Archive for February, 2010

12-year-old Finds West Fraser Painting in a Tree and Family Makes Donation to the Gibbes Museum of Art in Charleston, SC

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

I made an entry about West Fraser’s project to encourage personal giving to support the arts on Dec. 10, 2009. You can read about that at this link. Today we heard that someone else has found a Painting in a Tree.

Here’s the press release we received at Carolina Arts:

(Charleston, South Carolina)–In early 2009 renowned Southern painter West Fraser initiated a project of personal giving and called it Painting in a Tree.  The artist places a Painting in a Tree, an oil on panel, in public places to be found by a passer by.  The paintings that hang by string, have strings attached. Fraser writes a personal note on the back of each painting appealing to the finder to give back to their community. Fraser’s motivation is to encourage giving back to one’s community. In late December, 12 year old Charleston, SC, native, Kenner Carmody found a painting in Charleston’s French Quarter. There are still paintings to be found in Charleston, Cumberland Island (SC) and Palmetto Bluff’s Wilson Village (Bluffton, SC).

Kenner Carmody was on a mission to find the painting after her father read about West Fraser’s Painting in a Tree project in the local newspaper. After scouring the French Quarter she made the discovery of the West Fraser oil painting hanging in a tree on the corner of State and Chalmers Streets. Delighted with her find Ms. Carmody now has her first piece of fine art. In January 2010, Ms Carmody and her family decided to make a charitable donation to the Gibbes Museum of Art in Charleston. They hope that their donation can be enjoyed as much as they will enjoy their newly found Painting in a Tree. The Carmody’s directed their donation to the Daniel West Fraser Memorial Scholarship Fund. Established by West Fraser to honor his son Daniel who was born in 1983 and passed away in 1986, the Daniel West Fraser Memorial Scholarship Fund provides financial assistance for children and teens to study at the Gibbes Museum of Art through art classes and art camp.

According to Fraser, “I hope that with my gift found, the discoverer will give as well, and perhaps encourage others to make random acts of giving and kindness.  As a catalyst to perpetuate gift giving in the community, I hope that my Painting in a Tree project can make a difference.”

Fraser is represented in Charleston by Helena Fox Fine Art. For further info call 843/723-0073.

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SC Arts Commission Sends Out 12 Day Notice for Important Public Meetings

Wednesday, February 10th, 2010

We received this e-mail today at Carolina Arts about public meetings about the future of the SC Arts Commission – what their priorities should be in the coming future – 12 days before the first meeting takes place. Not a whole lot of notice in my opinion.

If you are not happy with what the SC Arts Commission is doing, here is your chance to give them an earful, but be forewarned, these meetings are highly structured without lots of opportunities for open discussion. It is also my opinion that the Arts Commission doesn’t always follow the directives generated at these gatherings and to my knowledge has never held a follow-up meeting with the public to determine how they did from one canvas to another.

I’m not sure why they continue to go on with another Canvas without looking back at the last Canvas to see what they accomplished and what they didn’t as far as the stated goals are concerned, and if they do that internally – why isn’t the public part of that process instead of them grading themselves?

If you want to read my opinions about the Canvas of the People process and how well they follow through on some things that came out of the last Canvas click this link.

Here’s their press release:

Public Invited to Help Shape the Future of the Arts
Seven forums planned to hear public’s priorities for the arts

COLUMBIA, S.C. – Planning for healthier economic times, the S.C. Arts Commission invites the public to share their priorities for the arts at any of seven forums taking place Feb. 22 – April 8, 2010. The meetings are a part of the 2010 Canvas of the People, a statewide planning process that will inform the 2011-2020 Long-Range Plan for the Arts in South Carolina.

“We want to hear what people value about the arts and how they think the arts can support the economic, educational and creative well-being of their communities,” said Ken May, acting executive director. “We will use that input to help develop the next long-range plan for the arts, which the statewide arts community can use as a road map for the future.”

Forums are taking place in seven locations and are free and open to everyone. Each runs from 6:45 p.m. to 8 p.m. Registration is not required.

