REVIEW: Chapin Theatre Company's MARY POPPINS at Harbison Theatre

“From props to costumes and everything in between, this production represents not only a labor of love but a look at the growth of CTC from a small community theatre to one that wants to be, and should be, taken seriously.” —Jasper Online

When this writer found reviewing Chapin Theatre Company’s ambitious musical, Mary Poppins, on my calendar for last night’s opening performance at Harbison Theatre, I consulted an expert on all things whimsical, uplifting, and fun, and brought along said expert with me to check out the performance. In the photo above, please see my 6-and-a-half-year-old granddaughter Sara James, hugging her program as she waits for the show to get underway.

During the 15-minute intermission between the first and second acts, I asked my expert consultant what she thought so far and she responded that she gave it 4-and-a-half stars out of 5 and deemed it, just like the titular character Mary Poppins “practically perfect in every way.”

I would have to agree.

For starters, let’s give Chapin Theatre Company as many stars as possible for taking on such a challenging production in Mary Poppins – The Broadway Musical. The cast is huge, the vocal and physical requirements of the actors are demanding, the set is large and cumbersome, the costuming complex. And while this performance only slightly fell short on precious few of these challenges, it clearly was not for lack of effort.

This reviewer is not telling the noble team of volunteers devoted to creating and then manipulating the moveable set pieces anything they don’t already know when I write that the set for Mary Poppins is a bear! Heavy, somewhat awkward in places, and portable thanks to casters rather than the magically silent gliders that a Broadway set would have, we were impressed by the army of stagehands who stepped up to make the difficult scene transitions happen. It clearly wasn’t easy on opening night but, with repetition, we feel certain the process will become more comfortable. From props to costumes and everything in between, this production represents not only a labor of love but a look at the growth of CTC from a small community theatre to one that wants to be, and should be, taken seriously.

Evidence of this growth was on full view last night by virtue of an exceptionally strong cast of leading actors, well equipped with the needed chops to hit the high notes in all the right places. In the role of Mary Poppins, Celeste Mills simply nailed it. Her vocals were spot-on and her demeanor captured the anything-but-smug self-confidence the character is known for. Similarly, Gavin Slusher, in the role of Bert, was a delight, also delivering a performance nearing professional. Kudos to director Jami Steele Sprankle for work well done in bringing these characters to their fullest potential in this performance.

As George Banks, Jasper’s old friend Frank Thompson called on his years of stage experience and considerable vocal talents to also give a confident and nuanced performance. (Thompson once served as the theatre editor for Jasper Magazine.) Playing opposite Thompson as Winnifred Banks was Lisa Akly, who also delivered an excellent vocal performance, lacking just a bit of the dynamism expected from this character.

Accolades for standout performances should also be given to Ella Riley as Mrs. Brill, Christyne McClellan, who does double duty as the beautifully-voiced  Bird Woman and the show’s music director, and Tiyon Ritter in the small but important role of John Northbrook. The roles of Jane and Michael Banks were double cast with Grace Bender and Libby Todd sharing the role of Jane, and Perry Dawson and Chase Duplaga that of Michael. We would like to be able to comment on these specific performances by actor’s name, but we may have missed an announcement of whose performance we were enjoying. Suffice it to say that the children we saw held their own quite well. The dueling aria performance between Lisa Baker in the role of George Banks’s old nanny, Miss Andrew, and Mary Poppins (Mills) was by far one of the highlights of the evening.

Another highlight for us was the full-cast rendition of Chimney Sweep Bert’s theme song, “Step in Time” delivered with power, grand enthusiasm, and (practically perfectly) tap shoes! The high energy number was engaging and exciting, making good use of Meredith Boehme’s choreographic skills. In fact, this reviewer would have liked to have seen more movement like this throughout the course of the play, finding the times when the cast seemed to stand sqquarely in a line to sing or speak, typically during scene changes, far less engaging. We also very much enjoyed the flights of fancy (see the play) experienced by Poppins (Mills) and, particularly Bert (Slusher), who took aerial dance to new heights for host Harbison Theatre.

Having prepped for this performance by watching both the 1964 film Mary Poppins and the 2018 Mary Poppins Returns, my co-reviewer and I agreed that the performance was a success, with her one exception: the songs do not appear in the same order as those in the film do and the storyline is slightly different. Not better or worse, just not the same. As the well-designed program tells us, this musical is based on the stories of P.L. Travers and the Disney film. Original music and lyrics are by Richard and Robert Sherman, with the book by Downton Abbey’s Julian Fellowes (2004) and new music by George Stiles and Anthony Drewe. Cameron Mackintosh was a co-creator. For my part, I found the diverging storyline to be meaningful and lovely. Where the original films ask the viewer to assess the relationship between a father and his children, the contemporary story looks more closely at how damaging the absence of a close relationship with one’s parent can be by examining George Banks’ (Thompson’s) upbringing by the iron-fisted Miss Andrew. Similarly, this iteration shows us the unhealthy results of traditional gender roles in the home by looking deeper at a socially-constructed weakness in George and Winnifred’s (Akly’s) marriage.

That said, we both enjoyed the performance immensely and felt pride in Chapin Theatre Company which is, literally, our local theatre, and we highly recommend readers book their tickets now lest they miss the opportunity to see this watershed moment in a theatre company’s growth and history.

Mary Poppins: The Broadway Musical runs through July 26th with shows on some days at 3 pm and on others at 7:30. Check the website for tickets and times

The CALL is OPEN for Columbia's Next Poet Laureate!

Columbia’s next Poet Laureate will serve from

January 2027 - December 2031

Jennifer Bartell Boykin - Current Columbia Poet Laureate

It was just a little over a decade ago when a small group of us began hoping that the City of Columbia might expand the power of poetry in our community by creating a brand new position, City Poet Laureate. Lee Snellgrove became our champion and took our request to the powers that be. Within months we had not only a new post but an esteemed poet to take on that role when Ed Madden became Columbia’s first City Poet Laureate. Madden served two terms well, setting a high bar for our next laureate, Jennifer Bartell Boykin, who also served with dedication and, like Madden, a genuine desire to make poetry an accessihble part of the lives of the people of Columbia.

Ed Madden - First Poet Laureate of the City of Columbia

Now, Boykin’s term is winding down and the City needs a new person to fill that role. Who will be that poet?

According to the City of Columbia, “Jennifer Bartell Boykin has served as the second Poet Laureate of the City of Columbia since 2023. Her four year term ends on December 31, 2026, and she will not seek a second term. “Poetry saved my life and has brought me so much joy and connection,” Boykin said. “I have enjoyed sharing poetry with the city these past four years.” 

During her time as Poet Laureate, Boykin founded the Soda City Poetry Festival, which hosted poetry workshops, readings, and poetic conversations for the city. Additionally, she penned the poem “Finally Finlay” for the grand opening of Finlay Park in 2025 and has taught poetry workshops through the city and the state. 

One Columbia for Arts and Culture serves as an administrative and artistic collaborator between the poet laureate and city officials. One Columbia, through powers established in Resolution R-2014-08, convenes a committee responsible for selecting the next poet laureate. 

Applications are now open for the next City of Columbia Poet Laureate, which is an honorary position that recognizes a poet who champions poetry and increases poetic engagement across the city. The organization invites poets from across Columbia to apply; this includes any poet with a verified Columbia, South Carolina address. The application is available HERE and on the One Columbia website, under the What We Do Section, City Poet Laureate. 

The application window will run through September. A selection committee will convene in October to review candidates and identify the individual best suited to serve as an ambassador for poetry and literature throughout the city. One Columbia will announce the new Poet Laureate in November during Boykin’s final official reading event, a fitting moment to honor the outgoing laureate while welcoming her successor. 

In accordance with the City of Columbia’s Poet Laureate Resolution, the selection committee will include representatives of the Mayor’s Office and the Arts, History & Preservation Committee, members of the local literary arts community, and other individuals with relevant expertise. This diverse and thoughtful committee structure ensures the process remains firmly connected to the city and its civic mission. 

“Columbia has a vibrant poetry community of page poets and stage poets. It’s time for the next poet to carry the laureateship forward,” Boykin said. 

The Poet Laureate serves as a public advocate for poetry, literature, and creative expression, sharing work at community events and encouraging residents of all ages to engage with the arts. One Columbia looks forward to continuing this meaningful tradition and celebrating the power of poetry to connect and inspire the people of Columbia.”

Don’t be shy. Put yourself out there. Columbia needs you.

SC Humanities Partners with USC for 3rd Annual Better Together Film Festival with a Screening at All Good Books

From our friends at SC Humanities …

SC Humanities is partnering with USC's Office of Community Engagement for the 3rd Annual Better Together Film Festival to host a free screening of 9/11: Reclaiming Ground Zero on Friday, July 31, from 6–8 p.m. at All Good Books (734 Harden St., Columbia).

The film explores what happened after the September 11 attacks, focusing on the rebuilding of Ground Zero and the resilience of New Yorkers in the years that followed. After the screening, SC Humanities Executive Director, Bingo Gunter will facilitate a community conversation about the film. 

