Archive for March, 2011

The Last Bunch of Late Exhibit Arrivals for March 2011

Thursday, March 3rd, 2011

This will be the last time I’ll post press releases which came in after our deadline at Carolina Arts. We’re getting too busy dealing with info that comes in on time. So, I suggest that folks get their info to us before the 24th of the month. The only exception – will be advertisers.

Here they go:

Carolina Galleries in Charleston, SC, Features Works by Terri Katz Kasimov

Carolina Galleries in Charleston, SC, will present the exhibit, Lowcountry Series, featuring collages and abstract paintings by Terri Katz Kasimov, with an opening reception on Mar. 4, 2011, from 5:30-7:30pm.

Katz Kasimov received her Bachelors of Fine Arts in Painting from the Ohio State University and her Masters of Fine Arts from State University of New York at Buffalo. She studied under Sam Russo of Niagara Falls, NY, and David Hockney, University of California at Los Angeles as well as at Interlochen Arts Academy in Michigan and La Universidad de las Americas, Mexico City, Mexico.

Katz Kasimov works in a variety of mediums. Collage, watercolor, acrylic, and even using old canvases reworked into new paintings, she is always striving to produce engaging and communicative artwork. Her artwork is represented in numerous private. corporate and museum collections throughout the world. She currently divides her time between Buffalo, NY, and Kiawah Island, SC, just outside of Charleston.

For further information call the gallery at 843/720-8622 or visit (www.carolinagalleries.com).

The Society of Bluffton Artists in Bluffton, SC, Presents a Photography Exhibit

The Society of Bluffton Artists in Bluffton, SC, is presenting the exhibit, A View Thru the Lens of Bluffton, Low Country and More, juried by Jean-Marie Cote and Donna Varner, on view through Apr. 8, 2011.

An awards presentation and reception will be held on Mar. 6, 2011, from 3-5pm.

For further information call Sandra Wenig, The Society of Bluffton Artists ( SoBA) Publicity Chairperson at 843/247-2868.

UNC Asheville in Asheville, NC, Features Works by Norma Bradley and Vicki Essig

UNC Asheville’s Blowers Gallery in Asheville, NC, will present, Intimacy and Contemplation, a new exhibit of fiber art using unique approaches that invite the viewer to share the artists’ quiet contemplative space. The exhibit, featuring works by Norma Bradley and Vicki Essig, opens Mar. 7 and will remain on view through Apr. 2, 2011. There will be a closing reception with the artists from 2-4pm, Saturday, Apr. 2, 2011, in Blowers Gallery.

Bradley incorporates photography and digital processes into her fiber art, contrasting handwork with technology. Essig weaves natural elements and small found objects into her works, playing with light and translucency, and the dichotomy between fragility and strength. The works are very distinct, but both artists incorporate elements of time, nature and contemplation.


Work by Norma Bradley

Bradley, who relocated to North Carolina from her native New York City more than three decades ago, is Director of Education for HandMade in America and is a teaching artist in the North Carolina State Visiting Artist Program. Her works hang in private and corporate collections.


Work by Vicki Essig

Essig grew up in the Rocky Mountains but now lives and maintains a studio in Asheville. She is a member of the Southern Highland Craft Guild, Piedmont Craftsmen, is a founding member of Ariel Contemporary Craft Gallery, and has taught at Penland School of Craft. Her works are on exhibit at Blue Spiral 1 in downtown Asheville.

The Blowers Gallery is located in UNC Asheville’s Ramsey Library, is free and open to the public, and is usually open 7 days a week.

For further information call 828/251-6436, or visit (http://bullpup.lib.unca.edu/library/exhibits/blowers/exhibits.html).

Dialect Design in Charlotte, NC, Presents Works by Sharon Dowell

Dialect Design in Charlotte, NC, will present the exhibit, Shift: New Works by Sharon Dowell, with an opening reception on Mar. 11, 2011, from 6-9pm.

Dowell captures the  energy of place, the economic boom and downturn, and explores the theme of man vs. nature. She is interested in the documentation of memory and incorporates references to our changing political and social environment in this exhibition of paintings and installation.