Meeting dates and locations are:
Monday, Feb. 22 – Columbia Museum of Art, Columbia
Thursday, March 11 – Technical College of the Lowcountry, Beaufort area
Tuesday, March 16 – Governor’s School for the Arts, Greenville
Monday, March 22 – Black Creek Arts Center, Hartsville
Thursday, March 25 – Aiken Center for the Arts, Aiken
Monday, March 29 – North Charleston City Hall, North Charleston
Thursday, April 8 – Chapman Cultural Center, Spartanburg

For more information, visit (www.SouthCarolinaArts.com/canvas2010) or contact Milly Hough by e-mail at (mhough@arts.sc.gov) or 803/734-8698.

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Delivering Papers, Dodging Sleet & Snow, Finding Refuge in Seagrove, NC, and Visiting NC’s Newest Visitor Centers

Monday, February 8th, 2010

So last Thursday, Feb. 4, 2010, at 10pm, I’m getting in the car loaded up with my last run of papers headed to Rock Hill, SC, Charlotte, NC, Davidson, NC, Asheboro, NC, and eventually Seagrove, NC – all the time knowing I’m racing the clock against another winter storm of sleet and snow. The Weather Channel said that it will be raining in Charlotte until 3am and then changing to sleet as the temps drop down to 32 degrees and below. At that point I’d only be halfway done with the delivery.

We always like to have the paper completely delivered by the first Friday of the month so that all the communities that host art walks will have fresh copies of Carolina Arts. The last three months have been challenging to get that job done. You might say weather challenged.

When I got in the car at 10pm in Bonneau, SC – headquarters of Shoestring Publishing Company – the temp was 45 degrees. It was hard to believe it was going to be below 32 in Charlotte, but as I headed to Columbia, SC, on I-26 and then toward Rock Hill, on I-77 – the further I traveled north the temps just kept dropping one and two degrees at a time. By the time I reached the outskirts of Charlotte it was 34 degrees and it was going to take 3 hours to finish and then I’d be heading more north – eventually east, but the real kicker was I’d have to cross over Hwy. 64 from I-85 in Lexington, NC, to Asheboro. Halfway along Hwy. 64 there are some pretty big hills to cross over and in the past I’ve noticed that the temps really drop in that area. That was my big concern and I was right.

The temps stayed 34 degrees through Charlotte, Davidson, NC, and on I-85 headed towards Lexington – occasionally dropping to 33 degrees at times. At one point on I-85 I saw lots of flashing blue and red lights up ahead and the first thing I thought of was “black ice”. The traffic slowed and sure enough in a stretch of a mile several cars had gone off the road and all sorts of emergency vehicles were giving assistance, but the temp was 34 as I passed by. The temps must have dropped for a while in that stretch of the highway. I must have missed that by 30 minutes or an hour.

I finally make it on to Hwy. 64 and the temp is 33 degrees and it starts to sleet – oh boy. By the time I’m at the top of those hills the sleet is starting to collect on the road by an inch or two and I still expected the temps to drop. What’s a newspaper delivery boy to do?

Well, I did grow up in Michigan and I did my fair share of driving in snow, sleet and ice. I pulled off the road and waited for the next semi to come by and I pulled in behind it. That truck plowed the way over the top of the hills for me and on the other side of the hills it was 34 degrees and just raining. I pulled into Asheboro around 6:30am Friday morning, knowing that the sun would be coming up in 30 minutes – hoping the temps would never go below 34 and in fact be rising, as from then on I would be traveling south all the way to South Carolina where you can pretty much count on a 10 degree difference – warmer.

I really dodged a bullet. In Asheboro, I went to drop off papers at the W.H. Moring Jr. Arts Center on Sunset Avenue and it was sleeting there – back on Hwy. 64 in Asheboro at the McDonalds where I usually have breakfast it was just rain. That’s how close I was to real trouble. Cars were pulling into the McDonalds coming from the North with several inches of snow or sleet on them. Next stop, the NC Pottery Center in Seagrove – heading south.

While eating my breakfast a USPS mailman came in for breakfast too and I had to think – whether rain, sleet, snow, scorching heat, tropical storms – Carolina Arts must be delivered. And, I’m the sucker stuck with that job. Don’t get me wrong, I love my monthly adventures, it’s just that sometimes they’re too much of an adventure and I’m not as young as I was when I first started. So I headed to Seagrove, NC – the Center of Pottery in North Carolina – a new moniker I’m using for Seagrove. You see, Seagrove is also near the geographical center of North Carolina.

