New Work from Lee Malerich at Stormwater Studios -- September Dates for Reception, Presentation, and Viewing

A Message from Visual Artist Lee Malerich:

I put down my textile work some time ago. My stories were told; my problems dealt with and tied in a knot.

But that was not the end of the artmaking.  An artist walks through life absorbing, digesting, responding, and commenting. We are trained to do this.

I moved a house from three miles away to its current location. I stripped it down to its bones and started it over. I used new tools, learned new processes, and found new materials. I was hooked.

My question was, could I make art with these new skills having neither criticism nor teacher? Could I make sculpture without knowing its cumulative history from the beginning? Could I even work in three dimensions? The experiment was that basic.

In the end, I found that I could and learned a lesson from my personal history. I will be present during all the following times:

Opening Reception: Thursday, September 14, 2023, 11- 8 PM with the reception, 5-8 PM

Artist Presentation:  Saturday, September 16, 3:00

Viewing Hours: Wednesday, September 13, 2023, 11-3 PM

                            Thursday, September 14, 2023, 11-8 PM

                             Friday, September 15, 2023, 11-3 PM

                             Saturday, September 16, 2023, 11-5 PM

                             Sunday, September 17, 2023, 11-3 PM

I will be showing my most recent work and bringing examples of intermediary work which will show how I got from there to here. It is not really a surprising evolution. 

An Ode to Garage Rock (In Appreciation of the Woggles) by Kevin Oliver

(Photo: Steven W. Terrell)

Rock ‘n’ roll is old enough to have a Hall of Fame and a museum, and enough subgenres to confuse even the most dedicated music fan. One of the constants, however, has been “garage rock,” a subgenre of rock that’s indebted to raw, unfiltered sounds coming from a basic guitar/bass/drums band from the 1960s. Think Sam The Sham and the Pharaohs, The Kingsmen (of “Louie Louie” fame), The Standells (“Dirty Water”), The Troggs (“Wild Thing”) and many more. It’s an energetic, danceable style, something that has probably fueled its enduring popularity over the years, to the point where there are now “Garage Rock Revival” acts keeping the original style alive in various ways. 

One of the latter is the long-running Atlanta band The Woggles, which has been around in some form or another for over 30 years, so to call them “revivalists” may not be entirely accurate–they probably influenced many of the newer bands themselves.  

Featuring a two-guitar lineup, classic bass and drums rhythm section, and the irrepressible frontman “The Professor” Mighty Manfred, The Woggles have taken the garage rock blueprint and built their own sound on that foundation. 60s British Invasion, R&B and soul music classics and more form the border-less abandon of a Woggles show, with Manfred holding court up front as a slightly lunatic ringmaster of his own rock ‘n’ roll circus. It’s like a “Nuggets” compilation manifested in human form on whatever stage they appear on. 

The problem with writing about a band like The Woggles is that there’s no real substitute for actually hearing them or seeing them live. So, in preparation for this Friday night’s Art Bar show, here’s a quick primer on some of the best Woggles tunes:

 

My Baby Likes To Boogaloo” 

From their 1992 debut LP “Teen Dance Party,” this is a cover of an obscure 60’s tune from Don Gardner; it’s typical of the dance numbers they would make their name on. 

Sweet Tea

From 1998’s “Wailin’ With The Woggles,” this one shows off their mostly instrumental surf rock tendencies, a fun side of the band. 

Zombie Stomp

A must-have for your Halloween playlists, this one from 1996’s “Get Tough!” is another surf-rock style number but with spooky sounds added.  

Take it To The People

A veritable mission statement for the ever-touring Woggles, this one’s a great showcase of the slightly unhinged vocals of Manfred. From the 2012 album “The Big Beat.”  

Collector of Broken Hearts

While not quite a ballad, this one proves that The Woggles can slow down a bit and throw out some great melodic pop tunes when they want to. Great harmonica solo here, too.  

I Got a Line On You

A terrific cover of the Spirit classic that takes the dizzying speed of the original and fuzzes everything up even more. From the 2005 collection of singles, “Soul Sizzling 7” Meltdown.” 

 

The Woggles with the Capital City Playboys:

Art Bar

Friday, May 19th 

9:30 PM

Facebook event: 

 

Evelyn Berry, South Carolina Poet and Author 2023 National Endowment for the Arts Creative Writing Fellow

“At our time when the lives and future of queer people seem to be precariously endangered, I want to share stories of how we have survived, how we will continue to survive.”

Evelyn Berry

 

Congratulations to Evelyn Berry (she/her) for being awarded a 2023 National Endowment for the Arts Creative Writing Fellow. A trans author from Aiken, South Carolina, she is best known for her poetry. She published the chapbook Buggery (Bateau Press, 2020) which received the 2019/2020 BOOM Chapbook Prize from Bateau Press and has the upcoming poetry collection GRIEF SLUT due to be released in 2024 (Sundress Publications). In 2022 she received the Dr. Linda Veldheer Memorial Prize and was awarded the 2019 Broad River Prize for Prose in the Jasper Project’s Fall Lines literary journal, and the 2018 Emrys Poetry Prize, among other honors.

Other pieces of her work can be viewed in GASHER, Beloit Poetry Journal, Raleigh Review, Gigantic Sequins, Anti-Heroin Chic, petrichor, beestung, Taco Bell Quarterly, Underblong, and elsewhere.

Thirty-six fellows, including Berry, were selected through an anonymous review process, and judged on artistic excellence for the award. NEA’s Director of Literacy Arts Amy Stolls explains, “their poetry explodes with originality in form and content, offering powerful reflections of the pain and joy of our modern times.” (www.arts.gov, January 12, 2023). They received funding through this award to advance their literary careers. Berry describes this award as “a life-changing achievement

Berry’s desire, through this award, is to continue to “write poetry and prose that make visual the lives of transgender people in the American South, an often-hostile place I call home.” She states that receiving the $25,000 award allows “for the purchase a working automobile, to better afford healthcare, and to afford rent in a time of escalating inflation” which gives her more time to write. (www.arts.gov, January 12, 2023)

Berry wants to access archives and research to better understand the “legacies of queer communities in South Carolina.” In her personal statement to the National Endowment for Arts, Berry says, “At our time when the lives and future of queer people seem to be precariously endangered, I want to share stories of how we have survived, how we will continue to survive.” She continues to describe the importance and life changing effects of writing for herself and others, “Queer stories and poems have helped reflect myself back to me, have helped me imagine a future in which I was still alive. Trans people have always belonged in the South, and we will always belong here.” (www.arts.gov, January 12, 2023)

Visit www.evelynberrywriter.com to read about her literary work and accomplishments, and about her work as museum educational specialist and freelance editor in Columbia.

To view the complete Evelyn Berry release from the National Endowment of the Arts visit www.arts.gov/impact/literary-arts/creative-writing-fellows/evelyn-berry

To view bios and artist statements from all the 2023 recipients and past Creative Writing Fellows visit www.arts.gov.

