Posts Tagged ‘Columbia SC’

Columbia Museum of Art in Columbia, SC, Features Works by SC Ceramic Artists

Sunday, August 1st, 2010

Here’s another entry in our efforts to keep our readers up on clay exhibits taking place in the Carolinas.

The Columbia Museum of Art in Columbia, SC, is presenting the exhibit, SC6: Six South Carolina Innovators in Clay, on view in the Mamie and William Andrew Treadway, Jr. Gallery 15 through Oct. 3, 2010.

Drawn from public and private collections, six innovative ceramic artists who are, or have been, active in South Carolina are featured in this Gallery 15 installation. The works illustrate a diverse range of technique, glazes and forms for which the artists are best known. Featured artists include: Russell Biles, from Greenville, whose figural sculptures are deeply laden with social and political commentary; Jim Connell from Rock Hill, whose sinuous vessels are decorated with elaborate glazes, many of which are inspired by ancient Chinese ceramics; Georgia Henrietta Harris (deceased), a member of the Catawba Nation, who is largely credited with reviving the Catawba pottery tradition; Peter Lenzo from Columbia, whose technically complex sculptures recall the 19th century Southern “face jug” tradition yet remain completely unique; Ron Meyers from Athens, Georgia, whose functional ceramics are brightly slip-painted in a gestural, expressionistic style that can be both provocative and confrontational; and Virginia Scotchie from Columbia, head of the ceramics program at the University of South Carolina, who incorporates familiar shapes when creating her richly complex and lushly glazed vessels.


Works by Peter Lenzo

Brian J. Lang, curator of decorative arts at the Columbia Museum of Art, organized and curated the exhibition. “The Columbia Museum of Art is proud to highlight six diverse South Carolina ceramic artists who have had a profound impact on the development of ceramics in the state,” says Lang.

This Gallery 15 show is organized in conjunction with the Museum’s major summer exhibition, Innovation and Change: Great Ceramics from the Ceramics Research Center. The exhibition highlights 78 masterworks by many of the leading international ceramic artists of our day and offers a panoramic survey of the potential of clay as an expressive art form. Great Ceramics runs through Sept. 5, 2010. The Ceramics Research Center in Arizona contains one of the most exceptional collections of contemporary ceramics in the United States. The presenting sponsors for the exhibition are Carolina Ceramics Brick Company and Marcia and Allen Montgomery. Supporting sponsors are Colonial Life and Accident Insurance Company and Helen and Buddy Hill.

For further information call the Museum at 803/799-2810 or visit (www.columbiamuseum.org).

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SC Arts Commission May have Dodged a Bullet – But More Cuts Are Coming for SC’s Non-Profit Arts Groups

Monday, June 28th, 2010

Yes, the SC State Legislature may have stopped Governor Mark Sanford’s veto of the SC Arts Commission’s budget cut, but more cuts will come to the SC Arts Commission’s budget as our state adjust to shortfalls in revenue that legislators just ignored (after Tue. June 29,2010, that is). It’s easy to override a veto, it makes you look like you’re a friend of the arts to some folks back home, but those legislators know the State will be doing their dirty work for them when adjustments have to be made throughout next year’s budget cycle as projected revenues fall short. It’s SC’s official dance – pass the buck and pass the responsibility.

So, what will we see from our saved Arts Commission under the leadership of Ken May – its newly named director?

Our old friend Jeffrey Day continues in his position as the unofficial press agent for the SC Arts Commission by offering heaps of praise on Ken May in an issue of Columbia, SC’s Freetimes.

According to Day, one of May’s positive attributes is that he can be seen at art events all around Columbia. I bet he can also be seen at Columbia grocery stores, movie theatres, and book stores, but what good does that do the rest of SC’s art community? Yes, the Charleston, SC, community might see him there during the Spoleto Festival, but that’s one of the things wrong with the Arts Commission – it is the poorest form of centralized government. The entire staff sits in Columbia most of the time. And, with more budget cuts – they won’t be going anywhere too soon.

As far as I know – until proven differently – May represents the same old, same old, from the Arts Commission – which is great for the sector of SC’s art community that has been living off the Arts Commission’s funding for decades. Not so good for those who have gotten nothing and not so good for new groups pulling up to the Arts Commission’s trough – only to find no room.

So what’s the future look like? Well with the prospects of a new governor on the way – one who looks like they could prove to be a Sanford style governor on steroids – not too secure.

