Wednesday, November 14, 2012

LATE FEE WAIVED FOR OPEN WALLS!




But you must act fast! Anyone who wants to participate in Galleria's "Open Walls" should sign up ASAP (late fee waived.) It costs $50 for 7’ wide gallery space. Install artwork as desired in your space on the wall in the East Gallery. Locations are determined by lottery. Email Daniele Derenzi with any questions danielesphotos@msn.com.

 A few other things you may not know . . .


1) This show only - show anything--even if it's been exhibited before at Sanchez or Oceana. Also, no size limits. Big or small. Just figure some way to hang it.

2) How reasonable (cheap) entry fees are: $2, $5, $10 depending on the width of the piece.  Empty your storage space or garage of all that great artwork gathering dust.

3) Only $15 to participate in the Gallery Store - one time fee!

4) This year the event runs 3 weekends Dec 1-2, 8-9, 15-16, Saturdays & Sundays, 1 to 5 p.m. and during Pacifica Performances intermissions!

4) Chance to meet fellow artists - volunteer to help hang the show, serve refreshments, greet visitors, help with sales, or just hang out!

5) This show only - no commission will be charged (with the exception of 4% for use of Sanchez Art Center's credit card machine).

6) Gallery attendants will handle all sales in Salon show!

7) Gala opening -snacks, liquid libations, live music in both wings!

If you have any questions, call or email Nancy Russell at shoreside@mac.com or (650) 359-3471.

Download the Call for Entry: Visit our web site to download the call for entry by clicking (HERE) and look around the site for awhile, you never know what you might find!

This is a variation of a message sent to all AGP members recently via MailChimp.

Thursday, October 25, 2012

AGP's "Galleria" Coming Soon!

The Art Guild of Pacifica rings in the holiday season each year with an open studio and open wall exhibition.  Art Guild members can hang as much of their work as they desire in any combination on a seven foot section of gallery wall at Sanchez Art Center, and studio artists there are provided an opportunity to share their unique work environment and their art.  Overall, this exhibition has been a wonderful community offering. 

This year, the Art Guild of Pacifica elaborates on its success with an exhibition aptly entitled “Galleria”.  Indeed, there will be open walls and open studios, but “Galleria” also offers Art Guild members the opportunity to exhibit work, any work, in a varied salon style exhibition.  This exhibition has no theme, but rather encourages artists to include many pieces of art in all shapes and sizes, which adds to the riot of visual stimuli created by salon style hanging.  If that isn’t enough, participation is offered at extremely reasonable fees, and the exhibition extends three full weekends (although artists need to be present for only one). 

A seven foot section of gallery wall at Sanchez Art Center, the open wall portion of the show, is available to AGP members for $50.  Pre-registration using the call for entry form on line (here) is necessary.  As a bonus, however, artists can enter one piece of artwork in the salon style group show at no charge.  For only $15, an artist’s small works (i.e., cards, postcards, small books, and small jewelry) can be added to the Gallery Store, and therefore be one of the first things attendees see.  Interested artists should bring the work (remember, art of all shapes and sizes is part of the salon’s charm) to Receiving on Sunday, November 25, 2012 between 1:00 p.m. and 5:00 p.m.  Payments based on art size will be taken at that time and on a tiered basis, as follows: 

·         Pieces of art up to 12 inches wide cost only $2.00 each to enter.

·         Pieces of art up to 25 inches wide cost only $5.00 each to enter.

·         Individual pieces of art over 25 inches in width are $10.00 each to enter.

There is no gallery commission charged for sold items during this show, and art enthusiasts who purchase art can leave with their purchase that day (as opposed to waiting until the show’s end).   Artists entering their work must be Art Guild of Pacifica members (individual membership is only $25 – learn more about membership here). 

AGP’s “Galleria” will be open for three consecutive weekends, but artists with open walls are required to be on the premises to represent their work only during the first weekend, which is November 30 – December 2, 2012.  Thereafter, gallery attendants will be on site to handle sales the weekends of December 8-9 and December 15-16, and during Pacifica Performance intermissions in that time period.  Please see the Call for Entry for open wall installation information and more details. 

