Posts Tagged ‘Tommy Lockart’

A Trip to Vista Lights 2011 in Columbia, SC

Sunday, November 20th, 2011

If it’s the Thursday before Thanksgiving, then it’s time for Vista Lights in the Congaree Vista area of Columbia, SC. That’s when the art galleries, restaurants, and various shops turn up the lights for an evening celebration of the coming holiday season. It’s not the same as the Artista Vista event which focuses only on the arts community of the Vista, but it is still an enjoyable event – one I always try to make. Unfortunately for Linda, she was on call at her 911 dispatch job and that call came for her to come into work at noon. So I made the trip solo.

If there is one thing I’ve learned in my 37 years of living in SC’s Lowcountry it is the fact that although I love where I live – it is good to get out from time to time to enjoy the offerings of other communities – just a few hours drive away. I wish more people in the Lowcountry would feel that way, but I guess when you are born with pluffmud between your toes you see things differently. I’m originally from Michigan.

So, within two hours of leaving the Carolina Arts headquarters in Bonneau, SC, I was pulling into a nice parking space at about 4:45pm right on Lady Street in the heart of this event which would close off Gervais Street from 5-8pm. I guess most folks in Columbia didn’t think they could get a parking space so close to the action.

I started my Vista Lights journey at Vista Studios, a group of artists’ studios and Gallery 80808, which was presenting the exhibit Legally Twenty-One, featuring works by the studio artists, on view through Nov. 29, 2011.

I took my first photo and pulled out my note pad and – where’s my pen? And, it hits me like a lead brick – I took it out to write down my beginning mileage and it’s sitting on the passenger car seat. Darn! I took a few more photos but not too many that I couldn’t remember the order and then went to call on Susan Lenz who has a studio at Vista Studios. She’s a highly organized individual and I just knew she would have a spare pen or pencil. And sure enough, she had a fishbowl full of pens and pencils on one of her work tables.


Talking Trash by Kirkland Smith


Talking Trash, the full image.

We had a good chat about various subjects ranging from upcoming shows, business deductions that don’t grow on trees, and the sad fact that she will be “forced” to attend an artist’s residency for the month of March 2012 in Key West, FL. Poor Susan. The things some artists are forced to go through to keep the creativity going is downright heartbreaking at times. This was not one of those times, but Lenz has had her fair share of struggles so I gave her a pass while I was thinking that I’ll still be cleaning up Winter’s mess left in our yard during the month of March.


Reliquary to All by Heidi Darr-Hope


White Trash by Kirkland Smith. Works by Stephen Chesley to the left, work by
Laura Spong to the right.


Bill and Nan in Their Prime by Pat Gilmartin

So with pen in hand, I returned to my photo path and recorded titles and took a few more photos. Once home reviewing my photos I realized I didn’t get any photos of Lenz’s works in the exhibit, but I’m sure I’ll make that up sometime in the future. After all, she saved me a trip back to the car.

I also has a chat with Laura Spong, which is a tradition going back to my first days of delivering Carolina Arts to Columbia – back in the days when it was a printed publication – so old hat. When I think about that I realize I’d still be on the road right now if I had to deliver the 77,000 plus papers people have downloaded so far this month. My back and feet would be killing me.

Spong will be having an exhibit opening at the Spartanburg Art Museum in Spartanburg, SC, next month. Her exhibition, Laura Spong: Early Works will open on Dec. 20 and continue through Feb. 18, 2012. Make sure you put that on your calendar.


Other folks meeting Bill and Nan

Vista Studios was beginning to fill up so I headed on to my next stop – City Art Gallery to see the exhibit, New Abstracts: Rodney Wimer, which will be on view through Dec. 23, 2011. The key word here is “abstracts”. I like abstracts – regular readers know that by now. I’d seen the photos that we presented in our Nov. issue of Wimer’s exhibit, but photos never do much for me when it comes to seeing abstracts up close, in person. Wimer had my attention and his works did not disappoint. Since red is a favorite of mine, it was a plus that the color red seems to show up in most of his works.

The photos I took of Wimer’s works at City Art have made the reds look too orange, but I’m including some of the images we received for the paper to show the true colors, but all computer screens show colors differently. Take my word – his reds are red.


