Posts Tagged ‘Spartanburg SC’

Spartanburg, SC, Charter School in the Running to Win $500,000 from Kohls Cares for Kids – Do you Facebook?

Friday, August 20th, 2010

This has to be one of the most unusual request for help Carolina Arts has gotten since Teri Tynes of Walking Off the Big Apple asked us for help to win the title of Best Travel Blogger in the World. Plus, I was just up near Petoskey, MI, and we brought our son home a Petoskey stone as a gift from our travels. Don’t think how cheap – they’re not cheap and he just graduated from the College of Charleston as a Geologist, plus I also got him a Blueray disk of Dark Knight.

So here’s a shout out for help to my readers who also do Facebook – I don’t, and I guess you’ll know what it means to “like” Kohls.

Here’s the note I got from Martha Petoskey:

If you have not done so already, please vote (5 times) for Spartanburg Charter School (SCS) to receive a $500,000 grant from Kohls Cares for Kids. SCS is the only South Carolina school in the top 100. We currently are in the top 20 schools, and if we maintain this position (simply by number of votes) we will obtain much-needed funding. The direct link in facebook is noted below. Please also note that you must “Like” Kohls in order to post your vote.

Here’s that link (http://apps.facebook.com/KohlsCares/school/1371341/spartanburg-charter-school?src=SchoolBitly).

Please feel free to share this link!

For further info contact Martha Petoskey, Ph.D., Program Director by calling 864/494-0928, e-mail at (Martha.Petoskey@spartanburgcharterschool.org), or visit (www.spartanburgcharterschool.org).

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37th Artist’s Guild of Spartanburg Juried Exhibition Takes Place at Carolina Gallery in Spartanburg, SC

Friday, August 6th, 2010

This press release came a little late for all our August deadlines, but since Carolina Gallery has been such a good supporter of Carolina Arts – Yada, Yada, Yada – we don’t let any of our supporters down. Not if we can help it. Perhaps we’ll have more about this exhibit in our September issue, but for now, this is what we know.

The 37th Artist’s Guild of Spartanburg Juried Exhibition will take place at Carolina Gallery on Morgan Square in downtown Spartanburg, SC, on view from Aug. 19 through Sept. 18, 2010. The opening reception will take place on Aug. 21, 2010, from 7 – 9pm, but the exhibit opens to the public on Aug. 19, 2010, during Art Walk Spartanburg, held every 3rd. Thursday in downtown Spartanburg.

Dr. Stephanie Heydt, curator of American Art at the High Museum in Atlanta, GA, is serving as juror for this year’s exhibition. Dr. Heydt, who has published widely on 19th and 20th century American art, selects works for the show based on digital entries. Award winning submissions will be determined in person, and announced at the artist’s reception on Aug. 21, 2010.  More than $4,000 will be awarded in 4 categories, including 2-D, painting and drawing, 2-D, photography and digital art, 3-D, sculpture, ceramics and jewelry, and “Upcycled,” where the majority of the materials in the art must have been previously used.


Winter Hydrangea, photography on watercolor by Susan Johann,
First Place Winner of the 36th Annual Juried Exhibition

This is the first year that the Juried Exhibition has been open to artists in both North and South Carolina outside of the designated area for membership in the Guild. This is also the first year for Carolina Gallery to host the annual Artist’s Guild Juried Exhibition.

Carolina Gallery is located at 145 West Main Street on Morgan Square in downtown Spartanburg.

The Artists’ Guild of Spartanburg was founded in 1957 by a core of 16 local artists, in order to support one another in their artistic endeavors. Several charter members are still active in the Guild. The goal of the Artists’ Guild of Spartanburg is to serve as a source for creative art in the community by promoting, fostering, and cultivating knowledge of the visual arts and of local artists. It strives to provide enrichment and artistic education for its members as well as the community at large, and thus encourage a deepening appreciation, understanding, and love of art among the citizens of Spartanburg and surrounding counties.

For further information contact Laura Pinkley at 864/764-9568, e-mail to (artistsguildofspartanburg@gmail.com) or visit (http://www.artistsguildofspartanburg.com/).