We hope to see many Art Guild of Pacifica members involved in this wonderful exhibition and bringing their art to the public.  Remember, one doesn’t have to pay for wall space to be included in the salon group show.  For as low as $2.00, any artist can include a small piece of work and be a part of AGP’s glorious “Galleria”!  It’s a wonderful way to ring in the 2012 holiday season!

Get the call for artists here!


By Donna L. Faber
October 19, 2012

PENINSULA ARTS COUNCIL'S 11TH ANNUAL DIAMOND AWARDS

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: Julie Fellers
NOMINATIONS ARE NOW OPEN FOR PENINSULA ARTS COUNCIL’S
11th ANNUAL DIAMOND AWARDS
Awards given in nine categories - Deadline to submit 11/30/12
San Carlos, CA - Peninsula Arts Council is seeking nominations for it's 11th Annual Diamond Awards. The awards recognize and honor individuals and organizations for their outstanding artistic achievements and contributions to the arts in San Mateo County.
 
The Diamond Awards are given in nine different categories: Arts Educator, Arts Organization, Individual Artist, Ray Lorenzato Young Artist (18 and younger), Arts Volunteer, Local Business Support, Donor Support, Government Support and Special Recognition. Last year’s recipients included: Julia Belanoff, Woodside H.S. (Ray Lorenzato Young Artist Award), Shely Pack-Manning (Arts Educator), Art in Action (Arts Organization), Troy Paiva (Individual Artist), Bonny Zanardi (Arts Volunteer), Jerry Lee, The San Mateo Daily Journal (Local Business Support),Half Moon Bay Beautification Committee (Government Support), Francesca Eastman, Goodstein Foundation (Donor Support), and Neil and Pegi Young (Special Recognition).
All nominations to be submitted electronically via the official nomination form available at www.peninsulaartscouncil.org. Deadline to submit a nomination is 5 p.m. Friday, November 30, 2012. Judging will take place in early December and recipients will be notified mid-December.
The Diamond Awards gala benefit and awards ceremony will take place on January 25, 2013 from 6-10 p.m. at Hiller Aviation Museum in San Carlos. The celebratory evening includes a hors d’oeuvres and wine reception, silent auction, entertainment, guest speakers and presentation of the Diamond Awards.
Generous support from sponsors and silent auction donators are needed to help underwrite the costs of this signature county-wide event. Sponsors to date include Bramasol, San Mateo County Fair and Media Sponsor, The San Mateo Daily Journal. To find out how to sponsor or donate, please contact Peninsula Arts Council at info@peninsulaartscouncil.org.
About Peninsula Arts Council: Peninsula Arts Council (PAC) is a non-profit arts organization dedicated to supporting, promoting and advancing the arts in San Mateo County since 1992. Key areas of focus that have long-term county-wide benefits include: public art, arts education and developing the county into a destination for the arts, parks and culture. For more information visit www.peninsulaartscouncil.org or call Peninsula Arts Council at (650) 591-2101.

Friday, October 19, 2012

AGP Member's Spotlight: Linda Dever


The Art Guild of Pacifica is a dynamic collection of people that are rich in capabilities, artistic experience, teamwork, and most of all talent.  There is so much talent that I wish I could blog about every single AGP member all at once.  I’ll have to settle for one member at a time, this time focusing on artist Linda Dever.

Close your eyes.  Close them tight.  Think about an alternative world, a different world.  It is one that is awash in green and blue aquatic hues and dotted with trees.  This is a world where cats frolic side by side with fish and birds and other denizens of the sky and sea.  They cavort in friendship before the blissfully blue waters of the vast ocean.  Lo and behold, you've stumbled into a fantasy painting by San Bruno artist, Linda Dever.

When Linda paints, she plunges into limitless stores of creativity to invoke images of peaceful coexistence a midst imaginary worlds.   She lays down color first in acrylics, with special attention to shape and texture.  Her initial efforts seem abstract, but soon the common theme of water insinuates itself into her work.  It’s as if the water itself demands attention, leading Linda into an adventure of layering and collage, one that requires extra dry-time before the rest of the imaginary world is willing to reveal itself.  Frequently, Linda adds stickers or other embellishments which serve to coax unexpected elements of realism into what would otherwise be exclusively fantastical pieces. We don’t see much red, the angry color, or even hues of orange or yellow. No. It is ever the calming effects of blissful blue that dominate her art.  

