St. Louis

Art in Isolation

Art In Isolation seeks artists residing in the United States working in two-dimensional art.  Artwork can be about any theme or topic. The exhibition will take place solely online. A virtual exhibition walkthrough will be created along with a free downloadable catalog for the exhibition.

Jurors: Candice Corgan and Taro Takizawa

Submission process:

Up to 3 submissions made within the past 2 years

1 main image and 1 detail image per submission

ONLY 2 DIMENSIONAL WORK WILL BE ACCEPTED

150 or 300 dpi .jpg

Under 5MB per image

Files named as:

LastName_SubmissionNumber

eg. Smith_1

LastName_SubmissionNumber_Detail

eg. Smith_1_Detail

Attached Item Detail .pdf

Constructed Visions III

Constructed Visions III is a national juried exhibition seeking artisans (object makers) of 3D or 2D contemporary fine craft or sculpture that highlight process-driven methods. The artistic product may be functional or nonfunctional, but the process, technique, and material must align with the intent or content of the piece. The St. Louis Artists’ Guild seeks artwork in wood, metal, paper, fiber, glass, clay, jewelry, encaustics, and printmaking as well as non-traditional materials.

Clearly Human IV

The St. Louis Artists’ Guild is proud to host Clearly Human IV, an all-media group exhibition of artwork focused on the human figure. Clearly Human IV gives a comprehensive look at the many ways of representing the human figure, from traditional to contemporary, realistic to fanciful, beautiful to unsettling. The exhibit seeks a diverse view of the humanity representing subjects varying greatly in gender, age, ethnicity, and nationality. The artists are encouraged to use the figure to explore a wide variety of themes, including definitions of beauty, perceptions of history, relationships with nature, and moments of everyday life.

An Idea of Order

Juried Exhibition - An Idea of Order

The title of this exhibit is inspired by the poem "An Idea of Order at Key West" by Wallace Stevens. Artists have employed mathematics to bring visual harmony to our surroundings with tools such as the golden ratio, perspective and grid systems. From the intricate symmetry of Islamic tile design, to the measured drawings of Agnes Martin, mathematics can create visual harmony and give a sense of order to what appears to be chaotic.

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