— Ginny Merett

Columbia Author Carla Damron's New Fiction Deals with the Fight Against Human Trafficking

Advocate for human trafficking survivors pens thriller with a message of awareness and vigilance

Award-winning author and social worker Carla Damron, once named by NAMI as an Outstanding Mental Health Professional of the Year, uses fiction to address social justice issues, and her latest release is no exception. Emotion-driven, The Orchid Tattoo (Koehler Books, Sept. 30, 2022) is one part of Damron’s work as an advocate for human trafficking survivors and people with mental illnesses. Her previous work includes The Stone Necklace, winner of the 2017 Women’s Fiction Writers Association Star Award for Best Novel, which led award-winning author Pat Conroy to say “this is a novelist to be read again and again.”

In The Orchid Tattoo, social worker Georgia Thayer can balance her own mental illness with the demands of an impossible job. Mostly. But when her sister vanishes in the dead of night, her desperate quest to find Peyton leads to a multi-tentacled human trafficking network. When Georgia learns that her sister was brutally murdered trying to help a young victim called “Kitten,” she picks up where Peyton left off, and travels a treacherous path to expose the kingpin of the Estate, a luxurious brothel servicing rich and powerful men, and rescue his victims. Kitten is determined to escape. She won’t be trapped like the others. She won’t sell her soul like Lillian, victim-turned-madam, feeding the dark appetites of international business moguls and government leaders. Aided by Kitten, Georgia maneuvers to bring down the Estate and expose its dark secrets, but her efforts place her--and the very few people she allows to get close--in grave danger.

Continuing her advocacy work, Damron is partnering with Doors To Freedom, a non-profit that provides safe places for survivors of trafficking. They offer housing, education, treatment, and even vocational opportunities for teens and young adults who have been impacted by this issue. Their vocational program includes a cottage industry that makes cuff bracelets which you can purchase on their website. Damron hopes to promote the organization by selling bracelets at her signings, handing out information at her events, raising money, and donating a portion of her royalties. You can find out more at their website: 


“The Orchid Tattoo”

Carla Damron | September 6, 2022 | Koehler Books | Crime Fiction

Hardcover | $32.95 |978-1-64663-765-2

Paperback | $21.95 |978-1-64663-763-8

  

Carla Damron is a social worker, advocate and author whose last novel, The Stone Necklace (about grief and addiction) won the 2017 Women’s Fiction Writers Association Star Award for Best Novel and was selected as the One Community Read for Columbia SC.  Damron is also the author of the Caleb Knowles mystery novels and has published numerous short stories, essays, and op-eds. Damron holds an MSW and an MFA. Her careers of social worker and writer are intricately intertwined; all of her novels explore social issues like addiction, homelessness, mental illness, and human trafficking. In her spare time, Damron volunteers with the League of Women Voters, Sisters in Crime, Palmetto Chapter (President), her church, and Mutual Aid Midlands.


THE BEAT: Isabelle's Gift Revisits American Idle by Kevin Oliver

One of the Columbia music scene’s most iconic hard rock acts, Isabelle’s Gift, will be celebrating two things this week with its show Friday night at New Brookland Tavern. 2022 marks 30 years since the band’s first live shows, and singer Chris Sutton will turn 50 this week. For those reasons, and more, the band felt it was appropriate to mark the occasion and it has chosen an interesting way to do it– with a set that promises a full performance of the 2006 album American Idle.  

“We hadn’t played much for the past few years, even going into covid,” Admits Sutton, in a recent conversation with him and bassist Jason Carrion in the space where it all began–the former Rockafella’s, now Jake’s Bar & Grill, at 2112 Devine Street. “Everyone was separating, splintered apart, with kids and jobs and other things going on. Also, who wants to see a bunch of dudes our age get up there and play rock and roll?”  

Carrion agreed and noted that the logistics alone were daunting–but when they did convene with the idea to do another show, things clicked naturally. 

“I was very uncertain about where things were going to go–we couldn’t jam, it was a long time to not work on music together,” He says. The turning point came when he and Sutton recruited former Gift member (and current Soda City Riot, Gruzer, and Firenest member Travis Nicholson) and former Throttlerod leader Matt Whitehead.  

“We’ve all been friends for decades,” Carrion notes. “We toured with Throttlerod, Travis was in the band before, Scott (Frey, the drummer for Isabelle’s Gift’s last several years) came from the punk scene with Bedlam Hour. There’s a lot of history there. Chris and I have been playing together longer than most people’s marriages.” 

The addition of Nicholson and Whitehead changed the dynamic in the room and expanded what was possible.
“It’s a room full of gunslingers,” Sutton says. “It was pretty nerve wracking the first time we all practiced together, actually, because it felt like everybody was on their game except me.”

Nicholson is a natural fit, having been in the band before. He and Sutton have remained close over the years, too. 

“He helped write some of the stuff that was on American Idle,” Chris recalls. “Our families are close; our kids have played together for years. With Matt, it has been a bucket list kind of thing for me to play with him ever since our bands toured together.”  

Whitehead has been a revelation of sorts during the process of rehearsing the songs for this show, Sutton admits. 

“Going back and revisiting these songs, I was still writing on guitar for some of them and I feel like I was poorly trying to do what Matt was doing really well right off the bat with Throttlerod. So now, it’s almost like he’s going back in time and fixing everything that I did.” 

It’s important to both Sutton and Carrion to note that although they are playing an entire album of older material, the songs and the band may not sound like fans remember from the recording–and that’s fine with them. 

“It’s a texture that he adds to a lot of the songs,” Carrion says. “He’ll put melodies in places they didn’t exist before.” 

“I told both Matt and Travis that I wanted to make sure the verses were the same, and we kept the hooks, but I wanted them to bring their own feel to everything else,” Sutton says. “There’s no question there will be a difference in the sound, it almost feels like I’m fronting Clutch at times. Plus, I have a bunch of backup vocalists in the band now, which is exciting.” 

Rehearsals have revealed one major problem, Sutton says, and it has to do with how equally excited the entire band seems to be with the proceedings. 

“I’m concerned about keeping our tempos slower,” He admits. “We’re playing these songs in practice like we’re trying to kill somebody with them.” 

Isabelle’s Gift has always been the angry red-faced stepchild of the local scene, railing against mediocrity, hypocrites, traditional society, and more in their music and motifs. American Idle, released through the Jimmy Franks label of the Bloodhound Gang, was a high-water mark for the group, combining the sludgy Soundgarden vibe of their bottom end grooves with a punk fury reminiscent of Charlotte legends Antiseen. Topically, many of the subjects broached are still relevant a decade and a half later, and Sutton says getting reacquainted with how his younger self felt back then was not just surreal, it was affirming of his own life journey. 

“I remember the things I said, and the way I sang, as something I was embarrassed about,” Sutton says. “I realized that not only was I proud of some of the songwriting that was on it, the music is great, and it told a much more intricate story than I remembered–it made me a little more proud of who I was, and I’d forgotten a lot of that.”  

It was the album’s unexpected current relevance that inspired the idea to just perform the whole thing, he says.  

“It was scary how topical it was, and with the exception of maybe one song title and a couple of lyrics it even fits into current events,” Sutton says. “Usually guys our age are going to run into problems about things we said in our past being politically incorrect now, or not in step with some of the things we are defending these days, but it all checked so many weird boxes.  