Early on, Linda knew that to be happy she would have to find a way to combine her art and creativity with making an income. So, she achieved a BS in Art Education from Penn State University and an MA in Educational Technology and a certificate for English as a Second Language from San Francisco State.  This combined art with teaching, which brought her great happiness throughout her career.  Linda taught Art and First Grade in New York and New Jersey before relocating to San Francisco.  After a period of teaching elementary grades here, she began to work with disabled adults and senior citizens, most recently working with the Older Adults Program of CCSF, where she taught Art, World Culture, Art History, Crafts and Health & Exercise.  At this time, Linda offers a free class at the YMCA entitled “World Cultures in Art” in which current exhibits, countries, and art are the topic.  She and her husband, Steve, enjoy travelling to different parts of the world, and so she brings art & architecture from those lands to her classroom, where they are shared along with the travels of her students.

Linda is a passionate artist, and a very giving person.  I can attest to this personally. She is an individualist who has no desire to be like other people, but rather strives to be her own unique self.   She believes in the gift of giving and so, emulating her mother who believed in “help thy neighbor” as a personal attribute, she strives to capture moments in time where she can make a difference in the lives of others.  I asked her to describe her work in one word, and it was a challenge.  First, we thought words like “surreal”, “unique” and “colorful” might fit the bill, but ultimately Linda settled on joyful.  

The things that bring Linda the most joy such as cats, the sea, nature, birds, and fish, appear the most in her art … thus, Linda's art brings her joy just like teaching does.

View more of Linda’s work on-line at Linda Dever Fantasy Art and Books.  She is an exhibiting artist and member of ArtWork of San Francisco.  She’s exhibited at Bayshore Production Studios, Green Street Digital Arts and done solo shows at Caffe Bianco, Martha & Brothers Coffee, and the Art Center in San Bruno.  Linda’s art won an award at the San Mateo County Fair.  Her full body of work includes books best suited for children that describe the adventures of precocious cats and other topics close to her heart.  Read about them here.  She also does unique pet portraits that you can read about here. Her free class on “World Cultures & Art” happens at the Stonestown YMCA in San Francisco, across from the mall at 3150 – 20th Avenue on Tuesdays.  January’s classes will be about Asia and India.  Linda will be participating with an open wall at the Art Guild of Pacifica’s upcoming “Galleria” exhibition at the Sanchez Art Center.

Written and blogged by Donna L. Faber, AGP Board Secretary.
Visit Donna at www.donnalouisefaber.com .

Monday, October 15, 2012

Artists & the Internet Part 3: E-mail Marketing, On-Line Purchasing & Mobile Payments


I’d like to share some of my experiences and thoughts on the internet and how it’s affected my creativity and art.  I’ll cover blogs, domains, websites, social networking, electronic newsletters, on-line sales and taking electronic payments.   There may be something you, the reader, are interested in, shared, or experienced yourself; but also I hope to dissolve some of the intimidating mystery and perhaps make it feel more accessible to the Pacifican artist.

Read Part I: Blogs & Domains here.
Read Part 2: Websites & Social Networking here.

E-Mail Marketing

Before we get into on-line purchasing and payment information for the artist, let’s talk about e-mail marketing or e-newsletters. In the second part of this three part series here, I went over the benefits of marketing art using social networking sites like Facebook and Twitter.  A natural progression in marketing strategy for the artist, a small business person, and a way to reach the many people interested in your work quickly is through the use of electronic newsletters. When you receive colorful, newsletter style information from Art Guild of Pacifica, you are receiving it from Michael Risenhoover using an e-newsletter platform called Mail Chimp.  Mail Chimp is only one of the many different services available, yet it is quite user friendly, and it is free.  Some services are best to target a small audience and some are more suited for large mass mailings, but they all include the ability to manipulate statistics and reveal how many of your recipients look at your message.