After dropping off papers at the NC Pottery Center in Seagrove I’m officially finished – except for the four hour drive back to Bonneau. It’s always a relief and although it was raining cats and dogs and still a nasty 34 degrees I was up for some extra credit – so I drove to one of the newly opened NC Visitor Centers to check it out. I also needed a port in a storm – if you get my meaning.

The North Carolina Department of Transportation (NCDOT) has opened two new Visitor Centers, located within 5 miles of the geographic center of North Carolina along both sides of the US 220 corridor (the future I-73, I-74) in Randolph County just south of Seagrove.

In North Carolina the visitor centers open at 8am, an hour before they do in South Carolina so I didn’t have to wait at all to see what they had to offer. I was curious as this center is different from other NC Visitor Centers as it was being run by a commercial business.

I had a good look around, talked with the two women working there – they were friendly and informative and on the ball enough to realize after a bit of conversation that I seemed to know more about the area than the average person passing by. I identified myself and told them of my concerns that as a commercial operation that they may operate like a chamber of commerce – only providing info about paid members – not telling the whole story of the area to folks who didn’t know to ask about certain things. I was contacted myself about paying a fee to leave copies of Carolina Arts at the centers, but had to pass as we can’t afford to pay anyone to leave papers for distribution. Why else would I be delivering the papers myself? Ask any newspaper publisher you know if they deliver their paper.

I understand that the State of North Carolina, like every other state in America, is hurting for funding and realize that if it wasn’t for these centers being planned years ago and in the process of being built – might not have been built, but I hope when the economy turns and NC recovers they won’t let private business take over the lead point in telling the state’s tourism story – under a “pay you play” system. At least I hope the taxpayers of North Carolina won’t let that be the case. It’s too important a job to be put in the hands of bottom line business minds – who will soon wonder if they can get away with coin operated toilet paper dispensers.

I don’t know how much if any the North Carolina Department of Cultural Resources is involved with NCDOT visitor centers, but I hope they have some say about the materials offered in those centers. I hope they can convince the state legislators that they don’t want that info to be limited to only those who can pay for it. North Carolina has too much to offer to work on that system. I hope they don’t go over to the dark side.

While visiting the North Carolina Department of Cultural Resources’ website to get their link I noticed a publication they have available called, Homegrown Handmade, Art Roads & Farm Trails of North Carolina. It looks like it could be a valuable book for discovering arts and good food in NC. And, I’m giving them the plug – at no charge. That’s a hint, NC.

Well I had a nice visit at the Visitor Center, but wished it wasn’t raining so hard – I would have liked to check out the scenic lookout area of the center. I had been getting soaked all night and I didn’t see that getting soaked again would do me any good. I was finally dry after my stay in the VC.

Once back in the car I noticed it was 9:15am. I’m usually heading out of Seagrove by 7:30am – well before any of the potteries are open, but I wondered – Bulldog Pottery is just off the next exit – maybe they’re already knocking around the studio. I called and asked when they opened – the person who answered said 10am. I asked if it was Bruce Gholson and said who I was and it was Ed Henneke – Samantha Henneke’s father and he said come on over. So I headed that way. I’ve talked with Ed several times.


A work by Bruce Gholson

In less than 10 minutes I was there and got to see Bruce Gholson and Samantha Henneke’s new working studio, have a nice cup of hot tea and honey, and some good conversation about the new visitor centers and happenings in Seagrove. They were leasing space with several other potteries at the visitor centers. I noticed a piece of their pottery there but never imagined they had to pay to have it there. Such is the world under the current economy.

By the time I was leaving, their first customer of the day was arriving and I headed off to McCanless Pottery on my way to Whynot Pottery hoping their road was being unfrozen by all this rain. At McCanless I got a tour of his operation, which was impressive. Will Ravenel (my friend in Greensboro, NC, and sometime Seagrove visiting companion) and I had talked with Will McCanless at the last Celebration of Seagrove Potters about the crystalline glaze he does on some of his pottery – it’s a very interesting process and looks great on his pottery. You can see some images of the crystalline glaze effects on his website (www.mccanlesspottery.com).


A work by Will McCanless

Will McCanless is an intense kind of guy and after talking with him that day I wished he was also a blogging potter, but I think his plate is full – no pun intended. He told me he’s about to open a new pottery shop in downtown Seagrove offering works by a variety of Seagrove potters. This should be a wonderful new addition to the Seagrove pottery scene.

