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UMBC’s Intermedia and Digital Arts (IMDA) M.F.A. Program is accepting applications from interdisciplinary artists seeking to expand or reinvent their practice. Committed to art that poses unique conceptual and social challenges, IMDA provides artists a studio, state-of-the-art and emerging facilities, cutting edge curriculum, research and teaching assistantships, engaged faculty and prominent visiting artists. Graduate students take advantage of Baltimore’s vibrant art scene pursuing issues such as food justice, the environment, transportation, urban interventions, translation, race and gender identity, gift economies, and technology in both intellectual and formal terms.

Financial packages include Research Assistantships in teaching and research centers, providing tuition remission, health care and a stipend. Other merit-based grants are available.

Artists that have given 1-on-1 feedback to graduate students include: Janine Antoni, @rtMark, Zoe Beloff, Catherine Chalmers, Paul Chan, Annica Cuppetelli and Cristobal Mendoza, Paul DeMarinis, Tony Dove, Johanna Drucker, Hasan Elahi, eteam, Wendy Ewald, Darko Fritz, Guerrilla Girls, Dana Hoey, Nina Katchadourian, Matmos, Larry Miller, Alison Knowles, Margot Lovejoy, Joseph Nechvatal, Keith Piper, William Pope.L, Michael Rakowitz, Andrea Robbins and
Max Becher, David Rokeby, Mark Tribe, Fred Wilson, Martha Wilson, Karen Yasinsky and The Yes Men.

Apply by February 1 for consideration toward financial packages. For more information about the program, please visit imda.umbc.edu or email us at imda@umbc.edu.

1 studio available now! Move in January 2015!

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Applications will be considered on a rolling basis.

Studio Information:
Spaces are approximately 450 sq. ft.  All leases are for one year, renewable upon approval. Spaces are work only. Studio space offers plenty of natural light, a great community of local artists to work around, and participation in our studio mentor program!

Eligibility:   
Qualified fine art artists. Students and Employees of the Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts are not eligible.

Rent:   
$380/month, large windows, hardwood floor, and utility sinks on each floor. Prices include heat, a/c, and electricity.

Application Procedures: 
Send resume and CD portfolio with 10 JPEG, images (no more than 1 MB each, labeled Lastname_Firstname_01, etc.), completed application and slide description sheet to:

School 33 Art Center
c/o Melissa Webb
1427 Light Street
Baltimore, MD 21230

If you have questions, please contact Melissa Webb, at MWebb@promotionandarts.org or at 443-263-4350.

Registration forms can be downloaded here:

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Brick Layers

Presented by Washington Sculptors Group and the Workhouse Arts Center April 11 – June 28, 2015

LOCATION:
Workhouse Arts Center
Vulcan Gallery & designated outdoor spaces
9601 Ox Road Lorton VA 22079
www.workhousearts.org

DATES:
April 11 – June 28, 2015

JUROR:
Jennie Shanker

APPLICATION DEADLINE:
January 26, 2015 midnight EST (received by Entrythingy.com with $5 fee)

CALL DESCRIPTION:
Brick Layers, curated by Jennie Shanker, seeks artworks that are grounded in the Workhouse site and its rich and layered history. We’re looking for work that humanizes that history, and encourages conversation about themes that remain relevant to this day, such as the criminal justice system, women’s rights, the Constitution, workers/labor, issues of race/class/gender, how natural resources were essential to the region’s development, etc.

HISTORY OF THE WORKHOUSE ARTS CENTER:
The Workhouse Arts Center (WAC) occupies a unique historic site, originally the Occoquan Workhouse opened in 1910 as a federal prison. The prisoners built the Workhouse. Initially they camped out and built structures in wood. The Workhouse buildings we see today were made from clay formed into brick on site, fired in a large beehive kiln they made from their bricks. Walls were created as the bricks were layered, one onto the next, creating spaces that imprisoned the prisoners through their own labor.

From January 1917 until June 1919, for two and a half years, women stood vigil in front of the White House twenty-four hours a day, six days a week. They displayed banners that argued for the right for women to vote. There were 168 suffragists who were arrested and sent to the Workhouse where they were gravely mistreated. As stories of beatings, torture, worm-infested food and force feedings spread, sympathy for the women and their cause grew. What happened to suffragists at the Workhouse contributed to a shift in public opinion, and swayed President Wilson, ultimately leading to the passage of the 19th Amendment, granting women the right to vote.

