Posts Tagged ‘Greenville SC’

Some Articles About Exhibits Taking Place in the Carolinas Which Came In After Our February Deadline

Monday, February 7th, 2011

Some of these came in late – after our Jan. 24 deadline and a few came from folks just discovering us. Some think we should just add them to the paper – after all it’s not printed – it’s electronic, but I say no. That’s what deadlines are for and I don’t want several editions of the paper out there and people hearing about items they missed after they first viewed the paper. And, we might not always give these late articles a second life at Carolina Arts Unleashed. So people need to make that deadline.

If you haven’t seen our Feb. 2011 edition of Carolina Arts, you can find it at this link (Warning – this download can take several minutes) (http://www.carolinaarts.com/211/211carolinaarts.pdf).

Coker College in Hartsville, SC, Features Works by Koichi Yamamoto

An exhibition of prints by Koichi Yamamoto, an assistant professor at the University of Tennessee School of Art, is on view through Feb. 25, 2011, in the Cecelia Coker Bell Gallery located in the Gladys C. Fort Art Building in Hartsville, SC.


Tochika Ni, by Koichi Yamamoto, a 12″ x 24″ intaglio print

Yamamoto’s show, 00 To 10, includes a selection of intaglio prints (a printing process wherein an image is engraved or acid etched into a metal plate, inked then printed) and prints made with a monotype process, a procedure that yields only a single impression from each plate.

Merging traditional and contemporary approaches to printmaking, Yamamoto has worked with meticulous metal engravings, large-scale relief and intaglio prints. His current work is in large-scale monotypes and exemplifies a contemporary, international aesthetic developed from his upbringing in Japan and his education in Europe and North America. His prints explore issues of the sublime, memory, atmosphere, light and history through various representations of landscape.

“Surface only provides a record from recent events,” Yamamoto said. “Making critical judgments requires an understanding of what lies underneath. Addressing the landscape as subject, my work attempts to describe cross sections of history. I seek to slow down and take time for a deep level of investigation.”

Yamamoto is a graduate of the University of Alberta and Pacific Northwest College of Art. He has also studied at the Bratislava Academy of Art and the Poznan Academy of Art. His work has been included in a number of recent juried print competitions including the Boston Printmakers, the 7th Bharat Bhavan International Biennial Print Art in India and the Lujubljana International Printmaking Exhibition in Slovania. Yamamoto’s prints are in the collections of University of Hawaii at Hilo, the Vivian and Gordon Gilkey Graphic Center in the Portland Art Museum and the University of Alberta Museum and Collection.

The Cecelia Coker Bell Gallery is located in the Gladys C. Fort Art Building on the Coker College campus. Gallery hours are from 10am to 4pm, Monday through Friday, while classes are in session.

Coker College upholds and defends the intellectual and artistic freedom of its faculty and students as they study and create art through which they explore the full spectrum of human experience. The college considers such pursuits central to the spirit of inquiry and thoughtful discussion, which are at the heart of a liberal arts education.

For more information, contact Barb Steadman by calling 843/857-4199.

UNC Asheville in Asheville, NC, Features Laura Hope-Gill’s Poetry and Photographs by John Fletcher Jr.

UNC Asheville’s Ramsey Library will present the collaborative work of poet Laura Hope-Gill and photographer John Fletcher Jr., on view in Ramsey Library’s Blowers Gallery from Feb.  1- 28, 2011. Hope-Gill and Fletcher will also present a slideshow and poetry reading at 12:30pm, Tuesday, Feb. 8, 2011, in the library’s Whitman Room.

Hope-Gill and Fletcher’s book, The Soul Tree, features photographs of uniquely beautiful southern Appalachian landscapes accompanied by lyric poems, which illuminate themes of vision, faith, healing and the sacredness of nature. The Blowers Gallery exhibit will feature some of the images and poems from the book as well as more recent work inspired by The Soul Tree.

The exhibit and the slideshow/poetry reading are free and open to the public.

Hope-Gill is the Poet Laureate of the Blue Ridge Parkway and a recipient of a North Carolina Arts Council fellowship. She is also the founder and director of WordFest Poetry Festival in Asheville, and an instructor in UNC Asheville’s Great Smokies Writing Program. Fletcher is a photographer for the Asheville Citizen-Times. His 20-year career has included clients such as USA Today, The Associated Press, The Washington Post, and The New York Times.

The gallery is free and open to the public daily and most evenings.

For more information, call 828/251-6336 or visit (http://bullpup.lib.unca.edu/library/exhibits/blowers/exhibits.html).

Greenville Technical College in Taylors, SC, Features Works by Faculty of SC Governor’s School

The Department of Visual and Performing Arts at the Greer campus of Greenville Technical College in Taylors, SC, is presenting an exhibit of works by members of the South Carolina Governor’s School of the Arts and Humanities, on view through Feb. 18, 2011.

Impressive for its scope, the show includes works by photographer Carlyn Tucker, sculptor Joseph Thompson, painter Paul Yanko, ceramists Alice Ballard and Sharon Campbell, printer Katya Cohen, metals artist Ben Gilliam, and graphic designer Neil Summerour. We are pleased to showcase the creative excellence that exemplifies the commitment of arts faculty at this unique Upstate program.

For further information check our SC Institutional Gallery listings call Lisa Smith at 864/848-2044 or e-mail to (lisa.smith@gvltec.edu).