Non-profit arts groups are going to have to deal with less public funding, the SC Arts Commission will have to deal with less funding and the list of groups who get it will get smaller and smaller. It actually could get very ugly – during the fight over who is more deserving or more connected to get that funding. In fact, I’d be concerned if I was an arts group outside of Columbia. It’s easier to cut funding of groups you don’t attend on a regular basis. Of course May doesn’t determine who gets funding and how much – the Arts Commission Board does that – at least they would if they were really leading the Arts Commission. But, we all know the staff really does.

Again, I haven’t noticed that this current crop of Board Members are less rubbery than former Board groups. It’s so easy to just go along with the staff recommendations – they know what’s best. They know the right people, the deserving – those who will praise them – they’re buddies.

The Who said we won’t get fooled again, but I think we just did.

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Hey, Ken May and the SC Arts Commission – Welcome to Our World

Saturday, June 12th, 2010

I’ve been receiving the following letter by e-mail at Carolina Arts – from some who think I’m going to contact my representatives to ask them to override these vetoes and by some who want to make sure I see this for comment.

Here’s the letter from Ken May, Executive Director of the SC Arts Commission, one person who won’t be losing his job and won’t see a pay cut according to his statement. He may live and operate in a shell and serve no one, but it sounds like he’ll go on.

June 10, 2010

The governor has vetoed the bulk of the Arts Commission’s budget, effectively crippling the agency if the legislature does not override the veto. This cut eliminates all state funds for grants, programs and services, and more than 70 percent of our personnel. The cut also eliminates federal stimulus funds earmarked for grants to local arts organizations. The vetoed funds support arts curriculum and artist residencies in our schools; plays, concerts, dance performances and exhibitions in our communities; and thousands of jobs statewide. These targeted cuts (veto #32 Statewide Arts Services, $1,212,733 and veto #105, ARRA funds, $250,000) will destroy the agency’s ability to fulfill its mission, leaving it with little more than an administrative shell lacking the resources to support the arts industry that benefits all the people of our state. If this concerns you, there are a variety of ways to reach your state legislators this week before the legislature reconvenes on Tuesday, June 15, 2010.

Ken May

Executive Director

How do I feel about this plea to the art community to ask the SC Legislators to override the Governor’s veto? First, I was never sent this letter directly so I can only figure that the Arts Commission doesn’t see me as a friend they can call on, which I guess matches my feelings about them. I know any request for a helping hand by me to them would fall flat. Second, since I can receive no funding from the Arts Commission or any of the people they distribute money to – I don’t see this as a problem which effects me. Yes, some non-profits who receive funding from the Arts Commission have taken out ads in our paper, but we give them a 25% discount on our prices and they get an ad in our paper. We earn every penny of that advertising money. And, just because they receive some funding from the Arts Commission doesn’t mean the money they put towards advertising came from the Arts Commission. I know of no arts organization or artist who solely exist off of the funding they receive from the SC Arts Commission. So, the loss of their funding is just a part of any individual’s or groups’ funding picture. Third, although I still support public tax dollars going towards funding the arts I have learned from watching the SC Arts Commission that the money doesn’t always go to the most deserving, most qualified or groups that represent the overall art community in SC. Fourth, Ken May is wrong when he says, “…lacking the resources to support the arts industry that benefits all the people of our state.” The Arts Commission doesn’t support all the arts industry and not all the people of this state benefit from the arts – many are not even interested in them.

In this case I feel the plea is a little suspect. Is it a plea to save the funding of the Arts Commission staff or money which would go to the artists and art groups of this State? If this cut goes through and the agency is so handicapped as Ken May states – how will they go on? What purpose will they serve other than one for themselves? If there is no money left for funding grants, programs and the staff is reduced by 70% – why doesn’t May state that without this funding he and the rest of the staff will just resign and leave the budget they use up – for the art community?

The art community I know has been suffering for years without help from the Arts Commission – long before the economy went sour. And, not all help requires funding – so that is why I titled this entry – welcome to our world. We’ve been doing without, cutting back – watching a shrinking future, just like many others in the art community, but we’ve been doing it without benefits – like retirement, health insurance, dental plans, paid vacation days, etc. And, we’ve been doing it without taxpayer dollars.