About the Film — 9/11: Reclaiming Ground Zero, 2026, 69 minutes

After the 9/11 attacks, after the smoke was gone, after the rubble cleared away, New Yorkers had a city to rebuild. After the towers fell, no one could agree on what should be done with Ground Zero. In response to fast tracked redevelopment plans, New York decided to do one of the bravest – or maybe one of the most unconventional – things in the history of city planning: they gathered 5,000 representative New Yorkers for the largest town hall in American history and asked them to decide. They came to vote on the city’s six proposals for rebuilding Ground Zero. But instead, the people rejected the top down approach and successfully charted a new path forward. Their work determined what is at Ground Zero today. People expected chaos, yelling, maybe even a fistfight. But what happened was democracy. ‍Director: J.B. Sabey | Executive Producers: Sarah Perkins, J.B. Sabey, Carolyn Lukensmeyer | Producers: Robbie Shinder, Lisa Sabey


About the Project — Better Together Film Festival

At a time when Americans’ trust in others - and in our institutions - is at an all time low, and our media is plagued by toxically polarizing narratives, the social fabric of our nation can feel beyond repair. Now is a time for Americans to hear, see, and experience the stories of people coming together across their differences to solve problems together in their neighborhoods and build feelings of belonging in their communities. In alignment with America’s 250th Anniversary this year, local organizations across the country will host screenings of films that inspire hope, celebrate freedom, and model people uniting across differences to make their communities stronger. Audiences will have the opportunity to meet neighbors, reflect together, engage in conversations, and ultimately build relationships with fellow community members. 

Dr. Jennifer “Bingo” Gunter

About SC Humanities Executive Director — Bingo Gunter

Jennifer “Bingo” Gunter, PhD is an historian of the US South with a foundation in Southern Studies. She is an educator as well as a scholar, having spent the last decade in classrooms teaching history, media studies, Southern Studies, ethics, philosophy, and public speaking. After serving in various roles at the University of South Carolina, she applied for the position of Executive Director at SC Humanities. She had been on the board of directors for five years and developed a deep appreciation of the importance of the organization. After a nationwide search, she began the role with SC Humanities in July of 2025.

She earned a B.A. and M.A. in Southern Studies from the University of Mississippi and a Ph.D. in History from the University of South Carolina. 

 

The event is free and open to the public, but registration is required.

You can learn more and reserve your seat here.

Recognizing the 2026 Jasper Play Right Project Community Producers

The 2026 Jasper Play Right Project is well underway with a packed house of cast, crew, and our all-important Community Producers.

Community Producers essentially fund the production of the winning play to the Staged Reading level of development. Their work began on Sunday July 12 with their first gathering around a table of wine, cheese, and treats to witness Jasper’s first Table Reading of DK Turner’s The Counting Table.

Between now and Sunday, September 13th, the Community Producers will gather three more times to go deeper into the process of play development and then finally, on the 13th, they will take their reserved seats to witness the highly produced Staged Reading.

Thank you to our 2026 Jasper Play Right Project Community Producers!

Stan Conine

Jennifer Gunter

Larry Hembree & Joe Hudson

Linda Khoury

Richard & Nancy Layman

Tricia & Henry Motes

Bill Schmidt

Wade Sellers

Kirkland & James Smith

Gwinette Taylor

Keith Tolen

Jon Tuttle

Cindi Boiter & Bob Jolley

 

You don’t have to be a Community Producer to see the finished product though. Tickets are now available to join Jasper and the Community Producers for the official Staged Reading of The Counting Table followed by a meal inspired by the play itself.

Special Thanks to Columbia Music Festival Association for serving as the host of ALL Jasper 2026 Play Right Project events, including the Big Show on September 13th!

Learn more about the Jasper Play Right Project

Jasper Partners with SC State Museum to Present Screening of the New Iteration of Wade Sellers' Film PETER LENZO: IN MEMORY OF HIS MEMORY

Friday July 17th @ SC State Museum

12 pm — Artist Talk with Roxy Lenzo Douthit

6 pm — Screening - Peter Lenzo: In Memory of His Memory

by Wade Sellers

IF I ONLY HAD A BRAIN BY PETER LENZO

Join the Jasper Project at the South Carolina State Museum (301 Gervais Street) in the Lipscomb gallery on Friday night, July 17th at 6 pm for the screening of Wade Seller’s expanded film Peter Lenzo: In Memory of His Memory.

Originally created for the Jasper Project’s February 2026 exhibition Peter Lenzo: A Retrospective and Remembrance at Stormwater Studios, Sellers says, “This current screening expands on the existing film by adding interviews with his brothers Anthony and Steven, as well as his sister, Lisa.” He expects there will be a third and final version of the film at a later date.

“I never knew  Peter Lenzo,” Sellers says. “There were many moments we were probably in the same room, but we never met. I knew his work through his notoriety and through his art dealer and never quite understood why it drew me in so much. This film allows me the luxury to not only meet the man through his family and those that loved his work, but also through his own thoughts and words.”

Lenzo, known world-wide for his reliquaries and facejugs that married his unique style with traditional ceramic vessels prominent in the southern US, came to South Carolina in the 1990s. As Paul Matheny, Chief Curator and Director of Cultural affairs at the SC State Museum, writes in the book, Peter Lenzo: In Memory of His Memory (The Jasper Project, 2026), he “had an almost immediate impact in a state already rich with ceramic history.”

Lenzo, born in 1955 in New York died on October 6, 2024, after decades of seizures and their repercussions from a bike incident early in his life. He grew up in Detroit, and later lived in California, Illinois, and Columbia, SC.

Filmmaker Wade Sellers reflects on his film project, “I am fascinated by why artists, artists who have no choice other than to create, are drawn to the work they make. Peter’s story of a lifetime as an artist, a lifetime of seizures and dependency on others, and finding a home in the work was a story I couldn’t resist exploring and sharing with others.”

Sellers is an independent filmmaker and producer based in Columbia, SC. He is a four-time Emmy nominee whose production company, Coal Powered Filmworks, focuses on producing documentary and independent film projects. His work has been seen on cable and PBS stations nationwide and independent theaters and festivals throughout the United States and Europe. He began work in independent film as a cinematographer and in the late 1990s he followed this work to New York City, where he began establishing a strong resume of work with independent film and corporate clients. After returning to the south he turned his focus to producing and directing, and founded Coal Powered Filmworks, producing work for local, regional, and national clients. His work has been recognized with Addys, Tellys and numerous other awards and he is the 2025 recipient of the SC Governor's Award for the Arts.

The celebration of Peter Lenzo’s contribution to culture will begin at noon on July 17th with an artist talk presented by Lenzo’s daughter, Roxy Lenzo Douthit. Both events are free and open to the public.(Full disclosure, Lenzo Douthit is a member of the Jasper Project board of directors.)

To purchase the book, Peter Lenzo: In Memory of His Memory, scan the QR code below. 

Jasper Project Presents 3rd Thursday Featured Artist Sonya Diimmler in The Nook @ Koger Center

Opening Reception - Thursday, July 16th 5:30 - 7

Join Jasper and Friends this Thursday evening our Nook Gallery space at the Koger Center for the Arts as we celebrate the opening of Sonya Diimmler’s new exhibition of highly emotive abstract.

Part of a collaboration between the Jasper Project, the Koger Center, and the Congaree Vista, Jasper programs a monthly rotating gallery on the second tier of the Koger with an opening celebration each Thursday.

Blossoming Romance by Sonya Diimmler

According to the artist, “Sonya Diimmler brings dramatic color to dreamy contemporary landscapes and larger than life abstracts.” The artist “discovered painting during a season of caring for her aging parents. Serendipitously painting became a way to process loss, navigate grief, and rediscover hope. The dynamic color, loose brushwork, and expressive mark-making, convey emotion and energy.”

Diimmler paints colorful South Carolina lake and landscapes along with her favorite subject and muse, her Bulldog Smedley. Sonya’s work has earned awards at the SC State Fair, Union County Arts Council, and Crooked Creek Art League.

Having just started painting in 2015, Sonya fell in love with the process and quickly began a daily painting practice. She continually seeks to improve through frequent workshops and has studied with the late Mary Bentz Gilkerson and Michael Story.

In 2016 she joined the Crooked Creek Art League in Chapin, SC where she served as Workshop Coordinator and President and remains an active member. She has participated in a number of community art projects including her popular “Ship of Drools” sailboat from The Arts Sail into Chapin project in 2019. She also created the colorful canine and feline portraits on the fence outside Chapin Veterinary Hospital on Columbia Avenue in Chapin.

Diimmler now paints full time from her home studio in Prosperity, South Carolina.

Enjoy Diimmler’s art at the Koger Center during standard opening hours as well as before and after all Koger Center events throughout July and until the third week of August.

One Columbia Announces Cultural Layers Community Celebrations, Unveiling New Public Murals Honoring Columbia's African American History

"For us, public art is more than just what you see; it's about creating connections …" — Xavier Blake

Artist - Daniel Esquivia-Zapata

From our Friends at One Columbia …

One Columbia for Arts and Culture will host the Cultural Layers Community Celebrations, two free public events marking the unveiling of new public artwork honoring the stories, people, and places at the heart of Columbia's historically African American neighborhoods. The celebrations take place Saturday, July 18, at 2:00 PM at Richland Library Edgewood and Sunday, July 19, at 3:00 PM at the Richland Library Main Auditorium. Admission is free and open to the public.

The new artwork honors former residents and legacies of the Booker T. Washington, Ward One, and Wheeler Hill neighborhoods. Cultural Layers is a public art and storytelling initiative led by One Columbia and funded by the Knight Foundation and the Central Carolina Community Foundation. The project preserves and amplifies histories from these communities through photography, videography, oral histories, archival research, and public art, centering the individuals who shaped the city and the schools and neighborhoods that served as cultural and social anchors for generations.

At each celebration, attendees can view the completed murals and public artwork, meet several of the individuals depicted in the work, and connect with the community members, historians, and cultural partners who helped bring the project to life. The events are designed as community gatherings grounded in memory, local history, and collective pride.

