And the winner is….

Today is the day! To find a winner for Art Tasting Boot Camp! I would like to take this opportunity to thank all those who entered the competition.  It was very enjoyable reading all the entries.
I was looking for the following:

  • Work or an entry made specifically for the competition
  • An entry that was original and fun to look at and/or read.
  • The sentence completed in 25 words or less.
  • One that spoke to me and also appealed to my heart.

Edel Corrigan is the winner because her ‘petition’ sentence was heartfelt. She also drew a medical ‘doodle-diagram’ of her heart. But most of all she won because I love those paper fortune tellers! This was a very common pastime during my primary school years. As 8 year olds we innocently tried to predict our future, using these paper fortune tellers! My Mother (who lived in New York for over a decade called these ‘cootie catchers’) I think in Dublin we called them ‘chatterboxes’.

Edel’s sentence: I am free on Saturday mornings, and would truly benefit from doing this course because…creativity is at the (heart drawing) of everything I do. I just need the skillz to back it up…and one day maybe…pay the billz!

I remember how these bits of paper magically told you who liked you, who hated you, who you might marry, and even answered important childhood questions. Well for Edel Corrigan it brought the fortune she wished for, so perhaps they work after all. I always wanted to prove they did. So, Edel welcome on board! You are the winner!

Here is Edel’s entry:

WIN A PLACE ON ART TASTING BOOT CAMP!

Win a place on ART TASTING BOOTCAMP worth €780
How? Write 25 or less additional words to complete this sentence:
‘I am free on saturday mornings and would truly benefit from doing this course because…..

Bring your entry to OPEN EVENING on Thursday 2nd February 6.30-7.30
The Carmelite Centre, Garden Art Room, 56 Aungier Street, Dublin 2.
The 8 tutors will be there to answer workshop questions on the evening.

Alternatively send in your completed sentence, name & address by 24th February to:

Adrienne Geoghegan
4 Provost Row
Palatine Square
Dublin 7.

The WINNER will be notified by 29th February, a lucky leap year day!

GICLEE PRINTING SERVICE

Mark Neiland, fine art and photographic printer. Many satisfied IGI clients. Top Floor of The Dublin Camera Exchange, 63A South Great Georges Street, Dublin 2


Giclée prints are widely accepted in museums and galleries. Many museums, in those in the United States particuliarily have either mounted exhibitions of Giclée prints or purchased prints for their permanent collections. These include: the Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York) and the Guggenheim (New York).

Auctions of giclee prints have fetched $10,800 for Annie Leibovitz, $9,600 for Chuck Close, and $22,800 for Wolfgang Tillmans. Europe is a little behind but catching up. For example The Louvre Museum is using the process for reproduction and display of works which cannot be allowed out of the museum cellars, and otherwise would never be shown to the public. The Tate online shop sell giclee prints for about €400 each.

The ‘fancy word’  Giclee (zhee-klay) – this French word is a feminine noun that means a spray or a spurt of liquid. Images are generated from high resolution digital scans and printed with archival quality pigment inks onto various substrates including canvas, fine art, and photo-base paper, all of which I use. The giclee printing process provides better colour accuracy than other means of reproduction.

Giclee prints are created typically using professional 8 to12 colour printers. I use an Epson which prints up to 44inches or 110 cm wide. These printers have a built in vacuum system which holds the substrate dead flat, so print consistency is guaranteed.  Printers such as this are capable of producing incredibly detailed work for both the fine art and photographic markets.

Giclee prints are advantageous to artists who do not find it feasible to mass produce their work, but want to reproduce their art as needed, or on-demand, and this is what I do.

Once an image is digitally archived, additional reproductions can be made with reasonable cost. The prohibitive up-front cost of mass production for an edition is eliminated. Archived files will not deteriorate in quality as negatives and film inherently do. Another great advantage of giclee printing is that digital images can be reproduced to almost any size and onto various media, giving the artist the ability to tailor prints for a specific client.
The quality of the giclee print rivals traditional printing methods in terms longevity and fade resistance.
The term “pigment print” is used generally for any type of printed image that uses strictly pigments. Pigment printing processes have been utilised since the middle of the 19th century. The image stability of pigment printing is superior to that of any other method of printing, including traditional silver-halide or metal-based.

ILLUSTRATORS GUILD OF IRELAND (IGI)

Book Publishing Work from a selection of IGI members to be opened by Siobhan Parkinson Laureate No nOg.
Thursday 26th January 2012. The United Arts Club, 3 Fitzwilliam Street, Dublin 2

Viewing Monday to Friday 11am to 11pm, until 13th February 2012.