Artists and art groups should operate like regular businesses – within their budgets – budgets that reflect earned revenues. And, all who are involved in producing art which the public can benefit from, should be eligible to apply for public funding. Operating on the hopes that there will always be more funding is like living a dream. It’s time for some to wake up and face the world the rest of us live in. This just might be that day, but I’m not holding my breath.

Yes, a lot of good artists and good arts groups will lose some funding if this cut goes through, but a lot of good artists and good art groups have been going without a lot longer – and, will still go without whatever happens with the budget. Plus, it’s hard to defend restoring funding to the Arts Commission in light of what other cuts are being made in this State. It may seem like a drop in the bucket to some but to some individuals who may lose health services, food allotments, housing, etc. – it’s very important. What’s more important?

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Columbia Museum of Art in Columbia, SC, Offers Tapestry Symposium on June 11, 2010

Thursday, June 3rd, 2010

Here’s a press release we received at Carolina Arts about a symposium taking place at the Columbia Museum of Art.

In conjunction with the exquisite exhibition, Imperial Splendor: Renaissance Tapestries from Vienna, the Columbia Museum of Art presents a symposium, Tapestries: Then and Now, focusing on the history, manufacture, variety and splendor of tapestries as an art form on Friday, June 11, 2010, from 9:30 a.m. until 4:30 p.m. A distinguished group of speakers, including a tapestry conservator from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, addresses a wide range of topics. Subject matter, use and display, the role of the artist in tapestry design, the revival of tapestry production in the early 20th century, weaving techniques and the conservation of these delicate works of art will be discussed by the scholars.

Tickets are $25 / $20 for members / $5 students and can be purchased online at (www.columbiamuseum.org).

“This is the first time the museum has undertaken a full-day symposium on a topic related to a museum exhibition and I think that the subject of tapestries is a perfect place to start, said chief curator and curator of European art Dr. Todd Herman. “The use, production and beauty of tapestries are little known today even though they were the leading indicators of wealth, power and prestige in the Renaissance and Baroque periods. While tapestries have been eclipsed by paintings and sculpture as the most valued art objects from these periods, tapestries were far more costly and highly regarded as indicators of position and power. This symposium will not only introduce the audience to the important role tapestries played in the Renaissance, but also discusses the revival of tapestry design at the beginning of the 20th century by such major artists as Pablo Picasso, Fernand Léger, Anni Albers and Alexander Calder.”

Speaker Schedule (This is a framework – schedule subject to change.) A question and answer session will follow each lecture.

9:00 a.m. -  Check-in and coffee

9:30 a.m. -  Todd Herman, Ph.D., Chief Curator and Curator of European Art, Columbia Museum of Art Introduction – Imperial Splendor: Renaissance Tapestries from Vienna.

10:00 a.m. – Ward Briggs, Ph.D., Professor (retired), Department of Classics, The University of South Carolina – Romulus and Remus: Origins of an Original Legend.

11:00 a.m. -Carlton Hughes, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Art History, University of South Carolina History – Metaphor, Narrative: Storytelling in the Romulus and Remus Tapestries.

12:00 p.m. – Dirk Holger, tapestry artist and historian – The Art of Tapestry: Style Development through 2,000 Years.

1:00 p.m. - Lunch on Your Own

2:30 p.m. –  Olha Yarema-Wynar, Assistant Conservator, Department of Textile Conservation, The Metropolitan Museum of Art – Lessons from the Rose Tapestry: Conservation Techniques from the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

3:30 p.m. -Virginia Gardner Troy, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Art History, Berry College (Georgia) – Weaving Modern Art: The Marie Cuttoli Tapestries and the Pictorial Weavings of Anni Albers 1920-1960.

The symposium is made possible through a grant from the Samuel H. Kress Foundation, with additional funding provided by Family Medicine Centers of South Carolina.

Imperial Splendor marks the first time these centuries-old tapestries have traveled to the United States. Each of these eight exquisite tapestries, intricately crafted, measures from 11- to 12-feet high and from 12- to 18-feet long. The palace-sized tapestries came to the Kunsthistorisches Museum from the collections of King Matthias (Holy Roman Emperor 1612-1619) and King Francis I (1708-1765).

In addition, speaker Dick Holger leads a gallery talk entitled How Were They Made? on Saturday, June 12, 2010, from 11:00 a.m. until noon. Weaving demonstrations by Tommye Scanlin and Pat Williams begin at noon. Both are free with admission or membership.