Featured artists include Daniel Esquivia-Zapata, Visual Artist and Educator; Nora Williams, Photographer and Cultural Worker; and Malcolm Vanhannegeyn, CEO of Perspective Cinema and Cinematographer. Community members featured in the work include Crissandra Elliott, Deacon Richard Caughman, and Raymond Richardson.

"For us, public art is more than just what you see; it's about creating connections," said Xavier Blake, One Columbia Executive Director. "Through Cultural Layers and the incredible talents of Daniel, Nora, and Malcolm, we hope to create a lasting impact that honors the lives, spaces, and histories that shape our city."

The celebrations are made possible with the support of community partners and sponsors including Central Carolina Community Foundation, Knight Foundation, Richland County Library, the A'ja Wilson Foundation, the Center for Civil Rights History and Research at the University of South Carolina, Columbia SC 63, the Ward One Organization, and Friends of African American Art & Culture.

More information is available at onecolumbiasc.com/public-art/cultural-layers-project/.

FROM THE PRINT ISSUE - PART THREE IN OUR SERIES ON KOGER CENTER PROJECT WINNING ARTISTS featuring WILMA KING

Wilma King

by Cindi Boiter

Photography by Brad Martin

“I  remember an incident in fourth grade that helped me focus in on my love of art and design,” Columbia-based visual artist and winner of the 2022 Draw Jasper competition, Wilma King begins. “My teacher, Ms. Hendrix, knew how to inspire and cultivate creativity. She read to us, held in-class competitions, and infused applied learning into our coursework way back then. Our school was on a military base in Fort Greely, Alaska. My mind was full of dreams of being a nurse like Clara Barton until Ms. Hendrix announced a fashion design competition. My classmates convinced me that I would surely win – but I didn't. So, I launched this compulsion to design paper dolls for my sisters, friends, and anyone who would let me do so. It was an experience that allowed me to delve deeply into individual, and cultural preferences for design, color, shape, size, and form.” 

That lesson, to persevere despite all odds, has served King well as a guiding force driving her to accomplish a life full of achievements and broken barriers that serves as an inspiration to artists and women and people of color today.

Born in Lexington, SC, King, who has a BA in studio art from the University of SC and a MA in journalism from Texas Southern University in Houston, says she grew up both in Lower Richland County and Alaska. “I have lived in 11 different states and done domestic and international sabbaticals that took me to a cumulative 9 months of slow travels and teaching abroad in Italy and in Canada. After more than 30 years of doing some of the things I found interesting and exciting, and to become my mother's primary caregiver, I moved back home to SC.”

But that was not before teaching art at the Art Institute in Houston, O’More College in Franklin, TN, SUNY, and serving as an associate professor in PR at both Western Kentucky University and well as the Rochester Institute of Technology in upstate New York. “I always felt there should be a collaboration between words and images. I taught graphic design, computerized design, or some form of public relations design most of my career, beginning with launching, teaching, and designing the first courses and curriculum in commercial art here in Columbia at Benedict College.”

King was the first Black faculty member in the Department of Journalism and Broadcasting, and she stayed there for 16 years where “they allowed me to do things I never dreamed I could do.” One of those dreams-come-true was launching an international conference on diversity and inviting groundbreaking photojournalist Gordon Parks to the school for three days of lectures and hands-on learning. “It was then that I started to specialize in art and storytelling,” King says, reflecting on her time with Parks, whose documentary style photography was instrumental in the fight for civil rights but who went on to be the first Black person to produce and direct major motion pictures, including 1971’s revolutionary film, Shaft.

I came to love a very well-written painting,” King says, adding that “art should tell a story,” an endeavor she strives for in her own work. “I enjoy telling my stories as well as those of people I have met along the way. An avid nonfiction reader, I try to incorporate a level of authenticity, through descriptive and narrative detail in my paintings. I focus on the story to give it broader meaning – that is, the painting’s relationship-building potential. People often comment on my style. I paint from memory, not photos (unless commissioned to do so), and I rarely use references. Various elements in each painting are carefully outlined to show that the story is a composite of different places and spans of time.”

King’s medium of choice is acrylic. “My very wonderful art professors at USC, particularly Jim Edwards, taught me that acrylics are extremely adaptable and can convincingly disguise as other paint mediums.” And as for her technique, “I would say that I have either a ‘gentle’ realism or perhaps a somewhat ‘rigid’ surrealism style,” she says. “I am not painting from photographs unless I’m commissioned to or as reference. The white outlined objects in my work come together in my memories from myriad places and times.”

Among her greatest influences are Dony Mac Manus, sculptor/founder of the School for Sacred Art in Florence,  Italy, and Giancarlo Polenghi, the school's director of the master’s program who is an Italian art historian and teaches theology of the body. “They both helped me to understand that the purpose and power of art is to elevate the status of individuals in communities and in society.”

“Now, each day, before I begin to paint, I study some of the great Christian art. I enjoy Biblical stories through the eyes of Michelangelo di Lodovico Buonarroti Simoni, Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio, Peter Paul Rubens, Cristofo de Predis, Rogier van der Weyden, Rembrandt, Vincent Van Gogh, and even Salvador Dali.”

But she adds that, “Jonathan Green has given me some very good advice and critique on my work, as well,” counting Greene as one among her three favorite SC artists. “I love his use of color and form, and the stories of the African American experiences in the South. He depicts an enjoyment, pride, and love for life that is seldom seen these days. His viewpoint and perspective are necessary against a backdrop of sadness, anger, and bitterness in the world.”

Her other two favorite home-state artists are Gerard Erley and Phillip Mullen. Of Erley she says his technique is “akin to that of the ‘great masters,’ not only in his artistic ability, but also in the way he commands his storytelling.” From Mullen, her former drawing professor whose work she says she “has always loved,” King says, “I learned to be meticulous in the details and still develop a style distinguishable from everyone else.”

With a CV replete with honors, awards, grants, and fellowships, listings of lectures given, international conferences organized and attended, publications in books and esteemed journals as well as listings of books and publications she designed, and truly, more accomplishments than can be recorded here, King’s humility is overwhelming. It is beyond anticlimactic to mention her recognition as the winner of a competition as prosaic as the Draw Jasper contest, but it must be done.

 

It is on the cover of this issue of Jasper Magazine that Wilma King’s painting, Jasper is published, the winning entry in the 2022 Draw Jasper Competition. “My art is of hindsight, unable to catch up with the present – because the present becomes the past too quickly. Nonetheless, each of us are where we need to be when it comes to our art,” King says. “The Jasper painting expresses the joy of being where I am now, and the struggle of recognizing significant moments and collaborative memories from multiple sources. Through the colors and imagery, I try to describe my vision of a world that is seeded and then grows from my South Carolina and Louisiana Creole cultural roots. It also speaks of my age that notices and shares the pivotal history of two generations before me.”

 

“These days, I read less than I used to (a book each week), and paint more,” King continues. “I am painting each day, whether it is on canvas or glassware. Art is a way of praying. It helps me find positivity in whatever I am confronted with throughout the day – good or bad. I am seeking ways to put the events of the day in proper perspective and finding a way to reconcile my day in gratitude. I began what I hope will become a series of painting based on contemplative and spiritual exercises. I believe art should elevate the status of persons and communities. Finally, I have had a happy life, despite a few calamitous events I certainly hope the happiness is what my art passes on to others.” 

 Wisdom from Wilma King: I think there's a need to not only expose the world to Columbia arts, but to also expose Columbia arts to the world! There are ideas and opportunities for collaborations that are not being explored. Let's create some opportunities for collaborations and universality through perhaps Sister Cities for starters.

On my wish list? It's time for a women's museum, a children's museum, and an independent art school. The spirit and excitement of art is apparent in Columbia’s eclectic art community. Still, the more we venture out, explore, and study the universal art world, the less repetitive we become.

This article appeared in the Fall 2022 Print issue of Jasper Magazine.

Announcing the Cast of DK Turner's 2026 JASPER Play Right Project Winning Play, THE COUNTING TABLE!

MARILYN MATHEUS

Jasper is excited to announce the CAST of DK Turner’s 2026 Jasper Play Right Project Winning Play,

The Counting Table.

MARILYN MATTHEUS as MAMA RUT

BONITA PEEPLES as NADINE

SAMUEL MCWHITE as CURTIS

TASHERA PROVATO as NIA

MICHAEL "MYKKEL" WRIGHT as JEROME

Directed by Jocelyn Sanders

Mark your calendars for Sunday September 13th at CMFA for the Premiere Staged Reading of DK Turner’s The Counting Table, followed by a family style meal inspired by the dinner featured in Turner’s play.

Or join us this Sunday and everyother Sunday for 4 sessions as a Community Producer for exciting conversations & insights, lovely drinks & snacks, YOUR NAME in the playbill and the PUBLISHED book, reserved seating at the premiere, free post-performance dinner, and so much more!

DK Turner - Playwright, The Counting Table

Jasper's Play Right Project Commences THIS SUNDAY, July 12th -- LAST CALL FOR COMMUNITY PRODUCERS!

5 DAYS UNTIL THE 1ST TABLE READ!

This is the final week to sign up as Community Producers for Jasper’s Play Right Project and we still need a few more curious & supportive souls. This year we’re inviting local arts supporters to join us as Community Producers at a new rate ($250) that includes both you and your significant other.