“Within minutes of me telling the other guys the idea at rehearsal, we were blasting through the album, and I got left in the dust because I didn’t remember as much of the songs as the rest of the band.” 

Ultimately, it all started coming back to him, and in the process of working through the songs again, Sutton says it was a cathartic experience for him. 

“I don’t like to come right out and say some of the things I’m saying in these songs, but it’s unbelievably fitting in today’s political climate,” He admits. “I’ve always dealt with a lot of trauma, I’m lucky to be alive, and I didn’t plan on living this long. Back then I was pretty suicidal and I’m not now. Those are feelings I’ll be working through my entire life. I’m a completely different person than I was back then, but the trauma might even be felt stronger.” 

At this point the biggest question might be how the band’s new chapter might be read by fans old and, possibly, new. Sutton and Carrion both admit they are unsure, but optimistic.

“I don’t how it fits into today’s environment, how people who used to like us may take where we are coming from,” He says. 

“The last time we played a live show was in February, three years ago,” Carrion says. “We played that Ramones tribute show earlier this year, and getting to know those people, and the excitement behind that and other local shows lately, I love seeing the support now.” 

As for American Idle, growing up, and looking back, Sutton has the last, encouraging words for himself–words that might apply to anyone taking stock of their list of accomplishments later in life. 

“It’s so fucking honest, all the way through. I felt like walking up to myself like I was one of my kids and saying, ‘Good for you, you did better than I thought you did…you were honest, and it feels real as shit.’” 

Isabelle’s Gift plays this Friday, July 22nd, at New Brookland Tavern. Shun and the Transonics open the show. Visit www.newbrooklandtavern.com for tickets and more information. 

Welcome New Jasper Project Intern Emily Moffitt

Hello! My name is Emily Moffitt, and I'm an intern for The Jasper Project!

I am a student at the University of South Carolina pursuing a BA in both Studio Art and English. I was raised in an arts inclined household and as such have an affinity for fine arts-particularly music performance and visual arts-so I always search for creative outlets where I can exercise my appreciation and skill.

I've been a flute player since I was 11 and want to pursue a career in either fine arts or illustration, so I wanted to find a means to connect my passions with a third interest: writing and literature. I've had experience with social media outreach and press release marketing but wanted to expand my horizons into something more specialized and in tune with my passions. I'm especially interested in exploring the intersectionality between all facets of fine art and how to properly capture an experience through writing.

Jasper Magazine's mission statement and content align perfectly with my interests, so I'm super excited to experience the internship process with them!

Announcing a new Jasper Project Endeavor -- the Lizelia August Jenkins Moorer Poetry Chapbook Prize for SC BIPOC Poets

In honor of the 20th century poet, Lizelia Augusta Jenkins Moorer, the Jasper Project is delighted to announce a new project, the Lizelia Augusta Jenkins Moorer Poetry Chapbook Prize for SC BIPOC poets.

Lizelia Augusta Jenkins Moorer (1868-1936) was a teacher and social activist in Orangeburg, SC. Born in Pickens, SC, she taught at the Normal and Grammar Schools at Claflin College for 40 years. Her published anthology of poems Prejudice Unveiled and Other Poems (1907) examined the Jim Crow South’s propensity for lynching, racism, and social injustice. Moorer was also an advocate for women’s suffrage in South Carolina, especially in the Methodist Church. 

The purpose of the Lizelia August Jenkins Moorer Prize, affectionately called the Lizelia Prize, is to offer a first-time BIPOC poet from SC a publishing contract with Muddy Ford Press to publish their debut chapbook under the guidance of an established poet. The vision of Dr. Len Lawson, who is a member of the Jasper Project board of directors and the author, editor, or co-editor of four books of poetry, Lawson will also serve as project manager as well as editor of the winner’s chapbook and will collaborate with the winner on the construction of the book.

SC BIPOC poets who have yet to publish a book of poetry are invited to submit 30-40 single spaced numbered pages in Times New Roman 12pt and include a cover sheet with your name and manuscript title. Your name should not appear on the manuscript. The winning submission will receive publication via Muddy Ford Press, a cash prize of $250, and ten author copies of the book. Submissions should be in the form of a Word doc and should be sent to lizeliapoetry@gmail.com no later than February 28th, 2022.

JIM CROW CARS.

by Lizelia Augusta Jenkins Moorer

If within the cruel Southland you have chanced to take a ride,

You the Jim Crow cars have noticed, how they crush a Negro's pride,

How he pays a first class passage and a second class receives,

Gets the worst accommodations ev'ry friend of truth believes.

'Tis the rule that all conductors, in the service of the train,

Practice gross discriminations on the Negro—such is plain—

If a drunkard is a white man, at his mercy Negroes are,

Legalized humiliation is the Negro Jim Crow car.

'Tis a license given white men, they may go just where they please,

In the white man's car or Negro's will they move with perfect ease,

If complaint is made by Negroes the conductor will go out

Till the whites are through carousing, then he shows himself about.

 

They will often raise a riot, butcher up the Negroes there,

Unmolested will they quarrel, use their pistols,rant and swear,

They will smoke among the ladies though offensive the cigar;

'Tis the place to drink their whiskey, in the Negro Jim Crow car.

If a Negro shows resistance to his treatment by a tough,

At some station he's arrested for the same, though not enough,

He is thrashed or lynched or tortured as will please the demon's rage,

Mobbed, of course, by "unknown parties," thus is closed the darkened page.

If a lunatic is carried, white or black, it is the same,

Or a criminal is taken to the prison-house in shame,

In the Negro car he's ushered with the sheriff at his side,

Out of deference for white men in their car he scorns to ride.

 

We despise a Negro's manhood, says the Southland, and expect,

All supremacy for white men—black men's rights we'll not protect,

This the Negro bears with patience for the nation bows to might,

Wrong has borne aloft its colors disregarding what is right.

This is called a Christian nation, but we fail to understand,

How the teachings of the Bible can with such a system band;

Purest love that knows no evil can alone the story tell,

How to banish such abuses, how to treat a neighbor well.

Raena Shirali will be serving as the adjudicator for the Lizelia Prize.

Raena Shirali is a poet, editor, and educator from Charleston, South Carolina. Her first book, GILT (YesYes Books, 2017), won the 2018 Milt Kessler Poetry Book Award, and her forthcoming collection, summonings, won the 2021 Black Lawrence Press Hudson Prize. Winner of a Pushcart Prize & a former Philip Roth Resident at Bucknell University, Shirali is also the recipient of prizes and honors from VIDA, Gulf Coast, Boston Review, & Cosmonauts Avenue. She holds an MFA in Poetry from The Ohio State University Shirali and is an Assistant Professor of English at Holy Family University, where she serves as Faculty Advisor for Folio—a literary magazine dedicated to publishing works by undergraduate students at the national level. Her work has appeared in American Poetry Review, Academy of American Poets’ Poem-A Day, The Nation, The Rumpus, & elsewhere.

Columbia Conservatory of Jazz Alum Ashley Green Wins Princess Grace Award & Signs with Alvin Ailey Dance

My soul feels like it leaves my body sometimes and yet I have chills from my head to my toe. — Ashley Green

Columbia is home to a plethora of artists who put their all into their work. One of these passionate communities, rife with those reaching for the stars, is the dance community. Ashley Green, 23, grew up in Charleston, South Carolina, before moving to dance in Seattle and New York.  

