Posts Tagged ‘University of South Carolina’

South Carolina Volunteer Lawyers for the Arts Forms to Help SC’s Artists

Monday, October 25th, 2010

It’s good to see that the SC Arts Commission is finally getting around to providing SC’s artists a service that has been in NC for over 20 years. North Carolina Volunteer Lawyers for the Arts is a network of lawyers in North Carolina with experience in art law issues. Find info at this link.

Although I had to get the info from a third party involved – not the SC Arts Commission, I don’t mind saying this is a good thing.

Better late than never, but pretty late compared to our neighbors – who they always say they try to work in conjunction with.

Here’s the info:

The University of South Carolina School of Law in Columbia, SC, has partnered with area arts organizations to give them and the low-income artists they represent a new resource for legal assistance.

The South Carolina Volunteer Lawyers for the Arts will offer an online service that provides pro-bono assistance to the arts community.

This new resource is available at (www.SCvolunteerlawyersforthearts.org).

The SCVLA is a project of the school’s Pro Bono Program and Nonprofit Organizations Clinic, as well as the SC Arts Commission and the SC Bar Pro Bono Program. It refers those needing legal assistance to lawyers who have agreed to donate their time.

“This collaboration has been in the works for many years,” said Ken May, executive director at the SC Arts Commission. “We’re proud to see that it has come to fruition and is now providing the South Carolina arts community with this valuable service.”

“This is a wonderful opportunity for the law school to expand its relationship with the communities surrounding it,” said Walter F. Pratt Jr., dean of the School of Law. “Building on our nationally known Pro Bono Program, this new venture will allow even more students to learn the value of service to their community while, at the same time, acquiring skills that will make them better lawyers in the future.”

The service uses an online application system to gather facts from artists and arts organizations to match them with appropriate legal representation. SCVLA, cannot assign an attorney to a specific client, nor can it assist all clients. Some clients may be referred to an attorney outside the program.

Artists and arts organizations seeking legal advice or lawyers interested in volunteering their service can visit (www.SCvolunteerlawyersforthearts.org) to complete an online application.

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McKissick Museum at USC in Columbia, SC, Presents Annual Gala with Art from 60 Artists For Sale – Aug. 20, 2010

Sunday, August 15th, 2010

This is pretty straight forward – artists helping local museum by donating a portion of sales made during a gala party.

Here’s the press release:

The University of South Carolina’s McKissick Museum in Columbia, SC, will hold its 16th annual gala, Summertime… and the art is good lookin’, from 7:30 – 10pm on Friday, Aug. 20, 2010.

Tickets to the gala are $60 per person and may be purchased at the Museum office.

The gala features works by more than 60 artists who are native South Carolinians or have strong ties to the state and provides an opportunity for the public to meet local artists.


Example of work by Susan Lenz

Participating artists include: Ann Baker, Eileen Blyth, Ethel Brody, Clay Burnette, Jackie Eadon Chalfant, Stephen Chesley, Sam Compton, Craig Crawford, Heidi Darr-Hope, Colin Dodd, Joshua Drews, Phillip C. Dunn, Toni Elkins, Claire Farrell, Tyrone Geter, Mary Bentz Gilkerson, Pat Gilmartin, Bonnie Goldberg, Paul Grant, Walt Hanclosky, Mana Hewitt, Steven Hewitt, Ann Hubbard, Judy Hubbard, Tuula Ihamaki-Widdifield, Liisa Salosaari Jasinski, Susan Klein, Alicia Leeke, Deborah Lengel, Susan Lenz, Peter Lenzo, Robert Lyon, Paul Matheny, Fred McElveen, Laurie McIntosh, Gina Moore, Stephen Nevitt, Marcello Novo, Peggy Nunn, One Eared Cow Glass (Tommy Lockart & Mark Woodham), Nikolai Oskolkov, Patrick Parise, Rachel Parker, Carol Pittman, Eric Plaag, Joan Podd, Anna Redwine, Lynn Bell Rose, Renee Rouillier, David Russell, Georgette Sanders, Virginia Scotchie, Edward Shmunes, Kirill Simin, Laura Spong, Tom Stanley, Michael Story, Betsy Thorne, David Walker, Richard Wells, Mike Williams, Ellen Emerson Yaghjian, and Don Zurlo.


Example of work by Clay Burnette

Works by all of the artists will be available for purchase during the gala, with a portion of the proceeds benefiting the museum.

Coordinated by McKissick’s Advisory Council, the gala is one of two annual fundraisers held by the museum to support acquisitions and public programs.