For further information call the Museum at 803/799-2810 or visit (www.columbiamuseum.org).

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News From the South Carolina Arts Commission

Monday, May 24th, 2010

Today we received two items of news at Carolina Arts from the SC Arts Commission – one right after the other.

First, we learned that the SC Arts Commission Board meeting previously planned for May 26, 2010, has been canceled. The next regularly scheduled meeting is June 22 at the Arts Commission’s office in Columbia, SC.

Usually, this time of year the Arts Commission Board meeting was held in Charleston, SC – days before the opening of the Spoleto Festival USA in Charleston, but not last year and not this year. Actually, I don’t know why they were going to Charleston when they didn’t have meetings in any other cities around SC – except Columbia. Well, I know why, but it’s not fair to the rest of the art community in SC.

Next, we received a press release that Ken May, acting director of the Arts Commission, was named Executive Director of the SC Arts Commission. This was a little confusing to me in that if the Commission Board had not met recently – how they came to today’s announcement. An announcement which took a year to name the number 2 guy – number 1 – after conducting a three-month national search and reviewing 230 applications. I will have more on this subject after some deliberation.

Here’s the press release we got today:

Columbia, SC – The South Carolina Arts Commission Board of Commissioners today announced that Ken May has been named executive director effective immediately.


Ken May

May joined the Arts Commission in 1985 as a regional arts coordinator and served as director of planning, research and grants and assistant deputy director before being named deputy director in 1995. May has served as acting director of the agency since former Executive Director Susie Surkamer retired in May 2009.

“We look forward to working with Ken in his new role as executive director,” said Board Chairman Bud Ferillo. “Ken has proven his ability to lead the Arts Commission through the difficulties of the current budget cutbacks while positioning the agency for the future. His leadership in the agency’s core work — arts education, community development through the arts and artist development — will be crucial as we develop a new long-range plan for the state’s wide-ranging and diverse arts community.”

The executive director serves as the agency’s chief executive officer and is responsible for organization and administration, program development, fiscal accountability and staff supervision. The agency’s nine-member board is appointed by the governor and works with the executive director to make policy, advocate for the arts and ensure public accountability.

The board’s executive search committee, led by Commission Vice Chairman Dr. Sarah Lynn Hayes, conducted a three-month national search and reviewed 230 applications.

The South Carolina Arts Commission is the state agency charged with creating a thriving arts environment that benefits all South Carolinians, regardless of their location or circumstances. Created by the South Carolina General Assembly in 1967, the Arts Commission is celebrating 40 years of increasing public participation in the arts by providing services, grants and leadership initiatives in three areas: arts education, community arts development and artist development. Headquartered in Columbia, S.C., the Arts Commission is funded by the state of South Carolina, by the federal government through the National Endowment for the Arts and other sources.

For more information, visit (www.SouthCarolinaArts.com) or call (803) 734-8696.

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Photos of One Eared Cow Glass Sculpture at Columbia Museum of Art Celebration of Chihuly Chandelier

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

We now have photos of the finished piece by One Eared Cow Glass installed outside the Columbia Museum of Art during the Museum’s Red Hot…Cool! 60 Years of Color gala on the evening of Apr. 17, 2010.

Here’s a link to my earlier comments on that.

I have to say, it looks pretty spectacular!

Like I said – give Tommy Lockart, Mark Woodham, and their assistant, Ryan Crabtree, $360,000 and see what you get – considering they made this work on speculation just for this one event – for one evening.

Now we’ll see if someone is smart enough to purchase this work. I wish I could.

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Columbia Museum of Art in Columbia, SC, Features Great Ceramic Works

Sunday, April 18th, 2010

In our continuing effort to bring CAU readers news about events taking place in the Carolina pottery community, I’m scooping Carolina Arts in bringing you this article about an exhibit now on view at the Columbia Museum of Art in Columbia.

The Columbia Museum of Art in Columbia, SC, will present the exhibit, Innovation and Change: Great Ceramics from the Ceramics Research Center, on view from May 28 through Sept. 5, 2010.

The exhibition highlights 79 masterworks by many of the leading international ceramic artists of our day, offering a panoramic survey of the potential of clay as an expressive art form. The Ceramics Research Center in Arizona contains one of the most exceptional collections of contemporary ceramics in the United States.