COURSE BOOKINGS UPDATE

1. Illustration Boot Camp – January 2012 class full. Cancellation waiting list. October 2012 bookings have started. Enrollments from July 2012
2. Picture Book Boot Camp – January 2012 class full. Cancellation waiting list. October 2012 bookings have started.  Enrollments from July 2012
3. Art Tasting Boot Camp – New course starts on  Saturday 3rd March 2012. (places available) 24 week course. Open Evening Sat 18th Feb, 5pm- 6pm at the Carmelite Centre on Aungier St (GardenArt Room)

2012 ART BOOT CAMPS BROCHURE! Pick one up in town today!

2012 ART BOOT CAMP COURSES – ENROLLMENT OPEN

2012 ART BOOT CAMPS are  approx 60% booked.
1. Illustration Boot Camp No 7 (suitable for all visual artists). Begins on Tuesday 10th January 2012, 6.30 to 9pm. 24 classes,  fees €780
2. Picture Book Camp No 7 (write & illustrate a children’s book). Begins on Wednesday 11th January 2012, 6.30 to 9pm. 24 classes, fees €780
3. Art Tasting Boot Camp No 2 8 tastes of art, 8 tutors, 24 classes. Begins Saturday 3rd March 2012, 10.30am to 1pm,24 classes, fees €780

Inklings Show at Little Green Street Gallery

A collaboration of works by the visual artists of Illustration Boot Camp and Picture Book Camp courses.

Opening 17th November 2012 at 7.30pm

Little Green Street Gallery, Little Green Street, Dublin 1.

Exhibition runs until 30th November, 2011

Outstanding work on view. Drinks promotion and PICHET nibbles on teh night!

www.facebook.com/inklings24

Culture Night Kitchen Feedback

I found this on Maureen Walshe’s blog: http://poisonarrowblog.blogspot.com

Maureen is an animation student in Ballyfermot. He attended my Culture Night event in my kitchen and this is what she says:

Adrienne Geoghegan’s Kitchen of Culture Night 23rd of September

Culture Night in Dublin is a great night where a majority (if not all!) cultural events in Dublin are free. Musuems that might normally cost an arm and a leg to get into suddenly open their doors to the public. Although some of these open doors require booking, so as to avoid a million people turning up. Nevertheless, I booked some places in a workshop called “Creative Boot Camps – Artist Trading Card Workshop”. The info from the Culture night brochure described it as “a tiny, original piece of art created with the intention of trading it with another artist.” The artist running the event, Adrienne Geoghegan, usually runs illustration boot camps during the year, so I guess this was her equivalent of a taster of what she usually offers. It seemed a fun idea so I went ahead and booked a few from the class of us in. Places where very limited and when we arrived it was easy to see why. The event was in the artist’s house! Her crazy but lovable dog was roaming around with a stick in her mouth and a little boy and girl were hyper with the excitement of all the strangers in the house. It was a wonderful kind of madness!

We were the second group of the night, the first group had started late so we had to wait in the sitting room. Some of Adrienne’s work was on the wall, and it was fascinating. It was quite varied so at first I wasn’t sure if it was all her work. It was a nice experience to see inside an artist’s house. I even enjoyed looking at the collection of books she owned. I’d like to think that someday I’d have a house covered in work I’m proud of, and an equally great collection of books. There was really interesting 3d pieces on the wall, as well as 2d ones.

When we finally went through, we were offered tea and cake. Not just any kind of cake, french fancies etc! And not even just regular tea (in a way). It was served in the most fantastic crockery! Proper Alice in Wonderland tea party stuff! I was afraid I’d break mine! Even the tea pot was the most beautiful tea pot I’ve ever seen! I digress..

In front of us was almost every art material imaginable. Paper, scissors, paint, water-colours, water colour crayons, pastels, oil pastels, pencils, glue, stamps, ink, paint brushes of various sizes. I’m probably forgetting something.. Anyway, it was like being in a craft shop where you want to play with everything but can’t. Well, I could today! She said that we could do whatever we’d like, but that if we needed a theme, the theme was “urban”. She showed us a few examples of cards she’d made up and then we were away. Instantly, the word “urban” ironically made me think “country” and then I thought of the country mouse coming to town, so I painted him using water colour crayons, which I hadn’t used before and will definitely be buying a set! I then used oil pastels to draw a sophisticated town pig. This was obvious by his monocle and top hat. I then felt I was being a bit too silly, so then I drew a rather nice graceful simplistic swan on some gold metallic card. I was surprised how nice it looked. I’m usually not good at “sophisticated”.

Adrienne had had a special stamp made up so that when we were finished, we stamped the back of our card, which left a template for us to title the piece and write our name, which was a nice touch. I managed to trade all my cards, but unfortunately, I think because so many of us from the class went, that it resulted in us being a bit insular and not trading with many other people at the event. Never the less, I’m really happy to own some of everyone else’s work, even if it is only a little card. It’s odd to work alongside great artists, but yet never own any of their work, which is a shame. Anyway, I best get back to work. Tomorrow I’m painting pigs in a pub in Lucan, so fingers crossed I can get a few bob out of the locals! Thanks for reading!

Nice huh!?

Culture Night in My Kitchen Photos!

Urban theme for urbanites!

who stayed until after 8pm, well done!

busy busy busy

I am very happy with how Culture Night in my kitchen turned out! There were two groups of 12 to 14 people and each group produced Artist Trading cards on an ‘urban’ theme. We had some nice chats, tea, coffee and cakes. All in all a very pleasant time. It was quite a multi cultural mix with people from Germany, Poland, France, Iceland, Panama, and the USA.

Will I do it again next year?? I think I just might!

getting hungry....

why are we waiting?

very relaxing....

I may just do this again next year!