Feb 25, 2008

Conversations: ArtCade Crit night


Adrian and Ayo of Dissident Display be guest Gallerists for Artcade's second Crit Night. This month they will be meeting with area GWU MFA candidates. I hope Ding Ren (formally of the WPA) will be among the students (see the above image). Rachel Fick a junior at the Corcoran College of Art + Design and founder of ArtCade, organized this event so it's sure to be fun. Food, wine and art speak, be sure to put this event on your calendar.

ArtCade Crit night
Sunday, March 2nd at 7pm-10pm

George Washington University
Smith Hall of Art, 2nd floor 801 22nd St NW, Washington, DC

(photo courtesy of dingren.net)

Closer Look: the 2008 Sondheim Prize Semi-Finalists


Semi-finalists for the $25,000 Sondheim Prize are finishing up their applications to become finalists. If they are successful they'll be in an exhibit at the BMA and have a shot at the $25,000 prize. Last year's winner Tony Shore got a great deal of mileage off the prize. I see his name everywhere now. This year's crop of semi-finalists are much more Baltimore based. Kriston Capps noted on his blog that Molly Springfield, Chris Saar and Bridget Sue Lambert are the only DC artists nominated. Last year 14 of the semi-finalists were DC based.

I have provided links to each artist's website (or closest thing to it). In compiling these links I previewed all their work and I am very excited for the exhibits that will grow from this contest.

Becky Alprin, Laura Amussen, Rachel Bone, Ryan Browning, Mandy Burrow, Linda Day Clark, Brent Crothers, Melissa Dickenson, Eric Finzi, Laurie Flannery, Shaun Flynn, Dawn Gavin, Geoff Grace, Maren Hassinger, Kay Hwang, Courtney Jordan, Bridget Sue Lambert, Youngmi Song, Beverly Ress, James Rieck, Christopher Saah, Lynn Silverman, Molly Springfield, Pamela Phatsimo Sunstrum, Calla Thompson, Edward Winter, Erin Womack

Feb 24, 2008

Art History: An American in Paris

The Oscars are tonight. In 1951 the Best Picture was An American In Paris. It stared Gene Kelly, and Leslie Caron. At the time Leslie was 20 and Kelly who played her love interest was 40. The film cost 2.7 million dollars to produce and gave birth to one of the most beautiful moments in American film. This scene is part of twenty minute sequence that has little if any dialog. When the film began shooting in 1950 the final scene was yet written . Filming was halted for three days when members of the cast came down with Chicken Pox. Kelly, and director Vincentte Minnelli designed this legendary sequence in those three days.

Call for Entries: The Trawick Prize



Applications for the 2008 Trawick Prize are now being accepted

The deadline for submissions is April 11, 2008

Download the Application

The Trawick Prize: Bethesda Contemporary Art Awards is the visual art prize produced by the Bethesda Arts & Entertainment District. The fifth annual juried art competition awards $14,000 in prize monies to four selected artists. The first place winner will be awarded $10,000; second place will be honored with $2,000 and third place will be awarded $1,000. A “young” artist whose birth date is after April 10, 1977 may also be awarded a $1,000 prize sponsored by the Fraser Gallery. 400 artists applied for this honor last year.

Check out the jury:

Molly Donovan is Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art at the National Gallery of Art. She has written extensively on the work of living artists, including Christo, Jeanne-Claude and Richard Tuttle. She is presently preparing a book on the Andy Goldsworthy Project at the National Gallery. Donovan has curated several site-specific installations and numerous exhibitions and her upcoming show will feature Andy Warhol. Donovan holds a Master of Arts with a concentration in 20th century art from Williams College in Williamstown, MA.

Irene Hofmann became Executive Director of the Contemporary Museum in Baltimore in 2006 after four years as Curator of Contemporary Art at the Orange County Museum of Art in Newport Beach, CA. She holds her Master of Arts in Modern Art History, Theory and Criticism from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Hofmann has held positions at Art Museum in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan; Art Institute of Chicago; Walker Art Center in Minneapolis and the New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York. Recently, she curated the first United States museum exhibitions of work by Swiss artist Fabrice Gygi and Berlin-based artist Jason Dodge.

Leah Stoddard is the Director of Second Street Gallery in Charlottesville, VA. Stoddard holds her Master of Arts in Art History and Criticism from SUNY-Stony Brook and has served as Associate Curator and Registrar at the Contemporary Arts Center in Cincinnati, OH. She has curated over 80 exhibitions including 30 Years: Three Decades of New Art at Second Street Gallery (2003); The Colonial Show (2007) and work by Jane South, Gary Baseman, Joyce Scott, Kay Rosen and Anna Gaskell. She has taught contemporary art seminars at the Jefferson Institute for Lifelong Learning, University of Virginia and Art Academy of Cincinnati, and written many essays for Second Street catalogs, as well as exhibition reviews for New Art Examiner and Arts Indiana.

Feb 23, 2008

On View: Akemi Maegawa 2nite @ Irvine


Irvine Contemporary Art Presents:

Akemi Maegawa
Invisible, Inc
.

Sculptures and Installation Works
Exhibition Essay by Benjamin Teague

February 23 - March 29, 2008
Opening reception with the artist, Saturday, February 23, 6-8PM

1412 14th Street, Washington, DC