Attention all Georgia-based artists! Submit your best work in the area of visual arts, literary, video, and music. Submissions and voting ends January 31.
Select artists will have artwork featured in Georgia’s Arts Advocacy Week online magazine, a magazine designed to promote Georgia’s arts and culture. Also, select artists will be featured in Georgian’s for the Arts promotional materials to highlight the artists Georgia has to offer.
The publication distributed to Georgia’s legislative body showcases Georgia’s creative talents from every corner of the state, highlighting the impact art has on the state and its communities.
Competition terms and conditions apply.
YOU MUST BE REGISTERED AND LOGGED TO CONTINUE
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Wax Color pencils on gray paper. (37x24in) November 15th, 2019
Conceptualized in Cartersville Ga.
Charcoal and color pencils. (27×24 in) June 20th, 2019.
Conceptualized in Cartersville Ga.
18″x24″ oil on canvas. Multi-layered project.
18″x24″ oil on canvas.This multi-layered painting is designed with AR/Augmented Reality that is viewable through the ARTIVIVE App, which is free to download. Download the app and place pic of painting itself in the camera’s view for video and audio
This is a Black and White, 48″x48″ oil on canvas painting, with all 4 sides/front painted with design.This piece is one of two pieces that hang in the Eagle Theater in Sugar Hill, Ga.
Revisit clever things Grandma used to say in this nostalgic nod to the wisdom of Black Grandmothers in the American South. The 15 mini tracks in this album are all under 2 minutes each and are based on ‘mother wit’
I wrote this song at the beginning of the pandemic in response to the sudden uncertainty and fear being felt worldwide. I sat alone in a room – just me and my piano, and this song showed up. With the
During a session at a poetry workshop, Poets were given the task to write people of color into science fiction and outer space. I did disagree with concept of lack of representation. I made the argument that spiritually and cultural
In an effort to uncover the history of his land, artist Clark Ashton
began extensive research at the Georgia Archives and DeKalb History Center.
What he found was nothing less than the story of America in his own back yard.