McKissick is the only Columbia museum offering free regular admission. Located on the university’s historic Horseshoe, the museum features two permanent exhibitions, a number of rotating temporary exhibits and provides educational and cultural programming. Many of McKissick’s offerings are available through grants and private funding.


Example of work by One Eared Cow Glass

McKissick is open to the public from 8:30am to 5pm, Monday through Friday and 11am to 3pm Saturdays. It is closed on Sundays and holidays.

For more information about this event or McKissick Museum, call 803/777-7251 or visit (www.cas.sc.edu/MCKS/).

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

Wednesday, April 14th, 2010

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

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

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

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

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

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University of South Carolina in Columbia, SC, Offers Basket Day on April 17, 2010

Saturday, April 10th, 2010

We received this e-mail at Carolina Arts:

Join McKissick Museum on the University of South Carolina’s historic Horseshoe, in downtown Columbia, SC, on Saturday, April 17, 2010, from 11am to 4pm, for Basket Day, a day of free family fun.  Lowcountry basket makers: Loretta Richardson, Bella Cousette, Rosalee Coaxum, Willie Mae Jackson, Dauris Niles and Nakia Wigfall will demonstrate and sell their crafts.  Other events include a performance by the Woyate West African Drum and Dance Company, storytelling, a tour of the exhibition Grass Roots and rice winnowing demonstrations. Bring in your own baskets for information on how to preserve and care for them.

Visitors can also view the ChasDoc film society’s documentary, Bin Yah: There is No Place Like Home, about the potential loss of important African American communities in Mt. Pleasant, SC, due to growth and development.

Basket Day is made possible through support from Johnson Toal and Battiste, PA; the Cultural Council of Richland and Lexington Counties, the SC Arts Commission, and Glory Communications, Inc.

Grass Roots, on view at USC’s McKissick Museum until May 8, 2010, tells the history of coiled basket making in South Carolina and Africa. It features more than 200 objects, including documents, paintings and video footage as well as stunning examples of African and American artistry.

For more information on Grass Roots, or any other Museum exhibitions, visit the museum’s web site at (http://www.cas.sc.edu/mcks), or call the Museum at 803/777-7251.

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Info About Carolina Potters Showing at USC in Columbia, SC

Sunday, September 27th, 2009

Well this press release was a little late for consideration for inclusion in the printed version of Carolina Arts but it has an interesting collection of Carolina potters, so we wanted to let our blog readers know about and it will be on our web version of the paper at Carolina Arts Online on Oct. 1, 2009. Two of the potters are Bruce Gholson and Samantha Henneke of Bulldog Pottery in Seagrove, NC. They are also fellow bloggers – now with two blogs: Around and About with Bulldog Pottery and Three Corners Clay.


“Fish Platter” by Bruce Gholson

“Why all the attention for Seagrove potters?,” the new reader to Carolina Arts Unleashed asked. Well, it’s a personal project, plus I’m getting people ready for a big event coming in November.

Here’s the article:

University of South Carolina in Columbia, SC, Presents Ceramics Exhibition

The University of South Carolina in Columbia, SC, will present the exhibit, Ceramics : Southeast, in the McMaster Gallery, on view from Oct. 12 through Nov. 19, 2009.

The exhibition brings together the creative talent of thirteen individual artists from Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Tennessee. Each has taken their own unique path that celebrates contemporary ceramics from traditional pottery to non-traditional sculptural forms. Chosen to represent multiple approaches to clay and backgrounds the artist represent both full time studio potters to practicing academics.

Artists included in this exhibit are: Alice Ballard (SC), Russell Biles (SC), Jim Connell (SC), Don Davis (TN), Lauren Gallaspy (GA), Bruce Gholson (NC), Samantha Henneke (NC), Frank Martin (TN), Scott Meyer (AL), Gay Smith (NC), Paula Smith (SC), Mike Vatalaro (SC), and Jerilyn Virden (NC).

Alice Ballard’s pods are a reflection of her relationship with natural forms, while Russell Biles’ figurative works provide artist as social critic.


“Wall Podds” by Alice Ballard

Jim Connell serves up elegance with senuous curving vessels. Don Davis combines the figure with function. Lauren Gallaspy’s porcelain explores the mixed media of sculptures and drawing.

Bruce Gholson and Samantha Henneke are a couple that founded Bulldog Pottery and are exhibiting functional works with a painterly flair.

Frank Martin’s slip cast functional ware focuses on a painterly use of color. Scott Meyer’s interest turns to the sculptural – combining wood with clay. Gay Smith throws and sculpts geometric porcelain forms.

