News from American Women Artists 
December 2013 
Plan for 2014 shows: juried competition entry period opens in January
Addison Gallery, Cape Cod, MA

The 17th Annual Master & Signature Member Show and National Juried Competition
will take place at the Addison Gallery in Cape Cod two months earlier than our usual fall schedule in order to capitalize on the Cape's high season for tourists.  Show dates are August 15 through September 15, 2014 with an awards ceremony on Friday, Aug. 15th and opening reception Saturday, August 16th, 2014.

The application process for the 2014 National Juried Competition will be conducted through Juried Art Services, beginning in early January 2014. The National Juried Show prospectus will be available later this month, as will the Member Show guidelines for Master Signature and Signature members. Check our website for weekly updates on show application and guidelines.
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Prevailing Winds: AWA's 2014 museum show in Georgia  

Plans are well underway for the Master & Signature Museum Show at the Booth Western Art Museum in Cartersville, GA. Prevailing Winds: American Women Artists, will run October 23, 2014 to January 4, 2015.

Information will be available soon on exhibit guidelines, catalog of art, schedule of events, and more. This exhibit promises to be a very prestigious show for AWA; celebrating women artists is the entire premise behind the Booth's schedule of events surrounding this show.
AWA members awarded and go on tour: America's Parks II; Through the Beauty of Art 
Blues at Dusk, by Signature member, Cheryl Price
   
An impressive list of AWA members are to participate in three upcoming museum shows as part of the tour, America's Parks II Through the Beauty of Art.  Venues include the Arizona Sonora Desert Museum in Tucson in the fall of 2014, the Wildlife Experience Museum in Parker, Colorado next summer, and the Ella Carothers Dunnegan Gallery of Art in Bolivar, Missouri which will be held mid March - April of 2014.





Beverly Abbott
, Associate member - Ancient Guardians chosen as a Tour Artwork
Joy Kroeger Beckner, Master Signature member- The Eyes Have It! chosen as a Tour Artwork
Cathy Ferrell, Signature member - Above and Below chosen as a Tour Artwork
Shelley Hull, Associate member- Canyonlands Late Afternoon chosen as a Tour Artwork
Jane Hunt, Associate member- After the Rain
Sally Maxwell, Associate member- Sunrise, South Rim chosen as a Tour Artwork
Pokey Park, Associate member, chosen as a Tour Artwork and awarded Honorable Mention for Kit Fox
Anne Peyton, Associate member, chosen Tour Artworks and awarded Honorable Mention for 4 pieces: Beach Boys, In Perfect Balance, On His Territory, and Return to Arizona
Cheryl Price, Signature member, chosen as a Tour Artwork and awarded the Susan Kathleen Black Foundation Floral Art Award for Blues at Dusk
Sherry Salari Sander, Associate member, chosen as a Tour Artwork and awarded Honorable Mention for Wild Horses
Carol Swinney, Master Signature member, awarded Plein Air Magazine Juror's Choice Award for Trail Ridge View and an Honorable Mention for Arizona Canyons.  Both pieces chosen to be Tour Artworks.
Martha Thompson, Associate member, A Sonoran Desert Island chosen as a Tour Artwork 
How did she do that?
CarolSwinney
Carol Swinney

 

Master Signature member Carol Swinney shares the inside scoop on Trail Ridge View, winner of Plein Air Magazine Juror's Choice Award in America's Parks II, as detailed in the story above:
 
This is a studio piece, painted from photos I took up at the tree line above Trail  Ridge Road in Rocky Mountain National Park.  It was summer with  late afternoon light.  This was done exclusively with a palette knife. 

I use Grumbacher and Winsor Newton paints.  Thirteen colors are always on my palette: Cad Yellow Medium (and occasionally a Cad Yellow Pale), Cad Orange, Permanent Rose, Yellow Ochre,,Thalo Yellow Green,Cerulean Blue Hue, Cobalt Blue, French Ultramarine Blue, Mars Violet Deep, Light Red, Burnt Umber, Raw Umber, and Sap Green. 

I use Grumbacher Titanium white and Rembrandt Mixed White.  I like a stiffer white and a little softer white to use when I need to drag paint over the top of thick wet paint and not scrape it off with paint that is too stiff.   There's no black on this palette.  The darks you see in the trees were made from Raw Umber, French Ultramarine Blue, a little Permanent Rose and sometimes a little sap green mixed in for a real deep green.   

Trail Ridge View

Thanks to Nancy Boren for her service to AWA

Master Signature member Nancy Boren completes her long tenure on the AWA Board of Directors this month, having served as both President and Treasurer for the organization. On behalf of all of the members of American Women Artists: thank you Nancy for your many years of service!
 