Mesh Gallery in Morganton, NC, Features An Exhibit of Iron Works

Mesh Gallery in Morganton, NC, will present an exhibition showcasing the work of Oak Hill Iron that includes both fine art and utilitarian wares titled Ironology. The exhibit will be on view from Feb. 14 through Apr. 8, 2011, with a reception taking place on Friday, Feb. 18, 2011, from 6-9pm.

Oak Hill Iron was born out of necessity and driven by true talent and sheer determination to create beautiful products. Founded over a decade ago by Dean Curfman, Oak Hill Iron produces custom ironwork that meets the needs of countless utilitarian applications as well producing works of fine art that are at home in a gallery space. Both high art and craft are integral parts of a healthy arts community and with this exhibition Oak Hill Iron will demonstrate it’s ability to wear both those hats.

Oak Hill Iron is staffed by a team of highly trained artistic craftsmen and offers a wide selection of ironwork for both residential and commercial projects. There is no job that is considered too big or too small.

As always events at MESH Gallery are free and open to the public. Appetizers (hors d’oeuvres) for this event will be provided by Mountain Burrito of Morganton. Wine will be served by Sour Grapes Wine Distribution.

There will be a free concert starting at 8pm on Feb. 18, during the reception with a performance from Pimalia recording artists Moolah Temple $tringband hailing from Jackson County, NC. The duo of Johnny Favorite & Eden Moor co-pilot their goat-drawn deathcart, trailing the detritus of Old Time, Musique Concrète, Honky Tonk, IDM, Minstrelsy, songs of wounded affection, cautionary tales for our age, and the aesthetics of the Fraternal, Temperance, and Evangelical Movements. Moolah Temple $tringband rarely makes public appearances, but the duo is pleased to be invited by MESH. One clown is merely a clown, but two clowns make a circus.

Mesh Gallery is located at 114-B West Union Street, Morganton, NC.

For further information call 828/437-1957 or e-mail to (eliot@meshgallery.com).

Charleston County Public Library in Charleston, SC, Features Works by Cheryl Baskins Butler

The Charleston County Public Library in Charleston, SC, will present the exhibit, A Day at the Zoo: Impressions of Riverbanks, featuring works by Cheryl Baskins Butler, on view in the Saul Alexander Foundation Gallery, located in the Main Branch of the CCPL system in downtown Charleston, SC, from Feb. 1 – 28, 2011.

Butler began her sketch “safaris” at the Riverbanks Zoo in Columbia, SC, when it first opened in the mid 70’s. Throughout the ensuing years, she has returned regularly to observe, sketch, paint and spend personal time with the Riverbanks residents. A Day at the Zoo: Impressions of Riverbanks is a compilation of paintings, collages and site sketches from her visits.
The Main Library is located at 68 Calhoun Street in downtown Charleston.

For further information call Frances Richardson at 843/805-6803 or visit (www.ccpl.org).

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Furman University in Greenville, SC, Offers Senior Exhibition Beginning on Apr. 9, 2010

Tuesday, April 6th, 2010

I received an e-mail at Carolina Arts from Alex Klaes, a senior at Furman University in Greenville, SC. He started with these magic words: “Hi Tom. I was reading your blog today and I thought I’d send you an e-mail.” Now how can you ignore that?

Here’s the rest of the e-mail – after that first sentence:

My name is Alex Klaes and I am a senior art major at Furman University in Greenville, SC. Our senior art show opens next week on April 12, and part of that show is my photography exhibition. Here is a link to a few of the images that will be part of my show (http://alexklaes.tumblr.com/). There will be around 50 photographs total. Last summer I received a grant from my university to do a travel photography project, a sort of modern Walker Evens and Steven Shore type of thing, and my senior exhibition is the product of that trip. I traveled for the better part of three months, going to New Orleans, Austin, L.A., San Francisco, Portland, Seattle, Denver, and New York City. I slept on the couches of strangers that soon became my friends, and I had a blast.

So why am I telling you this? Shameless self promotion. If you have any interest in mentioning me in your blog or newspaper I would be happy to speak with you and answer any questions you might have. If you are in Greenville during the show it would be awesome if you checked it out.

Thanks for your time,
Alex Klaes

I e-mailed Klaes back asking if he could send us more info about this show as we didn’t receive a press release about the exhibit from Furman University. All we had was the dates of the exhibit and the fact that it was a senior show. When it comes to group shows I don’t like to mention just one artist – even after one makes the effort to contact us. Klaes sent us some more info which we can share with you and here it is:

Patchwork, the Furman University Senior Art Exhibition will be on view from Apr. 9 through May 8, 2010, in the Thompson Gallery located in the Thomas Anderson Roe Art Building. The exhibit included works by Azra Aslam, Press Compton, Shannon Daley, Emily Dean, Becky Harlan, Alex Klaes, Tricia Leventis, Sally Ann McKinsey, Dan Perkins, Amy Shaw, Drew Sisk, Rachel Tackett and John Wicks. Gallery hours are Mon. – Fri., from 9am-5pm. For further information call 864/294-2074.

It’s nice to know that Furman is turning out such insightful and well-read artists, such as Alex Klaes. I won’t get to go see this exhibit, but if you can – please do.

In fact, during the months of April and May, many colleges and universities across the Carolinas will be presenting senior exhibitions, which can give you insight into what the next crop of artists will be doing for the next few years – until they find out the real world isn’t like the world of academia.

