Baren Digest Monday, 20 November 2000 Volume 13 : Number 1220 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- From: "jerelee" Date: Sun, 19 Nov 2000 10:56:21 -0600 Subject: [Baren 12158] Re: SGC charset="iso-8859-1" Dear Barbara Can you please tell me what the SGA is all about. It sounds like it would be fun to attend a conference with fellow artists. I have a toddler at home so in all probability it might not happen for me but it's always enjoyable to hear new news and dream. Jerelee ------------------------------ From: B Mason Date: Sun, 19 Nov 2000 08:02:43 -0800 Subject: [Baren 12159] juried shows Lee, I think any of us who have been involved in the planning and hanging end of a juried show can sympathize with you, it is so hard to hang varied work together and so hard to judge it from slides and impossible to make expenses doing it. Especially if a catalog is produced. The catalog is the straw that breaks the camel's back, it always takes more time and costs more money that planned for. I see galleries in Art Calendar that seem to have ongoing juried shows and wonder what they are thinking or if they are just doing it poorly. Perhaps they have no catalog and no juror fees and hang the show themselves. Still it is a tremendous amount of work to look at hundreds or thousands of slides and take care of all the paperwork involved. If you kept the slides, maybe it would be less work, but still not much. I think Stonemetal press is to be commended for taking on a juried show every year. I am a director of an artist owned gallery here in Portland called Waterstone Gallery and we have considered having a juried show, but we know it would be huge undertaking and are all a little skittish about the energy involved. Also we are so small, only 756 sq feet, that perhaps artists might think our gallery is not a good place to show. We are in the heart of the gallery district and do sell a fair amount of work. We have had what we call "community return shows", in otherwords we mount a show the community will like to see that we know will bring us very little return, if any. We showed a section of the huge collection of the Regional Arts and Cultural Council's "Visual Cronicles of Portland" a few years ago and none of the work was for sale. Of course we can't afford to do this very often as we are a business. Not a non-profit, although it seems that way some months. There are 15 of us and we pay $100 a month to run the gallery. This covers our expenses, our rent is $1100. We pay 10%commission up to $200 a year then no commission on sales thereafter. All in all it works well and we all take turns sitting the gallery. Is Stonemetal Press run in a similar way? We volunteer a lot of time to make our small gallery look very professional. We jury new members three times a year, but have not had an opening for a couple of years. Someone would have to leave the gallery to make space for a new member. Most galleries that run like ours have considerably more members to share the work. We find our small number is an advantage as we all get along so well. We certainly consider personality when juring members as well as the quality of the work. Anyone who complains about the way thing are done, hasn't been in your shoes! So don't feel bad, just pat yourself on the back for all your hard work! And all artists need to bite the bullet, find a really good photorgapher and get professional slides done. I always think slides of photographs are a bit wierd, but I see the necessity of it. Shows that rejected your work with home made slides will suddenly like your work with professional ones. This has certainly been my experience. Barbara M ------------------------------ From: Wanda Date: Sun, 19 Nov 2000 11:14:05 -0700 Subject: [Baren 12160] Re: safety Lawrence wrote: > You definitely want to avoid milk at any cost. It becomes a toxic > reservoir, grabbing all the free floating toxins out of the air. You're joking, right? Wanda ------------------------------ From: barebonesart Date: Sun, 19 Nov 2000 12:08:15 -0800 Subject: [Baren 12161] Re: Baren Digest V13 #1219 Dear Jean and all, Yes, I've been following the possible closing of the printmaking studio at Parsons School of Design. The Northwest Print Council wrote a letter, to the powers that be, requesting that it not happen and citing that even traditional intaglio printmaking no longer needs to be considered toxic or dangerous with modern methods (veggie oil clean-up, Imageon film, Ferric Chloride, etc.) Just as frightening was a letter we received from students either at U of Oslo or Art Academy in Oslo (I'm having a sr. moment on that one) having the same problem. At Dr. Gilkey's request the NWPC wrote a letter to the