You’ll join this year’s confirmed Community Producers Linda Khoury, Bingo Gunter, Bill Schmidt, Richard Layman, and Stan Conine for four Sunday afternoon sessions (4 - 5:30, July 12, 26, Aug. 9, 23) at CMFA — Columbia Music Festival Association, 914 Pulaski St. in the Vista — and then take your seats as our honored guests at the Premiere Stage Reading of Columbia playwright DK Turner’s THE COUNTING TABLE on Sept. 13th.

Here’s what to expect:

Play Right Project 2026 Community Producer Schedule

SUNDAY, JULY 12 4:00–5:30pm: Introducing DK Turner and The Counting Table

Meet the 2026 Play Right Project Winning Playwright DK Turner and enjoy the first-ever read-through of his The Counting Table with the full cast and crew, as well as other Community Producers. This is called a “Table Read” – see? You’re learning already!

SUNDAY, JULY 26 4:00–5:30pm: The Playwright's Craft

A conversation with the Playwright, DK Turner, and special guest playwrights about their plays and what they have coming up.

SUNDAY, AUGUST 9 4:00–5:30pm:  Stagecraft: Acting and Directing

The cast & crew of The Counting Table explain the process of assembling a production and preparing for a role, with sample scenes from The Counting Table.

SUNDAY, AUGUST 23 4:00–5:30pm:  Sneak Peek Week!

Sit in on an actual rehearsal of The Counting Table and learn more about the process as actors rehearse and sharpen sample scenes in anticipation of the Big Event.

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13:  The Big Event – Staged Reading of The Counting Table

Take your reserved seat for the Premiere Staged Reading of The Counting Table by DK Turner at) and enjoy a special, brand-new post-show celebration designed especially for DK Turner’s The Counting Table!

Read more about Jasper’s 2026 Winning Playwright DK Turner and the Director of Turner’s play, The Counting Table, Jocelyn Sanders.

CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP

TO BE A

2026 JASPER PLAY RIGHT PROJECT

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AND THANKS FOR SUPPORTING SOUTH CAROLINA THEATRE ART!

FROM THE PRINT ISSUE - PART TWO IN OUR SERIES ON KOGER CENTER PROJECT WINNING ARTISTS featuring COLLEEN CANNON-CARLOS

Welcome to the second article in our series on the Koger Center Project’s Winning Artists. You can get the background on this series in yesterday’s article on Kate Timbes, and learn more about the project and the other winners from an earlier Jasper Online post. Today we’re featuring Colleen Cannon-Karlos and sharing the article by Emily Moffitt that appears in the spring issue of Jasper Magazine!

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Colleen Cannon-Karlos:

Left Brain, Right Brain – One Artist 

By Emily Moffitt

Photography by Perry McLeod

 

The intersection of art and science is sometimes explored only in name, particularly in academic settings. However, for Colleen Cannon-Karlos, the two fields are inextricably intertwined both in her art and her personhood.

Cannon-Karlos' upbringing took her across the country to both coasts—born in Los Angeles to native New Yorker parents, she ended up moving to New York after her parents divorced. During her school years, she excelled in all subjects, participating in gifted student programs and having a strong handle on both sides of her brain. The left brain seemed to dictate her path slightly more as she had not considered being an artist when she was younger. She still enjoyed creative endeavors, however. According to Cannon-Karlos, “I never had a formal art class growing up in school, and the gifted programs in the Bronx that I participated in had music as the cultural enrichment.” This did not stop Cannon-Karlos from pursuing artistic hobbies at home as her mother taught her how to knit, sew, and crochet. At home, she made her own art projects that combined her budding fiber arts skills with recycled materials like popsicle sticks and old fabrics. This resourcefulness has resurfaced years later in the Cannon-Karlos work we see today.

Even as the designated artist of the family, Cannon-Karlos still initially enrolled in schooling oriented toward a career in math or science. “I went to the Bronx High School of Science and had an affinity for math and physics,” says Cannon-Karlos. “There was a drafting class available if anyone wanted to be an architect or engineer, … I absolutely loved taking it. The precision, tools, and learning how to transfer schematic drawings into three-dimensions—I use these skills in my work today all the time.”

Precision is the key to much of Cannon-Karlos' artistic practices today. She developed these tools even further when she studied at Stanford University and worked in the physics lab. Her curriculum was strenuous and extremely scientific, but she always had art in the back of her mind. While in college at Stanford, the artist’s aunt asked her to make some art for her. This became an “a-ha” moment for Cannon-Karlos, whose time spent in the lab, identifying subatomic particles of smashed atoms, did not leave much time for creative hobbies. “I rediscovered my love for making stuff, using materials as simple as magic markers,” she remembers. It was time for her to find her path not only as someone with a knack for science, but also as an artist.

Cannon-Karlos decided to take a gap year from her Stanford studies and moved back to New York City to, hopefully, establish a career as an artist. She spent her days teaching herself how to paint, exploring museums and creative communities, and communing with playwrights, artists, and musicians. “This was during the 70s, so a lot of the community’s creative endeavors coalesced with different sociopolitical movements of the era,” Cannon-Karlos says. “There was this explosion of creative, dynamic energy that was so immersive and different from today.”

Working on her art career paid off early as she had her first gallery representation when she was 19-years-old. She began dabbling in photography and even convinced the staff photographer at the Studio Museum of Harlem to let her work with him in the darkroom. After spending the year building her portfolios in a variety of media, drawing, painting, and photography, she went back to Stanford and switched her major from sociology to art with a concentration in photography.

 She flourished in the field while also continuing to experiment with other media. The inquisitive Cannon-Karlos always had a knack for trying and learning something new and says that “some artists do the same thing for decades, but it is my nature to explore.” In her twenties, she began to bring back her fiber arts skills to simultaneously turn a profit and make some serious work; she was introduced to fabric design by her former husband, a fellow artist. She began to sell her handmade fabrics and clothing in flea markets, then boutiques and stores in New York. Eventually, Cannon-Karlos took the lessons she had learned practicing her art and began to apply them to something new: academia.

Throughout her career, Cannon-Karlos has instructed students of all ages, from elementary school through college. Since her methods of problem-solving combine both artistic and scientific approaches, she uses this thought process to her advantage in the classroom. She teaches her students that they may have analytic tools but they still need to be able to think outside the box.

The artist has also created curricula based around projects in which students can learn scientific concepts by making art. In Durham, NC, for example, she worked with the local art council and taught classes to elementary schoolers in which they studied ocean science through technical concepts but also had opportunities to create sculptures like jellyfish and tube worms with plastic bags, paper tubes, and other recycled materials that can, unfortunately, easily be found in oceans and bodies of water.

While she lived in Hawaii, she created curricula that truly captured the intersection of her interests. “I was finally able to make a proposal for an Art, Science, and Technology Class that collaborated with the marine science department,” says Cannon-Karlos. “We had a mix of art and science majors in the class, and we were allowed to use lab equipment, including their scanning electron microscopes. This allowed us to see the intricacies of the designs of a particular specimen at a microscopic level and beyond.” The designs found on the plates were only black and white, so the students would then learn how to use Photoshop to add color to their discoveries. While this was an art project in essence, Cannon-Karlos made sure that all students flexed both sides of their brains and wrote explanations of each step of their project, including why they dissected the image in a particular way, how they manipulated the image, and what they learned from the experience. The science-minded students loved the opportunity to express their inner creativity, and the arts students jumped at the opportunity to exhibit their talents on an academic level.

Thess lessons were among the many ways that Cannon-Karlos exhibited her proficiency in seeing things beyond the material plane and comprehending, on a deeper level, the use of an object or material for something completely different. Using recycled materials for creating artwork started in her childhood, and it has manifested contemporaneously as her preferred medium.

Piles of cardboard boxes inevitably piled up across Cannon-Karlos' cross-country moves. After collecting so many, but not wanting to throw them in the waste, she decided to express her resourcefulness by stripping, cutting, and tearing the boxes apart. “Being a science aficionado, I like to experiment with my materials and am always in that mindset of play,” says Cannon-Karlos. “I realized I could make some imagery with these strips.”

Cannon-Karlos had started to experiment with cardboard in 2019, but it was not until after the pandemic and a final move to Columbia that she seriously started to create with it. The cardboard allows Cannon-Karlos to work as a scientist again, finding ways to challenge herself and test new hypotheses regarding how she can use the cardboard and adapt the surface to do different things. One such test of skill was born out of observing sweetgrass basket weaving. “When I saw the weavers … I asked myself if I could simulate the weaving process with the corrugated cardboard.” This process also made Cannon-Karlos reflect on the resourcefulness of African artists, especially with recycled materials of their own. Her work is a constant conversation between culture and science, always looking to explore what that conversation could look like on a surface with one of the most accessible materials available. “A lot of recycled materials are brought over and dumped into Africa,” notes Cannon-Karlos. “The artists are very resourceful; they can go to the dump and pull fabrics, electronics, and other trash then turn it into the most amazing work. I am very inspired by people who look at things differently and turn them into something new.”

Like many other artists, Cannon-Karlos' career path did not follow a straight trajectory. The moves, twists, and turns provided great opportunities at each bend, but nothing necessarily consistent. “If I followed my trajectory out of grad school in the 90s, I may have become more prominent in the art world,” says Cannon-Karlos. “I have had to put my career aside working as a single parent. It is hard to be an artist when you are taking care of a family.” While working in Hawaii, she had first-hand experience with the exorbitant costs of shipping artwork, and the transience of teaching positions in higher education. Her trips across the country, while pursuing her dreams, created different bumps along the road. But when asked if she had the chance to do everything all over again, Cannon-Karlos admits that she may not change anything at all. Her life experiences and her way of approaching art, as both an academic and a creative, are what make her portfolios so alluring, with viewers waiting with anticipation to see what she’ll create next.