People checking out Rodney Wimer’s works


St. George and the Dragon by Rodney Wimer. Photo from City Art


A detail of A Guide to Recognizing Your Saints to show the texture of Rodney
Wimer’s work.

Randy Hanna, one of the owners at City Art and the art supply guru, matched up with me as we declared our favorites. That just shows me what an eye for art he has.

I found some not too tall women by Harriet Marshall Goode. These paintings
were only 45″ tall compared to the 7′ tall paintings Goode presented a few
months ago.

Of course Vista Lights is more about visuals than words, so I’ll let these meager photos tell just a little of the story you need to experience for yourself.


These folks were entertaining the crowd on Gervais Street


These children are waiting for their turn to preform


These folks were checking out the windows at Carol Sanders Gallery


Folks were flowing in and out of The Gallery at Nonnah’s


Here you can see some of the art on display at The Gallery at Nonnah’s


Here folks are roasting marshmellows

To illustrate how different the crowd is for Vista Lights compared to Artista Vista I stood on the Blue Marlin side of Lady Street looking across at if ART Gallery and the Lewis + Clark’s work studio. Streams of people were flowing past if ART with one in ten going in the door, but everyone was stopping to check out what they were seeing at Lewis + Clark, which was an odd collection of robot lamps – at least that’s what seemed to be drawing people in. During Artista Vista the crowd is there for the arts, during Vista Lights, more families are on the street. I would guess that during Artista Vista no one would be passing by if Arts.


Various lamps at Lewis + Clark


A closer look at one of the lamps


Body of the Robot Lamp/Stooges by Clark Ellefson


This was Lenin Bot by Clark Ellefson

My last stop of the evening was at One Eared Cow Glass. No trip to Columbia is complete without a stop to see the cowboys who were be demonstrating their magic for Vista Lights. Tommy Lockart, Mark Woodham and their sidekick Ryan Crabtree were doing the dance of glass making with an entranced audience on hand. Nowhere better does the concept behind Vista Lights works better than at One Eared Cow Glass where light sparkles off the surfaces of the colorful glass creations. If you squint your eyes it’s as if your looking at one big Christmas tree.


View inside the showroom at One Eared Cow Glass


This lamp is one of my new favorites


Mark Woodham talks to a very interested crowd


One parting shot – just another wonderful creation

I’m telling you – if you’ve never been before, put the Thursday before Thanksgiving on your calendar for a trip to Vista Lights in Columbia, SC. And then mark that weekend in for a trip to Seagrove, NC – my next blog entry.

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Linda and I Went to a Great American Monument and Saved $40

Wednesday, July 27th, 2011

Back on June 2, 2011, we received an e-mail from One Eared Cow Glass (OECG) in Columbia, SC, about one of their 20th Anniversary events or specials – a sort of take our T-shirt on vacation with you offer. The deal was that if you took a One Eared Cow Glass T-shirt on vacation with you and took a picture of someone wearing it at a monument, sign, or place, that is clearly recognizable – you would get $40 in “cow bucks” off your next purchase at OECG – just for showing your “cow pride” and letting them use the picture on Facebook and in the gallery.

For Linda and I, this was a deal we couldn’t pass up. We have three weddings to attend in the next four months and OECG is our official wedding gift retailer. And, believe me – no wedding takes place in our extended family without an invitation coming to us – whether we can attend or not as word has gotten around what kind of gift you will receive.

Of course the catch is that these e-mails telling about these great offers were only going to folks on OECG’s e-mail list and you had to own a OECG T-shirt, but how hard is it to get on someone’s e-mail list and Tommy Lockart (one of the cowboys) told me – any OECG T-shirt will do and they have sold plenty of them throughout their 20 years in business. And, they have plenty of new ones in stock. They say they can even mail you one or a dozen (803/254-2444).

This deal runs through Aug. 31, 2011, but it’s not the only deal they have in the works. But, I’m not telling you to do anything. I’m not suggesting that you do anything. I’m just telling you there is a deal out there – this is what it takes to complete the deal – I know it works – we got our $40 discount and here’s what they call in the biz – the money shot or shots in this case.

Now Linda and I are not taking a vacation this year – we had one last year. But we do live down the road from a very important SC monument – the grave of Francis Marion – the Swamp Fox – a true American Revolutionary hero. It’s one of the most important monuments in South Carolina. There is also a special prize for the T-shirt that travels the greatest distance, but I don’t think we’ll be winning that, but 40 “cow bucks” is $40 bucks. I’m just saying.