Some of Green’s first serious studies were with Columbia’s Dale Lam, who fondly recalls their moments together: “Les and I would drive her halfway home to meet her mom, who would pick her up and take her on home.”

 

Jasper had the chance to talk with Green about her recent accomplishments, such as winning a Princess Grace Award and joining dance company Alvin Ailey.

 

JASPER: Was dancing an early love for you, or something you fell in love with over time? 

GREEN: When I was younger and first starting dance, I actually didn’t like it that much. But then around nine, it became everything. I would never want to leave the studio. I would stay until 10 o'clock at night. Sometimes I wouldn't even be dancing but would love just being there late.

 

JASPER: And you danced in Charleston and Columbia, right? Did you go to school for it as well? 

GREEN: Around 13 I started coming to the Columbia City Jazz Conservatory to dance with Dale Lam. My initial objective after graduating high school was to move to New York or LA, but I spent half a summer in LA and realized I didn’t want to be there. I knew I had to go to school, then, and I chose Point Park University in Pittsburgh, where I studied dance.

 

JASPER: Was there a turning point with dance where you knew, “I want this to be my life." 

GREEN: Realistically, the time I fully knew would've been college. One day I realized, this is actual work, actual, actual work. This is trauma coming to the surface. This is work with no pay, with mental health issues here to stay. And I just didn’t know. But then one day I went into the studio by myself, and I was just dancing, and I was like, ‘wow, I want to do this forever.’

 

JASPER: How would you verbalize the feelings that accompany you when you dance? 

ASHLEY: When it feels really good, it feels very orgasmic. My soul feels like it leaves my body sometimes and yet I have chills from my head to my toes. And I think that's what keeps me…it feels like a drug, like I'm fiending for it at all times. Even when I hate it, I'll come home after work and I'm like, "I need that feeling." So, I'll just go dance in my living room.

 

JASPER: And you chased that feeling to Whim W’Him in Seattle, right? What went into the decision to go and then leave there? 

GREEN: My whole gist of everything is that I want to inspire younger generations. And with Whim W'Him, I could have done that, but it's different because everyone in the company was white-facing or of Asian descent...which was beautiful and great, but I don't think that for who I wanted to reach, I could ever reach them there. Seattle is very white as well, and while I love Seattle, and I love that company, I wanted to broaden my brand—dare I say—and broaden who I reach.

 

JASPER: How did you choose Alvin Ailey as your place to go? 

GREEN: They called me one day because they were looking for new people. Somebody, maybe a friend, suggested me to the director, and then from there, I got into the company. I didn't audition or anything—I think they couldn't have an audition because of New York's COVID protocol. But I wasn't seeking it. It kind of fell in my lap.

 

JASPER: And it was around this same time, this year, that you won the Princess Grace Award, right? Can you tell me about it? 

GREEN: My director in Seattle told me they were going to nominate me in February, and I was like, okay, I'm 23, I don't know how that's going to work out because I'm so young. It's very competitive and prestigious. But Princess Grace has always been a goal of mine—I just thought it wouldn't happen until I was like 27, 28. I honestly forgot I applied, and the lady called me a good ten times before I finally answered, and when she told me I won, I couldn’t believe it. Twenty-three has been a year of successes for me, and I just feel so lucky.

 

JASPER: So, what does a day in the life of Ashley Green the award-winning dancer look like? 

GREEN: Well, usually, I wake up at like 8:00/8:30. My fittings are usually at 9:00, and then from the fitting I go to ballet class. From class, I go to rehearsal until 7:00, and then I come home and try to stir up some courage to dance in my living room because that saves me. You know, let me settle down from this long day and be with myself.

JASPER: Do you have a favorite style or styles you return to, especially when you dance for yourself? 

GREEN: I think contemporary is my favorite, but maybe because it's the best I can do. What I have the most fun doing is hip hop. I just don’t do it very often. I really like them all, but hip hop is my favorite one and contemporary is the one I'm good at.

 

JASPER: Do you have ideas for your career post-twenty-three? 

GREEN: If God is willing, I really would love to move to Europe. I want to dabble in literally everything that I can before it's too late, but I'm just kind of on the ride. Honestly, the goals that I’m accomplishing here right now are my goals that I had for myself at like thirty. Something that I really want to do is own my own dance company. Eventually. And if I didn't, I think I would love to start a community facility for young girls, a mentorship program so that they could feel like they're supported with professional dancers behind their back.

 

JASPER: In your career so far, have you had any moments that stand out? 

GREEN: I have one. It was my second semester of college, and I was doing a Garfield Lemonius piece, and I connected to it on such a deep level. I was in this moment of time where I felt like I was really stepping into my own artistically and with my body, and I remember being on stage and–literally–I could see clouds, and it felt like angels were singing to me while I was doing this dance…even talking about it, I get chills because I felt the winds on me. And that's the most memorable moment I have as a dancer. And my parents had surprised me and were in the audience, and I didn’t know it!

 

JASPER: It sounds like your parents have been extremely supportive. 

GREEN: They sacrificed so much for me. Truly and honestly, I would not be here without them and their sacrifice, always being such a crucial support system that I have needed throughout my life and moving through the process of adulthood and finding myself.

 

JASPER: On the note of finding yourself, earlier you discussed dancing amongst white-facing and Asian dancers; would you mind speaking about your journey as a Black dancer? 

GREEN: I think it's hard sometimes for me to speak on the topic because I was lucky enough to be a very talented Black dancer, so I got treated differently. Granted, yes, there are microaggressions at all times because I am a Black woman in a white space. But it's like...this is why I'm in these spaces. If there's a white space, I'm going to enter it. It might put me in danger mentally, but it's showing we need representation in each spot. Because how can you evolve with no culture? And I think this is also why I need to step out eventually to another space, like interjecting space for Black dancers in European spaces so that kids here or there who are Black feel like they can enter these spaces confidently.

 

You can follow along Ashley’s journey as she creates these spaces on her Instagram @awagreen98.

By Christina Xan

 

Chad Henderson Moves to SC Philharmonic

PRESS RELEASE

SOUTH CAROLINA PHILHARMONIC

Chad Henderson

Chad Henderson

 

COLUMBIA, S.C. – The South Carolina Philharmonic welcomes Chad Henderson as the new Marketing and Communications Director. The position, recently held by Kristin Morris, will be filled by the recent Executive Director of Trustus Theatre who resigned from Trustus on July 29, 2021. SC Philharmonic Executive Director Rhonda Hunsinger announced the hiring of Henderson on August 9, 2021, and Henderson’s first day with the SC Philharmonic will be August 16, 2021. 

Henderson, a native of Spartanburg, SC, came to Columbia in 2003 as a student of the South Carolina Honors College. He started his studies at the university as an aspiring professional percussionist at the school of music with a minor in advertising. He later transitioned to a major in advertising and a minor in theatre. Henderson served as Trustus Theatre’s Marketing Director for eight years starting in 2007, was Artistic Director for 5 years, and the organization’s Executive Director throughout the past year - which included the theatre’s closure due to the pandemic and its return to live performance. With 14 years of experience promoting nonprofit arts programming in Columbia, Henderson is excited to join the SC Philharmonic team as they launch their 2021/2022 concert season with live and virtual performances.  