The art objects on view range from functional ware for everyday use to more expressive sculptural forms. The exhibition includes featured works by 70 prominent artists including: Rudy Autio (American, 1926-2007), whose highly sculptural works decorated with brightly colored figures earned him the nickname, “the Matisse of ceramics”; Peter Voulkos (American, 1924-2002), one of the early founders of the American ceramic movement, whose ceramic sculptures are famous for their visual weight, their freely formed construction, and their aggressive and energetic decoration; Robert Arneson (American, 1930-1992) – “father of the ceramic Funk Movement” – who in the early 1960s abandoned the traditional manufacture of functional ceramic objects in favor of using everyday objects to make confrontational statements; and Betty Woodman (American, born  1930), who integrates color and form into complex sculpture based on the historical traditions of pottery making, most notably that of ancient China and Italian majolica. One of the most influential ceramic artists of the 20th century, Woodman was recognized for her outstanding contributions to the field and honored as the first living woman artist to have a solo exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 2006.


“The Abstract Expressionist”, 1985
Robert Arneson (1930-1992)

Karen Brosius, the Museum’s executive director says, “The museum is delighted to present this comprehensive exhibition of talented artists that provides the community and our visitors a satisfying discovery and enjoyment of the world of ceramics.”

Some of the artists started their careers when the studio movement in America was in its infancy. After World War II, there was renewed interest in the craft movement, with many universities establishing programs and more museums presenting their work. Influenced by European modernist design, as well as Asian pottery traditions, emerging ceramic pioneers created a new American aesthetic.

During the 1960s, the craft field matured and prospered. Bernard Leach and Shoji Hamada were influential figures in the field, promulgating the value of functional pottery in everyday life. But an American revolution in clay began under the charismatic leadership of Peter Voulkos, who embraced and redefined the potential of clay as an innovative form of contemporary art, which embraced individual expression rather than following the crowd. Rules were broken and a new ceramic frontier was born.

The figure became a prominent foil for artistic expression in clay and witnessed a resurgence of interest in the 1960s, primarily from West Coast artists, including Robert Arneson and Viola Frey. During the 1970s and 1980s, another sea change took place. Many artists began using the vessel format to express painterly concerns or to convey personal stories, either as painted narration on the surface or as fully integrated form and design. With each successive generation, emerging artists have forged a new voice within the ceramic idiom. Borrowing freely from different time epochs and cultures, as well as being more fluid between art mediums, they are not limited by past traditions.

The showing in Columbia is part of a 10-city national tour over a three year period containing 79 ceramic vessels and sculptures from the collection of the Ceramics Research Center, Arizona State University Art Museum. The exhibition was curated by Peter Held, Curator of Ceramics and was developed and managed by Smith Kramer Fine Art Services, an exhibition tour development company in Kansas City, Missouri.

Innovation and Change: Great Ceramics from the Ceramics Research Center has been organized by the Arizona State University Art Museum located near Phoenix in Tempe, AZ.

From June 16 throu September 19,  2010, the Museum will also present, SC6: Six South Carolina Innovators in Clay.

Drawn from public and private collections, six innovative ceramic artists who are, or have been active in South Carolina are featured in this Gallery 15 installation. The works illustrate a diverse range of technique, glazes and forms for which the artists are best known. Featured artists include: Russell Biles, from Greenville, whose figural sculptures are deeply laden with social and political commentary; Jim Connell, whose sinuous vessels are decorated with elaborate glazes, many of which are inspired by ancient Chinese ceramics; Georgia Henrietta Harris, a member of the Catawba Nation, who is largely credited with reviving the Catawba pottery tradition; Peter Lenzo, whose technically complex sculptures recall the 19th century Southern “face jug” tradition yet remain completely unique; Ron Meyers, whose functional ceramics are brightly slip-painted in a gestural, expressionistic style that can be both provocative and confrontational; and Virginia Scotchie, current chair of the ceramics department at USC, who incorporates familiar shapes when creating her vessels that possess complex and luminous glazes.

For further information check our SC Institutional Gallery listings, call the Museum at  803/799-2810 or visit (www.columbiamuseum.org).

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SC Arts Commission’s Canvas of the People Grand Tour is Over – Now What?