Historic Resources :

The Workhouse Prison Museum at Lorton
Jailed for Freedom, by Doris Stevens (Search for “Occoquan”)
Kate Heffelfinger: From the Workhouse to the State Hospital
19th Amendement
Eastern State Penitentiary, Philadelphia, PA

ABOUT THE JUROR:
Jennie Shanker is a Philadelphia-based artist, curator, educator and activist. In 1996, Philadelphia’s historic Eastern State Penitentiary hosted “Prison Sentences: Prison as Site, Prison as Subject”, curated by Julie Courtney and Todd Gilens. Jennie oversaw the safety of the site and the installation of the artworks in the exhibition. Since then, Eastern State has recognized the contributions that artists can make in the interpretation of an historic site, and has maintained a unique, highly regarded program of artist installations. She continues to act as a consultant in the selection and installation of artist projects for the site. She teaches sculpture, ceramics, and community arts courses at Tyler School of Art, and also teaches in the graduate studio art program at the University of the Arts.

ELIGIBILITY:
The exhibition is open to current members of the Washington Sculptors Group only. Artists may join WSG by paying annual dues of $45 ($15 for full-time students). Prospective members may download a membership form from the WSG website, www.washingtonsculptors.org and send in a check, or may join online with your submission to the exhibition.

WSG members must have paid their dues for 2015 by the entry deadline of January 26, 2015 to be eligible for this exhibition. The address label on this Call or the most recent copy of the WSG newsletter, The Washington Sculptor, will show your membership status (example: MEMBER THROUGH 2104). Notices for 2015 dues will be mailed in Nov. 2014.

WORK TO BE CONSIDERED:
The exhibition will be located in the Vulcan Gallery and designated outdoor spaces adjacent to the Gallery building. Three-dimensional freestanding and wall-hung sculpture, installations, and video/film-based work are welcome, though there is limited access to electrical outlets. A/V equipment must be supplied by the artist. Individual artists as well as collaborative groups are permitted, though no individual should be included in more than one submission.

The juror will consider a maximum of 11 images per artist or team of artists. Proposals (for works to be made), pre-existing works and video may be entered for the exhibition.

All applications must be submitted through www.entrythingy.com

If your piece is site or situation specific, please make it clear in your submission. We highly recommend that artists research the site and its history, and visit the Workhouse Arts Center. WAC is open to the public Wednesdays – Saturdays, 11am – 6pm, and Sundays 12 – 5pm. The Workhouse Prison Museum is open Wednesdays – Friday, 12 – 3pm and Saturdays – Sundays, 12 – 4pm.

Exhibition Manager
Laura Jamroz, Washington Sculptors Group, Laurajamroz@aol.com

Entrythingy / Application Submission Technical Assistance:
Assistance with submissions is available by email request, contact entries@washingtonsculptors.org

ABOUT THE VENUE:
Workhouse Arts Center: An innovative collaboration of visual and performing arts and education in the unique historic setting of the former DC prison.

Workhouse Arts Foundation Mission: To be a self-sustaining, thriving arts center with programs in the visual and performing arts and arts education through the repurposing of the former Workhouse correctional facility.

Workhouse Arts Center Vision: Leverage the architectural heritage of the former Workhouse correctional facility by transforming it into a unique arts center that provides visual and performing arts, arts education and entertainment for the community-at-large.

The Washington Sculptors Group (WSG) is a volunteer, non-profit organization dedicated to promoting awareness of sculpture and fostering exchanges among sculptors, sculpture enthusiasts and the public. Organized in 1984, membership has grown to include almost 400 area artists. The WSG sponsors frequent public programs and organizes professional sculpture exhibitions juried by prominent curators. Visit www.washingtonsculptors.org to join the WSG, view images of members’ work, and to subscribe to the WSG newsletter.

Supporting Sculptors and the Arts Since 1984. Celebrating 30 Years in 2014.

WASHINGTON SCULPTORS GROUP
PO Box 42534
Washington DC 20015
(202) 686-8696

info@washingtonsculptors.org
www.washingtonsculptors.org

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FY 2015 CALL FOR PUBLIC ART QUALIFICATIONS

Public Art San Antonio, a division of the Department for Culture & Creative Development, has released a FY 2015 Call for Public Art Qualifications for Artists, Art Inventory Services, and Collaborative Partners for potential inclusion in a pre-qualified pool, providing opportunities to work on new and existing public art including capital projects, temporary installations, and opportunities for conservation/restoration.

Please follow the link provided for a full description and application instructions at Getcreativesanantonio.com, or go directly to the application page at www.publicartist.org/pasa.

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The Indianapolis Airport Authority, in consultation with the Arts Council of Indianapolis, is seeking proposals for site-sensitive, temporary installations at Indianapolis International Airport in 2016 and 2017.  All media and approaches welcome that respond to the airport context. Modest honoraria paid. For more information and submission instructions, visit

here:  http://www.indyartsguide.org/classifieds/detail/30409