluding to Occupy is simply a tip of the hat to those who would protect the little guy and his free speech.”

As for the Valentine’s Day theme, Greenleaf says, “A lot of people write off Valentine’s Day as just another big business commercial day, created to make more money from the hardworking citizen. But I envisage that it could also be a day for celebrating love in all its colors through art: romantic love, love of life, love of country, love of family, love of food and drink, brotherly love, sisterly love, love of humanity, erotica, even love of dogs and cats.”

At the upcoming show local artists will hint at, portray or poke fun at some of love’s many facets with painting, drawings, photographs, cartoons, jewelry and sculpture.
Greenleaf is promoting it as a show “for the erotic and the neurotic, and for the big-hearted and the broken-hearted.” He expects the afternoon to be more of a party than an art show.

Some of the artists to be featured in the show include:

  • B.D. Himes – Cartoon men and women
  • Tara Jordan-Greenleaf – 3D paintings
  • Johnny Rojas- Sculpture in Iron
  • Tracy Pierce – Found object art
  • Bhavana – Eastern and spiritual influenced art
  • Lynn Chapman – Blue ladies and Vivid hearts
  • Robin Winfrey – Brazen photography of women
  • Gordon Greenleaf- Then & Now (35yrs of photos)

Vendors at the show will be offering gifts such as handmade valentines, french postcard art, pin-up art, homemade chocolates (made with local honey), nautical items and Hawaiian shirts. Greg Harbar will provide gypsy music, and the owner of Rudyard’s Pub will be offering champagne specials.

FACEBOOK: Occupy Wall Space 2

ArtPrize Announces $100,000 Juried Grand Prize

ArtPrize, the radically open international art competition and social experiment in Grand Rapids, Mich., has announced a new award for 2012: the ArtPrize Juried Grand Prize.

The $100,000 award will be added to a revised list of public and juried prizes that will be distributed at the end of the 19-day event. ArtPrize 2012 will take place Sept. 19 – Oct. 7, 2012.

In 2011, nearly 400,000 people visited Grand Rapids to engage with the work and ideas of nearly 1,600 artists. The new juried award changes the dynamic of the competition, and increases the total awards the event distributes to $550,000, making it the largest total prize purse for art in the world.

In addition to the Juried Grand Prize, ArtPrize will also increase its other juried awards to $20,000 each. The organization selected five categories to recognize:

  • Two-Dimensional
  • Three-Dimensional
  • Time and Performance
  • Urban Space
  • Venue

The increased commitment to juried awards will change the dynamic of the event and sets up a purposeful dialog between the opinions of arts professionals and the public, focusing on the artists’ work.

Jurors for all of the professional awards will be announced in the spring, prior to artist registration.

“For the past three years, ArtPrize has set itself apart by empowering the public and giving them a critical voice, but the success of the event is based on the exchange of artists’ ideas,” said DeVos. “We want ArtPrize to be accessible for everyone, so we hope the new awards will help artists understand our goals and encourage them bring new ideas to the event.”

The changes in Juried Prizes will result in a revision of the ArtPrize Public Vote Awards. For example, the top prize of $250,000 in 2011 will be reduced to $200,000 in 2012.  The second place awards will be scaled back from $100,000 in 2011 to $75,000 in 2012.  The third place award will continue to $50,000. The fourth-place through tenth-place awards will drop from $7,000 in 2011 to $5,000 in 2012.

The prize total for the public awards in 2012 will be $350,000, vastly outweighing the juried awards at $200,000, and keeping the organization’s focus on the community.

“The engagement of the community continues to be at the forefront of ArtPrize’s success,” added Catherine Creamer, executive director of ArtPrize. “Nearly 400,000 people participated in ArtPrize in 2011, not because we told them art mattered, but because we create a system where they matter to art.”

ArtPrize 2011 had more than 38,000 registered voters who submitted 383,000 total votes. With the increase of smartphones, mobile voting via the ArtPrize iPhone and new Android apps increased 62 percent.

ArtPrize 2011 began Sept. 21 with 1,582 artists from 39 countries and 43 U.S. states installing their work at 164 venues in a three-square-mile district in Grand Rapids, Michigan.

For more information and to see the winners of the 2011 competitions, visit www.artprize.org.