In my opinion, the most important part of using an e-newsletter is building a list of recipients. You need email addresses to do this.  Start with addresses you have at your disposal, people interested in what you do, and then build upward by asking people to sign. The service you choose will no doubt have html language (the mysterious language of the internet) to plug into your site.  Once all email addresses are saved in the program, you send your message only once to reach all recipients simultaneously.  Herein lies the grand benefit of the e-newsletter -- using technology to provide information to your clients quickly and efficiently.  E-newsletters serve the artist well to announce shows, exhibitions, monthly updates on your art, or any other information however often you wish to send it.  

IMPORTANT: Federal law regulating unsolicited email states that anyone sending a mass e-newsletter must include their name and address visibly (there are other rules, too, so be encouraged to read up on it). Artists wishing to keep their home address private might consider renting a P.O. Box just for their art business.

Mobile Payments

An artist’s greatest pleasure can also be her/his greatest challenge.   Fairs and events like Fogfest potentially bring your clients to a full, store like representation of your work, but in the absence of cash or personal checks, how do you take payment?  The ability to take a credit card is important to the artist, but in the past meant using a manual credit card imprinter, paying huge fees to companies like Visa or Master Card, or worse, running the risk of payment denial once slips are batched and submitted.  Those fees can be prohibitive, threatening to eat a huge chunk of an artist’s profits.  Our work is too personal, too wonderful, and too much effort to throw its benefit away on needless and expensive fees.

The advent of technology like the smart phone offers new reliable ways to take payments in the field.  There are a number of these tools available now (PayPal’s Mobile Credit Card Reader, Intuit GoPayment), but I can only speak to my experience with Google Square.  Square is an application that allows your iPhone or iPad (or any variation thereof) to process Visa, Mastercard, American Express, and Discover payments over the internet ... and to do so right on the spot!  

A thing of the past!
Visit squareup.com to sign up and when you do, Square will send you a card reader or what is fondly referred to as a “dongle”.  Do the same by uploading the app directly to your phone.  The card reader plugs directly into your smart phone.  Mine took less than a week to arrive, a benefit of living so close to Silicon Valley.  Upon receiving your card reader, downloading the app, and signing up you are able to take payments immediately.  Square takes a small fee from each transaction and will download money directly into your bank account nightly if you want it to.

IMPORTANT: Like your cellphone or smart pad, Square is available through your carrier’s mobile network.  If you are exhibiting at Sanchez Art Center, for example, note that certain parts of the gallery have limited cell reception. This can happen anywhere.  If you don’t have a strong signal for your phone, Square won’t be accessible either.  You must be on-line to process payments.

On-Line Purchasing

When the internet prompted business on-line (the sale of goods and services, or what is referred to as e-commerce), it opened the door for internet identity theft and fraud. Early on, the only way to make a credit card payment to a small business person on-line was to use an insecure internet connection, one that allowed crawlers and bots to pick up your credit card number and publish it in search engines, or worse, sending your credit card number through email.  That was eons ago.  Now, e-commerce has become secure and easy.  PayPal makes e-commerce safe and available to the artist.

“PayPal is a global e-commerce business allowing payments and money transfers to be made through the Internet. Online money transfers serve as electronic alternatives to paying with traditional paper methods, such as checks and money orders … PayPal is an acquirer, performing payment processing for online vendors, auction sites, and other commercial users, for which it charges a fee. It may also charge a fee for receiving money, proportional to the amount received. The fees depend on the currency used, the payment option used, the country of the sender, the country of the recipient, the amount sent and the recipient's account type.” <source>

If you can use the design features on your blog or website, you can use one of Paypal’s serveral purchase buttons.  They plug right into your site and link up directly to PayPal in an expedient and secure manner.  It has numerous safety measures, as well, and when used properly, they protect your transactions from fraud or threat.  But don’t take my word for it.  Be encouraged to research PayPal as a viable option for your small business.  

Donna L. Faber
This concludes my series on artists and the internet.  I hope it's dissolved some of the mystery around using the internet to pursue your small business and convinced you it can be a powerful tool for marketing and selling.  With the right teacher, all of these things (blogs, domains, social networking, etc.), can be mastered by any artist who has drive and determination in their arsenal of talents.  