FROM THE PRINT ISSUE -- Jasper Writes About 5 of the 6 Koger Center Project Winning Artists (and we're adding the 6th to our story bank!)

At the Jasper Project we have nothing but praise and appreciation for the work the Koger Center for the Arts has done to bring more diverse arts disciplines to their halls. In addition to providing Jasper with a designated space called The Nook to offer monthly openings in conjunction with The Vista’s Third Thursday celebration (thanks Koger!), over the past few years they have elevated SC visual arts appreciation by sponsoring their own visual arts contest (sort of awkwardly) titled The Koger Center Project. Jasper has written about this year’s winners already via Jasper Online, but we were happy to find that we have already written about 5 out of 6 of the winning artists in the pages of Jasper Magazine. Let’s take a look back at these stories by visiting the Jasper Magazine archives.

Photo by Perry McLeod

Kate Timbes: Right Places, Right Times

By Emily Moffitt

 

Ten days after Kate Timbes graduated from Wofford University, she moved halfway across the world to Germany. This was a decision that became integral not only to her career, but to her life as an artist.

Timbes graduated from Wofford’s studio art program in 2023 with a minor in business and film. She grew up in a creative household, amongst a sister with an affinity for art and a father who worked as an architect. The creative spirit of her family spanned multiple generations; Timbes’ grandfather is an artist as well, and her mother often brought her to bead crafting shows growing up. “I credit my parents and their support and belief in me to be an artist,” says Timbes. “They never questioned my career choice.” Her parents were there to watch her artistic abilities flourish from coloring with crayons, to creating commissions for their family friends. Even now, Timbes’ studio where she perfects her craft is at her parents’ house.

Growing up, Timbes knew she wanted to pursue art after spending her childhood years painting and making jewelry, but she originally considered graphic design as a career. It was not until her undergraduate years at Wofford that she discovered and fell in love with studio art. While studying studio art, she got to explore with a variety of mediums and pursued as many opportunities as possible to learn what she could. “I accepted a work study at a school in Tennessee where I learned to spin my own wool,” says Timbes. “I saw so many other artists honing their craft, and they were all so encouraging and eager to share their knowledge with me.”

Photo by Perry McLeod

As her studies progressed, one of her professors at Wofford approached her and asked if she had any experience making paper. “I told her I had seen it be made, and I spent the next two months learning as much as I could about the medium,” Timbes says. “I was going to help lead a class on how to make your own paper. The next thing I knew, I could not get my hands out of paper baths.”

Awakened with a sense of wonder in how to push the limits of this newfound medium, Timbes started to see motifs from her existing practice reawakened. She found that she resonated with the low-to-zero waste practice of making paper from scratch and wanted to learn how to use plant fibers to make new sheets. Timbes says, “I felt very connected to a tradition that is starting to disappear in certain places around the world.”

At the beginning of her papermaking practice, Timbes would experiment with sheet pulling to see what would happen, figuring out if the sheet would be used for painting, sculpture, or just exist as a sheet of paper. Now, just a few years later, paper making is Timbes’ primary method of creating building blocks for her art in her daily routine. “When I am on the journey to find what possibilities exist within paper, and what it is going to do to push me...I find it to be a very conversational art practice.”

Photo by Perry McLeod

Conversation itself is integral to many of Timbes’ artistic endeavors. The paper that Timbes creates is made through a conversation of intention: what will a specific piece of paper be used for, what kind of fibers are needed for the sheet, and how will it react to the additives? Timbes even casts her own body in handmade paper for some of her projects. The resourcefulness of the artist is not reserved for making paper from scratch, however, as she is proficient in using fabric to create stunning installation and performance work. One notable medium that Timbes has visited multiple times in her career is a simple bedsheet. “In 2022, when I was working on my senior project, Roe V. Wade was overturned,” says Timbes. “I looked for an outlet for rage, and turned to tearing up bed sheets, weaving the strips into rage rooms.” The accessibility of bedsheets made the project’s foundation easy to start. Using leftover paint from a previous mural project, the rage room installation came to fruition by throwing the watered-down paint all over the stripped, cut, and torn bedsheets until they dried. Afterwards, she created circular installations with the strips by weaving them together to create a microcosm of rage and relief.

The experience with this project followed her from Spartanburg to Garmisch. In a setting with no formal studio or ample space to create like she had in college, Timbes made sure to immerse herself in the culture of the small ski resort town she worked out of. After spending time researching the local ecology and energy of the town, it prompted her to reflect on her own desires as an artist. “I had to ask myself, ‘What am I passionate about? How do I narrow everything down? Am I a sculptor, painter, or something else?’” She ended up cultivating all these thoughts and experiences with her surroundings into her notable performance piece/sculpture/photography series, “I Cut My Arms Off So That I Could Fly.” In her hotel room, Timbes found an ample number of bedsheets once again to be her canvas. “The piece is a fiber sculpture turned performance that was inspired by a glacier that melted off the top of the highest mountain in Germany,” says Timbes. “There were so many tours going up there, but no acknowledgment of the glacier itself. It was almost like a tourist attraction that did not exist.” Some church groups in the area hosted funerals for the glacier, which pushed Timbes to create a remembrance of her own. After tearing and dyeing the bed sheets, she wove them into a set of arms she could wear. It was not until right before the ski season ended that Timbes came up with the perfect idea: “I took the piece up into the mountain and decided to ski down while wearing it. That’s where the photos came from.” What resulted was a stunning coalescence of movement, reverence, and originality that has reappeared throughout Timbes’ portfolio.

Now in the present day, Timbes has taken all of her life experiences and creative endeavors and melded them into a path she is sure to take with aplomb. Timbes has joined an artist collective named Zerospace, participated not only in exhibits across South Carolina, but as far away as California and Denmark. Building a community and participating in one that exists amongst her artist peers is the most important thing to Timbes’ artistic practice. At Woven Studios, Timbes creates murals and takes commissions, emphasizing the importance of understanding her clients. Building relationships with clients fosters trust, while collaborating with other artists inspires creativity and new ideas, especially now that she's returned to South Carolina. “Within the last year, tapping into the Carolinas’ creative communities has really fueled my practice, and I have acknowledged how important creative spaces are,” says Timbes.

Photo by Perry McLeod

Upcoming projects for Timbes include participation in the Koger Center’s annual art competition exhibit, where a jury-selected panel of SC artists is featured and Timbes was awarded first place. Additionally, Timbes is developing a new collection of fiber and paper-based works inspired by German folklore. Timbes’ explores subject matter and artistic concepts with the originality and passion of someone who has given themself the grace to create without self-imposed boundaries: a tenet passed down from her father. “It is hard to navigate the world right now, let alone as an artist in her 20s,” says Timbes. “But I have to be okay with failure, comfortable with vulnerability, and just reiterate to myself that whatever happens, I got this.” With a knack for storytelling and working with intention, she is well on her way to fashioning herself as one of the young artists to watch in Columbia, SC or wherever her journey takes her.

 This article appears in the current issue of Jasper Magazine, Spring 2026.

Return to this space to read about Koger’s Featured Artists Anna Byars, Lori Isom, Wilma King & Colleen Cannon-Karlos. And to keep up with Jasper’s ALL-ARTS news & articles between print issues, go to JasperProject.org, find Magazine on the front page, then scroll down for Jasper Online. Recent articles have included local theatre reviews, news about Columbia Classical Ballet, calls for art, the SEPF, SCSM artist talks & everything about our current Big Thing,

Jasper’s Play Right Project.

Jasper Welcomes SC Photo Artists to the Jasper Alley at Tapp's for First Thursday in July

The Jasper Project is excited to announce our July First Thursday lineup for the Jasper Alley at Tapp’s. Still Here is a group photography exhibition featuring the work of SC photographers Jackson Campbell, Perry McLeod, Nora Williams, Alexander McDonald, Jr., and TuJuan “TJ” Huiett.

Please join us on Thursday, July 2nd from 6 – 8:30 PM to view their photography and spend some quality time with all of our artists. There will be wine & beer for purchase, music (TBA), and new issues of Jasper Magazine. When you enter the building through the front door at 1644 Main Street, head all the way to the right where you’ll find the Jasper Alley. Our featured artists will be on hand to answer questions about their work and processes.

Artist - Alexander McDonald, Jr.

Featured Artists

Alexander McDonald, Jr.

Alexander S. McDonald Jr. is a photographer whose studio has been the American highway for eighteen years. A long-haul truck driver by trade, he has crossed nearly every road in this country – building a quiet, sustained practice of documenting what most people drive past without seeing. His work focuses on landscape, sky, and the charged stillness of in-between places: cloud formations, mountain ranges, open plains, and overlooked roadside moments. McDonald's images don't reach for spectacle. They reach for honesty – the feeling of a place, alight a second that insists on being remembered. He is based on the road and everywhere in between. 

Artist - Perry McLeod

Perry McLeod

Perry McLeod is a Fullbright scholar, retired high school teacher, a photographer and avid traveler. He shoots sports, concerts, events, “and just about anything else I can point a camera at,” he says. “I love photography! Every day is a new adventure and I just want to capture the moments that will make people stop and think. Make people want to make a change. Make people smile. Make people go –‘Damn’ or ‘Nice’ or ‘Wow,” he says. “Photography is the most perfect art - we all get moments that will never happen again. It's frozen in time forever - how cool is that?”