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Artists’ Guild of Spartanburg in Spartanburg, SC, Offer Studio and Garden Tour – June 5, 2010

Friday, May 14th, 2010

We received this press release at Carolina Arts about an art event where artists are helping themselves. It’s not an art auction where art is being purchased (below market value) or a gala where the sale of art is hoped to pay for the party – it’s a straight forward event – a chance to visit artists’ studios and see their gardens. If you want to buy something you see – that’s up to you.

Here’s the press release:

What: Artists’ Guild Studio and Garden Tour, a Benefit for the Artists’ Guild of Spartanburg

When: Saturday, June 5, 2010
10 a.m. – 4 p.m.

Where: Artists’ Studios and Gardens Open for the Tour

Julia Burnett, 561 Otis Boulevard, 29302
Vivianne Carey, 105 Rosewood Lane, 29302
Isabel Forbes, 335 N. Park Drive, 29302
Jill Jones, 124 Whites Mill Way, 29307
Bill Wilkinson/Bob Bellinger, 270 Montgomery Drive, 29302

Admission: Ticket prices, $20.00 in advance/ $25.00 day of event

Of special interest: Mimosas, Lemonade and Finger Food will be served in the garden of the Wilkinson/Bellinger home, 2 – 4 p.m.

Nothing says spring like gardens. Add in a few artists’ studios and you have a can’t miss event.


Garden of Julia Burnett


Garden of Isabel Forbes


Garden of Jill Jones

The Artists’ Guild of Spartanburg is sponsoring a tour of four studios and five gardens on June 5, 2010, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., featuring gardens both formal and natural in the mix.

The event is a fundraiser for the Guild and all proceeds will go to benefit the programs sponsored by the organization. Artists are donating their time and homes in support of the work of one of the oldest artists’ organizations in the state.

“We are so excited to be opening artists’ studios and gardens to the public for the first time,” Laura Pinkley, executive director of the Artists’ Guild says. “Of all the fundraisers that we have done, this has the potential to have the most appeal to both artists and the general public.”

Julia Burnett, known for her watercolors that incorporate flowers from her garden and birds that frequent her feeders, is chair of the tour committee and one of five on the tour. Truly a plant collector, Julia’s interest in anything unusual, contorted or rare has led her to create a garden that weaves patterns, textures and colors among the hardscape of large rocks, walkways and pond.

“I live in the city, but feel as if I am in another place when in my garden,” Burnett says of the garden oasis she has created at her Otis Boulevard home.

Also on the tour are Isabel Forbes’ Duncan Park studio and garden, Jill Jones’ studio and garden in White’s Mill, Vivianne Carey’s Rosewood Lane studio and garden and the home and gardens of William Wilkinson and Robert Bellinger on Montgomery Drive, where refreshments will be served from 2 – 4 p.m.

The studios range from Jones’ detached building that mimics the style of her home to Carey’s basement studio with its outdoor welding area. Each space is uniquely suited to the artist that creates there.

The day of touring will be topped off with mimosas, lemonade and finger food from 2 – 4 p.m. in the English country style garden rooms of the Wilkinson/Bellinger home.

Advance tickets are on sale for $20 at the following locations in the Spartanburg area: Art and Frame Gallery, Carolina Foothills Artisan Center, Carolina Gallery, Carolina Garden World, Chapman Cultural Center ticket office, Hatcher Gardens and Woodland Preserve, Home and Garden Classics, Gunter’s Gardens, Roebuck Greenhouses and Sassafras Home and Garden. Tickets are $25 the day of the tour.

For information, contact Pinkley at (864) 764-9568 or buy tickets using Pay Pal at (www.artistsguildofspartanburg.com).

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Converse Students Exhibit Print and Mixed Media Works at HUB-BUB Showroom Gallery in Spartanburg, SC

Thursday, May 6th, 2010

Three art students from Converse College in Spartanburg are having an exhibit opening tonight at the HUB-BUB Showroom Gallery in Spartanburg, but we don’t promote receptions at Carolina Arts. We allow folks to do that in paid advertising. But with a little smarts – you could figure it out.