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Martha R. Severens is Retiring From the Greenville County Museum of Art in Greenville, SC

Monday, March 22nd, 2010

We were first sent this news by an old friend in Greenville, SC, and then confirmed it by reading an article in the Greenville News and then making contact with the Greenville County Museum of Art. After 17 years as curator at the Museum, Severens and her husband Kenneth will do some well deserved traveling.

Linda and I knew Martha and Kenneth when they were in Charleston, SC, long before we started doing an arts newspaper – Martha was curator at the Gibbes Museum of Art and we worked with Kenneth processing black and white photos for his books on Southern architecture. We did photo processing for the Gibbes too. That was during our life as custom photo processors before publishing newspapers.

At some point a change was being made at the Gibbes and I think Martha Severens and Paul Figueroa were both up for the directors job and Figueroa got the job. Severens moved on to take a job as curator of the Portland (Maine) Museum of Art, but in 1992, came back to South Carolina to take a job as curator at the Greenville County Museum of Art. That was probably during a time when folks in South Carolina couldn’t imagine a woman being director of a major museum. Now women directors are the norm.

Severens is the author of The Greenville County Museum of Art: The Southern Collection, issued in 1995. She has written books on Andrew Wyeth, The Charleston Renaissance, and a series of articles on the Museum’s collection, which have appeared in American Art Review, a national publication.

Severens will be leaving the South Carolina Museum community with a lot of knowledge and experience, and will be hard to replace, but all good things come to an end and she and her husband deserve their time to travel. And, who knows – she may still have a few books planned.

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A New Studio/Gallery Opens in Greenville, SC’s, Pendleton Street Arts District on Jan. 22, 2010

Sunday, January 10th, 2010

We usually don’t mention receptions or exhibit openings at Carolina Arts. It’s a long boring story and a lot of hassles, but this is more about new life in the Carolina visual art community. There’s been too much death in the last year and a half – I’m talking about gallery closings – not actual death, but it can feel like death to the owners and the artists who used to show at any gallery that closes.

So this is an announcement about a new beginning. Angelique Brickner and Rhonda Gushee, newcomers to Greenville, are opening The Clay People Gallery, featuring their figurative sculptures and they’re inviting folks to come preview their new venture on Jan. 22, 2010, beginning at 6pm.


by Angelique Brickner

The studio/gallery is located in the Flatiron Building, 1211 Pendleton Street, Unit 1203, in the Pendleton Street Arts District of Greenville. This is the same location (the Flatiron Building) of Art & Light Gallery mentioned on this blog in Sept. 2009 about an exhibit by Christopher Rico, a fellow blogger I read.

Both Brickner and Gushee have already been showing their work at various venues, including Upstate Visual Arts Gallery (also new to the District) in the Pendleton Street Arts District, and Thee Inner Cirkus at the WareHouse Theater on Augusta Street. They both also have home studios, and Brickner was included in The Metropolitan Arts Council’s Open Studios tour. They have both sold their sculpture as a result of these exhibits and events, and they now look forward to showing their figurative sculptures in their own gallery space.


by Rhonda Gushee

The studio/gallery space will be open on Fridays and Saturdays from 10am to 5pm and of course during Greenville’s popular First Fridays, which takes place on the first Friday of each month (Duh) from 6 to 9pm – throughout the downtown area of Greenville. But you can see it first on Jan. 22.

You can get further information on their website at (www.theclaypeople.net) or by calling 513/315-1872.

New life – something we all need in the Carolina visual art community. Let’s hope it’s a long and prosperous journey for the two artists.

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Riverworks Gallery in Greenville, SC, Features Works by Tracie Easler – Jan. 8 – Feb. 28, 2010

Friday, December 18th, 2009

As usual we received several press releases about exhibits starting in January – after our deadline. We can’t reward all the stragglers, but occasionally we single out one or two for exposure here. It’s not that they’re all not interesting, but some just stand out more than others and after all – all we receive by deadline for the web version of Carolina Arts will be posted on Carolina Arts Online – on the first of the month.

That’s right, we produce two really different publications every month – one the physical printed paper and another online version which includes much more info than can be found in the printed version. The ratio of advertising to printer cost vs. unlimited space on the Internet, for much less money, is the reason for these two publications. It’s not like we wouldn’t want to produce one big color publication covering everything – we just can’t afford it without the help of advertisers and since we’ll never be able to receive any government support for doing what we do – it’s the reality of our life. Oh well.

These small gallery spaces located at Art Crossing on the Reedy River in downtown Greenville are an interesting concept which I wish more cities or developments offered to their local visual art communities. The Reedy River area in Greenville is interesting enough on its own, but the galleries add an extra touch of class – many cities in SC and the Carolinas could use.

Here’s the press release.

Riverworks Gallery, located at Suite 202 at Art Crossing on the Reedy River in downtown Greenville, SC, will present the exhibit, Carolina Cowboy, Photographs by Tracie Easler, on view from Jan. 8 – Feb. 28, 2010. The exhibition is sponsored by the Department of Visual and Performing Arts at the Greenville Technical College/Greer Campus.

Easler’s riveting photographic portraits document the cultural anomaly of the South Carolina cowboy. The Carolina Cowboy series is a collection of environmental portraits produced using processes from the 19th and the 21st centuries. The images are intended to serve as a reflection of the lifestyle of each individual. Easler utilizes both 35mm digital and 4×5 large format film cameras to make the portraits. The images are presented utilizing the antique process of platinum/palladium and the modern technique of archival inkjet printing. “Photography fuels my personal expression in ways that words cannot,” say Easler.