South Carolina Philharmonic Executive Director Rhonda Hunsinger expressed her excitement to welcome Henderson to the team after receiving his application for the position earlier in July 2021. “I have known Chad since his early days at Trustus and have always admired his creative drive and commitment to the arts in Columbia,” said Hunsinger. “As colleagues we have often turned to each other for guidance, and I am delighted that we can now work together to advance the mission of the South Carolina Philharmonic!” 

Henderson’s passion for music, experience in promoting events in Columbia, and his desire to work for an established team of professionals makes him a winning fit for the Marketing and Communications Director position at the South Carolina Philharmonic. “I am a longtime fan of the South Carolina Philharmonic and its programming, and am thrilled to have the opportunity to join their team,” said Henderson. “The leadership at the South Carolina Philharmonic has an amazing track record and tenure, and the Board of Directors has been exemplary in it support of the staff and moving the organization forward. I had the pleasure of talking with various members of the Philharmonic’s artistic family over the past few weeks, and I am so delighted to be able to work for this amazing arts organization.” Henderson intimated that he considered applying for the position when it became available in 2018, but is so grateful to have the Opportunity in 2021.

 SC Philharmonic Mission: The South Carolina Philharmonic is committed to performing live symphonic music and providing dynamic educational opportunities in the Midlands. We carry forward a legacy of passion for the music and embrace our responsibility to be a vibrant part of the cultural fabric of our diverse community.

Jasper Galleries Presents New Gallery Space at McDonnell & Associates with Exhibition By Lauren Chapman and Pam Bowers

The exhibition opens on Thursday, June 24th

reception from 6 - 8 pm

McDonnell and Associates

2442 Devine Street - Columbia

The event is free and the public is invited to attend.

Lauren Chapman and Pam Bowers

Lauren Chapman and Pam Bowers

The Jasper Project is excited to announce a new gallery space for local artists at McDonnell and Associates law firm, 2442 Devine Street, in Columbia. We’ll be opening the gallery with an exhibition of work by Lauren Chapman and Pam Bowers. Reception is Thursday night (TONIGHT!) from 6-8 pm.

This collaboration with McDonnell and Associates came about when the organization reached out to Jasper and asked if we could help them find artists who would exhibit their work in the law office lobby and conference rooms. Of course, Jasper jumped at the opportunity to help fine art make its way into the homes of art lovers and we immediately booked Lauren Chapman, who we had previously worked with in our gallery at Motor Supply, and Pam Bowers, who previously taught Chapman at the University of SC.

The women’s relationship began as that of mentor and protege but developed into a close collegial friendship.

A native of Tulsa, Oklahoma, Chapman received her BFA in Painting at the University of South Carolina and has been awarded the Scholastic Art & Writing Gold Key Award for excellence in Visual Arts, the Yaghjian Studio arts scholarship at USC, and the 2018 Artfields Solo Award Exhibition at Jones-Carter Gallery. She has been featured in Garnet and Black, Daily Gamecocks, The State, Free Times, Susie Magazine, and Jasper Magazine. She has lectured for classes at USC, SC State University, and spent a summer residency in Monte Castello, Italy. Exhibitions include group shows in Italy, New York, South Carolina and solo shows in Iowa and South Carolina. 

Chapman says, “I create immersive environments via vibrant thick textured romantic paintings telling short stories, in the forms of fables, folklore, and fairy tales challenging our current cultural climate through the eyes of feminine figures and personified creatures. The narrative of the work promote lessons from my personal experiences and question dangerous themes within American society.”

Artist - Lauren Chapman

Artist - Lauren Chapman

Bowers, who earned a BFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and an MFA from Indiana University-Bloomington, has a distinguished career as an artist and an educator that has taken her all over the world for lectures, residencies, unique academic opportunities, and pleasure, including China, Hungary, and throughout Italy. Her work is in many private collections both in the US and internationally from Morocco to Greece.

According to her artist’s statement, “Bowers work explores nature as a connecting force in the intersection of art, science and mythology and express her affection for the wilderness and biological forms. There is an emphasis in her work, teaching and research on the interrelationship between environment, culture and individual material usage in the formation of visual meaning and metaphor.”

Artist - Pam Bowers

Artist - Pam Bowers

Meet Jasper's New Intern - Stephanie Allen!

Hi, I'm Stephanie, one of the interns for the Jasper Project! I'm currently pursuing a BA in English and a BFA in Studio Art at the University of South Carolina Honors College. While my technical focus is drawing, my work is extended to include painting, mixed media, and some printmaking. My practice and upcoming thesis work focus on artistically reclaiming and redefining the female form.

As a writer, I've spent the past several years focusing on editorial content for the student newspaper (the last year and a half of which I served as opinion editor) but I’ve also dabbled in arts reporting and radio.

As I begin working with Jasper, I look forward to engaging with its mission as both a writer and an artist. I am excited to see how these two passions merge over the next several months.

Columbia Poets Al Black and Randy Spencer Featured in Piccolo Spoleto’s Sundown Poetry Series

Al Black and Randy Spencer are effervescent poets, speakers who refuse to hold back or look away from what asks to be gazed upon. In their work, readers are taken on a journey of intertwining rivers where you learn about their histories, intimate parts of yourself, and the spaces and places in which we dwell. Keep reading to learn more about Piccolo Spoleto’s Sundown Poetry Series and Black and Spencer—and discover two poems from the artists. 

Former Charleston Mayor Joe Riley launched Piccolo Spoleto in 1979, two years after Italian composer Gian Carlo Menotti founded Spoleto Festival USA. Piccolo, alluding to the smallest woodwind and thus the smaller festival within the larger Spoleto, has reflected the City of Charleston’s desire to showcase local art and artists. 

The Sundown Poetry Series is one of the oldest events in Piccolo history, with the goal of featuring a select number of local poets. The current selection committee consists of Ed Gold, Katherine Williams, and Curtis Derrick. According to Derrick, the application process for poets parallels the process for all Piccolo Spoleto artists and is based on a submission of work. At times, however, the selection committee directly invites applications from poets who have “achieved particular notoriety or had recent book publications.”  

The original venue for the Sundown Series was the courtyard at the Dock Street Theater—so drama patrons could enjoy poetry as an art “appetizer” before a performance—but this year Sundown is being held in the Lenhardt Garden of the Gibbes Museum of Art to accommodate more efficient social distancing. 

Eight poets are being featured this year, one per evening, in the following order: Al Black, Valerie Nieman, H.R. “Randy” Spencer, Lola Haskins, Dr. David B. Axelrod, Kwoya Fagin Maples, Grace C. Ocasio, and Ren Ruggiero—two of the poets, Black and Spencer, are Columbia-based. 

Al Black has published two poetry collections: I Only Left for Tea (2014) and Man with Two Shadows (2018), both with Muddy Ford Press. He co-edited Hand in Hand, Poets Respond to Race (2017) and has been published in several anthologies, journals, periodicals, and blogs. He hosts various arts events, co-founded the Poets Respond to Race Initiative, and was Jasper Project’s 2017 Literary Artist of the Year. 