Here’s the info we received:

HUB-BUB Showroom Gallery in downtown Spartanburg, SC, will present the exhibit, BFA Senior Show, featuring works by Converse College art students, Katy Butler, Miranda Sawyer and Jamie Tanner, on view from May 6 – 28, 2010.

While Butler, Sawyer and Tanner share the screen-print process within their art, each student’s body of work is extremely different, appearing on both paper and wood panel. Students at Converse, the three women have spent the last four years honing their craft and developing their own personal style.

Andrew Blanchard, the Associate Professor of Printmaking and Photography at Converse College, says, “I have had several strong BFA printmaking students in my past five years at Converse, however, never the trifecta within one graduating year. The work that these three women artist-printmakers have produced is very stellar. Having shown in several juried exhibitions (locally, regionally and nationally) as well as participated in portfolio exchanges and beyond, all three have exhibited a commitment to creating conceptually sound print work. It has a ‘hipness’ to it that fits in perfectly with the current contemporary trends in the international printmaking community. Though all three bodies of work are unique in their own right, the screen-print process is shared among them-which embodies a cohesiveness to the show’s entirety.”

Converse Senior Katy Butler was included in the 2010 Central Michigan University Print Club Undergraduate Exchange Portfolio. This was her second time participating in this event. She was also accepted for this year’s 31st Annual Pickens County Juried Art Exhibition. According to Blanchard, “Katy’s work examines a sort of global view of interconnected relationships and how the passing of time/aging of human kind has affected everyone within it.”

Miranda Sawyer won a Juror’s Prize for her print at the 31st Annual Pickens County Juried Art Exhibition. Sawyer’s work was also accepted into the 2010 Artspace National Juried Printmaking and Photography Exhibition at the Plant Zero Art Center in Richmond, VA. When creating her pieces, Sawyer works with the screen-print process, though she prints on mounted wooden panels. The panels have intricate armatures that consist of smaller wooden panels and/or mounted Plexiglass sheets.


Work by Miranda Sawyer

For the HUB-BUB exhibition, Sawyer found her inspiration at the direction of an alarm clock. Blanchard explains, “Miranda’s work is a self-imposed rigor of randomly chosen times in which her alarm was set some six months ago. When the alarm sounds (whether driving, sleeping, eating, etc…) Miranda documents the world around her – interiors, exteriors, people, conversations, dreams, colors, feeling/emotions etc. – from there, her senior work is all derived from these instances in order to further inspect what makes her tick.”

Jamie Tanner will be exhibiting with Professor Blanchard in the 20/20 Vision: The Art of Contemporary University Printmaking at the Firehouse Gallery in Louisville, GA. Tanner’s work deals with the Neo-Dadaist notion of absurdity – referring to a juxtaposition of unrelated imagery derived from popular culture and appropriated from her environment.

Andrew Blanchard earned a BA degree from the University of Southern Mississippi in 2000 with an emphasis on printmaking and a minor in photography. Shortly thereafter, he traveled to Paris, France to work and study with Frederic Possot, a master lithography printer. This experience solidified his desire to be a lifelong artist-printmaker. In 2004, he earned his MFA degree from The University of Mississippi in Oxford, MS.

In the last four years, Blanchard’s lithographic and photo silkscreen prints have been included in over sixty national and international juried printmaking exhibitions. He garnered several acquisition awards at the 2009 Pacific States Biennial at the University of Hilo, Hawaii. In addition, his prints have been collected throughout the United States, as well as in France, Bulgaria, South Korea, and the United Kingdom.

From 2009 until 2012, his print Is This My World – I Barely Recognize? will travel along with others in the 2009 Southern Graphics Council Traveling Exhibition that will open throughout the United States. In May 2010, Blanchard’s work will appear in the hardcover book, Printmakers Today published by Schiffer Books.

Blanchard is currently the Associate Professor of Printmaking and Photography at Converse College. He is also a board member of the HUB-BUB arts initiative, serving as co-curator for their exhibition space, the Showroom Gallery.