In addition to being enrolled as a photography student in the Department of Visual and Performing Arts at Greenville Technical College, Easler is the mother of three children under fourteen, a wife, a homemaker, a ranch hand, a gardener and a cook. She is also a rodeo promoter and a calf and team roper.

Easler was selected as the 2009 recipient of EMRYS Foundation grant, the Alice Conger Patterson Scholarship, from a group of over fifty applicants. The scholarship is designed to encourage South Carolina women to pursue continuing education or to develop a creative endeavor.

Riverworks Gallery is a small student art gallery operated by the faculty and students from the Department of Visual and Performing Arts at Greenville Technical College.

For further information check our SC Institutional Gallery listings or call Blake Praytor at 864/848-2020 or e-mail to (blake.praytor@gvltec.edu).

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Greenville, SC’s Open Studio Tour is a BIG Event – Taking Place on Nov. 7 & 8, 2009

Friday, October 23rd, 2009

At times I find myself in a conflict when I’m promoting several events taking place at the same time. Such is the case with the Greenville Open Studios tour in Greenville, SC, and the Charleston Art Auction taking place on Nov. 7, 2009, in Charleston, SC, during the Charleston Fine Arts Annual weekend. Both the tour and the auction are big supporters of Carolina Arts. People could really attend both, but human nature for most is just to chose one. I just hope I’ll be finished delivering our Nov. issue and have that opportunity. But, then again – with every issue of Carolina Arts or Carolina Arts Online were promoting dozens of events that take place at the same time – even in the same city or town.


Carl R. Blair

In this posting I’m plugging the Greenville Open Studios tour – taking place Nov. 7 & 8, 2009, 10am-6pm Saturday and noon-6pm Sunday. The event is organized by the Metropolitan Arts Council in Greenville. This is the biggest or at least one of the biggest studio tours in the Carolinas. And, Alan M. Ethridge, executive director of MAC, would just love it if I would plug the events two major sponsors – Wachovia and SEW Eurodrive, so I guess I will.

Wachovia Bank, N.A. and SEW Eurodrive are proud to be the presenting sponsors of the eighth annual Greenville Open Studios and congratulate the 124 participating artists.

Hopefully some of you got a copy of the tour booklet I helped distribute during the delivery of our Oct. issue of Carolina Arts. It’s a great resource about the studio tour and the Greenville area visual art community. With 124 participants, it doesn’t represent the entire visual art community but it does feature a lot of the area’s heavy hitters – at least a lot of folks I like. Alice Ballard, Carl R Blair, Jane Todd Butcher, Bob Chance, Lynn Greer, Diane Hopkins-Hughs, Glen Miller, Susan Sorrell, Barbara Stitt, Enid Williams, are just a few I’ll mention. Of course there are just as many that I like who are not on the tour, but out of 124 – anyone should find plenty to like.


Barbara Stitt

The booklet offers one image by the artists, contact info, including website addresses to see more work, a short description – even info on wheelchair accessibility. If also offers maps that can be very helpful in figuring out your driving route from studio to studio. The booklet also offers info about other programs by the Metropolitan Arts Council and an arts calendar of other events taking place in the area during the months of Nov. and Dec. It also gives a complete list of sponsors – of which there are many. So even if you don’t go to the tour – the booklet is a great resource to have.

I took these booklets to a lot of places we don’t go to every month distributing Carolina Arts.

Why don’t we distribute Carolina Arts to every inch of South Carolina, much less every inch of the greater Carolinas? Come on – we’re a business, not a non-profit charity. Besides, anyone with access to the Internet can see every page of Carolina Arts every month. If you have a library in your community – you can most like get access to the Internet. The address is (www.carolinaarts.com).

I guess there are some who would make a game out of the tour by trying to go to all 124 studios in the two-day time frame, but that’s no way to look at art. The tour is a great opportunity to see the environment in which these talented artists create, talk with them, see their latest creations, and – wait for it – buy art. That’s right – they’re going to let you buy art during the tour. So don’t let this opportunity go by.

Now, if you think this is something you might be interested in and you’re making plans to go – here’s a tip. Plan to go to Greenville on Friday, Nov. 6, 2009, so you can also enjoy the First Fridays event (6-9pm) – a gallery crawl of many of Greenville’s art galleries and some of the folks on the tour will be open that evening too – giving you a few extra hours to see more of the 124. The booklet tells you who is doing the First Friday and who is not.

Man, this booklet reminds me of another great resource of the visual art community in the Carolinas. It’s on the tip of my tongue.

Well, anyway I’ve made my plug – it won’t be the last and you may just run into me there – you never know. It seems to be a surprise for anyone who does see me at an event as they are always saying – “What are you doing here?” which I hope refers to the distance the event is away from homebase Bonneau, SC – because I do actually show up at a lot of events. Not as many as we report on – but a lot. It seems such a funny question to ask – considering what I do.

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Christopher Rico Exhibit Begins on First Fridays Event at Art & Light Gallery in Greenville, SC – Oct. 2, 2009

Thursday, September 24th, 2009

Not too long ago I went to Clinton, SC, to witness a visual art event – a short site-specific installation – which was being photographed for a book and filmed at the same time. I did a blog entry of it on Aug. 27, 2009 – here’s a link to that blog entry.