P.S. Get on “the” e-mail list, get “a” T-shirt, take a “picture” near a monument, get it to “them” before Aug. 31, 2011, and save $40.

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A Trip to Columbia, SC, for the 20th Anniversary Artista Vista – April 28, 2011

Monday, May 2nd, 2011

OK, right off I want to make it clear that I take the power of Mother Nature seriously. Although, it may sound at times like I scoff at the predictions of weather experts – I spend a lot of time watching and listening to the folks at the Weather Channel, and on Thursday, April 28, 2011, that process lasted from 7:30am to 2pm. And by noon, they seemed to stop talking about South Carolina which gave me the sign that Linda and I were not taking that much of a risk traveling to Columbia, SC, for the 20th Anniversary of Artists Vista – the annual celebration of the visual arts in Columbia’s Vista area. The storm which had killed over 300 people had lost a lot of its punch by the time it got to the eastern coast. Believe me, after watching coverage of what the storm had done in Alabama, I wasn’t taking the weather lightly, but in the same breath – the weather can change in the blink of an eye.

On our two hour drive to Columbia, twice we were sprinkled on for a minute or two, but by the time we crossed the intersection of I-26 and I-95, it seems that we were on the other side of this fast moving storm, which was headed east and when we got to Columbia, the sun was shining, the winds were calm and there were few clouds in the sky. It was a perfect Spring evening in Columbia. A few hours this way or that way and things could have been a lot more challenging. We all lucked out.

So why were we going to Artista Vista anyway? First, it’s part of our job to get out and see some of the events we cover in the paper. Second, it was the 20th Anniversary and third, we like Columbia’s visual art community. We have a lot of good supporters there and we always enjoy the different kind of art scene Columbia presents – compared to Charleston, our own back yard.

Now what do I mean by that? Simply put, Charleston is a tourist destination and the art community is influenced by that, and Columbia is – not so much. Being the capital city, it is the business and political hub of South Carolina and the visual artists there hold on to their ties to university and college longer than if tourist were demanding images of the local scenes. Don’t get me wrong, you can find just as much tourist oriented art in Columbia and just as much non-tourist art in Charleston – if you look hard enough, but each city has a distinctively different approach to art making.

It’s not that unusual, all art communities are creatures of their environments. If you go to the mountains – you’ll find less images of beaches and more of mountains, waterfalls, and stands of forest. In the desert it’s coyotes and desert landscapes. Out west it’s cowboys and native Americans. The point is, Columbia’s art community is different than Charleston’s. A few more observations I can make in comparing the two cities is, Charleston has many more art galleries in a more compacted area and although over the years I have seen many folks from Columbia at art walks in Charleston, I have never seen anyone from Charleston in Columbia during one of their art walks, except for a few artists being featured in shows in Columbia, which is a shame.

Before we get into my observations on the 20th Anniversary of Artista Vista, I want to explain that most of my opinions are based from an insiders perspective. After all, I’m in the biz, and we’re part of the delivery system telling people about the different opportunities being presented to them and I have to say I didn’t get the feeling that this was a 20th Anniversary celebration at all. It was more the feeling of “We can’t believe we’ve made it to 20 years celebration”. Which is a sign of the times. The art community as a whole – both non-profit and commercial have been under siege during the last decade by a failing economy and social politics. In the words of former President Jimmy Carter – they’ve been suffering from a malaise. How else can you feel when your Governor says there is no value to the public in supporting the arts.

I’ve been to about a half dozen Artista Vista and Vista Lights events and I wouldn’t have been able to tell you the difference between the 10th, 13th, 15th or 20th. There were no signs that this Artista Vista was more special than the last. Funding, or lack of funding, could be the answer here but I wasn’t getting the impression that anything was different. The people promoting the event had little info to offer and it’s not my job to make up or fill in the blanks on what’s being offered. And, while covering events in two states I don’t have time to investigate it either. People are being paid to provide this information. And on the other hand, they can only pass on the info they are provide by presenters. And, Artista Vista has had a long history of being short and at the last minute on information. I am amazed these days at how little effort people are making to get people to attend their offerings – as if people don’t have any choices. There were a few exceptions I’ll mention later.

