Call for Artists: Cryin’ Out Loud

Center for Contemporary Arts, Santa Fe

Entry Deadline: Mar. 5

1050 Old Pecos Trail
Santa Fe, NM 87505
Phone (505) 982-1338

http://ccasantafe.org/visual-arts/call-for-artists-cryin-out-loud

Cryin’ Out Loud is a juried exhibition that examines the role of women’s and femmes’ voices as expressed in art about politics, activism, and emotion. Considering both the metaphoric and literal voice, Cryin’ Out Loud explores and celebrates the use of art as a form of speaking up and out. A large group exhibition of works by selected artists will take place in CCA’s Muñoz Waxman Gallery, 1050 Old Pecos Trail, Santa Fe, NM 87505.

Micol Hebron, Juror’s Statement: Cryin’ Out Loud takes each word of this maxim seriously – Crying. Out. Loud. – and navigates the various implications of the phrase, wheter exasperated and fed up (“Oh, for crying out loud!”) or literal, as one who does not hide her desperation or emotion while she is actually “crying out loud”. Similarly, “living out loud” has associations with survivors of abuse, with activism in the LGBTQ community, and with anyone refusing to “be quiet” about issues of oppression, identity and authorship. It is time to speak loudly with our voices and our art; with our intellect and our emotion; with our politics and our personhood.

Throughout history women’s voices, perspectives, and innovations have been undermined by those in power. In order to have their voices heard or published, many women artists and writers have adopted gender neutral or male pseudonyms. Women have fought for their right to vote, are still fighting for wage-equity, and to have equal representation in congress. Speaking and acting out is complicated for women and femmes because of common double standards like the label “hysterical,” for simply speaking her mind. Women have learned to work within these oppressive structures often at the expense of their rights and humanity, and frankly, we are ready for change.

Cryin’ Out Loud proposes that to unabashedly express emotion is a political act. To live out loud is a necessary political gesture and that women’s experience needs to be seen, heard, and cherished. The exhibition will consist of work in all media that embraces emotion as statement; that broadcasts social and political concerns, and that reacts to and resists the structures that continue to oppress us.

How it Works:

Eligible artists can enter up to 5 images ($35 application fee), statement, CV and web link. All works must be made within the last 2 years. The juror will review the submissions online and make selections A large group exhibition will feature these selections, of which three participants will recieve cash prizes (totaling $1,500.) All artists will be responsible for shipping artwork both ways.

Applications Available: January 18, 2017
Application Deadline: March 5, 2017
Winners Announced: March 24, 2017
Exhibition Dates: April 21 – July 9, 2017
Eligibility: Nation Wide (United States)

Application Requirements:

Applicants can submit up to 5 images Current CV A brief statement on how your work addresses the themes of the exhibition Payment of a $35 submission fee. Shipping artwork to and from CCA.

Juror:  Micol Hebron is an interdisciplinary artist whose practice includes studio work, curating, writing, social media, crowd-sourcing, teaching, and public speaking. Hebron is an Associate Professor of Art at Chapman University; the founder/director of The Situation Room, a resource space for the creative community (in Eagle Rock, CA); the Femmes International Video Art Festival; the Gallery Tally Poster Project about gender equity in contemporary galleries; and the Digital Pasty/Gender Equity initiative for the internet. In 2016 she was awarded the SPArt grant for Social Practice Art in Los Angeles. Previously, Hebron has been the Chief Curator at the Utah Museum of Contemporary Art; the director of the UCLA Summer Art Institue; an editorial board member at X-Tra magazine; an independent curator; a conservator at LACMA, and the co-founder of Gallery B-12 in Hollywood in the 90s. She has served on advisory boards at Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions, Birch Creek Ranch Residency (Utah), Los Angeles County Museum of Art, and UCLA. She is the founder of the LA Art Girls and the co-founder of Fontbron Academy. She employs strategies of conciousness-raising, collaboration, play, and participation to support and further feminist dialogues in art and life.

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