A USC alumnus, McLeod taught Social Studies and Digital Media Production in both Richland District One and Richland District Two for 31 years. During his teaching career, he established a digital media production program at Richland Northeast High School, which fueled his love for photography and his fascination with video production. After retiring from education, McLeod's passion for photography continued to grow, and he has worked for several local and national media outlets. In addition to photography, McLeod has a deep love for travel. He says, "When I travel, my mind races with all the new things around me. I see a face, an old building, or an amazing vista, and I have to capture that moment." He believes that "a photograph is magic!"

Artist - Nora Williams

Nora Williams

Nora Williams was born and raised in South Carolina. As a fine-art, documentary artist, she explores the complexities of identity, place, and history in the American South. Her work examines themes of resilience, belonging, and social change, often focusing on underrepresented narratives.


Williams’ photographs have been exhibited in galleries that include the Elder Gallery of Contemporary Art. Williams has covered stories for The New York Times, The Washington Post, Rolling Stone, Huffington Post, and The Wall Street Journal. She is an FAA-certified drone pilot and a member of Black Women Photographers, Diversify Photo, NPPA, and Alternate Roots. She is currently pursuing her MFA in Studio Art with a concentration in Photography at the University of South Carolina. 

Artist - TJ Huiett

TaJuan "TJ" Huiett

A photographer based in Columbia, South Carolina, Huiett says his work is “all about capturing the real and raw moments of life through the lens of my camera. I’m inspired by documentary style photography and strive to tell authentic stories through my images. As an African American artist, I also aim to showcase the diversity and beauty of Black culture and experience. My love for travel has taken me all over the world, allowing me to capture stunning landscapes and unique cultural environments.” He continues, “I hope my photography can transport you to a different time and pace and make you see the world in a new light.”

Jackson Campbell

Jackson Campbell is a photographer based in Columbia, South Carolina. His work moves between abstraction and observation, often focusing on atmosphere, form, and texture. His images balance recognizable subjects with mood-driven compositions.

The Jasper photography exhibition Still Here will be on view in the Jasper Alley at Tapp’s throughout July and until the first week of August.

Columbia Classical Ballet Moves to 5 Points & Opens a New School for Student Dancers

The School of Columbia Classical Ballet lets a child train from age 3 through their teens, taught by professional dancers, without ever leaving Columbia. You don’t need a dancer in the family. You just need a kid who likes to move.

Joseph Phillips - Artistic Director, Columbia Classical Ballet

From our friends at Columbia Classical Ballet …

Columbia Classical Ballet (CCB), the professional ballet company that proudly bears the capital’s name, is opening a school for young dancers: the School of Columbia Classical Ballet (SCCB). Children across the Midlands, ages 3 through 18, will learn in the same studios as the professional company, taught by the dancers and coaches who perform with it.

The school opens September 8, 2026, at 610 Harden Street in Five Points.

Artistic Director Joseph Phillips, a Columbia native hailed by the international press as “Ballet’s Golden Boy,” left home as a boy and spent more than two decades dancing internationally. Now he’s home, building the school he wished he’d had growing up here.

“As a boy, I had to leave Columbia to get this training. My daughter won’t,” Phillips says. “I came home to help build the school I wish I’d had, right here.”

Come Look Through the Glass

The studio at 610 Harden Street sits behind a wall of glass on the street, so you can be walking by, look right in, and watch professional dancers at work. Starting August 31, the company takes class every weekday morning at 10, in full view from the sidewalk. It’s free, and you don’t need to call ahead.

Start Here

Every dancer starts somewhere, and the easiest way to begin is to come take a class. All through August, SCCB’s Open Classes (August 10–28) are yours to try. Come as often as you like, any day of the week, and see if the studio fits. Many classes are free, and the rest start at just $15. Sign up at columbiaclassicalballet.com/school or call 803-990-2345.

Programs include Pre-Ballet (ages 3–6), Young Dancers (6–10), Pre-Professional (10+), and an Adult Program, with placement by age and level.

Your Child on Stage: The Nutcracker

Every December, Columbia Classical Ballet presents The Nutcracker at the Koger Center, and the school’s students share the stage with the professional company. “I was a young boy when I was cast in The Nutcracker. I was standing in the stairwell when my mother told me I’d been cast as Nicholas. I remember that moment so clearly, even to this day,” Phillips says.

This year, any child in Columbia can stand where he stood. CCB is opening The Nutcracker auditions to everyone, beginners welcome, on Saturday, August 22 and Saturday, September 19, at 610 Harden Street, by age group. The youngest dancers need no experience. Performances are December 4–6.

Who Your Child Will Learn From

Every beginner is welcome, and from their first class, students are taught by the company’s own dancers and coaches.

Leading the school is Phillips, who danced with San Francisco Ballet, Miami City Ballet, and American Ballet Theatre, and became a principal dancer at the Mariinsky Theatre’s Primorsky Stage in Russia, before returning home with his fiancée, Irene Liu, and their daughter, Summer.

Liu, founder of El Camino Ballet in California, is joining the school; her graduates have gone on to companies and programs including the Boston Ballet pre-professional program, The Washington Ballet, and Complexions, and to universities including Columbia and Stanford. Two of her students are moving from California to train at SCCB: Siena Appelboum and Aria Du, both 2026 Youth America Grand Prix medalists. Sergei Zolotarev, a former dancer at the Primorsky Stage, joins SCCB as the Principal Teacher, relocating from Russia with his wife, Karina Zolotareva. Joy Alexander, who grew up dancing alongside Phillips here in Columbia, leads the school’s Musical Theater program, and the faculty also includes Kiyomi Mercadante Ramirez, a master teacher and Fellow of the Cecchetti Council of America.

Key Dates

Registration opens: July 1, 2026

Open Classes: August 10–28

Nutcracker auditions: August 22 & September 19

Company class viewable from the street: begins August 31

School opens: September 8 Nutcracker performances: December 4–6

Register during Open Classes and the registration fee is waived.

About: The School of Columbia Classical Ballet operates under Columbia Classical Ballet, founded in 1991, which presents classical and contemporary repertoire across the state and produces the LifeChance international benefit gala.

columbiaclassicalballet.com

Spotlight on Jasper's Featured Artists in the Jasper Alley at Tapp's in June: Jackie Bobo, Michael Morris Zamora, and Barry J. White

This month, Jasper is featuring three artists in the Jasper Alley at Tapp’s that we want to make sure everyone knows about—Jackie Bobo, Barry J. White, and Michael Morris Zamora.

Artist - Barry J. White

Barry J. White is a Blythewood, SC-based self-taught multi-disciplinary artist whose works center the beauty, strength, and vulnerability of Black men. Guided by intuition, personal experience, and emotion, Barry’s paintings explore themes of identity and self-acceptance through expressive realism and atmospheric color.

Barry’s work has been featured in the following exhibitions For the People, Crowned by the Roots, Jasper Degenerate Arts II, as well as at Gemini Arts, Stormwater Studios, Roc Bottom Studio, and Drummond Studios. His work has been recognized for its depth, honesty, and visual storytelling. 

White says that his exhibition at the Jasper Alley has given me the confidence to start working on more pieces daily. I'm creating a collection I'm naming, I Drew Him. It's a collection of people that I have known over the years that inspire my current artistic expression. My next show is By Any Means, curated by KELA, with the opening reception on Juneteenth at REDUX Studio in Charleston, SC.”

Continuing, White says he is inspired by many local artists including Dre Lopez, Skrilla, Cam Moore, Keith Tolan, Damion Johnson, Sanford Greene, Jahnna Blyden, Ija Monet, and Tyrone Geter, but he really appreciates the work of his show-mate, Jackie Bobo, saying, “I can't look at Jackie's work without thinking about the kindness she extends to the people around her. Before I ever spent time with her artwork, Jackie encouraged me to embrace vulnerability and find the courage to share my own art and show up as my authentic self. That same spirit lives inside her paintings. In her work, what's typically viewed as different or spooky becomes a strength instead of something to hide or be ashamed of. Little Lonely Ghost feels less like sadness and more like an invitation to be seen. Her "Happy Spooky" aesthetic reminds me that belonging isn't about fitting in, it's about showing up as your authentic self. Spending time with her art feels like receiving permission to take up space exactly as you are.”

Artist - Jackie Bobo

Jackie Bobo is the vibrant force behind Bobo to the Max, an art practice and brand that creates emotionally immersive art and experiences inviting people to feel deeply, express fully, and belong as their most vivid selves.

Informed by nearly a decade as a speech-language pathologist—and more than three decades of living at the intersection of queerness, Blackness, and neurodivergence—Bobo approaches painting as its own language, one capable of holding nuance from the playful to the profound.

Through her signature “Happy Spooky” aesthetic—bright, bold colors paired with ghosts, spiders, and other whimsically macabre motifs—her work explores what it means to unmask, authentically connect, and belong. Each piece acts as a symbol of self-acceptance, affirming that belonging doesn’t mean blending in—it means revealing who you already are.

Bobo, who is currently an artist-in-residence with One Columbia for Arts & Culture at the Garage Studio, says she is “in the ideation phase of another immersive experience, but I'm being intentionally tight-lipped about it for now!”

About her show-mate Barry J White, Bobo says, “Barry captures the power, in both strength and tenderness, of Black masculinity in a way that's magnetic. His work makes you feel, in real time, suspended between society's limited understanding of and ability to hold space for Black masculinity, showcased through his daring vulnerability and technical skill.”

 

Artist - Michael Morris Zamora

Michael Morris Zamora was born in Puerto Rico to a South Carolinian father and a Puerto Rican mother. Mostly self-taught, he began creating art at the age of ten, and by fourteen, was painting in oil and acrylic mediums with a tendency toward abstract expressionism.