Black expresses anticipation for the reading—while often not the type to seek out readings and more so the one to host them, he deeply enjoys being a part of them. Derrick reached out to Black in 2019 and asked if he would be interested in reading for Sundown, and Black accepted and was slated for 2020, but when the festival was cancelled due to COVID-19, the poets were moved to 2021. 

Spencer was also originally slated to read in 2020 and is looking forward to reading this week. H.R. “Randy” Spencer is the author of several chapbooks, and his first full collection, The Color After Green, was published in 2019 by Finishing Line Press. As stated on Piccolo Spoleto’s Facebook, “Recently featured on SCETV’s By the River, this collection of contemporary nature poems is both personal and reaches for larger concerns around climate and ecological changes, sometimes set in the South Carolina Lowcountry.”

Spencer previously read as part of the Sundown Series in 2012 and had such a positive experience that, after the required waiting period between reapplying, he immediately applied to read again. “I don’t do many readings, and my favorite are small groups where we can sit and talk,” he divulges, “I’m looking forward to sharing my work with whoever comes.”   

Spencer says that he will start off the reading with poems from his collection but will mix up what he reads to fit this event. “I change it up due to where I am,” he shares, “Since it’s in Charleston, I’ll do more poems that have to do with the coast and the low country and traveling.”  

He will also read outside the book, reading some books from a chapbook of poems about the COVID-19 pandemic. He also recently wrote a poem in the Gullah language as a means to preserve and honor the lyrical language, and he hopes to read it during the event as well. 

Black also likes to switch readings up based on where he is performing. He will have the time it takes to read a work at the top of each poem’s page to ensure he fits within the time limit—each reading is approximately 40-45 minutes with time for a Q&A after. 

“I never have a set list of poems to read—I’ll have 2-3 poems in my head that I might open the night with, but I’ll walk in and try to get a feel for the night,” Black intimates, “based on people’s reactions I may end up reading a poem I’ve never read before.” 

Black intends to start “edgy,” potentially touching on racism and/or women’s issues. He will likely start with his first book (I Only Left for Tea), then move to the book about his father (Man with Two Shadows), then various publications, then a book about his mother—which he is currently prepping for publication—before ending with new work. 

Both Spencer and Black look forward to sharing work new and old in a fresh space. In that vein, both poets have offered a poem for the audiences of this blog. Spencer’s poem is from The Color After Green, and he feels it is a companion piece to the Gullah poem he may read at the event. Black’s poem is a recent one he was compelled to write after watching an ad card fall from a magazine.

Al.png

Beatitudes

 

Blessed is the morning.

Blessed is the coffee.

Blessed is the sun before the rain.

Blessed are the birds

that dampen traffic noise.

Blessed is the train that wails

and the siren song that fades.

Blessed is the drone of the plane that stays aloft.

Blessed are the dog walkers, the couples,

the skateboarders, the bike riders,

the joggers, the mommies pushing strollers,

and the daddies carrying daughters on shoulders.

Blessed are the lonely.

Blessed is the greening tree.

Blessed are the flowers that grow wild.

Blessed is the broken fence rail

I step over to enter the park.

Blessed is the cat that chases the squirrel

and the dog that scares the cat.

Blessed is the silent leaf blower

when the neighbor takes a break.

Blessed is the moss that fills

the empty spaces with color.

Blessed is the blue recycling bin

that sits outside our kitchen door.

Blessed is the card stock magazine ad

that falls at my feet

for it shall become a bookmark.

 

—     Al Black, 2021

 

Randy Spencer.png

Wind

                        September 23, 1989:

 

I can still feel it. The wind last night

sucked the breath out of me, flung it screaming

over the live oak and limbless pine.

Then the water swelling, some deep voice

sliding up to us, a dark face, its white woolen beard

spilling over us, straining the ballast

that kept our house rooted like a stiff barnacle

to some tether in the sand

My ears still roar like a seashell.

 

The ominous calm coming next. That calm

without even the random rustle of life,

birds appearing, silent in the dead air.

When the eye came, I walked outside.

There was a hole straight up

through all that darkness, like a tunnel,

starlight like pinhole punctures in a black screen.

I could barely see the pines, stunted, still straight,

but snapped off midway up, all clipped

the same height, bodiless legs

left planted in clay boots. I could see

cuts opened up in hardwoods, limbs broken

from live oaks, shrubs uprooted, scattered, terrifying.

 

It came back worse than before,

blowing oppositely, humming its tune

differently over the stringed forest. Inside,

when I could fall sleep I dreamed my ankle

braceletted by a whirl of rope leaping overboard

after an anchor, dragging me after it,

dreams of fish flying, their silver pancaked scales

covering my eyes, cutting into me like razors.

 

Then, this morning. Coming out

seeing sailboats piled like cordwood,

battered and strewn over the marsh,

masts stepped vertically yesterday

laying over now, angled north

as if they were still carrying sail,

reduced to sundials marking shadows in the morning sun,

birds blown north, vagrants, wounded, dazed,

Shells everywhere, freshly gutted open,

still slick with gristle or beaten white

and smooth, broken on some rock,

then carried inland, a whelk settled in a cowshed,

a purplish clam in a seaside garden

where chrysanthemums should be in bloom,

with my neighbors empty house half lifted

from its foundation and nesting in spartina grass,

on an ordinary autumn day

               with bright sunshine, mild sea breezes, soft breakers.

 

—    H.R. Spencer, from The Color After Green (in reference to Hurricane Hugo)

If you’re interested in potentially hearing these poems out loud and in hearing more from these poets, both readings occur in the coming days in Charleston. Black opens the Sundown Series tomorrow, June 1st, and Spencer reads Thursday, June 3rd. Both events begin at 6:30pm.  

Spencer’s collection can be purchased at larger retailers or directly from the publishing house, Finishing Line Press: https://www.finishinglinepress.com/product/the-color-after-green-by-h-r-spencer/  

Black’s books can also be purchased at larger retailers or the publishing house, Muddy Ford Press: https://www.amazon.com/Man-Two-Shadows-Al-Black/dp/1942081162

-Christina Xan

Welcome New JASPER PROJECT Board Members - PREACH JACOBS & LEN LAWSON!

We are delighted to welcome two new members to the Jasper Project Board of Directors!

Preach.jpg

Preach Jacobs is a hip-hop artist, writer, SC Press Association Award Winner, and Cola-Con founder, the nation's only hip-hop/comic convention. His music has been featured on NPR and Okayplayer. He has a podcast, 'The Negro League' on his Mo' Betta Soul network that includes event programming in the southeast. His latest column is currently in the Columbia weekly Free-Times titled "Fight the Power," speaking about hip-hop, politics, and social awareness.