I wish you the best of luck as you pursue the internet and all it has to offer!


Read Part I: Blogs & Domains here.
Read Part 2: Websites & Social Networking here.

Blogged by Donna L. Faber, Board Secretary of the Art Guild of Pacifica.  Please do not reprint any part of this information without prior permission.  Visit me at www.donnalouisefaber.com and see what's happening!

Sunday, September 30, 2012

AGP Members Spotlight: Denny Holland


The Art Guild of Pacifica is a dynamic collection of people that are rich in capabilities, artistic experience, teamwork, and most of all talent.  There is so much talent that I wish I could blog about every single AGP member all at once.  I’ll have to settle for one member at a time, this time focusing on artist Denny Holland.

Denny Holland is one of four artists featured in this year’s Art Guild of Pacifica Member Show at Sanchez Art Center.  He considers being featured an unexpected honor, but we like him for so much more than just that!

Waterline, 16" x 20", oil on panel
In the AGP Members Show, Denny presents a series of ocean paintings focused on waves.  His style is primarily realistic and in oils, but with this series, he became fascinated by the wave’s abstract patterns. This show gave him the opportunity to deeply explore the line between realism and abstraction.

Denny is an artist living and working in the Bay Area, and he’s been painting for 30 years.  He attended the San Francisco Art Institute, and in 1983 graduated with a BFA in painting. Then, as a newly married man starting a family, he discovered how difficult it was to get work around that skill specifically.  So, Denny started a house painting business, and for the next 25 years it gave him flexibility to paint.

Denny's Trailer from "Travelogue"
Over the last two years, Denny has been teaching interior design at Canadá College and doing design work himself.  Of course, creativity and personal interest meet at the intersection of art. So, he explored three dimensional arts, such as the small trailer that was in Oceana Gallery’s show, “Travelogue”.  While 3D art is reminiscent of building models as a child, it also keeps his creativity fresh and new. From time to time, Denny needs a different creative outlet, but in the end it always comes back to oil painting.

Remember this from AGP's "Buddy Show"?
The creative elements Denny learns eventually blend together in a personal exploration of art that is largely inspired by living on the Coast and his various Coastline travels.   Many artists I speak with feel this way.  As Denny states, “we’re living in a gold mine of inspiration, really.”   I agree with him wholeheartedly. When you view his work and experience it’s soothing, calming and even atmospheric effects, you will understand Denny’s personal inspiration, and come to appreciate his work as much as I do.

Denny's Studio
You can see more of Denny’s work at www.dennyholland.com and on his blog at http://dennyhollandstudio.blogspot.com/.  He is highly focused on the AGP Members Show at this time, but immediately after will set painting aside for a time to do more three dimensional art. 

The Art Guild of Pacifica’s 54th Annual Members Exhibit will be at Sanchez Art Center,1220 Linda Mar Boulevard, Pacifica, California  94044.  The show opens with a lovely reception on Friday evening, October 12, from 7 to 9 p.m.   Thereafter, the exhibit continues through November 18, 2012.

Blogged by Donna L. Faber
AGP Secretary

Monday, September 24, 2012

AGP Members at Fogfest 2012

What AGP Members will present at Fogfest this weekend?


A sample of Barbara's work
AGP Member Barbara Aygun marks her fourth year with FogFest, and can be found at the north end of the show right in front of Ingrid B. Lacy school. Barbara will be offering original jewelry designs under her store's banner "Mystical Moon Designs". 




A sample of Daniele's work
AGP Member Daniele Derenzi marks her eighth year with Fogfest.  Look for her in booth #67, near the corner of San Jose Avenue, right across from the Sea Horse Saloon.  She'll have offerings around her photography, as well as a few surprises!



A sample of Debra's work
AGP Member Debra Abarca will be in booth #205 presenting an assortment of functional and sculptural ceramic items. You might remember Debra's fantastical sculptures in the last two shows at Oceana Gallery.  They were really cool!




Do you know any other AGP Members who are exhibiting at Fogfest this year?




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