Saying downtown Seagrove may seem a stretch to some, but compared to the town I live near – it’s a downtown or if you like – village center.

OK – on to Whynot Pottery to visit Meredith and Mark Heywood. When I got to the driveway, sure enough the rain had done its job – the road was clear of ice and snow, but their was a closed sign up on their main sign. Darn! I figured they might be taking the day off to do something else – what better day to take off, but I’m the curious type so I called and got Mark on the phone and he said come on in. They had placed the closed sign up there so people wouldn’t try and drive down the frozen driveway and end up taking a swim in their pond.

I was greeted with the excuse that I had just missed a pie or something of the sort. I asked if there was any of that pineapple upside down cake I’ve read about on her blog and was told I’d have to give notice for that – so I settled for good conversation instead. You see, sometimes the unplanned adventures just don’t pay off the same as planned visits. Frankly, I don’t need any pie or cake – I wouldn’t turn most offers down – that’s obvious, but good conversation – I’ll drive 12 hours in rain or sleet for that.


Works from Whynot Pottery

We talked about the new visitor centers, they too were leasing space there and the exhibit Meredith is organizing entitled, Clay and Blogs: Telling a Story, which will be presented at the Campbell House Galleries of the Arts Council of Moore County in Southern Pines, NC, from Oct. 1 – 29, 2010.

Meredith and Mark set up shop in Seagrove when there were only 12 potteries operating, so they are a great resource on the history of the area and its development to being one of the largest concentrations of potteries in the country. At one point mostly traditional pottery, but now offering some of the finest contemporary pottery being made in the Carolinas – as you’ll be able to see if you visit the NC Pottery Center’s new exhibit, New Generation of Seagrove Potters, featuring works by fifteen Seagrove area potters all under age 40, from Feb. 12 through Apr. 10, 2010.

But, before long it was getting late – it was still raining cats and dogs and I still had a four hour drive ahead of me and I was beginning to feel the week of driving weighing heavily on me. So, I headed to Seagrove and back on to Hwy. 220 pointed toward South Carolina. But, before I left the area I stopped once more at the new southbound Visitor Center – I mean that’s what they’re for, right? – they want you to visit don’t they?

Four and a half hours later I was pulling into Bonneau just before dark – the rain had finally stopped as I left I-95 in Manning, SC.

If you’ve been keeping track, this 20 hour day was spent on four interstate highways (I-26, I-77, I-85, and I-95) and one future interstate highway – I-73, I-74. I think in my next life I’ll apply to be a truck driver. I hope they make more money.

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A Trip to South Carolina’s only National Park – Congaree National Park

Saturday, February 6th, 2010

It was well over 22 years since I last visited the Congaree National Park, in fact, it was still the Congaree Swamp National Monument back then. It didn’t become a National Park until 2003. I know it was over 22 years as there was no Andrew – our son. So it falls into that BA time period – Before Andrew. It was a Sierra Club outing and at the time, Linda and I were producing the Club’s statewide newspaper – the Congaree Chronicle.

I can’t remember all the folks on that trip – excuse my poor memory if you were on that trip, but the group was led by Dick Watkins – the Sierra Club’s man behind making the Park a National Park. Dana and Virginia Beach were there. That was back when Dana was involved with the Sierra Club – before founding the SC Coastal Conservation League. Our friend and nature photographer John Moore was also there.

The things I really remember about the trip is the record trees we saw (some national record trees) and walking or should I say wading in the swamp – at times up to our waist. And, I can tell you – all our eyes, at least mine, were on the look out for snakes in the water, snakes on the ground, and snakes in the trees – snakes on the plane – who cares – we were walking in the swamp. Luckily that trip – most of the ground we covered was above water.

Our son Andrew is hoping to get a job as a geologist or as anything, with one of the National Parks around our country, so after two weeks of freezing winter weather, we decided the next warm day to head for the Congaree National Park which is less than an hour and a half away from our home on Lake Moultrie – down river from the Park. The day we went it was 65 degrees – 67 in the sun.

We traveled the back roads to get there seeing parts of South Carolina I haven’t traveled through in years. The Park entrance is near the town of Gadsden, SC, There are a lot of small towns in SC – mostly farm and timber country. We arrived just before noon and went straight to the Harry Hampton Visitor Center – which wasn’t there when I was there last. There wasn’t much there before, other than a sort of check-in center – to record your entry into the swamp. They wanted to know who didn’t make it back so they could go looking for you.