Rosetta Sculpts with Signature Style

by Nicole Cardoza
Copyright 2013 American Women Artists 
 
Rosetta
AWA Master Signature Member Rosetta

In the world of professional art consistency is highly valued. Consistency demonstrates the development of an artist's style or signature. According to Kim Barnett, owner of Oregon's Bronze Coast Gallery, this signature style is the most difficult thing for an artist to achieve. It is unique and instantly identifies a work's creator. Barnett believes sculptor Rosetta, an AWA Master Signature member, has this instantly recognizable signature style. "Her work is stylized and on this geometric plain, and still anatomically correct - very few people can create realistic sculpture that is so interpretive," Barnett says.

 

Puma Prowl  

 

"I didn't want to play with dolls..."

 

Rosetta's work almost entirely depicts animals, but she says that growing up in the suburbs didn't allow her much exposure to the wildlife she found so fascinating.  "Much to my mother's chagrin I didn't want to play with dolls, instead I carved animals out of soap and made paper sculptures" Rosetta remembers. "It was always just there - art, sculpture, animals.

 

Rosetta credits her father for recognizing her artist talent early on and enrolling her in drawing and painting lessons. In college Rosetta she chose to study graphic design, a field she made her living in for 21 years. Sculpture remained a personal passion and Rosetta continued to sculpt and even began casting her work in bronze, after taking a class through her local community college in Marin, California.

 

Rosetta's calls it a natural evolution from her graphic design work to her sculpture.  Type-setting, trademarks and logos previously done by hand were slowly being made obsolete by computers, but Rosetta was able to translate her aesthetic from design to sculpture.  "The work I was doing required you to distill shapes down to their simple essence with as little detail as possibly - so the way I stylized my sculpture came out that way as well," says Rosetta. In 1985, after she won an annual competition at the National Sculpture Society, Rosetta began to invest more of her professional time in sculpture.  "That award let me know I could do sculpture that I love and people would respond to it," says Rosetta.

 

One of the top bronze artists of her generation...

 

For many gallery owners, like Barnett, Rosetta was something of a pioneer in bronze sculpture and is now considered one of the top bronze artists of her generation. "Rosetta was an anomaly - she wasn't doing realism, instead she had this stylistic approach to representative art," Barnett says. "It is much easier to follow the crowd but she really made her own way.

 

Rosetta believes the art world is more open to women than when she began her career almost 30 years ago, and changes to the art world will reflect the redefinition of traditional gender roles.According to Barnett, there was a time when realistic Western art seemed to be the only thing gallery owners and collectors were interested in purchasing, a genre dominated by men.

 

"At the time I started in Colorado, sculpture was all western wildlife and dominated by men," Rosetta recalls. "I felt shut out until I realized that my work didn't belong in those Western shows and organizations that hardly had any women artists."  During those early years of her career, as she gained more recognition for her work, Rosetta was invited to exhibit alongside of the founding members of American Women Artists. "I was very new to the scene and so grateful for an opportunity to show with really good artists," Rosetta says. "I believe it helped my career get going".

 

Artists often create in solitude and each creation can be a very personal thing to the artist, so it can be difficult for an artist to appreciate the value and benefits of association, community and networking, according to Rosetta. "Showing with high quality artists can give newcomers legitimacy and encourages them to strive forward in their own work," Rosetta says.

 

Rosetta's work can be seen at Cape Cod's Blue Heron Gallery, Bronze Coast Gallery in Cannon Beach, Oregon, Wilcox Gallery in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, Cornerstone Gallery of Fine Art in Salt Lake City, Utah, Howard Mandville Gallery in Seattle, Washington, Evergreen Fine Art in Evergreen, Colorado, Frank Howell Gallery in Santa Fe, New Mexico and she is a featured artist in the book

Art of the National Parks published in June 2013.  



Rosetta notes:  When the city of Dowagiac, MI called in 2009 (they had purchased a Lion sculpture from me years earlier) and said they wanted some running cats for a long strip next to the railroad tracks, I knew that it had to be cheetahs. Depicting three stages of the cheetah's famed running style, I'm told  that the conductor on the local Amtrak run points out the racing cats to the passengers on board as they approach Dowagiac Station.
AWA Board and Officers 2013
Ann Larsen, President, Edinburg, NY
Kathrine Lemke Waste, Vice President, Sacramento, CA

Paula Holtzclaw, Secretary, Waxhaw, NC
Judeth Davis, Treasurer,Glendale, CA
Carol Swinney, Immediate Past President, Casper, WY
Bethanne Kinsella Cople, Past President, Alexandria, VA
Ann Self, Hutchinson, KS
DeBob Jacob, Maypearl, TX 


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