Not long after that I got to see the first draft of the short film made that night. It was amazing to see how hours and hours of work edited down to a few minutes looked. You can also see that at this link, but I must warn you – it you have an old computer, it might not work, it you have a slow internet connection, it might not work and even for those who have a spiffy new computer and highspeed internet, you might want to turn the HD switch off.

The book will be called, The Forest and the Sea. Rico offers a read of the interview done for that book on his blog, Machinations of a Distracted Mind. Rico’s friend D. A. Adams did the interview which can be found at this link.

You can also see a preview of some of the works done for the show at Art & Light Gallery on Rico’s other blog found here.


St. Theresa #2

Of course if you are going to be in the area of Greenville, SC, on Oct. 2, 2009, you could go to the First Fridays event, which takes place from 6-9pm. Art & Light Gallery is located at 1211 Pendleton Street, (for you fans of Google Maps) in the Flatiron Studios of the Pendleton Street Art District of Greenville.

Now, with all these links you have just about everything Christopher Rico – except the article we’ll be running in our Oct. issue of Carolina Arts. But, why hold that back? Most of you readers don’t ever see a printed copy of the paper unless you view it on our website – where you can see every page of every issue dating back to Aug. 04.

So here’s the article:

Art & Light Gallery in Greenville, SC, Features Works by Christopher Rico

Art & Light Gallery in Greenville, SC, will present the exhibit, Christopher Rico – The St. Theresa Suite and Other Works, on view from Oct. 2 – 31, 2009.

Christopher Rico’s work has been exhibited nationally. He is part of corporate, public and private collections in locations throughout the Southeast. He has been a member of artists’ collectives from Memphis to Seattle to Texas. Rico has also designed professionally for the theatre, collaborated with modern dance companies and mounted ephemeral exhibitions in warehouses, construction sites and public outdoor settings. His work, while deeply tied to his materials, responds powerfully and uniquely to each environment it finds itself in and consistently creates a profound sense of encounter within the viewer.

“When people look at my work, I hope they ask themselves questions about my medium and my surfaces, because all of those choices are very specific and hold references to history or poetry or the body, and these references exist autonomously from whatever loose concept or abstracted narrative the painting may or may not have,” says Rico.  “I want people to bring their own interpretation, so their associations and relationships to these materials may be completely different from my own, but no less true.”

Rico adds, “I like to paint with my hands – without brushes – because I feel a real intimacy with the paint and surface that way. I think we make our own light in the world, our own meaningfulness. I’d rather people be concerned with this meaningfulness than worrying about objective meaning.”

The Art & Light Gallery is a fusion gallery/home accents boutique located in the heart of the Pendleton Street Arts District in Greenville.

For further information check our SC Commercial Gallery listings, call the gallery at 864/363-8172 or visit (www.artandlightgallery.com).

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Folks Who Didin’t Make the September Deadlines for Publicity

Sunday, September 6th, 2009

Each month a few days after our deadline (25th of the month) for inclusion on our website version of the paper, Carolina Arts Online, goes by, our e-mail runs like an open water tap – the late press releases just flow in. They all start the same way – “I think we may have missed your deadline, but if there is any chance you can fit this in…”. That kind of logic always hits me in a funny way. If you think you may have missed the deadline, it means you might have a clue as to when it is, and if so – you know you missed the deadline. Some would plead – why have a deadline for things that will only go on the website anyway? They understand when it comes to the printed version of the paper, but they think of the website as something that’s continuous – in a process of constant updating. But, if we did that, there would never be another printed version of the paper as we would always be updating the last issue. So we have to have deadlines and we have to stick to them.

So, why am I doing what I’m doing? You got me. Occasionally something comes in late that is a shame it didn’t make the deadline and you try to do something to give it some life. I have no idea these days if any other media will publish any of this info and our readers are a different brand all together – so I make an exception and then it just snowballs until you get to the point and say – no more.

I wish people did a better job with publicity, but most just don’t get it. What good does it do to offer a great event, an interesting exhibit or an important gathering and wait till the last minute to tell people about it? No good at all and if you still think it’s the media’s responsibility to go out and gather this info – get real, step aside, and let someone else do the job.

So, here is a few things we might have missed.


“Phillip’s Gate”

Converse College in Spartanburg, SC, is presenting the exhibit, Leo Twiggs’ Hurricane, on view in the Milliken Art Gallery through Sept. 24, 2009. The exhibition commemorates the twentieth anniversary of Hurricane Hugo.

The centerpiece of the exhibition is East Wind Suite: The Hugo Series, 1990, a series of nine batik paintings which Twiggs created the year following Hurricane Hugo’s devastation of the South Carolina lowcountry, his childhood home. In addition to this series, the Milliken Art Gallery will display fifteen of Twiggs’ batiks from his personal collection.

The East Wind Suite paintings have not been shown together publicly since their premiere at the Hampton III Gallery in Taylors, SC, in 1991, at which time the series was purchased in its entirety by Greenville businessman Jack Shaw and his wife, Jane, who have loaned the works for the exhibition.

“Converse College is honored to celebrate the masterful skill and emotional power of Dr. Twiggs’ creative expression. When Hurricane Hugo devastated South Carolina’s lowcountry twenty years ago, this talented artist and visionary educator found beauty, hope, action and inspiration in the destruction. His work is much like a phoenix rising from the ashes. With our focus on creativity at Converse, Dr. Twiggs’ life and work are exemplary models,” said Converse president Betsy Fleming, who authored the forward of the exhibition catalog. “Dr. Twiggs and his layered creations involving signs and symbols, people and places of South Carolina are authentic and original. His life’s story, his painstaking creative process of batik, and his determination and skill as an art educator reveal a pride, purpose and passion for South Carolina.”