Thursday, April 15th, 2010

OK, the seven public gatherings of the Canvas of the People 2010 have taken place – plus one special, unannounced, gathering at the recent Arts Alliance Board meeting, and the private gatherings held with community and business leaders in several, if not all the original seven locations – before the general public gathered. Why some folks couldn’t participate like the rest of us in a public forum – I don’t know, but it fits the pattern of secrecy conducted by the Arts Commission. It’s always about not telling the whole story – holding back information.

We’ve had our say on what’s working in the arts, what our challenges are, and what opportunities lie ahead, but what now?

Of course if you didn’t show up, you can probably still participate by doing the online Canvas survey. Here’s the link (http://www.southcarolinaarts.com/canvas2010/index.shtml). You can also see what others said throughout SC at this link as well – see listings on the left of the page. Of course you won’t see any comments from the private gathering.

We’re not told much about what happens now, but my guess is someone will sort through all the comments in the three categories and pull them together in some kind of report and then distribute that report or at least make it available as a download on the Arts Commission’s website. There you go – problems solved.

Of course we were told at each of the gatherings that this plan for the next ten years was a plan for us – not the Arts Commission – they’ll be doing that later, on their own – behind closed doors.

My guess is that this plan will look a lot like the previous plans – except for the pleas for more funding from somewhere – which doesn’t exist.

So all the calls for working together will fade and the dog eat dog scramble for a bigger slice of the funding pie will resume amongst the non-profits and not much will change.

We’re already seeing the “too big to fail” factor being floated by the Charleston Symphony Orchestra and its supporters (a shrinking number), which has been in financial trouble for ten years, and continues to rob funding from the greater Charleston art community. Giving money to the Orchestra is like stealing funding from the fiscally responsible to give it to the fiscally irresponsible. But the cry to save the “artistic soul of Charleston” drones on at the expense of the other worthy art groups.

From all my years of experience and attending the Canvas of the People process – my advice to the people who attended these meetings is to forget about having the Arts Commission lead you around by the nose and schedule more gatherings of the art community in your area, on a regular basis, for a longer period of time, and work on your own challenges and opportunities. Follow through on what you come up with and you’ll get a lot further along than worrying about the size of the pie you’ll get from the Arts Commission. Who knows your community and its resources better than you?

In my opinion, more would be accomplished if members of the art community gathered at a local watering hole on a regular basis and discussed issues over a few drinks than attending these Canvas gatherings – there will be more pressure to monitor the follow-through on ideas and plans – more accountability. Our art communities don’t need more art walks – they need art talks once a month.

I went to a few of the Canvas gatherings to observe and make a plea for the non-profits to work with the commercial side of the art community – not just look at us as a source for funding and handouts. I also asked why commercial businesses in the arts, who support individual artists, help build audiences, promote the arts, and support the community with taxes – can’t share in applying for funding from the Arts Commission. Some of our ideas might be better that those proposed by some non-profits and might pay off better for the overall art community and community in general. Most of us live in a world where if you can’t pay your bills, you’re out of business – not begging the community for another chance to get your act together. Reality for us is the bottom line and we don’t enter into risky ventures, knowing there is always another funding cycle around the corner. Yet, in our case, when Carolina Arts got into financial troubles when the economy collapsed, we made cuts to the bone, took on personal debt, and we reached out to followers and people responded and helped us survive, but there was no chance for public support – none at all.

So, I hope there are not a lot of folks out there waiting for this final report from the Canvas of the People 2010 to solve their problems. There will be a few who do that, but they are going to be disappointed. Waiting for funding, much less more funding from the SC Arts Commission is futile as long as the State of South Carolina continues to have budget shortfalls. At some point, someone in the SC Legislature is going to be asking – do we need to pay for this big fat bureaucracy of a state agency – why don’t we give our money directly to the counties to decide where it should go in their art communities? At that point, non-profits will discover a pie that is not already half eaten by the time they get to it.

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USC’s McMaster Gallery in Columbia, SC, to present 55th Annual Art Auction – Apr. 21, 2010

Wednesday, April 14th, 2010

Here’s another example of late arriving news which we received at Carolina Arts today (no photos or links supplied):

Sculpture, photography, paintings and ceramics created by faculty and students at the University of South Carolina will go to the highest bidders April 21, 2010, at McMaster Gallery’s 55th Annual Art Auction.

The popular event will be held in the Campus Room of Capstone House, at USC in Columbia, SC, beginning with a preview party at 6pm followed by the auction from 7 – 10pm. The art will be on display beginning at 1pm that day for public viewing. The event is free and open to the public, and light refreshments will be provided.

