Why buy original art from Zatista? We'll tell you here
The Sketchbook Project: 2012

If you missed our post about this last year, here’s your second chance. The Sketchbook Project – a group art project in which anyone from anywhere in the world can participate. Artist or otherwise, you and someone you know can be part of this project. To receive a sketchbook, pay $25, choose a theme from a list of 30 intriguing possibilities including: In Fifty Years, Fears and Tears, Treehouse, Heroes and Villains, or opt for the project to choose a theme for you.

Sketchbook by Duncan Reid

Sign up by October 31, 2011, and postmark your completed sketchbook by January 31, 2012. Tour begins April 2012 and will stop in Brooklyn, Chicago, Portland, OR, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Boston, Philadelphia, Portland, ME, Toronto, Vancouver, Atlanta, Austin, London, and Melbourne.

Sketchbook by Ken McCarthy

Creator of the project, Art House Co-op says, “Thousands of sketchbooks will be exhibited at galleries and museums as they make their way on tour across the country. After the tour, all sketchbooks will enter into the permanent collection of The Brooklyn Art Library, where they will be barcoded and available for the public to view. For an additional $20, your completed sketchbook can be professionally scanned and uploaded to the official Sketchbook Project virtual archive. Visitors from anywhere around the world will be able to explore your work online.

Sketchbook by Kate Castelli

Once a sketchbook is barcoded, authors and artists can track how many times it’s pulled it from the shelf, on tour and in the library, so you can stay connected with your sketchbook. How cool is that?

If you did this last year, tell us all about it. If you’re doing it this year, we want to know. Happy doodling!

Share item with friends

Comments (1)

  1. Sharis DeJaynes
    October 7, 2011 at 4:12 pm

    I took part in the 2011 Tour! http://www.arthousecoop.com/library/83 Great fun, and it’s still getting read! Sadly, I won’t be able to do the 2012 tour due to time constraints, but it is an amazing project!! Cheers.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

The Belle Simplicity of an Artist’s Journal
My high school art teacher, Mrs. P, used to ask us to draw out our art before starting to paint, specifically when using watercolor. I didn't understand why mess with what could have been a perfect, soft reflection of a landscape or a vase of flowers...