“First Breeze”

Leo Franklin Twiggs was born in St. Stephen, SC, in 1934. From early on he knew great responsibility; he was in junior high school when his father died and, as the oldest of seven children, he began working to help support the family.

He was a bright student and a hard worker. Encouraged to pursue a college degree, Twiggs worked odd jobs to finance his education. In 1956 he became the first person in his family to graduate from college, receiving a BA summa cum laude from Claflin College in Orangeburg, SC.

At the time Twiggs graduated, South Carolina graduate arts programs did not admit African-American students. So Twiggs left the South, studying at the Art Institute of Chicago and then at New York University, where he received his MA and studied with Hale Woodruff, the acclaimed African-American painter and muralist.

In 1964 he returned to South Carolina and joined the faculty at South Carolina State University in Orangeburg, where he would remain for more than three decades. He was instrumental in developing the university’s Art Department and I.P. Stanback Museum. Twiggs was named Professor Emeritus in 2000.

During his time at South Carolina State, Twiggs also completed a Doctorate in Arts Education at the University of Georgia. He was the first African-American person to do so.

In 1981, Twiggs received the Verner Award (Governor’s trophy) for outstanding individual contributions to the arts in South Carolina, the first visual artist so honored.

Twiggs has presented over seventy-five one-man shows and his work has received international recognition, with exhibits at the Studio Museum and the American Crafts Museum in New York and in US Embassies in Rome, Dakar and Togoland among others. His work has been widely published in art textbooks and featured in several television documentaries. He was selected to design an ornament for the White House Christmas tree in 2001 and 2008.

Hampton III Gallery represents him in the Southeast and his studio is located in Orangeburg, where he is Distinguished Artist in Residence at Claflin University.

“Twiggs’s art is intensely personal but never strident. Whether through depictions of the violence of a hurricane, the complexity of racial relations, the romance of southern rivers, or the bonds of family, he interweaves his experiences into a coherent narrative, because most of his works occur in series, where his symbology of that experience becomes recognizable and revelatory,” writes William Eiland, director of the Georgia Museum of Art.

Twiggs began experimenting with batik, an ancient process that uses dyes and hot wax to decorate fabrics, in 1965. He demonstrated the process during a classroom exercise with students, became intrigued, and began to innovate. It has remained his medium of choice for four decades. “From the outset my aim was to control the viscosity of the dyes and orchestrate the crackles to make them work as plastic elements in the design of my paintings. It is a long and tedious process, but, like jazz, it embraces improvisation and contemplation, important elements in my creative efforts,” Twiggs explains.

According to Sandy Rupp, director of Hampton III Gallery, the medium is one reason Twiggs’ work is so unique. She said, “The batik process is slow. It can take weeks, even months to produce a work. So he never has an abundance of work on hand. It is a unique medium, and no one has used it in the way Leo does. His is a painterly way.”

She added, “He is one of the top African-American artists in the country. He could have established himself anywhere, but he chose to come back to South Carolina and contribute here. We are lucky to have him.’

“It is evident that East Wind Suite: The Hugo Series, 1990, like many of Leo Twiggs’ series, comments on the ways in which humanity is challenged,” writes Converse art history major Erin Cramer, who authored the exhibition catalog under the direction of associate professor of art history, Dr. Suzanne Schuweiler. “It exemplifies Twiggs’ tendency to create art that comments on issues or events that have the capability of exhausting the human spirit, while simultaneously expressing optimism, resilience, and inevitable growth that is born out of adversity and despair.”

For more information, contact Beth Lancaster, director of communications for Converse College, at 864/596-9705 or e-mail to (beth.lancaster@converse.edu).

Furman University in Greenville, SC, is presenting the exhibit, Ruminations with a Charred Vine, featuring works by Glen Miller in the Thompson Gallery, located in the Thomas Roe Art Building, on view through Oct. 5, 2009.

Miller’s drawings were created at the Sheffield Wood Gallery located at the Greenville Fine Arts Center. The materials used were charcoal and paper. The drawings took 18 working days and allowed for public viewing as well as help from Fine Arts Students.

Miller is from Tennessee and received his bachelor’s of Fine Arts in drawing and painting from East Tennessee State University. He continued his art education for a master’s in Art and Education from the University of South Florida, and furthered his graduate study at University of Tennessee.

Since 1979, Miller has been teaching South Carolinians art, including teaching at public high school for 16 years. Currently he is a professor at Furman University and Converse College. He is also a faculty member at the Greenville County Museum of Art. Several of Miller’s exhibitions have shown in Greenville.

For more information contact Furman’s Art Department at 864/294-2074.

Celebrating the artistic talents of older adults in our community is the focus of Senior Action’s 13th Annual Arts Alive Art Exhibition & Festival to be held Saturday, Oct. 3, 2009, held from 10am to 4pm, in downtown Greenville, SC’s McPherson Park.

“We seek to celebrate and recognize the talents of the seniors in our community by providing a venue to display their works through the Arts Alive Exhibit & Festival,” says Andrea Smith, Executive Director and CEO of Senior Action, the charitable recipient and sponsoring agency for the event. Arts Alive was established in 1996 by Senior Action to promote and bring awareness to the artistic skills and talents of older adults. Arts Alive is also meant to encourage other aspiring senior artists to “pick up a paint brush” or discover an alternative art medium and begin creating works of art.