A chemist, film actor, writer, poet, and drummer, in Puerto Rico Zamora is also a Certified Artisan specializing in wood carving and sculpting, harkening back to his childhood interests in iron sculpting, wood carving, miniature buildings installations, and jewelry-making from natural seeds and seashells. In 1972 he published some of his first poems and stories. In 1980 he published his poetry book, Telarañas (translated, Cobwebs). 

Zamora also taught elementary art and later studied art at the San Juan Art Students League under Professors Rafael Rivera Ortiz (drawing and painting), and Hiram Rosado Poupart (ceramics).

According to Barry J. White, “I've met Michael on several occasions, and what stands out immediately is his warmth. He's a natural storyteller, always ready with a conversation, and he has a genuine enthusiasm that makes people feel welcome. That same sense of curiosity seems to carry into his artwork. Michael's paintings move between dreams, emotions, memory, and abstraction. Two pieces that especially resonate with me are Depression and Dreaming in Green. While very different in mood, both feel deeply human. Depression captures a quiet heaviness and vulnerability, while Dreaming in Green feels expansive, imaginative, and full of possibility. Michael’s paintings don't simply depict a subject; they create space for reflection and emotion. Like the stories he tells from his life experiences, they stay with you long after you've walked away.”

Bobo agrees adding, “Michael's work makes me feel like I've found a visual escape hatch from this reality into a world where my thoughts, galloping as they may be, are supported by his artistry the whole time. His use of color and the integration of various subjects on his canvases invite ease and reflection while maintaining presence—like a daydream.”

Zamora returns the sentiments about both his show-mates. “When I met Jackie for the first time in person at the Jasper Magazine release party a couple of months ago, it was a magical moment. For some reason, we recognized ourselves immediately,” he says. “Since we were notified we were going to be in the June Tapps show together I was touched by the magical vibrance of her creations. Her work and personal energy really synchronized with me and we spent over an hour engaged in a wonderful exchange of ideas and artistic views.”

He continues, “About Barry I can say we connected from the first moment as well.  He is such a humble being with a spiritual aura that you can feel every time you coincide with him on any artistic venue. His sensibility can be felt both on his great artistic expression and his person as well. [Barry is] always ready for a fraternal hug with his contagious smile. I feel so honored by being with both great artists. Thanks to the Jasper Project for this memorable experience.”

The work of all three artist will remain on display at the Jasper Alley at Tapp’s until the end of June when the group photography exhibition, Still Here, is installed. Still Here features the work of Jackson Campbell, Perry McLeod, Nora Williams, Alexander McDonald, Jr., and TaJuan "TJ" Huiett.

Read about showing YOUR work via one of the Jasper Project’s gallery spaces throughout the city and apply today!

 

 

 

 

Summer Camp is NOT Just for Kids - Check Out CMA's Stamped Charms Art Class

Art Class: Stamped Charms

Tuesdays, July 7, 14, and 21 | 6:00 – 9:00 p.m.

From Our Firends at Columbia Museum of Art …

Find inspiration through metalsmithing in this fun, three-day workshop. On the first day, plan and design a brass charm, then learn to use a jeweler’s saw and files. On the second day, explore options for metal textures and finishes before drilling a hole for attachment. On the final day, handstamp the charm, explore patinas, and create and attach jump rings. Taught by artist and educator Chrissy McCurry. Ages 15 and up. All supplies and equipment provided. 

$150 / $120 for members. Members get priority registration through Wednesday May 6. Join today!

Member Registration

Public Registration

Chrissy McCurry is a multidisciplinary artist based in Columbia. Currently an art educator in Lexington District One, she recently graduated from the University of South Carolina with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in art education. She is an active Art-O-Mat contributing artist.

CHECK OUT ALL THE AMAZING CLASSES AND EVENTS OFFERED BY

OUR COLUMBIA MUSEUM OF ART


Can we assist you with accommodations for accessibility during your visit? Please let us know at 803-799-2810 or info@columbiamuseum.org.

 

REVIEW: Trustus Theatre's URINETOWN - THE MUSICAL

by Beth DeHart

If Saturday Night Live’s effete city correspondent Stefon Meyers reviewed Trustus Theatre’s production of Urinetown: The Musical, which opened last weekend, he might say something like, “This show has everything! A flawless live band, cartoon-level physical comedy, eye-rolling puns, an adorable unparented little girl, a strangely parented big girl, and a set that is both dirty and clean at the same time… You don’t want to miss it!”

And he’d be right!

Urinetown: The Musical – a name that is already intriguing – is a Tony award winning musical written by Greg Kotis with music by Mark Hollman. It debuted on Broadway in 2001 and is set in a dystopian fictional town severely impacted by a 20-year draught. The antagonist is the for-profit business, “Urine Good Company,” whose tagline is, “We care where you go.”  The primary conflict of the story is that in response to the oppressive draught conditions, “Urine Good Company” established public restrooms which require payment – tariffs – for community members to use the amenities. The story is a cautionary Eat-the-Rich revolutionary tale about overuse of critical resources like water. But for the punsters out there, the puns alone are a good enough reason to see the show.

The play is directed by Dewey Scott-Wiley whose fingerprint is notable throughout – slow motion moments, consistent meaningful business, believable and entertaining characterizations – all bring this satirical story to life. The audience is engaged throughout by the visual, musical, and physical presentation of the creative script. Kudos also to Sheldon Paschal for her additions to the show as Assistant Director.

The cast features 21 actors who use the space of the set quite effectively - a credit to Ashley Jensen, Scenic Designer, who establishes both horizontal and vertical interest on the stage. The set is not fussy; it’s built to depict the desperation of the moment and to make scene changes happen as efficiently as possible. Kudos to Marc Hurst for lighting design that supports this minimalist set. Hurst’s Lighting, alongside Sound Design by Jacob Olano with Sound Engineer Matt Pound, were all excellent. “The Band,” conducted by Ayush Joshi, is hidden in the rafters, allowing tiny glimpses of movement which is fun for the audience.

Cast members Jonathan Monk, Kevin Bush, Lauren Roberts, and Dayna Arnett made the audience look particularly forward to their characters’ distinct moments in the spotlight. A younger cast member who also carried the story along beautifully was Te’Jah Beaton as Little Sally.

Several Urinetown team members are currently in the process of studying various theater-related skills, including acting, musical theater, stage management, and theater technology and design. The energy these cast and crew members bring to the production is notable. Olan Domer as Bobby Strong and River Dively as Hope Cladwell also add believability and heart to the performance. In the dance department, Daniel Mason, in the role of Hot Blades Harry, is a stand-out!

A couple of elements that detracted a bit from the otherwise excellent quality of the show included some questionable casting choices and dance performances. Some of the older character roles are played by much younger actors, which requires the audience to work much harder to suspend their disbelief and fully engage in the show. While most of the performances remain completely believable throughout, a few were, sadly, unconvincing.

Overall, Trustus Theatre’s production of Urinetown is well worth the price of the ticket. The production is yet another example of the excellent quality of local theater available in Columbia, SC.

