Call for Entries: Inked
Entries due: October 3
Exhibition: October 24 – November 3
We are looking for submissions of tattoo inspired art for a curated exhibition in the Amalie Rothschild Gallery. Photographs, drawings, flash, and other tattoo inspired works can be submitted. Digital images/photographs and specs should be submitted to Heather Keating atheather@creativealliance.org by October 3, 2014.
MAP Studio/Office Space Available
Facing Race: A National Conference Art Gallery – Call for Submissions
Race Forward: The Center for Racial Justice Innovation in partnership with the Joan Mitchell Foundation is excited to announce a unique small grant opportunity for visual artists from across the nation to be featured at Facing Race: A National Conference. Facing Race is the largest multiracial, inter-generational and unique collaborative gathering space for racial justice movement making, organizers, educators, creatives and other leaders. Facing Race 2014 will be held in Dallas, Texas on November 13-15, 2014.
Art activism has been known to give life to movements by using radical aesthetics to make visible the voices of often silenced communities of color. Race Forward is committed to providing a space for intersectional work and training by broadening the recognition of artists’ important contributions to the fight for racial justice.
“… the thought pictures create in our minds are the way that we can kind of slip through the back door of our rational thought and see the world differently”~ Frederick Douglass
Visual artists are welcome to submit three works for consideration to be featured at this year’s Facing Race National Conference Art Gallery.
An internal Arts & Cultural Committee appointed by Race Forward will select six visual artists to be featured. The deadline for applications have been extended until August 15th, 2014. Selections will be made on a rolling basis and artists will be notified by the end of August.
Eligibility Requirements:
- Artwork must fall under the category of ‘Fine Arts’
For this purpose we define ‘Fine Art’ as visual art considered to have been created primarlily for aesthetic purposes and judged for its beatuy and meaningfulness, specifically, painting, sculpture, drawing, watercolor, graphics, and archutecture.
Priority will be given to strong visual works that are:
- Timely, reflecting on recent race moments and ruptures on the United States.
- Produced by emerging visual artists of color.
- Produced by visual artist based in the U.S. South and Southwest
Featured artists will receive:
- A conference registration scholarship in their name
- Travel stipend
- Shipping stipend for artwork
**Please note that at previous Facing Race Conferences independent curators and buyers have commissioned some artists whose work was on exhibit in the gallery space for work. ***
Do not submit more than three works to be considered. Please email lgrant@raceforward.org with any questions.
We are pleased to announce our first annual art exhibit, Free State at the Peale, to benefit the restoration and reopening of The Peale Museum as the Peale Center for Baltimore History and Architecture. The exhibit will be held at the Carroll Mansion the month of November 2014. All entries are due by October 1, 2014. (Please note that this is the current due date, as of Sept 2- editor)
Click here to view the Submission Guidelines
What do Leonardo, Gainsborough, Breughel, Reynolds, Bosch, Van de Velde, Ruysdael, Kauffmann, Claude, Poussin, Velasquez, Canaletto, Raphael, Sully, Charles Willson Peale, and Raphael, Rembrandt, and Sarah Miriam Peale have in common with:
A. Aubrey Bodine, Herman Maril, Keith Martin, Glenn Walker, Amalie Rothschild, Betty Cooke, Joe Sheppard, Aaron Sopher, Jacob Glushakow, and Reuben Kramer? Their artworks were exhibited at Baltimore’s venerable Peale Museum, the old masters in 1823 (from local collections); the regional artists in exhibits of photographs and paintings depicting “Life in Baltimore” ca. 1950s–1960s.
Free State at the Peale pays tribute to the museum’s 200 years of presenting fine art to the public. It is the first major event in the Peale Center’s $4 million capital campaign to breathe new life into this historic icon in the heart of downtown and make it a lively gathering place to explore Baltimore’s rich architecture and diverse history.
The Peale is the oldest museum building in the United States. Rembrandt Peale, a member of the first family of American artists, opened it in 1814. It is a National Historic Landmark. The Peale has served many purposes in its long and colorful career, including a period in the mid-19th century, as Baltimore’s City Hall. The Peale Museum closed in 1997 with the demise of the City Life Museums. It has been vacant since then.
The Peale Museum celebrates its bicentennial this year. The plan is to reopen it to the public in two years, coinciding with the 200th anniversary of the Baltimore Gas and Electric Company. In 1816, Rembrandt Peale lit one of his painting galleries with gas and soon founded the Baltimore Gas Light Company, ancestor of BGE.
Free State at the Peale will be held at the Carroll Mansion, 800 E. Lombard St., a building close in age and proximity to the Peale Museum. The juried exhibition is open to regional artists showing recent works. The general subject is Baltimore and Maryland. All artworks will be for sale. The “Charles Willson Peale Prize” will be awarded for excellence in art. A portion of the exhibit will showcase artists who exhibited at the Peale Museum. If you own a Glenn Walker painting or Reuben Kramer sculpture, or know someone who does, and want to support the Peale Center, please contact exhibit coordinator John Ferguson via terrymiller@prodigy.net or 410-455-9219.
Free State at the Peale opens Saturday, November 1, 2014, 6:30–9:30 p.m. The first hour will be a VIP champagne reception for donors. At 7:30 p.m., the public will be welcomed to the Carroll Mansion to view the artworks. Silhouette artist Lauren Muney will be on hand to cut silhouettes of guests (as was done at the original Peale Museum). Following the opening, Free State at the Peale will be open to the public Fridays, 4–8 p.m. (Friday following Thanksgiving, 1–6 p.m.) and Saturdays and Sundays, 12 noon–4 p.m. Visitors after opening night will pay the Carroll Mansion’s usual $5 admission charge.
School 33′s Lotta Art 2014 Call for Submission
The Call for Submissions for School 33′s Annual LOTTA ART benefit is now open!
Click here for the application!
DEADLINE for registration: September 20, 2014
To learn more about the LOTTA ART event, click here!
School 33 Art Center is dedicated to providing opportunities for artists through exhibitions, art classes, workshops, a Studio Artist Program, and special events. School 33 Art Center is a program of the Baltimore Office of Promotion & The Arts, Inc., and is supported in part by grants from the Mayor and the City Council of Baltimore, the Maryland State Arts Council, and through private contributions to School 33 Art Center.