Artists are invited to submit original works of art in the following categories: painting, watercolor, pottery, sculpture, photography, stained glass, and other three-dimensional design. Artists must be over the age of 55 to exhibit in this event.

An additional, but important, aspect of Arts Alive is that funds raised from this festival serve to support programs for seniors at Senior Action – including the Open Studio art program at the Sears Shelter in McPherson Park. Senior Action strives to meet the needs of the older population of Greenville County and the Arts Alive event and art programming assist Senior Action in meeting these needs.

Artists may request an Exhibitors Application by calling Senior Action at 864/467-3660 or downloading one from Senior Action’s website at (www.senioraction.org). Sept. 11, 2009 is the deadline for submission.

For more information about the 13th Annual Arts Alive Art Exhibition & Festival visit (www.senioraction.org) or call 864/467-3660. To become a sponsor in support of this event or to inquire about vendor availability please call J.J. Swartz at 864/467-3660 or e-mail to (JJ.Swartz@senioraction.org).

You may have noticed that these first three releases were from Upstate SC – believe me, they don’t have the sole license for being late. And, finally, we have an entry from the Florence, SC, area where they were not late, but they have just discovered us – again. I’m not sure how many times we have re-discovered them in the last 15 years.

The Florence Regional Arts Alliance will continue its 25th Anniversary Celebration with the exhibit, Fry-Grissette Show, featuring works by Francis Marion University Visual Communications Associate Professor Gregory G. Fry and local lifestyle photographer Christina Grissette. The exhibition is on view through Sept. 21, 2009, in the Arts Alliance Gallery, located at 412 South Dargan Street in Florence, SC.

Gregory G. Fry’s collection, Imprinted Aspirations, is reflective in nature. Fry indicates, “In my latest work, much of the content comes from aspects that are happening in my own life, aspects that include external events which happen in the larger world and internal events over which I like to think I have control. One of the issues I am dealing with is terrorism and the impact it is having on the environment and those living in that environment.”

But Fry also turns back the pages of history to the world of ancient Greece. He observes, “There are a number of Greek references in my work that make a strange connection between Greek mythology and the nuclear, biological, and chemical warfare environment of today’s world.” He points out that although his work connects to the environment in which he lives, some of his art remains somewhat esoteric. He also adds, “Much of my work contains typography, which connects the content in a non-linear fashion while still allowing the presentation to remain traditional.”

Fry uses processes such as digital, lithograph, serigraph, collagraph, and monotype in addition to other techniques, both printing and traditional, that may be included depending on the design. His work includes small edition prints as well as one of a kind works of art. Fry indicates that the process of printmaking is very important to him in terms of being systematic and having a personal connection, but he does indicate that “by using multiple techniques in his prints he can find the true nature of the print itself.”  In addition to teaching at Francis Marion University, Fry maintains a studio in Florence, where he works in print and drawing media.

Christina Grissett is a Florence portrait photographer. Her work is distinctive because of her unique use of bright colors and textures. She is motivated by the art of imagery more than mere sales. When asked how she approaches her work, she replies, “I discuss the need of my client, with particular attention to the kind of image desired. My style evolves from selection of clothing to location and lighting.” She further indicates, “Clothing choice elevates the image away from the ordinary. I try to choose a location that is unexpected and that will add to the art of the photograph. Lighting is good old fashioned sunshine, low in the sky and reflected off the clouds. The joy of a unique, intriguing capture is priceless, and I so enjoy offering a tailored experience to my clients.”

In commenting on Florence, Grissette observes, “I love my city, especially downtown. There are so many interesting people, buildings, and stories.” Returning to the subject of photography, she adds, “Photography allows me to be in places I never thought of being and talking to people I don’t know. I get the opportunity to meet some fabulous families and funny children, visit interesting farms and rustic buildings, and make connections.”

For Grissette, connecting with people is what “makes my work an adventure.” Originally from Birmingham, AL, she is married to Russell, and they are rearing a family that consists of three children. She also holds a masters degree in speech-language pathology.

Gallery Director Uschi Jeffcoat reminds theatergoers who will be attending the Florence Little Theatre production of The Producers that the Arts Alliance Gallery will be open an hour and a half prior to each performance.  She indicates, “We invite theatergoers to come a little earlier, park in The Arts Alliance parking lot, and enjoy the works of Gregory Fry and Christina Grissette before walking across the street to Florence Little Theatre. It’s so wonderful that we are all developing downtown and can work together.”

Operating from its base at 412 South Dargan Street in the evolving Arts and Cultural District of downtown Florence, the Florence Regional Arts Alliance is as the “chamber of commerce” for artists, arts organizations, school arts programs, and school arts teachers in the City of Florence and Florence County. The Arts Alliance is committed to preserving, supporting, and promoting a vibrant arts community by providing grants to artists, organizations, schools, and teachers; by recognizing students, individuals, and businesses through a comprehensive program of awards and scholarships; by offering community programming that showcases the visual arts, the performing arts, and the literary arts; and by serving as an advocate for the arts to business, civic, and governmental leaders. All initiatives of The Arts Alliance are premised on the basic organizational core value and guiding principle that a vibrant arts community is fundamental to quality of life, education, and economic development as demanded by today’s knowledge-based economy, an economy that will require innovative, imaginative, and creative solutions to a broad variety of issues that will face the 21st Century.

For further info call the Alliance at 843/665-2787.

