Call for Art!

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Call for Art! 〰️

We have the following calls for art currently:

Cake Decorating and Taste Competitions—Due March 13th

Please see the following links below to apply.

All applications have a $10 donation—however anyone 18 and younger may apply for FREE!

Assistance is also available upon request if needed. We do not want an app fee to be a barrier to great art!

ALSO!!!

Dzanc House has been hosting monthly online photo exhibitions to fundraise for our incoming darkroom. Our online exhibitions are now open to all mediums, from 2D or 3D to poetry works! For March, What's Left Ypsi is sponsoring and curating the online gallery space with the theme, "Around The Kitchen Table." In collaboration with the launch of What’s Left Ypsi's Issue VI: Food and Dzanc House’s Frosted and Fabulous show, we invite you to tell us your stories of kitchen tables for the chance to be featured on our website!

Deadline: March 18

Online Opening: March 22

Submission fee is waived (max. 3 pieces per artist)!

Our 2026 Season is an exciting line up of many talented local artists!

April: Rick Wedel

May: Two Exhibitions with the following artists— Erin Theroux, GiGi Bennett and JJ Honequeen

June: The Queer Show with Guest Curator, Jen Eastridge

July: Sierra Fancher

August: Iman Hathaway

September: Jason Schnabel & Joel Henry-Fisher

October: Holly Bones

November: Minumental with Guest Curator, Jen Eastridge

December: Photography Exhibition with Guest Curator, Mady Cantrell

Our 2025 Season is coming to an end and we have so much gratitude for the incredible artists we have worked with:

Sarah Nisbett: You are a Work of Art

Mackenzie Stolzenburg & Britt Slater: Ladyscapes & Climate Haste

Natalie Liu: The Midnight Parade

Riyin Tocco & Ken Pendergrass: Up A Tree & Avidity

Ginger Chase: Living on the Edge

Emily Mills: Our Streets

Danielle Deo Owensby: My Divine Comedy

Mahsa Khazeni: Reconnect

Joy

Opening Reception: January 9th, 2026

Guest Curator: Jen Eastridge 

This exhibition seeks to explore joy not as a fleeting emotion, but as a radical act of presence, resilience, and creativity. In a world marked by uncertainty and constant change, finding joy—and acting on it—has become more essential than ever. Joy connects us to our humanity, expands our perspective, and reminds us of what is worth cherishing.

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