Linda had taken the afternoon off from her other job to go on this trip, so we were able to arrive a little early and we found a good central parking space on Lincoln Street in the heart of where most of the art galleries are located. The less walking we have to do for both of us the better. We were both taking a little time off from finishing the May 2011 issue of Carolina Arts – check it out at (www.carolinaarts.com).

Our first stop was Vista Studios, which had recently celebrated its own 20th anniversary last year during Vista Lights – the fall event in the Vista. The exhibit here was, Prima Vista: Fresh Art at Vista Studios, featuring works by all 13 studio artists, on view through May 10, 2011. There was a time during my delivery days when Columbia was one of the few cities where I arrived during the daylight, although very early in the morning – but not too early to catch a few artists already at work at Vista Studios. Laura Spong was one of those early birds. We used to have some good discussions about the Columbia visual art scene.


From L to R, work by Pat Gilmartin, Ethel Brody, 2 by Laurie McIntosh and 2 by David Yaghjian

About half of the artists who called Vista Studios home in those days have moved on to other studios, but the quality of artists has always stayed high and diverse. Their shows are always interesting. And, on this day, all the studios seemed to be open – not always the case over the years.

We actually arrived slightly before 5pm, the official starting time, but there were also a few other early birds there with us and soon the place was filling up. We made some of the usual stops. I’m always amazed at the bargains Ethel Brody presents for these occasions. I looked at a nice print which was priced at $10. We have a number of these bargains in our collection. We talked with Laura Spong about how long it’s been since those old days of my early morning visits. We had been at Artista Vista two years ago, but a lot of stuff has happened in those two years. Spong was apologizing for not being so computer savvy and that she hadn’t seen our new version of the paper. Linda showed it to her on her iPhone. Spong will be in Charleston on May 6, for a reception at Smith Killian Fine Arts, during one of Charleston’s major art walks. She’s included in a group exhibit of some of SC’s leading contemporary artists. That will be another posting.

I’m always interested in seeing Pat Gilmartin’s new sculptural creations – which didn’t disappoint me. I’m still remembering a piece she had two years ago titled, Blooming Arms.


Blooming Arms, by Pat Gilmartin

We checked out a few of the new studio residents since last time, Michel McNinch and Kirkland Smith. McNinch is ready for her 17-day marathon during the annual Piccolo Spoleto Outdoor Art Exhibit in Marion Square in downtown Charleston, SC, starting May 27, 2011. The artists who do that show are made of steel – in my opinion.


Work by Kirkland Smith


Detail of Kirkland Smith’s work. Objects make the color.

We had hoped to meet Kirkland Smith, who is now our publicity contact with Vista Studios, but she was outside her studio while we checked it out – her work is amazing and I hope my photos do it justice. I also liked the drawings I saw in her studio.


Wall of Keys, by Susan Lenz

We would have also talked with Susan Lenz, but she was doing duty at her installation, I DO / I DON’T, over at 927-929 Gervais Street. This was a busy week for her. She was involved in art events all over Columbia, Charleston, and North Charleston.


Weight Lifter, 3-D art by David Yaghjian

The crowd was picking up here so we moved on up the hill to City Art, which was presenting the exhibit, Layers and Passages: A  Tribute to Seven Women of Courage and Compassion, featuring works by Stephen Nevitt, head of the art department at Columbia College.

As we walked in the door we saw Randy Hanna of City Art and Mary Gilkerson, who we ran into at City Art two years ago. That was a little strange. Gilkerson teaches art at Columbia College and writes reviews for the FreeTimes newspaper in Columbia. She also once wrote reviews for Carolina Arts – which now seems like a long, long time ago.


People viewing Stephen Nevitt’s exhibit.


Randy Hanna – making a sale! Yes, it happens even in the middle of such events.

Nevitt’s exhibit was a great look at a family tree in photos as well as a great example of how a creative artist can turn family photos into works of art. While looking at them I overheard someone say how brave Wendy Wells, the owner of City Art, was to present such an exhibit during an important event. I guess this was a reference to sales – like who would buy artworks of Nevitt’s family? I disagree.

