Your Eyes to the World of Soft Pastel Art
Posts tagged art competition
The 11th Pastel 100 Competition Results
Mar 3rd
The grand prize winners of the Pastel Journal 11th annual Pastel 100 Competition are Don Rantz, Sarah Blumenschein, Akiko Hoshino, Jennifer Gardner and Dawn Emerson. In the slide show below you can see the awarded pastel paintings and some more work by these fine pastelists.
The Best of America pastel Artists – volume II
Jan 24th
The Visual Art Guide is hosting websites for many artists and they publish really nice books. They have recently issued book “The Best of America Pastel Artists – volume II” which you can browse online and even download for free. The shorter presentation of the book can be found here and you can enjoy some fantastic soft pastel works.
If you like those books you can enter one of the competitions and if you are chosen among top 200 artists you can be published and get 2 pages in the book.
The Richeson 75 International – Announced Finalists
Jan 14th
Jack Richeson &Co, Inc has published pastel paintings that were juried into the show and will be included in the exhibition catalog. The show is physically presented in the Richeson Art Gallery in Kimberly Wisconsin, USA, and virtually presented at the Richeson 75 website.
How to make 36.000€ with your figurative pastel painting
Jan 13th
The “Foundation of the Arts and Artists” was founded in 2005 by architect Jose Manuel Infiesta and is based in Barcelona, Spain. The Foundation has proposed the creation of a Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art that is differentiated from many already in existence in that it provides space for contemporary artists who, for being figurative, realist or hyperrealist artists, are often excluded from other museums and collections of foundations or institutions for whom, generally speaking, the concept of “contemporary art” is synonymous with “abstraction”, “conceptualism”, etc… Since a couple of years back they have competitions of Figurative art and Sculpture. There is a single prize in the Painting Discipline of 36.000€, for sculpture 44.000€ and a fund of 120.000€ to buy work. The museum is planed to be opened in 2010 and the deadline for the competition registration is May 16th 2010. The website is in Spanish but you can find information about the Foundation and the competition rules in English. Let me know if you win
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Cecilia Watson won “Get Dusty” contest
Jan 10th

Cecilia Watson "Just Hanging Around".
The Pastel Guild of Europe is a society that gathers pastel artist from all around the Europe. Any pastel artist living and working in Europe can join the society by submitting 3 paintings. As one of the activities for the members they run a monthly challenge called Get Dusty. The theme for December was “Still life – artist’s own setup” and the winner was Cecilia Watson, a self taught animal and wildlife pastelist from Spain.
Sarah Blumenschein winner in Still Life/Floral category
Nov 16th
Sarah Blumenschein won the first place in the Still Life/Floral category of the Artist’s Magazine 26th annual competition with her pastel painting
New Mexico artist Sarah Blumenschein looks forward to the brief springtime appearance of red Bartlett pears in her local grocery store because of their beautiful red color. Sunflowers, Red Pears, Turquoise Cloth is a joyous assemblage. “I tend to try to enhance the colors and the effect of the light,” Blumenshein says. “I really like the challenge of capturing how the light bounces between things.” A systems engineer before turning her attention to art full time in 2000, the artist began experimenting with pastels in 2003. She’s found them to be the ideal medium for her, and the still life genre suits her for a similar reason. “Still life allows me to be a mom and an artist,” she says. “I can set up a still life and paint for a couple of hours, then stop and come back later.”… The Artist’s Magazine
Frederick Somers winner in Abstract/Experimental category
Nov 16th
Frederick Somers won the first place in the Abstract/Experimental category of the Artist’s Magazine 26th annual competition with his pastel painting.
For more than 30 years, Frederick Somers has noted those small sections of flowers and grasses sequestering pools of water in the Minnesota farmlands. In winter, as the days grow shorter and darker and the sun sits lower in the sky, the longer wavelengths of light create vibrant purples and reds, like those in Ruby’s Crowned Waters. The painting originated from a reference photo he’d snapped impulsively from his truck window. “Near the peripheral edges of my sight, I saw colors of the most brilliant light blues, reds and greens,” says Somers. “When I turned my head, they were gone. I believe the colors were some kind of prismatic effect.”
Somers began by painting shapes and values, then added details and final color notes. He used the flat side of his pastel and a “dry wash” applied with Viva towels—a frequently used tool for both adding and removing color. By this means he achieves the perfect balance of hard and soft edges and bright or dull color. The Artist’s Magazine
Rita Kirkman honorable mention in Wildlife/Animal category
Nov 16th

Rita Kirkman "4 at Rest"
Rita Kirkman got the honorable mention in the Wildlife/Animal category of the Artist’s Magazine 26th annual competition with her pastel painting.
“My work is more about composition and light than subject matter,” says Rita Kirkman. In animals she sees aesthetic lines and expressiveness.
She works mostly from photos and plays with compositions on her computer. Her piece 4 at Rest mainly derives from one image, but two cows were pasted in from other shots. She liked the overlapping diagonals—and enjoyed breaking a compositional rule by using an even number of elements. The artist, who holds a bachelor of fine arts degree from the University of Dayton in Ohio, begins her pastels by applying Art Spectrum pastel primer with a wide brush to Gatorboard (a plastic foam board). She then applies pastels in thin layers, building values from dark to light. “On large pieces such as 4 at Rest,” says Kirkman, “I don’t like to blend; the pastel sits on the primer so the underlying tone and texture show through, allowing that crispness and sparkle only pastel can achieve.” Artist’s Magazine
Terry Donahue winner in Wildlife/Animal category
Nov 16th

Terry Donahue "Fly Over Country"
Terry Donahue won the first place in the Wildlife/Animal category of the Artist’s Magazine 26th annual competition with his pastel painting.
“While on a road trip through Nebraska, Terry Donahue saw in the distance what looked like a “white tornado.” On closer inspection he realized the sight was a swirling mass of migrating snow geese. For the next three days, the artist photographed the marvelous creatures, and, from these reference photos, he created his winning pastel, Fly Over Country. The title is a wordplay based on a comment by a political pundit who described the Midwest as flyover country—dull and not worth a visit. Donahue, who returned to Nebraska two weeks after the snow geese migration to watch sandhill cranes in flight, clearly feels otherwise.
“I don’t do thumbnail or rough sketch drawings prior to starting a piece,” says the artist. “Some works fall together quickly, whereas others build from a particular vision or impression of mine and are continually forcing themselves in new directions. These works take a little more time to finish; Fly Over Country was one…” Artist’s Magazine




Barbara Benedetti Newton