The Visitor Center is a large facility which offers visitors lots of educational displays explaining features of the Park. We talked some with the rangers and volunteers there – trying to get tips on getting a job with the Parks Service and then we watched a movie about the history of the Park. We picked up some trail guides and headed out. Unfortunately, the folks at the Visitor Center said they had reports that some of the boardwalk was under water – due to recent rains a few days before.

We started out on the Low Boardwalk and after a few hundred yards down it – we saw the boardwalk disappear under the water. I did not come prepared to get wet on this trip. It was a beautiful day, but I bet that water was cold – really cold. And, I remembered that things swim in that water. Although Andrew was gung-ho, I convinced him that I did not want to get wet – end up sick – days before I have to deliver the paper around the Carolinas. So we turned around and picked up the Elevated Boardwalk – which was high and dry.

Before long – I’m sure less than a quarter of a mile on the boardwalk – and we were out there. There weren’t many sounds other than a few squirrels scampering around and the wind blowing through the pines – the old whispering pines – and an occasional bird noise, but before long we were commenting about the lack of bird sounds. I heard more birds getting the car packed for the trip in our own yard. We could have been in the middle of nowhere and there were no sounds of any other people out there either – and we knew people were out there by the cars in the parking lot.

The trees were amazing. By the end of the day my neck was aching from looking up so much. The boardwalk had markers which corresponded with a self-guided boardwalk trail flyer and the first one we came to described the experience we were seeing best.


One of the tall tree’s bottom


The tree’s middle


Looking up toward that tree’s top

“The trees you see here average over 130 feet in height. Here the tops of the trees come together to form the forest canopy. The forest canopy at Congaree has been said to be taller than any other deciduous forest on earth, taller than the hardwood forest of Japan, the Himalayas, southern South America, and Europe.”

It seemed every 100 feet or so there was something more amazing as we walked further into the Park, even though we were only scratching the surface of the Park. I don’t think we walked more that 5 or 6 miles in total and some of that was a trail to a camping site and then around the parking area. The Park has 24,000 acres with miles and miles of trails – unfortunately this day most was under water.


Andrew on the “elevated” boardwalk

We just missed the opportunity to see some of those national trees by a few days. A ranger on the boardwalk told us a few days before most of the area was high and dry. Bummer. In one place we were just a few hundred yards from a national Loblolly Pine which is 167 feet high – the tallest Loblolly Pine in the US.


This was dry land a few days earlier

I remember back on that Sierra Club trip there was a tree where it took six to seven people, hand to hand stretched out to go around the trunk of one tree. I’ve seen the great Redwoods in California when I was much younger – trees you could drive a car through, but to think that some of the tallest trees in America are an hour and a half away – less than 30 minutes from Columbia, SC – it’s astonishing that it took me over 22 years to come back.


These trees are strong – not much stops them

We’ll be back sooner this time – I want to see those big trees, but Mother Nature might not cooperate. On this day – in the middle of our winter – it was 65 degrees – NO bugs – I’m mean not one bug and the humidity was probably below 60%. Oh, and did I say – no snakes. Water levels around SC are high and rain is in the forecast, at least once a week it seems. I hope that return trip isn’t in August when it’s 95/95 (95 degrees and 95% humidity) and I’m covered in bug spray. Or I’m just going to have to go prepared to be wet.

Eventually we heard some – tap, tap, taps – and saw a few Red Headed woodpeckers and then, a TAP, TAP, TAP – it was a Pileated woodpecker. We saw it for a few seconds and then it dove deeper into the forest. Other than those woodpeckers all we saw was one red Cardinal and a few Nuthatches. Where were all the birds?

It was a nice day of being out in nature – away from everything else. The silence was great – when the SC Air National Guard wasn’t flying over head, but all and all – well worth the trip, even though we didn’t get to see any BIG trees, but the ones that were 130 feet up were still okay.

The Congaree National Park is open 24/7 and it’s free admission, no charge for parking and they have very nice rest rooms.

The funny thing, at the Visitor Center the rangers said the Park is better known around the world than to the folks in South Carolina. Which is about par for the course. I still meet folks who have lived in Charleston, SC, all their lives and have never gone to any of the plantation gardens, Ft. Sumter, or the Gibbes Museum of Art.