Converse College was founded in 1889 and is located in the heart of Spartanburg – home to six colleges and 13,000 college students. Converse helps women develop the skills necessary to balance a full life. Students develop their unique voices through our challenging liberal arts curriculum, century-old honor tradition, and Daniels Center for Leadership and Service. Our close-knit residential community cultivates a spirit of sisterhood and enterprise among women diverse in backgrounds and interests. Across the board – from art and design to science, business, music and education – professors actively mentor and challenge students through spirited discussions inside and outside of the classroom. The Nisbet Honors Program, Petrie School of Music, independent and collaborative research opportunities, leading national debate teams, study abroad and internship programs, and a 9:1 student/faculty ratio differentiate the Converse learning community.

Converse competes in NCAA Division II athletics – the highest level of any women’s college, is the only women’s college on the All-Steinway School roster, and is consistently top ranked by U.S. News & World Report.

For more information about this press release, contact Jennifer Baker, associate director of communications for Converse College, at 864/596-9705 or e-mail to (jennifer.baker@converse.edu).

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More Blog Link Changes at Carolina Arts Unleashed – One Changed – Some Added

Tuesday, April 6th, 2010

We have some more changes that we are making to the blog links found to the right. One is coming off the list and replaced with another blog by the same artist and we’re adding some new ones.

Christopher Rico as ended his blog, Machinations of a Distracted Mind, but he also does a studio blog called Working Space (http://workingspacerico.blogspot.com) which is mostly a photo blog, but does carry some comments from time to time. Rico’s blog, MDM, was giving readers a view at an artist working and living in a small town in South Carolina (Clinton, SC) with a big city drive. MDM was one of our first blog links almost two years ago – I’ll miss it. He has hinted at offering some guest entries to Carolina Arts Unleashed and I hope he does.

We’re adding a blog I discovered a few weeks ago – it is just the kind I like as it is not just the blog of an individual artist, but also does a good job of covering the visual arts scene of a certain area. If you know of any such blogs in the Carolinas – let us know about them. We’re always looking to broaden the view we offer readers of the Carolinas’ visual art scene.

This blog is Art Seen Asheville (http://artseenasheville.blogspot.com), written by Ursula Gullow. What I like about it is that Gullow is not a native so she is not influenced by the Asheville, NC, hype. She arrived on the scene six years ago and has lived in other art communities, but I think she offers an interesting view of what’s going on there. One ofher latest entries gives artists wondering about moving there a good rundown of what the community is like for an artist – at least a visual artist.

Having pulled Carolina Arts out of Asheville (due to a lack of support) long before Gullow moved there – she fills in a view of the city after I stopped going there. We still include the area on our website version of our paper and receive regular press releases from the area, but I have to scratch my head every time the name comes up.

At least every other month I get a call from someone from there that discovered Carolina Arts somewhere else in the Carolinas and wonders why we don’t include Asheville in the printed paper. I have a well-practiced explanation and remedy – which everyone agrees with and then I never hear from them again. Most really get frustrated when they learn that every month I drive within 25 miles of Asheville to deliver papers to Hendersonville, NC, and then turn around and drive back down the mountains to Tryon, NC, and then Spartanburg, SC. Business is business.

Speaking of Spartanburg, we’re adding the blog of Carol Beth Icard (http://carolbethicard.blogspot.com) of Spartanburg, SC. She is a visual artist who also works at MYST Gallery, a sister gallery to Carolina Gallery. Both are located across from each other on Morgan Square in downtown Spartanburg. Icard’s blog is another opportunity to follow an artist’s regular life – not just the art side. It’s a side most of the public never sees and seems to not understand.

I’m also adding the blog, Tilting Windmills (http://david-tiltingwindmills.blogspot.com), written by David Halsey. Does that name sound familiar? His mother and father were Corrie McCallum and William Halsey of Charleston, SC – two of my favorite artists over the years. He is running The McCallum-Halsey Foundation and is also a thinker and writer, who I hope will write more once people start following his blog. Not all blogs are daily journals. He has also been a potter and photographer in other lives and member of an artistic family – so his experiences in the art world are reflected from within the Carolinas and from outside. Meaning, although he has lived within the Charleston hype for many years – he’s been elsewhere and has seen other worlds – unlike some in Charleston who seem to have never been anywhere else – it’s the only reason I can explain their overuse of the phrase – world-class.

So, check these blogs out, I know I will be from time to time to expand my view of the Carolinas’ art scene.

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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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