more prizes, grants, funding, and free exhibitions

 Craft Victoria – deadline for exhibition proposals is 31 March 2011

Craft Victoria promotes contemporary craft and design. Their exhibition program provides professional opportunities and support for emerging and established artists. They support projects that reflect innovative work; demonstrate new ideas and techniques, whilst extending critical debates. Their program also provides opportunities for externally curated exhibitions. Craft Victoria fosters creativity and experimentation to a local, national and international audience.

More information – http://bit.ly/fxyZYU

This is Not Art – submission close 31 March 2011

 This is Not Art is a supercharged convergence of writers, performers, thinkers, independent and industry musicians, creative researchers, electronic artists, dilettantes, and DIY culture makers in a showcase featuring over 400 local, national and international artists.

More information – http://bit.ly/hVTCBK

Rhizome Grants – deadline for applications is 14 April 2011

Rhizome award grants to emerging artists for creation of new media art. By new media art, they mean projects that creatively engage new and networked technologies and works that reflect on the broader social and political impact of these tools and media in a variety of forms. Rhizome defines emerging artist as artists who exhibit great potential yet are not fully recognized within their field. Commissioned works can take the final form of web-based works, works that engage mobile platforms, performance, video, installation or sound art. Projects can be made for the context of the gallery, the public, the web or networked devices. Rhizome Commissions awards generally range from $1,000 to $5,000.

More information – http://bit.ly/u3or4

Creative Industries’ Career Fund – deadline for applications is 15 April 2011

As part of the Cultural Fund, Copyright Agency Limited allocates $100,000 a year to support individual Australian creators and those involved in the creative industries who wish to develop their skills and take their careers to the next level. Applicants can apply for grants of up to $5,000 to undertake training, travel or other activities that will enhance their careers.

More information – http://bit.ly/eEv5qU

Artsite – Submissions close 30 June 2011

Submissions are invited from Local Artists living in the Inner West of Sydney for consideration for inclusion in the inaugural “The Cats Pyjamas” Exhibition at Artsite Gallery in 2011.

More information – http://bit.ly/hDinFm

prizes, grants, funding, and free exhibitions

There are quite a few initiatives on at the moment to help kickstart your arts career in the way of prizes, grants, funding, increased exposure, and free exhibitions.   Check these out!

Experimenta – Applications close 14 March 2011

Experimenta is pleased to announce the commencement of their next commission round in preparation for Experimenta’s 5th International Biennial of Media Art launching in September 2012.

Projects supported will be funded up to $8,000.

More information – http://www.experimenta.org/

ArtStart – Round 2 applications close 27 September 2011

The ArtStart program has been created to give financial assistance to recent arts graduates, helping you make the challenging transition from studying to having a professional career in the arts.  If you’ve completed an accredited Certificate IV arts course or higher in the past three years – or are about to complete one – you could be eligible.

An ArtStart grant could provide you with up to $10,000 to fund services, resources, skills development and/or equipment to help you build an income-generating career in the arts practice you have studied.

More information – http://www.artstartgrant.com.au/

Underbelly Arts – Submissions close 4 April  2011

Underbelly Arts is dedicated to supporting emerging and experimental artists to collaborate, develop and present innovative new works to a broad public.  They are currently seeking applications for their 2011 event.

More information – http://underbellyarts.com.au/

NSW Women and Arts Fellowship – Applications close 18 April 2011

This biennial fellowship was established as a result of the Women and Arts Festival in 1982. It is given to a woman to assist her professional development as an artist.

$30,000 is available.

More information – http://www.arts.nsw.gov.au

Brunswick Street Gallery Prizes & Exhibitions

$10,000 Picture This Photography Prize – Entries close 3 April 2011

$10,000 Small Works 2011 Prize & Exhibition – Entries close 29 May 2011

More information – http://bsgart.com.au/

Cheap Canvas Prints – 60% off until 13 March 2011

Place an order via their website before midnight 13th March and get the biggest discount they’ve offered all year.

More information – www.cheapcanvasprints.com.au

one hundredth gallery – Free online exhibitions until 30 April 2011

Exhibit your artwork on one hundredth gallery’s website for free.  Until 30 April 2011, we will exhibit up to ten of your artworks on 100thgallery.com for free. 

More information – http://100thgallery.com/special-offer/

art is anything an artist calls art

by Germaine Greer for The Guardian in the UK

Now please pay attention everybody. I’m about to tell you what art is.

A week ago I confused 1,500 sixth-formers by attempting to answer the non-question: “What is art?” The students found a lot of what I said surprising. I hope too many of them didn’t ditch their portfolios and start new ones on Lady Gaga, because I rather think their teachers found what I said even more confusing than they did. So here is another go at the same thing. Pass it on.

What is art? Art is anything an artist calls art. An artist is someone who makes or does something she or he thinks of as art. Making pictures can be called graphic art, but it is quite likely to have nothing to do with art whatsoever. Take the pictures that hang every weekend on the railings of London’s Hyde Park, hundreds of them. No art involved. A graffito on a railway bridge is more likely to be art, most probably bad art, but art just the same. Most art is bad, but you don’t get the good art without the bad. Our best artists make stuff they know is bad; the difference is that they destroy it themselves. Tracey Emin didn’t wait to be told to destroy the paintings that earned her an MA at the Royal College of Art. There are a few dealers around the place who would kill to get their hands on them; she has made sure they never will. That’s the kind of thing real artists can be expected to do.