Wells has never been one to shy away from doing the brave thing, but since when is it brave to exhibit good art? And, have you ever noticed all the artwork which includes people as the subject matter. And, for all the people who buy those works of people they do not know – it doesn’t seem to bother them – people are interesting and they make interesting subjects for artists. I’m sure Wells would tell you as a gallery owner, she’s taking a risk with every art exhibit she presents no matter what the subject or medium is. There are no sure things.

When I first saw Wells she was mopping up a spill on the floor. I missed that photo by seconds. When we actually got to talk with her she was filling punch glasses. It’s such a glamorous life owning and running an art gallery. Her first question was if we knew how other locations were doing?

There was a good crowd at City Art, more than you would think as it is a big space, and we were happy to report they had a good crowd at Vista Studios. Little did we know that might have been the peak of the evening. Of course in my opinion these two venues were two of the most popular stops in the Vista.

Sidebar: There were a lot of people on the streets, but they didn’t seem to be flowing in and out of the galleries. The Vista is not the same Vista of a few years ago. There was a time when there was an art walk down there – most of the people were there for the galleries – there wasn’t that much else to do down there, but today it has a lively nightlife scene.


A work by Jo Dean Bauknight that I liked – a paint makers dream kind of artist.

While at City Art we also ran into an old friend, Claire (Suzie) Farrell, who used to be part of the Waterfront Gallery in Charleston, which has now closed. She was one of the Columbia artists who had moved into the Charleston art market. We had seen her at many a Charleston art walk. We shared more talk about the good old days, which may be old, but we’re still enjoying good days, but it’s hard to not think of the 1990′s as the golden days for the art community in South Carolina.

So it was time to move on to see the installation art. I’ll admit up front, I’m not big on installation art. Many times it falls short of the written or verbal hype it is given and I have to say I’ve been spoiled by some people who do it very well. I’ve seen the site-specific exhibits that the Spoleto Festival USA presented in its heyday when it presented visual arts. I’ve seen some great installations during Piccolo Spoleto Festivals including works by Herb Parker, Patrick Dougherty and Jonathan Brilliant. So, I’ve seen some really good installation pieces and I’ve seen some bad ones. It’s like all art – some good – some bad and what I don’t like probably thrills others. I was mainly drawn to this show to see what Susan Lenz had come up with. She is slowly but surely building up to one day being an A level installation artist. She’s not bad now, but one day someone is going to give her the money to really do something spectacular.

Now here is where a lack of information hurt this event. This might cost me some advertising, but so be it. The first press release we received offered very little details. I could write one just like it right now for next year. The next one, came after our deadline for our April issue, but it had more details about an installation art component for this year’s Artista Vista. I posted it on our blog, but it still didn’t have some vital info – like there was an active blog (http://artistavistainstallit.blogspot.com/), which was started on Mar. 31, covering the progress of the installation project headed up by Jeffrey Day, former arts writer and art critic for The State newspaper in Columbia.

Day didn’t send us any info about this project, which is understandable since we have been at odds and he doesn’t think much of our publication. I did hear him at least twice on ETV radio programs plugging the event the week of the event, but I also know he didn’t approach other media venues to get the word out either. It’s what happens when you have strong opinions – you burn some bridges, but I got the impression he was trying. The problem may have been with the people being paid to promote this event – I don’t know. Knowing about the blog would have helped spread the word ahead of time – on the installation project.

Anyway, I liked Susan Lenz’s piece, but didn’t care for much of the others that I saw at the location on Gervais Street. She was there taking an active part in getting people to participate in her piece – it was almost like a performance piece. She was so busy that when we went to say hi, she gave Linda one of the markers to post a statement about marriage on a board that would later be added to one of the veils. This gal was working. Nice leggings, Susan. (Anyone who was there knows what I’m talking about.) She wouldn’t stay still long enough to get a photo. She was busy so we moved on.


I DO / I DON’T by Susan Lenz


People giving their input on marriage and divorce.

Anyway, maybe I’m just too simple to grasp the magnitude of the other installations, but in paraphrasing a Supreme Court judge’s attempts to explain what’s pornographic – I don’t know how to explain what is good installation art, but I know it when I see it.


Sticks and Stones by Bill Guess


You Are Here, by Kara Gunter


We received this photo, after our posting, of Eileen Blyth’s installation on Park Street.
Again, I wish we could have seen everything, but there is never time and energy to do it all.

