Feature Articles
 For more information about this article or gallery, please call the gallery phone number listed in the last line of the article, "For more info..."

January Issue 2010

Franklin G. Burroughs-Simeon B. Chapin Art Museum in Myrtle Beach, SC, Offers Works by SC's Senior Artists

The Franklin G. Burroughs-Simeon B. Chapin Art Museum in Myrtle Beach, SC, will present the exhibit, Milestones: Celebrating 70 and Beyond, featuring works by some of SC's senior artists, on view from Jan. 17 through Apr. 25, 2010.

Dottie Moore

"Aging is taking me deeper into this creative process where I am finding more and more parts of me that want to express themselves,"
says Dottie Moore, (b. 1940).

Milestones are those momentous occasions that mark our lives, from birth to death and all the important events in between. Milestones: Celebrating 70 and Beyond, recognizes a significant milestone for 27 of South Carolina's most distinguished artists who have reached - their 70th year - along with their long and illustrious careers that have contributed to the cultural richness of the State.


Dixie Dugan

The exhibition, which will feature two works by each artist completed within the last two years, includes sculptures, paintings, prints, quilts, batiks, photographs, collages and hand-carved bowls. The list of artists reads like a "Who's Who in South Carolina Art" and includes Deane Ackerman, John Acorn, Bobbi Adams, Betty Bee, Carl Blair, Ethel Brody, Carrie Burns Brown, Edward Byrd, Joseph Cave, Ray Davenport, Jeanet Dreskin, Dixie Dugan, Maxie Eades, Tom Flowers, Darell Koons, Jean McWhorter, Rose Metz, Dottie Moore, Boyd Saunders, Marlene O'Bryant-Seabrook, Laura Spong, Barbara St. Dennis, Jo Ann Taylor, Carole Tinsley, Leo Twiggs, Sam Wang and Don Zurlo.

While all have reached their 70th year, a number are into their 80s, with Jeanet Dreskin, born in 1921, leading the way. She is followed by Betty Bee and Darell Koons, both born in 1924, and Maxie Eades in 1925. All continue to be productive. Indeed, Barbara St. Dennis speaks for many when she says, "There is not a day that goes by that I don't think or do art."

Joseph Cave
John Acorn

Perhaps it comes as no surprise that many of the artists are retired from careers as college professors from some of South Carolina's leading institutions. John Acorn long chaired the art department at Clemson University where Sam Wang also was on the faculty; Boyd Saunders created the printmaking department at the University of South Carolina; Darell Koons and Carl Blair had long tenures with Bob Jones University. Marlene O'Bryant-Seabrook was the first African American and one of only two women to be named to the faculty at the Citadel in 1975. Tom Flowers chaired Furman University's art department, and Leo Twiggs was the art department chairman and gallery director at South Carolina State University where Don Zurlo was also on faculty. Twiggs has the additional distinctions of being the first African American to receive a doctorate degree in art from the University of Georgia and the first visual artist to receive the Verner Award for outstanding contributions to the arts in South Carolina.

Some were "late bloomers", turning to the arts after pursuing other careers, such as Edward Byrd who, after his retirement from the medical profession, earned degrees in studio arts and art history from the College of Charleston in 2007. Initially he was frustrated with his progress, but now notes that "the work goes faster and better with each painting."

On the significance of achieving his 70th year, sculptor John Acorn said, "Unless I look in the mirror, I'm still the same kid I was with a hammer in my hand trying to make something. My art interest was sparked by my elementary school education when the boys in the fifth grade went to Manual Training and the girls went to Sewing and Cooking."

Also on exhibit at the Museum is the exhibit, Apron Chronicles: A Patchwork of American Recollections, which runs from Jan. 10 through Mar. 19, 2010.

The Franklin G. Burroughs-Simeon B. Chapin Art Museum is a wholly nonprofit institution located across from Springmaid Pier at 3100 South Ocean Boulevard in Myrtle Beach. Admission is free, but donations are welcomed. Components of Museum programs are funded in part by support from the City of Myrtle Beach, the Horry County Council and the South Carolina Arts Commission, which receives support from the National Endowment for the Arts.

For further information check our SC Institutional Gallery listings, call the Museum at 843/238-2510 or visit (www.MyrtleBeachArtMuseum.org).

[ | January 2010 | Feature Articles | Carolina Arts Unleashed | Gallery Listings | Home | ]

 

Carolina Arts is published monthly by Shoestring Publishing Company, a subsidiary of PSMG, Inc. Copyright© 2010 by PSMG, Inc., which published Charleston Arts from July 1987 - Dec. 1994 and South Carolina Arts from Jan. 1995 - Dec. 1996. It also publishes Carolina Arts Online, Copyright© 2010 by PSMG, Inc. All rights reserved by PSMG, Inc. or by the authors of articles. Reproduction or use without written permission is strictly prohibited. Carolina Arts is available throughout North & South Carolina.