Len Lawson is the author of Chime (Get Fresh Books, 2019) and the chapbook Before the Night Wakes You (Finishing Line Press, 2017). He is also co-editor of Hand in Hand: Poets Respond to Race (Muddy Ford Press, 2017) and The Future of Black: Afrofuturism and Black Comics Poetry (Blair Press, 2021). Among his accolades, he won the 2016 Jasper Artist of the Year Award in Literary Arts, the 2018 NC Poetry Society Susan Laughter Meyers Fellowship in Poetry, and the 2020 SC Academy of Authors Carrie McCrary Nickens Fellowship in Poetry. He has received fellowships from Tin House Summer Workshop, Palm Beach Poetry Festival, Callaloo, Vermont Studio Center, and Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, among others. In 2021, Len will complete a PhD in English Literature and Criticism from Indiana University of Pennsylvania and will begin as Assistant Professor of English at Newberry College. 

While we welcome Len and Preach we sadly say goodbye to Raia Hirsch who served us as our attorney on board for two years. Thank you Raia for all your hard work and devotion.

Gina Langston Brewer Expands Her Popular Tiny Gallery Show Incohesive, A Collection Rife With the Importance of Creation

“Mostly I create out of a need to process my emotions about the world around me.” 

Tiny Gallery Featured Artist Gina Langston Brewer

Tiny Gallery Featured Artist Gina Langston Brewer

We are halfway through our November Tiny Gallery with Gina Langston Brewer, a local multi-media artist. We’ve been overwhelmed by the love towards the show so far—in just the first 24 hours, nearly 50% of her show, Incohesive, sold out. 

Brewer was a self-proclaimed “army brat” towards the beginning of her life, but she spent most of her formative years in West Columbia. Her family home was filled with art, but the idea of having a career as an artist never presented itself as an option. 

Regardless, Brewer found herself continually inspired by her Grandmother Langston, a multi-media artist herself, who worked with themes surrounding nature, flowers, and the ocean. 

“She made art out of everything. My dad was a contractor and brought her scraps of wood, that he beveled, to paint on,” Brewer recalls, “She gave me a love and appreciation for art, nature, and using what you have available to you.” 

However, when Brewer first ventured to Winthrop University, she wasn’t planning on going down the same path–her eyes instead set on teaching. Then, she started taking art classes as electives, and before long, she graduated with a B.A. in Art. 

“Though I have taken college courses, I feel somewhere between a fine and a folk artist,” Brewer ruminates, “Mostly I create out of a need to process my emotions about the world around me.” 

White Wash by Gina Langston Brewer

White Wash by Gina Langston Brewer

Like her grandmother, Brewer works with the materials that are closest to her in the moment. “I will, can, and have worked in most mediums, yet I mostly work with acrylic paints,” Brewer shares, “I have also been working on several copper wire sculptures, recycled lightbulb/cork insects, wood assemblages, and altered books.” 

Within these various creations, Brewer seems to often return to one dominant theme: the female form. “Mother and child, Life, the creators of life,” Brewer intimates, “I have always painted voluptuous women, body positive, having always been quite zaftig, myself.”

Orange Recline by Gina Langston Brewer

Orange Recline by Gina Langston Brewer

Brewer also reflects on how her art is a powerful tool of distraction in the time of COVID and worrisome news updates pervasive across multiple channels. This collection stems from both Brewer’s standing loves and these new emotions. 

“I told a friend when I had my next show it would be called Incohesive, because my work has just been all over the place,” Brewer remarks, “I've chosen mostly smaller recent works and a few pieces just to show the spectrum of what I've been up to.”  

Two of Brewer’s pieces are COVID Collaborations that she started with Kristine Hartvigsen just before lockdown, who wrote Brewer’s artist bio and statement for the show. Brewer also has featured a handful of her new recycled insect experiments, and ruminations on the female pervade the show.

Cork Toggle Fly by Gina Langston Brewer

Cork Toggle Fly by Gina Langston Brewer

As mentioned earlier, the show has been largely popular, and upon bathing in her gratefulness, Brewer has made an exciting decision: she will be adding a handful of new pieces to the show.  

“Being a part of [this show] has, in a way, reinvigorated my interest in being a part of the art ‘world,’” Brewer admits, “The past four years, I have shut down with my engagement and the art community—I'm very thankful for this opportunity and for the patrons of this incredible venue.” 

Throughout this week, on the Jasper Project social medias, we will be announcing and showing some of the new pieces Brewer has chosen to add to her gallery. While an inconhesion, all these pieces come together to tell a story: about femininity, about life, and about survival.  

“I never really plan what I am about to create. All that I know is that I must.” 

 

Mermaid Dance by Gina Langston Brewer

Mermaid Dance by Gina Langston Brewer

Gina Langston Brewer’s Tiny Gallery show runs through November 30th on the Jasper website and is the perfect opportunity to support local art and get your special someone an irreplaceable gift for the holidays.

 

Be sure to follow Brewer’s Instagram @metamorphosisters for updates on her art during and after the show.

By Christina Xan

Jasper Project Finds New Home at 1013 Co-Op - More Details from Lee Snelgrove & One Columbia

Jasper Project board of directors members Laura Garner Hine (far left) and Al Black (far right) join board president Wade Sellers and ED Cindi Boiter at the new Jasper Project home

Jasper Project board of directors members Laura Garner Hine (far left) and Al Black (far right) join board president Wade Sellers and ED Cindi Boiter at the new Jasper Project home

Homeless since the closing of the Tapp’s Arts Center on Main Street last winter, the Jasper Project finally has a place to hang its hat at the newly formed 1013 Co-Op at 1013 Duke Avenue in the old Indie Grits Lab building.

The Jasper Project will share upstairs office space in the house along with the Columbia Children’s Theatre and The Magic Purple Circle, presented by artist and storyteller Darion McCloud. One Columbia for Arts and Culture will manage the co-op space which includes a downstairs with two rooms large enough for salons, readings, and meetings, as well as a kitchen and a central stairwell. But at Jasper, we are most excited about the many ways we look forward to using the large backyard such as presenting film screenings, concerts, and outdoor stage presentations and readings.

Jasper is indebted to Lee Snelgrove, Jemimah Ekah, and One Columbia Arts and Culture for inviting Jasper to join the co-op. We contacted Snelgrove and asked him to share a few more details about the Co-Op and how the arrangement will work.

JASPER: How long has this plan been in the works?

SNELGROVE: The development of the 1013 Co-Op has been discussed by the Board of One Columbia since about April or May. When Indie Grits decided to move out of the space, they contacted me to suggest that we might look into taking over the house. They had put in a lot of work into creating a cultural space in North Columbia and they were concerned that their efforts would be redirected to non-arts purposes. Because of our concern that a cultural space would be lost, we started talks with Lenoir-Rhyne, the property owner, around that time to discuss the terms of the lease and to develop a suitable arrangement that would work. Once it seemed like a viable project that could be reasonably managed with One Columbia's existing resources, we started to reach out to potential partner organizations to make it a reality. 

JASPER: How were the organizations involved chosen?

SNELGROVE: One Columbia contacted many of the organizations that already utilize office and administrative resources that One Columbia offers. We also talked to potential partners that we knew were interested in working with communities in the North Columbia area. From these conversations it was the Columbia Children's Theatre, the Magic Purple Circle and the Jasper Project that elected to partner and join the mission of the 1013 Co-Op. 

JASPER: What do you expect/hope for out of this arrangement?