Paula Smith’s sculptural ceramics challenge us with the role of women. Mike Vatalaro deals with architectural thrown forms and Jerilyn Virden’s interest are in the notion of containment.

In conjunction with Ceramics : Southeast there will be a panel discussion and a workshop with Gay Smith as well. The public is invited. Call for further details.

For further information check our SC Institutional Gallery listings, contact Mana Hewitt, Gallery Director at 803/777-7480 or visit (http://web.mac.com/mcmastergallery/McMaster_Gallery/Ceramics_Southeast.html).

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National Book Art Exhibit in Columbia, SC

Thursday, May 7th, 2009

It happens every month – the deadline for the paper comes and we quickly go into action to layout the paper and get it ready to give to the printer to keep on schedule so we can bring the news of the visual arts to readers around the Carolinas – on time. Next come the e-mails and phone calls from people who are just wondering if there is still time or space to fit something else in the paper. Sadly, 99 percent of the time – it is too late. Plus, you better be a very good advertiser to get me to take something out of the paper to make space for your late press release. That’s right, we do give preference to our supporters when it is possible, it’s just not always possible.

Our deadline for the printed version of Carolina Arts is the 12th of the month – every month. And, for those who seem to know nothing about publishing, that’s the 12th of the month prior to the next printed issue. That’s May 12, 2009, for the June 2009 issue. Some – a very few – still think they have the 12th of June for our June issue, which would mean people might get to start reading the paper by June 25th. It doesn’t work that way – except in their mind.

One of the items we received – well after deadline was a press release about a national book art exhibition taking place at the McMaster Gallery at the University of South Carolina in Columbia, SC. This is not that unusual in that in my experience. Colleges and Universities have a hard time getting out information about the public exhibits they present to media – other than daily media – on time. Some do a very good job, but they are in the minority. Over the years I have heard various reasons or excuses for this problem of timely notice. The biggest problem is that every office of the president of every institution seems to want to sign-off on every public press release – which takes time. Second place comes in with less than motivated professors who have been assigned the duties of managing the gallery – with no extra pay involved. Third is usually unorganized professors.

It’s really a shame because these are usually some of the best exhibitions being offered throughout the Carolinas. And, when it comes to annual student exhibits – there is less effort made to get the word out.

Enough of the soapbox rant, but I add it to make sure people know – I’m not going to be making it a habit to give exposure of shows that did not make the deadline. Also, the organizers of this book art show have done some advertising with us in the past.

And, as a final note – we include all press releases about visual art exhibits taking place anywhere in the Carolinas on our website version of Carolina Arts – received by the 25th of the month by 5pm. Again, that’s prior to the issue we are working on.

So here is the press release.

University of South Carolina in Columbia, SC, Features National Book Art Exhibition


Ellen Knudson

The University of South Carolina in Columbia, SC, will present the exhibit, Intimate Curiosities: 2009: Southeast Association for Book Arts National Juried Exhibition, on view in McMaster Gallery from May 5 – 29, 2009.

Ha Ran Kim

This exhibition of book arts includes thirty-seven works from the traditions of papermaking, letterpress, bookbinding to non-traditional artmaking and self-publishing techniques, that celebrate the book as a vibrant contemporary art form.

Matt Liddle

The exhibition was juried by Bea Nettles, who has been exhibiting and publishing autobiographical works since 1970. Since that time, she has had over fifty one-person exhibitions including the International Museum of Photography at the Eastman House, the Museum of Contemporary Photography in Chicago, and Light Gallery and Witkin Gallery in NYC. Her works have also been shown internationally in major group exhibitions. Her images are in numerous collections including the Museum of Modern Art, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the National Gallery of Canada, the Polaroid International Collection, the International Museum of Photography at the Eastman House, and the Center for Creative Photography in Tucson, Arizona. Nettles has taught photography and artists’ books since 1970 at Rochester Institute of Technology, Tyler School of Art, and the University of Illinois where she is currently a Professor.

Shawn Simmons

For further information check our SC Institutional Gallery listings, call Mana Hewitt, Gallery Director at 803/777-7480 or e-mail to (mana@sc.edu).

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Gene Speer’s Exhibit at McMaster Gallery in Columbia, SC

Sunday, July 13th, 2008

As my last act during this month’s delivery of the paper I stopped in Columbia, SC, on my way back home from Charlotte, NC, to see if the Gene Speer exhibit, Line • Circle • Square, was still on view. I was in luck, but it was the last day of the exhibit (July 3, 2008).