The Congaree, besides being a National Park is a National Natural Landmark, an International Biosphere Reserve, a Wilderness Area and a Globally Important Bird Area. Cedar Creek, which runs through the Park, is on the list of Outstanding National Resource Waters.

You can learn a lot more about the Park at (www.nps.gov/cong/). You can also become a member of the Friends of the Congaree Swamp by visiting (www.friendsofcongaree.org), and if you want to plan a trip there, you can call the Harry Hampton Visitor Center at 803/776-4396 to check on water levels or temporary closures and other visitor and safety info. They can also tell you what number the bug meter is set on.

Be adventurous – go see some of Mother Nature’s art.

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Some News About What’s Going on in Seagrove, NC, the Center of Pottery in North Carolina

Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010

There is some big news for folks traveling on US 220 (the future I-73/74) in North Carolina. The North Carolina Department of Transportation (NCDOT) has opened two new Visitor Centers, located within 5 miles of the geographic center of North Carolina along both sides of the US 220 corridor in Randolph County just south of Seagrove and just minutes from the North Carolina Zoo, near Asheboro, NC.

It’s great news for my bladder and I’m sure many others too. Thank you Hardee’s in Seagrove and the old rest stop in Ellerbe, NC, on US 220 Business – you’ve both been good friends in the past but I’ll now give my business to the NCDOT – with some exceptions. I won’t be paying to place copies of Carolina Arts in either of those centers. We don’t and have never paid for placement of our paper and surely couldn’t now – no matter how good a distribution point some places might be. We still feel the various visual art locations we report on – art galleries, art spaces, art museums and even potteries are the best places for people to discover our paper and look for it every month. If people like the info we offer, we want them to return to the places they found it to begin with or places like it.

It is my hope that both of these new Visitor Centers will be great ambassadors for Seagrove area potteries, as well as other area attractions.

The North Carolina Pottery Center (NCPC) in Seagrove, NC, will present the exhibit, New Generation of Seagrove Potters, featuring works by fifteen Seagrove area potters all under age 40, from Feb. 12 through Apr. 10, 2010.


Blaine Avery

The Seagrove area has a long and rich history of pottery and this exhibit highlights some of the younger potters who have made a career working in clay. The participating potters include Blaine Avery, Chad Brown, Jeff Dean, Samantha Henneke, Daniel Johnston, Crystal King, Matthew Luck, Stephanie Martin, Eck McCanless, Will McCanless, Tommy Nichols, Travis Owens, Hitomi Shibata, Takuro Shibata, and Jared Zehmer.


Samantha Henneke


Travis Owens

The NCPC will host a Demonstration Day on Mar. 20, 2010, from 10am-3pm. Plan to visit the NCPC to see featured potters, Samantha Henneke, Crystal King, Travis Owens, Tommy Nichols, and Chad Brown demonstrating at the wheel in NCPC’s education building.

Also, Meredith Heywood – that’s Heywood with an “e” (my mistake several times) of Whynot Pottery in Seagrove, NC, and a fellow blogger is in the process of organizing an exhibit, to be entitled, Clay and Blogs: Telling a Story, which will be presented at the Campbell House Galleries of the Arts Council of Moore County in Southern Pines, NC, from Oct. 1 – 29, 2010.

I think she has nearly 50 potters and bloggers from as far away as Alaska in the US of A, and from Canada, UK, Australia and possibility New Zealand as well. It should be a very interesting exhibition.

Since starting Carolina Arts Unleashed, over a year and a half ago, I have been amazed at the impact of blogs in spreading news about events, information about techniques, marketing practices, travel tips, images of artworks, calls for help – you name it. I look forward to seeing this exhibit of clay works from around the world, plus seeing the impact blogs have had on the potters and their creative process.

Carolina Arts, Carolina Arts Online, and Carolina Arts Unleashed have become a media sponsor of this exhibit and we’ll keep you updated on developments as we get closer to the date of the exhibit’s beginning.

Of course there will be Spring kiln openings in Seagrove and there’s an expanded “Cousins In Clay” event planned for this year, including Bulldog Pottery, Johnston and Gentithes Art Pottery and their special guest potters, but I don’t want to spill all the beans at once. So stay tuned for news from Seagrove.

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