administration of the school protesting the closing of the printmaking dept. So many schools are doing away with the printmaking and putting their money & space into the Computer Imaging dept., thinking, I am sure, that the wave of the future is the computer. I personally think they are all wet - the computer is just another tool and will never replace the hand pulled print. (I seem to remember my Mother saying,"Never say never". Hmmmmmm.) Maybe it will be up to us, as individual printmakers, to apprentice our children and private students to carry on the tradition until the Universities & schools wise up. Sharri ------------------------------ From: "Cate Pfeifer" Date: Sun, 19 Nov 2000 21:08:54 -0500 Subject: [Baren 12162] Thanks for your kind words charset="iso-8859-1" Hi Everybody, Thanks for your kind, encouraging words. Barbara, I can't take full credit for this print. Mike Lyon and Linda Sampson-Talleur helped me quite a bit. Everything that I liked about the background was Mike's work. The black was made with sumi ink. We printed this like a 4 color separation with layers of yellow, magenta, and blue under the black. I think it made it very rich - again, it was Mike's idea. Carol, your name is Lyons, Mike's name is Lyon... hmmm. Maybe we should have a "carve your name/heritage" exchange? That would be fun. My design (for Pfeifer) would be full of flutes. Alas, I can't play one (but I am full of wind). Wanda, I agree with you completely. Without Mike's (and Linda's) help and encouragement, I would still be thinking about doing this. Baren rocks. Julio, yup, the very first. I can't believe it. What a rush! I started sketching the design for the snake print. Off to work on that! Thanks again, Cate ------------------------------ From: B Mason Date: Sun, 19 Nov 2000 18:34:56 -0800 Subject: [Baren 12163] Re: SGC jerelee wrote: > Dear Barbara > Can you please tell me what the SGA is all about. It sounds like it would be > fun to attend a conference with fellow artists. I have a toddler at home so > in all probability it might not happen for me but it's always enjoyable to > hear new news and dream. Jerelee Jerelee, The SGC is the Southern Graphics Council and every year they have an international printmaking conference somewhere in the south, this year in Austin Texas. I went last year for the first time to the conference that was in Miami. I have always wanted to go and it was really fun. Just imagine 800 printmakers together and all excited about what they are doing. You can read about the conference here: http://www.utexas.edu/cofa/a_ah/sgc/index.html We bareners who were there met for breakfast and it was just too much fun. It is fairly expenxive, as the conference is $150 + joining SGC for $75 and of course the travel and room and so on. But it was also really fun and I thought worth it. But my children are grown so I am a different place in my life. What part of the country are you in? Having toddlers really ties you down, but printmaking will wait. Nothing is more important than doing a good job raising your family! The rewards for doing this job well are life long! Best to you, Barbara ------------------------------ From: Lawrence Date: Mon, 20 Nov 2000 16:35:36 +1100 Subject: [Baren 12164] Re: safety <200011190649.PAA47612@ml.asahi-net.or.jp> Wanda wrote: >You're joking, right? Er no, not kidding, milk is basically fat and fat attracts the toxins in the air and concentrates them by collecting them in one place (your glass of milk) when you drink it, its basically concentrated toxin. I never drink milk on or around days when I'm near studios (actually I never drink milk anymore because of this). Leaving milk out in a studio is definitely a no no for this reason. there are some great books on safety in the art studios, I wouldn't read them cover to cover but a browse every now and then is enlightening. Date: Mon, 20 Nov 2000 07:30:28 -0500 Subject: [Baren 12165] Re: SGC <200011192211.HAA44262@ml.asahi-net.or.jp> Dear Jerelee, I must also chime in and say that The Southern Graphics Council is a wonderful organisation and the conference is one of my highlights of the year. I admit I am a little bias because I am the Vice President but the conference is printmakers heaven. Do not be thrown off by our title because the SGC had now grown into the largest printing organisation in the US with members in over 45 states and has a number of international members too. I wanted to clarify that membrship is only 25.00 for regular membership and 10.00 for students (a bargain if I say so) I am really looking forward to meeting everybody at the conference. Greg Carter ------------------------------ End of Baren Digest V13 #1220 *****************************