Feature Articles


December Issue 1999

SC State Museum Explores the 20th Century in SC Art

One hundred years, 100 artists, 100 stories -- and a multitude of images. That is what the South Carolina State Museum in Columbia, SC, will present in 100 Years/100 Artists: Views of the 20th Century in South Carolina Art.

The exhibit will be on view until Mar. 19, 2000 in the Lipscomb Art Gallery, the SC Connections Gallery and the museum grounds.

The 1900s began with pleasing landscapes and works showing Southern life. Then came: The Charleston Renaissance. The rise of professionalism and of university art programs. Joining - and influencing -- the national and international art scenes. Self-taught artists. "Cutting edge" craft artists. And, of course, Jasper Johns, "the catalyst for change in American art," says State Museum Art Curator Robin Waites.

The artists in the show were selected by a team consisting of Sharon Campbell, an independent curator from Greenville; David Houston, director of the Rudolph E. Lee Gallery, Clemson University; Polly Laffitte, formerly chief art curator at the State Museum; Frank Martin, curator at the I.P. Stanback Museum, SC State University; Nina Parris, former curator at the Columbia Museum of Art: and Martha Severens, curator at the Greenville County Museum of Art.

The exhibit is divided into five time periods representing trends over the century. "We started with basic representational art: landscapes, aesthetically pleasing works that represent a romantic view of life in the South," Waites says. Among the artists important between 1900 and 1920 were Edwin Harleston, Edward Gay, William Aiken Walker and Ann Cadwallader Coles.

The 1920s and '30s was the time of the Charleston Renaissance. Artists included Alfred Hutty, Elizabeth O'Neill Verner, Alice R.H. Smith and Anna Heyward Taylor. "They focused on Lowcountry scenes, but you could see a national influence," Waites says. Some artists, such as Laura Glenn Douglas and William Henry Johnson, studied outside the US.

By the 1940s and '50s, many influences were beginning to be felt. "Real solid artist groups," such as the SC Artists Guild, were formed, Waites says. Artists such as William Halsey and J. Bardin began producing abstract work. Edmund Yaghjian began infusing social commentary in representational art. Jasper Johns, who left SC for New York in 1952, was coming into his own.

Much of the exciting work of the 1960s and 1970s grew out of the 1950s when college art programs became better established, Waites says. Another important development was the founding of the SC Arts Commission in 1967. It helped support a growing number of professional artists through fellowships and grants and by exhibiting and collecting art.

SC art during the period was "very diverse" and was beginning to reflect the national mainstream, Waites says. Philip Mullen of the University of South Carolina was internationally recognized for his abstract painting. Sam Wang of Clemson University did "really innovative work in photography." But the influence of Sam Doyle, whose paintings showed black life on his native St. Helena Island, also was felt. He became one of the best-known self-taught artists in the nation, Waites says.

During the 1980s and '90s the state's art horizon has continued to expand. Boundaries have blurred and a plethora of styles mix in an age of pluralism in the arts.

Photographer Phil Moody, a native of Scotland, is one of a number of international artists who have become influential in SC. But it has also been a time when Southern crafts have come to be recognized as fine art. Among the artists are basketmakers Mary Jackson and Clay Burnette and potters Sara Ayers and Steve Ferrell.

The artists in the show are a diverse group, Waites says. Some spent their lives here. Others blossomed after they left SC. Many were influential as teachers as well as artists. A number are South Carolinians by choice. Several worked in the state only briefly but did important work here.

"This is not to say the artists in the show are the only significant artists in SC at this time, but they are the ones who had a strong impact," Waites says. "We hope the exhibit will initiate a healthy, creative dialogue concerning art in SC in the 20th century."

For further infomation check our SC Institutional Gallery listings or call the Museum at 803/898-4921.

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