Grab your tickets and empty your bladders… You’ll be happy about both!

~~~

(One recommendation: It could be argued that an opportunity was missed by not charging audience members a fee to “pay to pee.” Not only would this have reinforced the message of the play, it also could have served as a real-time fundraiser for Food Not Bombs, the non-profit being supported by the show.) 

Urinetown: The Musical runs June 19 - July 19, 2026. Tickets are available at Trustus.org or the number on the poster above.

Thursday Night at the Koger Center Brings You the Opening of Ginny Merritt's Exhibition, the Opening of the Koger Center Project Winners' Exhibition & the Closing of the Late Laura Spong's Show

Artist - Ginny Merritt

When we first saw the work of Ginny Merritt years ago at a Contemporaries exhibition at the CMA, we knew she had something special. That’s why Jasper awarded her the Best in Show prize (2018) and wrote a feature on her in the next issue of Jasper Magazine. In the years since, it’s been such a trip to watch this retired art educator pour herself into her own art, after decades of nurturing the art in her students, and grow and grow and grow.

That’s why we’re excited to welcome Merritt back to the Jasper Nook Gallery at the Koger Center this Thursday night from 5:30 - 7pm.

And we’re even more excited to invite you to her opening reception which will coincide with the Closing Reception for the Koger Center’s beautiful exhibition of the late Laura Spong’s work, as well as their Opening Reception for The Koger Center Project Winners’ Exhibitionall three happening at the same time!


About Ginny Merritt

Ginny Merritt was raised in Denver and settled in South Carolina in 1987. She graduated from the University of Georgie and has two master’s degrees from USC. She studied art education and taught art in public schools for 30 years, also teaching as an adjunct instructor at USC.

Her work is centered on mixed media collages inspired by the stylish women from her grandmother’s day which she recreates using vintage and contemporary papers. She has mounted exhibitions of her work all over town as well as  in Charleston, Lake City, Augusta, Brooklyn, NY, and a solo show at the Etherredge Center Gallery at USC Aiken, SC. Merrett published her book Tall Women in 2024, which offered a collection of ekphrastic poetry based on her art.

Ginny Merritt



About Laura Spong

Laura Spong (1926-2018) is remembered as one of SC’s leading Abstract Expressionist artists. Originally from Nashville, where she graduated cum laude from Vanderbilt University, Spong took her first drawing classes in 1948 before moving to Columbia, SC and studying under Gil Petroff among others. Spong was a favorite of the late Wim Roefs and Eileen Waddell of the former If Art Gallery, Waddell wrote of the artist, “Laura was a genteel Southern woman with a Tennessee accent whose ‘Coming Out’ party as an artist was on her 80th birthday.” Spong died at the age of 92, painting until the end of her days.



About the Koger Center Project Winners’ Exhibition

The Koger Center Project Winners’ Exhibition is a group exhibition in the Gallery at the Koger Center. The exhibit features the winning artists from their 2025 call for art sponsored by the Koger Center: Kate Timbes, Lori Isom, Anna Schumann Byars, Colleen Cannon-Karlos, Max Hardy, and Wilma King.

This opening reception coincides with Third Thursday Art Night featuring Ginny Merett.

About the Winners

Kate Timbes (1st Place) is a South Carolina based interdisciplinary artist whose work investigates the narrative and functions of materiality.  Working primarily in painting, video, and sculpture, she weaves mediums together, carrying objects, paintings, seeds, weavings, and sculptural handmade paper through physical, emotional, and digital landscapes. Timbes contemplates sourcing of resources, rethinking use as an individual effort to engage in a curious ecological practice. Timbes has exhibited her work nationally and internationally, with recent exhibitions at the Richardson Family Art Gallery, Greenville-Spartanburg Airport, the Spartanburg Public Library, and the DIS Student Hub in Copenhagen, Denmark. In addition to her studio practice, Timbes teaches papermaking workshops that have been supported by the Tri-State Sculptors Association and Wofford College. Timbes received her BA in Studio Art from Wofford College in 2023. (Read more about Kate Timbes in the current issue of Jasper Magazine, on newsstands now.)

Lori Isom (2nd Place) Artist Statement: It is fair to say that my life has been quite varied as an artist, and all around creative person. Years of my life were dedicated to working as a professional dancer, singer and actress in New York and Los Angeles, and I’ve had several interesting and fun entrepreneurial pursuits along the way, including owning and operating my own baking business! I am predominantly a self-taught artist, however, I studied illustration in high school, and later fine art and fashion design at Parsons School of Design. I would say that I walk the line between illustrator and fine artist. While I work to tell a story with my art, I also produce paintings that primarily express a particular emotion. Artists like Mary Cassatt, Andrew Wyeth, and John Singer Sargent were ones who greatly influenced my work early on. I suppose that’s how I came to love capturing people.

Anna Byars (Honorable Mention) is an artist based in Columbia, South Carolina. Anna grew up in Lexington, South Carolina, and received a BA in Studio Art and Art History at the College of Charleston. Her work has been shown in exhibitions at the Southern Graphics Conference, Sawtooth Visual Arts Gallery, and the Halsey Institute of Contemporary Art. Anna primarily focuses in printmaking and is currently exploring the idea of transcendence within her work.

Colleen Cannon-Karlos (Honorable Mention) was born in Los Angeles, raised in New York City, and currently resides in Columbia, SC after living in Hawaii for 20 years. Over the years she has worked in a variety of mediums including painting, drawing, photography and ceramics. Conceptually her work is based on quantum physics and ancient metaphysics exploring the illusive abstract nature of reality. Inspiration for her work includes indigenous African, Native American, Asian and Polynesian art forms. (Read more about Colleen Cannon-Karlos in the current issue of Jasper Magazine, on newsstands now.)

Max Hardy (Honorable Mention) Artist Statement: I’ve always loved to draw and paint and make things and have done so since I can remember. When I was in high school I took a few art classes but other than that I’m self- taught. Lately my paintings have been sculptural and deal with illusion in some way. My process is quite slow with visual art; I only produce a handful of pieces a year.

Wilma King (Honorable Mention) endeavors to combine her experiences of living in 11 states (including Alaska) with her educational background into a visual storytelling collaboration through her painting. Her pursuit and passion goes beyond a daily practice of technique and development. She believes that universality — seeking common ground — is what makes art purposeful. She taught public relations, communication studies, advertising design, publication design, and photography for more than 30 years in American universities in Kentucky, Tennessee, New York, Virginia, Texas, and South Carolina, and taught Study abroad courses in Italy several years. She was an associate professor of Public Relations at both Western Kentucky University (Bowling Green, KY) and Rochester Institute of Technology (Henrietta, NY), and served on faculty at Benedict College (Columbia,  SC), where she wrote the curriculum for, and taught the first courses in the college’s now defunct commercial art program; O’More College of Design (Franklin, TN); Texas Southern University (Houston, TX); The Art Institute of Houston (Houston, TX). (Read more about Wilma King in the Fall 2022 issue of Jasper Magazine.)

Artist Talk with Sanford Greene This Friday, June 19 at 12 p.m. - SC State Museum

From Our Friends at the SC State Museum …

Join us for this Artist Talk as Sanford Greene sits down with Ramon Jackson, Curator of Cultural History, to discuss several pieces Greene has donated to the Museum and the stories and meaning behind them.

This artist talk series highlights artists featured in From the Vault: Art from the Museum’s Collection, currently on view in Lipscomb Art Gallery. These programs will give artists the opportunity to discuss their work and offer visitors a chance to hear firsthand the ideas, experiences, and processes that fuel artists’ creative journeys.  

Each conversation will center on the artist’s practice, the themes that shape their work, and what it means to create in South Carolina today. Some talks may include mentor and mentee pairings or collaborative discussions, while others will focus on individual artists sharing their stories and perspectives. 

Above all, the series is designed to create an open and engaging space where artists and audiences can connect, ask questions, and deepen their understanding of the work on view.


About Sanford Greene

Sanford Greene is a nationally recognized illustrator and comic book artist originally from Greeleyville, S.C. Known for his work on major titles like Black Panther and Batman, Greene’s dynamic ink work and layered narratives explore culture, place and resilience.

Jasper Enters the Free Times BEST OF Game - With Some Caveats

For the first time ever, the Jasper Project joins in the reindeer games of playing the Free Times Best Of campaign. Why? For the same reason everyone else plays:

  1. The Jasper Project has been nominated in a “Best Of” category — Best Local Website: Music and Entertainment.

  2. We support Free Times & this is a money-maker for those guys. (Sorry, we aren’t going to advertise though.)

  3. Like everyone else, we also enjoy seeing our name in print and distributed throughout the land.

Do we think that the entities who also play the game and win are actually the “best of?”
No, Silly!

We recognize that the “Winners” of this marketing campaign are the people and businesses who do the best job of rallying their friends, families, and supporters to go to the trouble of logging in to the Free Times website and thumbing through all 300+ categories of “Best Of” in order to cast their vote.

Do we think that winning would mean that Jasper actually has the Best Local Website: Music and Entertainment in Columbia?
To be honest, there are far too many variables being ignored here to declare that anything is actually the Best Of anything, based on an unscientific method of gathering info. That being said, it should be noted that the Jasper Project website is the Only Contender in this category that devotes its entire website to Music and Entertainment (and Theatre, Visual Art, Film, Dance, Design, Poetry & Prose), so there’s something to be said for that.

Do we think we have a chance in hell of winning, considering that we are in competition with the organization that makes the rules, along with many other deserving websites?
Well, that’s really up to you, isn’t it?

Finally, do we think the Free Times Best Of Campaign is anything other than a popularity contest?
Of course not! (But we are not so jaded as to pretend that we don’t like to feel pretty, too!)

So caveats in place, here are Jasper’s votes for a few categories of competition dealing with local arts, along with our recognition of the important arts categories that weren’t even invited to play.*

*Best Local Creative Writer, Best Local Theatre Director, Best Local Photographer, Best Songwriter, Best Poet, Best Graphic Artist, Best Creative Nonfiction Writer, Best Book Written By a Local Author, Best Classical Musician, Best Arts Administrator, Best Arts Supporter/Volunteer

Best Art Gallery

There's something good to be said about all these galleries. CMA has always supported Jasper and the folks at Stormwater are professional and great to work with. Kudos to Richland Library for making art -- especially local art -- a priority. But we have to pull the lever for the Gallery at the Koger Center because it is truly a hyper-local space; Jasper Magazine's own Visual Arts Editor, Emily Moffitt, is the curator there; and you'll find one of Jasper's unique gallery spaces, The Nook, on the second tier where we install a monthly exhibition featuring a SC artist with a reception on the third Thursday of every month (and sometimes Friday or Wednesday, check our events page). 

Best Entertainment Venue

We're on the fence between the Koger Center and Harbison Theatre because we admire both venue's commitment to featuring local artists and we appreciate the support we've received from both organizations. 

Best Filmmaker

We've worked with most of these outstanding filmmakers in one capacity or another and are proud to support them all. But what kind of an organization would we be if we didn't rally behind our board president, Wade Sellers? In addition to being a trail-blazing filmmaker, Wade gives back to the community in so many ways, including heading up our 2nd Act Film Project which has produced a total of 100 films by independent SC filmmakers as of 2025.

Best Local or Regional Museum

We are fortunate to have a wonderful working relationship with the SC State Museum and we are all about the fantastic stewardship these good people are affording to their impressive SC Arts Collection. They like us, too, as evidenced by their hosting Jasper’s film — In Memory of His Memory by Wade Sellers at 6pm on July 17th.

Best Place to Celebrate a Birthday

We tend to choose our friends at Motor Supply Company for their menu, service, and the beautiful local art, programmed and installed by yours truly, Jasper!

Best Artist

We think all of the Greater Columbia Arts Community artists deserve a prize, a big fat commission, and a Peter Lenzo hug (IYKYK), so go with your heart on this when you vote but always remember to buy local when you can.

ALWAYS SUPPORT LOCAL SC ARTISTS IN ANY WAY YOU CAN!