Skip to main content

Call for Art - Deadline June 29th

Sheltered in Place: UMVA Members and the Pandemic

Call for Art

            In March, the U.N. called on artists to produce “concise and impactful visuals to help share life-saving information on COVID-19.” Since then, artists have responded with nearly 17,000 designs from 143 nations. In one,  Mexican artist Lisa Saldivar depicts the facade of an apartment building, as a crowd of people converse. Bubble letters frame the piece: "kindness not cancelled."



                                                                       

  Lisa Saldivar ©  2020

 

            Of course “keeping people safe” requires that many stories be told. Depicting heartache and tragedy, as well as scenes and messages like Saldivar's painting above, contributes to our collective healing. In this spirit UMVA Portland calls on UMVA members across the state to contribute work to our curated online exhibition “Sheltered In Place: UMVA Artists and the Pandemic.”

Deadline: June 29, 2020 – Submit One Image Only

Label your single image (in the name line at the top of the image) in this format:

FirstName_LastName_Title (no spaces in title and include all the underscores as shown here).

 

Sizing: A single jpg image approximately 2800 pixels on longer side and 72 dpi (no Tiff files, only jpgs).

 

Brief bio: a brief artist statement in Word doc. format, not a pdf file. Label this Word doc.: Last Name_Title (with no spaces). At the top of the artist statement document include Artist's Name, Title of Work, medium, dimensions, date (optional), price. This statement is limited to 250 words.

 

Please wait until all your material is compiled to submit.


This show will be "virtual" because the gallery isn't open yet.  The show will be featured on the UMVA blog and will link to our Facebook pages as well as the website.

 

Important: Write 'Shelter' in the Subject Line of the Submission Email & Submit to:

 

umvaportland @gmail.com

 

Submit no later than June 29

 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Maine’s Coastal Islands Engage Midcoast UMVA Artists

  The Union of Maine Visual Artists (UMVA) - Midcoast Chapter, in partnership with the Friends of the Maine Coastal Islands National Wildlife Refuge in Rockland, presents “REFUGE”, a dynamic exhibition of artwork inspired by the unique beauty found in and around Maine’s coastal islands .  The exhibit opens with an artists’ reception on September 27th from 5 to 7 pm at the gallery at the Visitor’s Center, 9 Water St., Rockland, ME.  The gallery is open during the Visitor Center’s open hours from 8:30 AM - 4:30 PM, Monday through Friday.  The exhibit continues to Dec 13, 2024.    "Pemiquid Parkbellhouse" by  Bernadette de Cesare   Contemporary realist painter Jane Dahmen juried this exhibit which features both representational and abstract works. Dahmen, whose landscapes explore the coastal regions of midcoast Maine, has shown in solo and group shows both within the U.S. and abroad. She is represented by The Portland Art Gallery.  Viewers c...

More Photos from the August Gala

 Hi...  did not have the bandwidth to hunt down and ID all the folks... so if you want to tag yourself, I guess you could do so in the comments...  But here are the photos that I shot during the event... I do know who was behind that mask  Anthony Anderson from the #MaineGallery+StudioGuide UMVA Board Member Janice L. Moore Ave Melnick with Board Member Joanne Tarlin and other person Janice L. Moore with Anthony Anderson Daniel Sipe with a friend and ARRT!! Director Natasha Mayers A Saucy skirted pirate and UMVA president David Estey Bookhead Sweettooth - minus board member Al Crichton (he was sick) UMVA President David Estey and Treasurer Richard Kane (who also runs the Maine Masters project) Board member Barbara Sullivan in gray top Board member Emily Sabino  The hat this fellow wears references a UMVA Broccoli Protest which Carlo Pittore helped lead in Kennebunkport, in front of the Bush mansion there.  UMVA Vice President Joanne Tarlin Now, here are the...

Sheltered in Place - a Pandemic Art Show

The Covid pandemic reshapes our lives. It continues to strip down our existence, separating us from loved ones and exposing weaknesses in our system of governance and our political leadership. It demonstrates the devastating impact of the nation's grave social injustices. Systemic racism and socioeconomic disparity put oppressed peoples at greater risk for Covid-19. Then, on May 25, as many of us bunkered inside our homes, we witnessed the cold-blooded murder of George Floyd. This videotaped tragedy and the eruption of Black Lives Matter protests across the nation revealed the depth and breadth of racism in America. It is a contagion every bit as present and virulent as the coronavirus. In the face of both existential challenges – pandemic and racism – we can only recover through radical social change. The images and words of UMVA artists in this online exhibition surface from the isolation and compression of life in the pandemic. The works express personal and universa...