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Starving Visual Artists and Galleries in SC Offered Opportunity

Monday, August 10th, 2009

Just when visual artists and art galleries in South Carolina thought it couldn’t get any worst – along comes the SC Arts Commission with a great opportunity – an opportunity to help whom?

In my recent travels I was handed a letter which someone received from the SC Arts Commission about an opportunity to rent a booth at the upcoming American Institute of Architects South Atlantic Region (SAR) Conference to be held at the Carolina First Center in Greenville, SC, from Sept. 30 – Oct. 4, 2009. This conference will host architects from North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia with over 1000 attendees expected.

The letter states, “SAR is offering to artists and commercial galleries the opportunity to exhibit and sell their work in the exhibit hall. Booths are limited and are on a first-come, first-served basis. The special booth rate/registration for artists and commercial galleries is $277.00 per person. The cost for additional registrants is $189.00. The rate includes meals (snacks, breakfast and lunch, only, booth rental, one chair, one table, booth signage and carpeting).”

The letter also suggest checking their website (www.aiasc.org) for further info. Good thing I did – and I hope others did too before jumping on this opportunity.

Here’s what the website gave as registration cost breakdown.
The total cost $277 of registration for one person  includes:
$30 Wed. Exhibitor reception (food)
$20 Thur. Breakfast (food)
$14 Thur. Breaks (food)
$30 Thur. Lunch (food)
$30 Thur. Reception (food)
$20 Fri. Breakfast (food)
$30 Fri. Lunch (food)
$14 Fri. Breaks (food)
$21 Booth Cost
$19 One Table in Booth
$1   Chair
$8   Booth Sign
$40 Carpet in Booth

That’s $188 for food for three days. That’s $62 a day for food and it doesn’t include any dinners – $94 for Thursday alone. That’s some good eating for an artist who hasn’t been doing so well in this economic downturn – a real luxury.

Out of the $89 which actually is dealing with the booth – $40 is for carpeting? Of course this isn’t being offered ala cart. There is just one fee and it’s take it all or leave it.

I know some people would think this is a great opportunity to have access to 1000 architects, but is it? Did I miss the news about the building boom going on in these three states? And, I guess all these architects and their firms don’t already have connections with artists and art galleries in their own home areas. Plus, do you think these people don’t have meetings, lectures and workshops to attend and they are just going to be going from booth to booth to do some shopping for art?

Is the $277 plus travel, lodging and other expenses worth this “rare” opportunity? If you think it is – there you go. Thank you Arts Commission for the opportunity.

And, I’m sure some will do it and may have great stories to tell of this opportunity. But if money is as hard to come by for you as it is for me these days – is this really an opportunity for me or anyone to help the American Institute of Architects pay for their conference or more profit for the Carolina First Center?

Why now is the SC Arts Commission sending out letters to offer opportunities for commercial galleries? Is this the kind of help we should expect? There are a lot of ways to look at this.

First, how do you think the Greenville visual art community feels when they have such a juicy conference taking place in their town – during one of their First Friday art walk events – where those 1000 architects could be visiting their galleries and studios – free that evening? Thanks, Arts Commission!

Is this the kind of padded registration fees you would expect at other opportunities you would participate in as an artist or gallery owner? That’s $188 for partial food cost and $40 for carpeting.

Did the SC  Arts Commission know this was the breakdown of the registration fee? Did they care to check out the website for details? Do they think this is really what visual artists and art galleries need right now?

My question is should it cost $277 to have access to architects and their firms in these three states? Shouldn’t they have access to some sort of state-wide art registry that they can scan through when they need art. Is there not one at the SC Arts Commission?

Or, is this their way of saying the registry doesn’t work and you need to pay to have access to these people. Access you could get just as well on the internet or by e-mail with a little hard work. Time is money, but in this case your time may be in more supply than demand.

I don’t know about you but I’m not spending $62 a day on meals for me or my whole family. I couldn’t justify $40 for whatever kind of carpeting they could be supplying. And, I would expect more from the SC Arts Commission in the way of help – if I expected anything at all.

What would have been a real opportunity is for the SC Arts Commission to have made a deal where artists and galleries could participate for just the booth fees – not all the extravagant extras.

But then – that’s me. How about you?

I know one thing – I’d like to have the carpet rental contract at the Carolina First Center in Greenville, SC.

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Lest We Forget Our Humble Beginnings

Tuesday, June 24th, 2008

The Greenville News in Greenville, SC, offered an article by Ann Hicks on June 22, 2008, entitled, “Phil Garrett’s King Snake Press Marks 10 Years”. The article gives a brief overview of Garrett’s past ten years running the press and mentions a collaboration between the press, SC artists, and the Greenville County Museum of Art. In fact the Museum is currently showing an exhibit of works coming out of the print studio over the past ten years by 15 artists through July 27, 2008.

What the article doesn’t mention is that Garrett lifted the idea of setting up a print studio in Greenville after parking himself at the Art Thomas Gallery in Charleston, SC, in the mid-’90s. Thomas first offered a print studio for artists to make monotypes in Charleston and gave Garrett the idea to work with artists and the local art museum through his collaboration with the Gibbes Museum of Art in Charleston. I know, I have one of those prints.

It’s not surprising that Garrett left out the fact that the spark for his idea of opening a print studio and working with a museum came from Charleston – his past conduct in Charleston is forgettable – except some of us remember. But, then again, maybe that part was cut from the article for space limitations.

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