Art is a part of life, but in order to be art it has to create for itself a separate zone, what we might call the art space or the art time. A urinal is not an art object as long as it is carrying out its essential function. To make it art we detach it from the plumbing, tip it on its end and set it on a plinth. The beholder then has to entertain a galaxy of new and unfamiliar thoughts about the object, redefining it and herself in relation to it. The original object, which Marcel Duchamp called Fountain, signing it R Mutt, was rejected by the Society of Independent Artists at whose New York gallery it was supposed to be exhibited in 1917 because, they said, it was not art. In 2004, 500 British “art experts” selected it as “the most influential artwork of the 20th century”.

Human beings have always done art. They have set aside time to carry out activities that did nothing obviously useful. They made images, transformed their bodies with painted marks, told stories, sang and danced. Nowadays, we imagine that these activities were “timeless”; it would be truer to say that they were “timeful”, sometimes taking days for preparation, and days for performance. The times and the places they happened in were set aside.

For most of human history, the artist has had no duty to record what things or animals or people actually looked like. The subject of art was more often something that could not be seen, such as the energy of the monsoon, depicted in the rock art of the Australian Kimberley region as the wandjina. In that case the artist was a person apart, a senior lawman who inherited the responsibility of keeping the sacred images fresh. Before he could lay a finger on them he had to travel to the sacred site by a special route and bathe in the clean, cold water of the deep gorges. Sacred is just another name for separate.

Drawing and painting are fun, and most people like doing them, especially if they are considered good at them, but they are not art until they acquire separateness. A recognisable likeness of a celebrity will be artless, unless it acquires its own position in relation to all the other images of that celebrity and celebrity itself. Andy Warhol refined the image of Marilyn Monroe till it was almost insubstantial, a hieroglyph in place of a likeness, with neither age nor identity nor expression. It may seem the diametric opposite of the most famous portraits of history, but it isn’t. The portraits that survive have outlived their subjects and taken on a life the subjects could never claim. Those pictures exist in their own versions of the wandjina/Warhol zone.

Studying art for A-level is really tough because of the inherent contradiction between being trained to reach a standard and finding out how to be spontaneous. The value the examiners demand is creativity, but creativity cannot be taught. Lady Gaga has said: “Once you learn to think about art, you can teach yourself.” She might as well have said: “Once you learn to think about art, you can only learn from yourself.” You can be taught to draw like somebody else, but you can only learn to draw like yourself from yourself. Supposing drawing is your kind of art, and supposing you are really serious.The kids who get up at midnight and head out to a derelict wall to begin working on a graffito are working within a demanding tradition that requires the sequence of execution to have been worked out in detail in advance, before any mark can be made. They can make no money out of what they do. There are no prizes for them. They could go to jail. There is no truer example of the sacredness of the art enterprise than this. Discuss.

The original article can be found here – http://www.guardian.co.uk/artanddesign/2011/mar/06/germaine-greer-art-graffiti

Andy Warhol's Marilyn Monroe. Photograph: Adam Butler/AP

emerging artists now showing

One hundredth gallery is all about exhibiting aspiring and emerging artists.  Painters, photographers, sculptors, designers, textile makers, drawers, print makers, etc. are all welcome to exhibit their work with us.

We currently have six online exhibitions showing by some extremely talented artists, and hope to add a seventh and eighth later this week.  All artwork is for sale and enquiries can be made directly to the artist. 

If you haven’t already, please check out these wonderful emerging artists.

Wolfgang Glowacki

Macro Artscapes

19 Feb – 20 Mar 2011

Pete Goodlet

Noddy Comes to Daylesford

15 Feb – 20 Mar 2011

Michell Guo

Not Without Soul

10 Feb – 13 Mar 2011

Mark Hammon

Six Pack

4 Feb – 6 Mar 2011

Janicke Johansen ???(Last Week!) 

Above and Below

31 Jan – 27 Feb 2011

Brian Mangano (Last Week!) 

More than City Lights

8 Jan – 27 Feb 2011

Special offer until 30 April 2011

Between 1 February and 30 April 2011, we will exhibit up to ten of your artworks on 100thgallery.com for free.  Please click here for further details.

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introducing wolfgang glowacki and macro artscapes

We are very proud to open the first of at least two new Online Exhibitions today by photographer/artist Wolfgang Glowacki.  Wolfgang’s first exhibition with one hundredth gallery is titled ‘Macro Artscapes’.

Wolfgang’s online exhibition and biography can be found on the NOW SHOWING tab above, or by clicking here.

All of Wolfgang’s works are for sale in multiple sizes, and prices start from only $50.00 for a 200mm x 300mm print on archival paper.

emerging artists now showing

One hundredth gallery is all about exhibiting aspiring and emerging artists.  Painters, photographers, sculptors, designers, textile makers, drawers, print makers, etc. are all welcome to exhibit their work with us.

We currently have three online exhibitions showing and hope to add a fourth and fifth later this week.  All artwork is for sale and enquiries can be made directly to the artist.

If you haven’t already, please check out these wonderful emerging artists.

 

mark hammon

six pack

4 Feb – 6 Mar 2011

 

janicke johansen

above and below

31 Jan – 27 Feb 2011

brian mangano

more than city lights

28 Jan – 27 Feb 2011

 

Special offer until 30 April 2011

Between 1 February and 30 April 2011, we will exhibit up to ten of your artworks on 100thgallery.com for free.  Please click here for further details.

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