It’s just my opinion, Day will be able to tell these artists it doesn’t mean much and it doesn’t. I don’t expect everyone to like what I’m doing or saying either – nor should they.

I do have to wonder how Day feels these days standing on the other side of the fence. He spent years nit-picking other people’s efforts in presenting art and now he’s on the front lines. I heard a lot of praise for the Vista art galleries during those public radio programs. I hope he really feels that way now. It wasn’t too long ago that he helped several artists question if Columbia really had any “real” art galleries in an article in The State. In fact, he is now getting a lot of support – for this project and a publication he is involved with these days from these same galleries.

Frankly, I’m glad Day is part of the art community now. He’s articulate, experienced, and I guess passionate about the art community. Now he’s learning what it’s like to try and present things with limited resources. No one expects anyone to hit a home run their first time at bat.

We wanted to make sure we hit One Eared Cow Glass before we ran out of gas, so our next stop was headed in the direction of the car to The Gallery at DuPRE, a gallery I have never been in before. Linda had already worked a six hour day, spent two hours in the car and we were in the middle of putting the May issue of Carolina Arts together.  We were running on borrowed time. I wish we could have gotten to the Gallery at Nonnah’s, but on this day – it was a bridge too far for us, although just across the street (four lanes of traffic). We’ll start there next time.

The Gallery at DuPRE had some nice works in it, but not many people looking. Their entrance is down an alley or you could come through the store it’s in back of, but there were not many people coming in from there either. At least while we were there. We don’t get many notices from this gallery about exhibits and if you’re not as active as other galleries, it many be hard to compete during events like this – people make choices, hardly anyone tries to visit all the stops in an art walk. There were a few other locations listed as part of Artista Vista which only seem to be mentioned during these events which would tell regulars in the visual art community that they might be a risk in visiting. People like to go places they know – not everyone wants an adventure.

When we got to One Eared Cow Glass, usually my first stop to any art walk in Columbia, we could see the fall off of the crowd on the fringes. And the cowboys, Tommy Lockart and Mark Woodham, confirmed that they were not seeing many people. They just had a wine tasting event which was part of their 20th anniversary on Apr. 21, which was wall to wall with people, so they were scratching their heads as to why so few people were coming their way this evening. They also confirmed that there were also a lot of competing art events going on in Columbia that same evening. Oh the wish for master calendars in the arts, but that’s another blog – I won’t be making.


Tommy Lockart and Mark Woodham

We looked around at all the new glass goodies and some old ones I’d love to have. We watched the demonstrations for a while – they’re always amazing. There’s a wall of history about One Eared Cow Glass in the studio which shows a lot of newspaper and magazine coverage from over the last 20 years which I found very interesting. Oh how we’ve all grown older. There’s nothing like old pictures to show that. There are some vintage issues of Carolina Arts there too. Check it out.

It was 8:30pm and we were about to head home when I remembered there was supposed to be a photography exhibit around the back at Lewis + Clark’s space at the rear of the building One Eared Cow Glass is in. So we went back to check it out.

This exhibit was, Instant Vista, featuring Polaroid images by Barry Wheeler and Heather Bauer recently taken in the Vista – of disappearing places. There’s nothing like looking at 3″ x 3″ images on outdated Polaroid film of areas of the Vista that very few will or would miss – beyond a few winos. Smart phone links or not, this wasn’t much of an art offering. Here’s the description of this event in the last press release we received: “Barry Wheeler and Heather Bauer will present a photography piece at Lewis + Clark, which will share the history of the Vista through photos.”

You can’t show the history of the Vista when you just spent two weeks taking the photos. Why would you promote such hype during a 20 year anniversary event? Again, the fault of having people write press release about events they knew little about.

At that point I was glad home was just two hours away.

Now we just saw about a four hour slice of a three-day event. For locals who maybe had the time to spend three days taking this all in – it may have been a whole other experience – if they knew about it to begin with.

I had a good time. I think Linda did too, and I can’t wait for the 21st anniversary and to see how it is promoted. Perhaps one day we’ll make it a weekend and party all night long in the Vista.

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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 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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Roll with One Eared Cow Glass at Artista Vista 2009

Thursday, April 16th, 2009

Here is something to get you ready for this year’s Artista Vista 2009 – Columbia’s premier gallery crawl, held in the Congaree Vista area of Columbia, SC, on April 23 – 25, 2009. Take a look at the boys at One Eared Cow Glass doing their thing.