The auction is sponsored by the department of art in the university’s College of Arts and Sciences. Proceeds will be divided between the artists and the university’s art scholarship and gallery fund. Credit cards and checks will be accepted.

For more information, contact Mana Hewitt, gallery director and organizer of this year’s event, at 803/777-7480, 803/777-4236 or e-mail to (mana@sc.edu).

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Columbia Museum of Art Celebrates the Installation of a Dale Chihuly Chandelier – Apr. 17, 2010

Tuesday, April 13th, 2010

This Saturday evening, Apr. 17, 2010, the Columbia Museum of Art in Columbia, SC, will celebrate the installation of a chandelier designed by Dale Chihuly, purchased by The Contemporaries of the Columbia Museum of Art, in the museum’s David Wallace Robinson, Jr. Atrium.

The installation marks the first of its kind in the state and measures 14′ tall, 5′ wide and 11′ deep. The design was chosen to enhance the asymmetrical design of the museum’s atrium space and a “Carolina Sunset” color-scheme will incorporate Columbia’s “Famously Hot” shades of golds, oranges and reds.  The public celebration of the installation will be held in conjunction with this year’s Museum gala, Red Hot…Cool! 60 Years of Color that evening.

The completion of this installation also marks the success of a public-fundraising campaign by which the Contemporaries raised over $360,000 through private donations and fundraising events – led entirely by the young professional affiliate group of the museum with the generous support and guidance of a team of community mentors, the Board of the Museum of Art and the staff of the museum. The fundraising total covers the cost of the acquisition, long-term maintenance of the piece, educational support, lighting and a documentary video.

But…

If you happen to be going to that gala that evening or hanging around Boyd Plaza in front of the Columbia Museum of Art on Saturday – you can see another installation of glass sculpture, by One Eared Cow Glass, Tommy Lockart and Mark Woodham, with the assistance of Ryan Crabtree. It might be gone by Sunday afternoon, so don’t wait.

They are unveiling their own sculpture in the courtyard outside of the museum consisting of 3 totems having aprox. 100 individually blown glass faces and 21 large plates assembled on copper piping at the top. The whole sculpture loosely resembles trees…ie. palmetto trees. The height of the totems with the plates on top are about 15′ tall.

They are working with Steven Ford from Steven Ford Interiors, and Woodley’s Garden Center (whom are providing plants, etc. to surround the sculptures). Ford asked the guys at One Eared Cow Glass to make something that would “Wow the crowd” as they arrive at the museum.

We hope to have some photos of the final installation, but for now we have a few images of part of the work.

And, I’m sure anyone seeing this installation will be just as wowed by this art work as they will by anything they see inside the Museum, and it came from Columbia. Or maybe I should say, most folks seeing this installation will be wowed – until they find out it was made by someone from Columbia. As we all know – the best things come from – somewhere else. I know better and so do a lot of folks, but most don’t.

Look, I think it’s great that the Contemporaries group was able to raise $360,000 to purchase the Chihuly piece for the Museum. It will be a great addition to the Museum’s collection and really impress visitors as they enter the Museum.

I’m not comparing Dale Chihuly’s work to that of One Eared Cow Glass.

In an effort of full disclosure, I don’t own any works by Dale Chihuly – no surprise there, and I own quite a few works by One Eared Cow Glass. Linda and I love their work.

All I’m saying is – don’t overlook the talents of artists in your own community. Most are considered creative giants – somewhere else. And, if you gave artists like Tommy Lockart and Mark Woodham $360,000 to create a work of art – you might be surprised at what you would get. You might not get world-wide name recognition, but I bet it would be one impressive work of glass.

I’m offering this blog entry as a reminder of the accomplishment of The Contemporaries of the Columbia Museum of Art and to advise people to smell the roses along the way as they enter the Columbia Museum of Art Saturday evening.

And, by the way, if you don’t have $360,000 in your pocket to purchase your own Dale Chihuly – the work by One Eared Cow Glass is for sale and I bet it will cost a whole lot less.

For further info about the Museum, the Gala, or The Contemporaries of the Columbia Museum of Art, call 803/799-2810 or visit (www.columbiamuseum.org). For information about One Eared Cow Glass, call 803/254-2444 or visit (www.oneearedcow.com).

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