Dowell is a painter residing in Charlotte and exhibiting internationally. Her work is in major collections such as the BLT Steakhouse (Ritz Carlton), Duke Energy, Fidelity Investments, and The Federal Reserve Bank. Recent shows include the Kipton art auction at Christies New York, UNC-Charlotte, and Duke University. An Arts and Science Council grant recipient, she is currently working on public art commissions for Charlotte’s light rail and Durham’s bus line. In 2010, she was in residence at NES in Skagastrond, Iceland, and will be an Affiliate at the McColl Center for Visual Art, in Charlotte, from Apr. 11 – Aug. 23, 2011.

For further information call the gallery at 704/488-6811.

Stanly Arts Guild in Albemarle, NC, Features Works by Deb Russell

The Stanly Arts Guild in Albemarle, NC, will present the exhibit, Landscapes of Lake Tillery & the Uwharries, featuring breathtaking photographic imagery of Lake Tillery and the Pee Dee River Basin by Deb Russell, on view at The Stanly County Agri-Civic Center, from Mar. 1 – 31, 2011.

Hosted by the Stanly Arts Guild, in cooperation with Falling Rivers Gallery, the exhibit features two of Russell’s metallic gallery wraps on loan from HD Photo Lab. Their glossy finish and metallic appearance result in striking three-dimensional imagery. Photographers often describe the effect as “chrome on paper.”

The fine art exhibit includes a series of nearly 20 photographs, ranging from large gallery wraps hand-crafted by HD Photo Lab, a division of Bullock Professional in Albemarle, to framed metallic prints. Anchoring the show are two large canvas wraps of ethereal Lake Tillery at daybreak: Golden Swift Island and In Morning’s Glow.

The exhibit showcases Russell’s signature approach to landscape photography, captured so powerfully in her recently released book, Lake Tillery: Our River, Our Beauty.

“I like to create images which evoke an emotional response in me,” says Russell, further elaborating on her inspirations. “Dramatic light and interesting composition drive my photography, and my appreciation of art generally. Fortunately, if you’re ready to really see them, engrossing vistas unfold before you on and around Lake Tillery, revealing themselves in surprising ways.”

Russell grew up just a few miles away from the lake in Mount Gilead, NC, and considers the area her “home turf.” She has seen her beloved Lake Tillery change over the years. It’s no longer the quiet, sparsely developed river of her youth, when most houses along its shores were simple weekend river cabins. Gone are the days when weekday boating could mean a long paddle to the shore if you ran out of gas.

Through her imagery, Russell hopes to convey – and, perhaps, to recapture – the quiet harmony and mystery of Lake Tillery, to remind busy Sunday afternoon boaters of the majesty of “our river.”

“For those with a life-long appreciation of this stretch of the Pee Dee River, I want to confirm that your river is still beautiful,” she says. “For everyone, I hope there can be a renewed or continued desire to preserve that which is close to us, so precious and delicate, and so critical to our way of life.”

Russell has worked at Bullock Professional, a pro lab in Albemarle, for the last 12 years. In that time she has complemented her artistic instincts with refined editing and post-processing skills that help her turn ordinary photographs into art.

“The masters canvas product is great for my landscapes because the Kodak metallic paper is ‘right out there,’ behind no framing glass, allowing the room light to play with all the vibrant color, contrast and depth in the paper,” she says. “In one of my graphic bridge shots, the morning sun hitting the glistening water is so much more enhanced by the reflective properties of the metallic paper. It brings additional life and pop to the sunlight as the viewer moves to examine at different angles. I know I smiled when I first saw that one in the lab.”

All photographs in the exhibit are available for sale by contacting Anita Ammerman of the Stanly Arts Guild by calling 704/982-0924. More of Russell’s art, including her book, are on display at Falling Rivers Gallery, a cooperative of local artists, in downtown Albemarle.
The Stanly Arts Guild and their Falling Rivers Gallery is sponsored in part by the Albemarle Improvement LLC, the Stanly County Arts Council, and the Grassroots Arts Program of the NC Arts Council, a state Agency.

For further information call the 704/983-4278 or visit (www.fallingriversgallery.com).

Share this article

Upstate Heritage Quilt Trail, in Upstate SC, Announces the selection of Gil Huggins as the 2011 Oconee County Quilter of the Year

Wednesday, March 2nd, 2011

The Upstate Heritage Quilt Trail, in Upstate SC, has announced the selection of Gil Huggins as the 2011 Oconee County Quilter of the Year. This award recognizes a local quilter who provides leadership and community service through their quilting.