Unlike art districts that offer art walks, art crawls, or art strolls – every month – this is the one “galleries only” art event in Columbia. So it’s a once a year offering, and its usually a big bash. This year Artista Vista features some new galleries in the lineup and of course the Congaree Arts Festival held at the SC State Museum on Saturday, April 25, from 10am-4pm.

This will be the 18th annual Artista Vista – no kidding. Unlike some art walks who just had to celebrate their 20th anniversary – four years early – this is the real deal.

I’m going to try and make it this year. You should too.

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One Eared Cow Glass Turns Sand Into Art

Monday, August 4th, 2008

One of my favorite stops on my monthly delivery run is at One Eared Cow Glass Gallery & Studio, located at 1001 Huger Street in Columbia, SC, in the Congaree Vista district. Columbia is one of the few stops on my runs where I’m there during regular gallery hours – at least some of the time. When that happens you can be sure I’ll stop in and watch Tommy Lockart and Mark Woodham make works of glass art – from molten sand.

From the first time I watched the two work I’ve been amazed at the transformation of a glob of molten glass into – well whatever you can imagine. And, even after all these years of watching them create, I still can’t tell you what they are making when they start – as it always seems to take some turn in the middle and ends up being something the farthest from my first guess. If I think it’s going to be a bowl or vase – it can end up that those pieces would be the stand for a more elaborate sculpture or lighting fixture. If I’m lucky, I might figure it out three-quarters of the way after all this time.

Another thing that puzzles me is when I see other people watching them work – most of the time they just watch. From the very start I was asking questions every step of the way. How hot are those ovens? How can you work all day in this heat? Where does the color come from? Why do some colors cost more? What happens to the pieces you break – can they be recycled? Why do you have to put finished works in a cooling oven? What’s a cooling oven anyway?

I don’t see how you can watch them work and not have a thousand questions. I even asked them if they minded people asking questions. They don’t – at least good questions. So, I can understand how dumbstruck someone can be when they first see the two work, but you have to have questions about what you’re seeing. How are you going to learn something without asking questions? They move so fast you might miss half the things they are doing to the glass.

One Eared Cow Glass is a gallery of finished works and a working studio. Many times when I’m out front in the gallery looking at new works – there are always new works, new designs, different color combinations, or different shapes – I have to go back into the studio to ask – How did you get this color and design to work? After they explain, it all seems logical, but I would have never figured it out on my own. They have often admitted that many things work out by trial and error. Over the years I’ve learned somethings about how the colors and designs work, but sometimes I’m stumped.

A few years back, I got to see the progress of a large commission piece over a few months time that Lockart and Woodham created for the Columbia Metropolitan Convention Center (http://www.carolinaarts.com/oecg505.html) on Lincoln Street in the Vista. The piece is called Intermingling Convergence a.k.a. Flo. The work is a 20′ long x 10′ wide x 3′ deep creation of blown glass and stainless steel suspended from the ceiling of the two story lobby of the convention center. We have a photo essay of the installation of the work and finished images at the link for the Convention Center.

One of the first Special Features we added on our website – way back when we first launched it in 1999 – is a photo essay of Lockart and Woodham doing their thing (http://www.carolinaarts.com/glassmaking.html). Since that time these pages on our site have ranked in the top 30 pages visited – month after month after month. And we have thousands of pages on our site.

If you go visit One Eared Cow Glass, go see Flo at the convention center too – it’s just down the street and there are a lot of other good works of art there to see. With gas prices what they are you want to make the most of every trip you make. You’re in the Vista area, so you’re close to other commercial galleries and the SC State Museum and not too far from the Columbia Museum of Art.

Now plan ahead. They do not work in the studio on Wednesdays and Saturdays, but the gallery is open, and on the days they are working – they work from 9 to 11:30am in the morning, stop for lunch, and then work again between 1:30 and 4pm. But, call ahead to make sure the day you are going – they will be working to make sure. Something can always happen and the experience just isn’t the same if you don’t get to see them work.

One more thing. After you’ve watched them for a few hours and asked all those questions – buy something. They have works that fit anyone’s price range from $30 to $2,000. And, they’d be happy to make a special commission piece for you too (another shameless plug).

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