Highway 101 Series, oil pastel

We didn’t receive notice of this exhibit until after our deadlines for the June or July issue, so this exhibit wasn’t included in the printed version of the paper or on our website, but I was interested in seeing the exhibit since seeing the work Speer had in the SC State Museum’s juried exhibit. And, I wasn’t disappointed – there, as a centerpiece of the exhibit at the McMaster Gallery exhibition, was another one of Speer’s mixed media works in his Highway 101 Series. I am really attracted to this – at least new to me – work by Speer’s. He had seven works in all under the Highway 101 Series title, but the other six were several monotypes, a lithograph and several oil pastels. I liked the oil pastel works too. Well, I liked the entire exhibit, but I’m really taken by the mixed media works and the oil pastels in this series. Some of the works are just titled Highway 101 Series and others were given subtitles like Hwy. 78 East or I-26 South.

I really didn’t see any highways in these images, but I didn’t have to in order to enjoy the works. Speer is an abstract expressionist so the works are his reaction to what he sees and feels. My reaction is on a whole different level to color, texture and shapes. Besides, if the highways I travel each month start looking to me like Speer’s works – my delivery days are over.

I’d love to see an exhibition of just the mixed media works in this Highway 101 Series.

The exhibit as a whole is a view at a wide range of techniques and media done in variations of Speer’s basic concept of vertical runs for the Highway 101 Series, grid patterns, and circular works. I read in a review by Mary Gilkerson for Free Times in Columbia that all of the works were done over the last two years. I would have thought that it might have been a longer span of time. It would seem that Speer’s has been a busy artist with a lot of ideas on his mind.

The least structured work in the exhibit was a black ink on white paper monotype entitled Bare to the Bone #4. There were no grids, no rows of symbols or any sign of organization in this piece. I guess it was a sign of Speer really letting go.

There was a small mixed media piece tucked away in a little corner of the gallery titled Short Circuit. I would have liked to take this piece home with me. I’m talking about buying it of course – if I had some money. (As many opportunities that I have had over the years to walk out of a not-so-well attended gallery with a work of art – it has never crossed my mind to do so – other than worry about whether other less scrupulous individuals do.) This work was maybe 5″ x 5″ square with small pieces of copper placed in a grid pattern against a darker gray/black background. This was sort of a 3-D version of Speer’s usual grid prints. They may have been pieces of a copper plate used to make some other print. The title might refer to a print that didn’t work out so well – who knows, but it was interesting to speculate as the piece was so different from the rest of the works – and after all it was sent to a corner of the room all by itself.

Adding to the total range of media used in this exhibit there were two other small works, one was Untitled, which was a grid pattern in acrylics, and one titled Yellow Can, which was a grid in watercolors.

A work entitled Month of June was comprised of six monotypes of black ink on white paper, with two rows of three images. These were circular shapes which looked like moonscapes. They looked more deliberate than most of the other works, so they stood out a bit in my opinion.

There were also four large circle-shaped monotype works – with lots of bright colors and lots of different shapes in the circles. They were more like the last work I can remember seeing of Speer’s in an exhibit – some time ago.

Another work in the – don’t you want to come home with me category was – This Way, an oil pastel. I can’t remember how it fit into the exhibit – line, circle, square – grid or what. I just remember writing down in my notes – I like this one too.

Highway 101 Series, mixed media

But, my all time favorite was the largest piece in the show, the Highway 101 Series mixed media work which was like the one found in the SC State Museum show – on exhibit through Sept. 7, 2008. I’m not really good at judging the size of some works, but this was maybe a 7′ long by 5′ tall work with eight rows running vertically down the piece. It’s white with colors breaking through from behind the white layers. There are some splashes of color on the outside of the white, but most of the color in the work comes from layers behind the white – making this work more muted than Speer’s other works. There could be a lot of layers of colors – it’s hard to tell, but the effect is wonderful – it had my abstract taste buds popping.

I’d love to say go see this show, but it’s over. All I can say is that if any of this sounds good to you – keep an eye and ear out for the name Gene Speer. Maybe another show is in the works somewhere in the Carolinas.

I know Speer is represented by Corrigan Gallery in Charleston, SC. And, I was disappointed that he doesn’t seem to have a website. I was hoping to link to some images of his works, but I didn’t find any sign of a site in a Google search. And I didn’t take my camera with me, so I’m sorry we don’t have any images at this time, but I’ll still be looking for some – so check back from time to time.

P.S. Since writing this we received two images from Gene Speer of works in the show and have received a web link to some other photos of his work. You can see the images @ http://web.mac.com/mcmastergallery/McMaster_Gallery/Gene_Speer.html

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