The Upstate Heritage Quilt Trail will honor Huggins with a ‘drop in’ at the Oconee Heritage Center in Walhalla, SC, on Mar. 13, 2011, from 2-4pm. In addition, a display of Huggins’ quilts will run through Mar. 31, 2011, at the Heritage Center. The quilt show will be open on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Fridays from noon–5pm; and Saturdays from 10am-3pm. The public is invited.

Huggins, a former teacher in the Oconee County School System, taught Industrial Arts and computer engineering. However, quilting was not a skill he was familiar with. His quilting education began when he and his wife, Pat, purchased a quilt at the Mountain Heritage Day, an annual fall event at Western Carolina University in Cullowhee, NC, featuring mountain crafts and art. When they arrived home, and examined the quilt, they realized that it was not only a wonderful work of art, but also a real bargain.

Thus began a pilgrimage of looking for and appreciating the fabric arts. It was during football season at Clemson University when his wife and family, avid Tiger fans, were attending the games, that Huggins began to take a more active interest in quilting. He attended a show in Pickens, SC, where the quilts on display fanned the flames of quilting in his heart. Those quilts had elements of design; geometry; flow, and order.

Huggins purchased a very nice sewing machine at a flea market and began to read books and magazine articles on quilting, and doing Internet searches. He made a small lap quilt using some of Pat’s fabric pieces.  She was greatly amused by his earnest endeavor and lovingly supervised his work. A month later, he began a bigger and better project, a large bed quilt.

When Huggins met Carolyn Harris with the County Extension Service, he told her about his fascination with quilting. She invited him to attend the next meeting of the Lake and Mountain Quilt Guild (LMQG). It took a lot of courage for him to enter a building where over one hundred women had assembled for the meeting. It turned out to be one of the most enjoyable times he’d ever had. Huggins was stunned when the ladies began showing their quilts.

As Huggins said, “It was like the gala opening of a great art gallery for me. I came away so inspired and wanted to learn even more about quilting.”

“Eventually I completed my second quilt. For my birthday, my wife gave me the gift of a quilting class at one of the local shops,” adds Huggins. “Yes, I was the only guy in that class, but I was beginning to enjoy the celebrity status of being a male quilter. You see, I taught Industrial Arts for over thirty years in a local high school. I was already too familiar with sawdust, metal shavings, ceramic dust, and grease. I was ready for an art form that was a little cleaner but challenging. That class was wonderful, and all the ladies were so helpful.”

When Huggins told Pat he was going to join the local quilting guild, she said, “Those ladies are extremely serious about quilting, so you better be prepared to hold your own if one of them asks you a quilting question!”

Huggins says that being a member of the quilt guild has been marvelous. Each meeting is filled with exciting presentations, and the works exhibited by the members are outstanding. He’s even been brave enough to show several of his own quilts. He’s learned about the art, fostered many friendships and now feels comfortable with the ladies. Best of all, another man has joined and he is an outstanding fabric artist.

Some of Huggins’ quilts have even won awards at the Anderson Fair and the LMQG biannual quilt show.

Two years ago, Huggins and his wife heard about an effort to bring the National Quilt Trail to South Carolina. They were enthusiastic, having seen many of the barn quilt blocks while visiting in Kentucky. In no time, they got involved with other volunteers in creating the Upstate Heritage Quilt Trail. As Huggins explains it, “Working with the quilt trail takes me back to my drafting roots, and many of the skills required to draw and complete a barn quilt block are second nature to me. It also helps complement my desire to be productive, and give back to the community.”

For further information call 864/638-2224 or visit (www.upstateheritagequilttrail.org).

Share this article

The March 2011 Issue of Carolina Arts is Now Available

Tuesday, March 1st, 2011

It’s up in cyber space now. All 61 pages. That’s ten more pages than our Feb. 2011 issue – which 19,624 people downloaded – that’s more than double the amount of people who downloaded our Jan. 2011 issue. So, go take a look.

The link to the download is (remember it will take a few minutes to download once you click the link) (www.carolinaarts.com/311/311carolinaarts.pdf).

We’ve added an active index on Page 2 to help you move around the paper – for those who don’t like starting at the top and following through to the last page – which would take some time.

And, as always – we ask you to help spread the paper around, by e-mail and social media and contact our supporters (advertisers) to let them know you appreciate their support for Carolina Arts.

Share this article