SNELGROVE: The goals for this cultural space and the partnerships with the three organizations align with some of the recommendations of the Amplify cultural plan. We expect that this arrangement will lead to better access for citizens in the North Columbia communities to cultural experiences and participation in the arts, as well as additional space that supports the work of Columbia's artists. We want to work directly with neighborhoods to identify their cultural resources and help them create plans that facilitate more cultural participation. And, we want this space to showcase how a community arts space with strong partnerships among community organizations can become a vital and vibrant destination. 

JASPER: Can you please tell us more about how the Co-Op will operate in terms of rent, OC's role in managing the space and subsidizing the extra costs, etc.

SNELGROVE: The 1013 Co-Op is structured as a partnership among four organizations that share the different kinds of costs of maintaining a cultural space. One Columbia is the lead organization responsible for the lease, communication with the property owner, and the day-to-day administration of the facility, but all of the organizations share both financial and labor responsibilities to keep the space operational. Each organization provides a monthly amount to cover expenses like rent and power and each organization will put in a number of volunteer hours to support the work of their partner organizations and to the functioning of the entire space. We've developed a structure that we hope will provide the flexibility that some arts organizations need by not requiring time commitments and keeping the costs low. It's very likely that partnerships will develop and change over time and partner organizations will come into the space or depart as is appropriate for them to carry out their own missions and/or to support the overall mission of the 1013 Co-Op. 

Thanks, Lee!

The Jasper Project is already developing plans for a community liaison committee, a neighborhood editor for Jasper Magazine, and a monthly Saturday or Sunday afternoon neighborhood picnic with poetry readings and open mic opportunities. But, like the rest of the world, all we can do now is sit on our hands and make plans for when the pandemic lifts and we can safely do our thing.

And we are always looking for volunteers. Please reach out if you’d like to get involved.

WELCOME to our new space!

WELCOME to our new space!

Announcing the 2019 Finalists for JASPER ARTISTS OF THE YEAR!

Each year since 2011, Jasper has taken the opportunity to highlight some of the artists from our community who have had particularly good years.

We do this by asking you, our readers and patrons, to nominate potential candidates and let us know what made their years so good. Then we take all the info you share with us to a panel of experts and ask them to select the top three candidates in each discipline as our finalists.

Check out the

2019 Jasper Artists of the Year Finalists

and find the link below to cast your vote.

(SC voters only, please!)

Then join us on

Friday, January 31st at 7:30 at

The White Mule

to celebrate finalists and winners at the

JAY Awards Ceremony and Mardi Gras Ball!

~~~~~~~~~

CONGRATULATIONS TO THE 2019 JAY FINALISTS!

JAYs1.png

~~ VISUAL ARTS ~~

MICHAEL KRAJEWSKI

MICHAEL KRAJEWSKI

Krajewski participated in Collectively Supported Art (CSA) #2 @ F.O.M.: a sold out live painting show, as well as presenting live painting at the State Street Art Crawl (x2) in West Columbia and at Columbia Green. He designed the 2019 Derby Day official poster art and created the cover art for the book, What's Left Between Us by Gina Heron. He designed and created the art for Black Rooster (permanent art installation filling restaurant walls); designed and created art for drums at West Columbia Interactive Art Park; and worked on the art and props for THE MUSE which was the winner of the Audience Award at the 2019 2nd Act Film Project). He created art for Columbia City Ballet ballet shoe art (donation for gala / fundraising); Time for Art (COR), painting (donation for gala / fundraising), and served as an art teacher for summer camps and adult classes at Columbia Art Center. His shows included (Private show) 701 Lofts with Preach Jacobs, Jasper Street Gallery at the Meridian Building, Motor Supply, Jasper Tiny Art Gallery, Southern Exposure Series at UofSC, Anastasia and Friends, and Figure Out.

CHRISTOPHER LANE

CHRISTOPHER LANE

Lane was juried into group exhibitions, including the SC State Museum 30th Anniversary where he was asked to create a work of art live on the last day of the exhibition during a special event called Art Day, Piccolo Spoleto at City Gallery in Charleston, and A Sense of Place 39th Annual National Juried Exhibition at Gertrude Herbert Institute of Art in Augusta, Georgia. He was also invited and participated in Last First at Anastasia & Friends in Columbia. Lane’s most meaningful accomplishment was the creation of his solo exhibition, Resist Division, a reflection of his concern that our nation is being divided by rhetoric and propaganda and his desire to advocate for unity and inclusion. He debuted this exhibition in his hometown of West Columbia at Frame of Mind where he also held Collectively Supported Art #7, a sold-out live painting show, and then took it to the Washington DC area to Kyo Gallery in Old Town, Alexandria, Virginia. He also shared a portion of this exhibition titled Resist and Preserve at Harbison Theatre at Midlands Tech.  Lane also had a solo show at Jasper Tiny Gallery at Tapp’s Art Center and created small pieces that tied in to his Resist Division exhibition. While participating in these group and solo exhibitions, Lane continued to create and completed an additional 33 works of art during this time.

OLGA YUKHNO

OLGA YUKHNO

Yukhno’s solo exhibitions included 24 Hours at the Tapp’s Arts Center, Southern Exposure at the University of South Carolina, and Beneath the Surface at Francis Marion University. Her Invitational Exhibitions included Around the World, Artfields Extended, Last First at Anastasia and Friends, Alternative Storytellers, The Language of Clay, and the Time for Art Gala. Her Juried Shows included Artfields, Trenholm Artists Guild Juried Show, and CCAL 24th Annual Juried Show. Her Group Shows included the TAG Art Showcase, Open Studios Exhibition, Palmetto Fine Arts Spring Show, Generations, and Strengthening Practice. Among her Awards are 1st Place/ Professional, SC State Fair/ Fine Art Exhibition, People’s Choice Award, Sail into Chapin, and 3rd Place, CCAL 24th Annual Juried Show, Chapin, SC. She was also invited to be one of 12 visual artists creating place-settings for the Jasper Project’s Supper Table project. She participated in residencies at Stormwater Studios and Tapp’s Arts Center, and gave Artist Talks at Stormwater Studios/UofSC, Penland School of Craft, SC State Library/ Commission for the Blind, Artfields at Lake City, SC, the Midlands Clay Arts Society, and the University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC.                                               

~~ THEATRE ~~

KEVIN BUSH

KEVIN BUSH

Bush performed as Jacob Marley in Jacob Marley's Christmas Carol (Trustus); Performed as Larry in Montgomery (Trustus Playwright's Festival Winner); as David in Company (Trustus); and offered a number of various singing performances with the "Columbia Rat Pack" and singing performances at Villa Tronco. He is also the “town crier for UofSC Theatre and Dance... those bushes constantly need beating.”

BRITTANY HAMMOCK

BRITTANY HAMMOCK

Hammock was a Featured Performer in Trustus Theatre’s Love is Love Cabaret, she portrayed the alluring 1920s Golf Pro, Jordan Baker, in The Great Gatsby at Trustus Theatre, the villainous high school Queen Bee, Heather Chandler, in Heathers the musical at Trustus, and Amy, the neurotic bride-to-be, in Company the musical also at Trustus.

LEN MANN MARINI

LEN MANN MARINI

In the indie film SHED, Marini played the sheriff and in the indie film AZRAEL, she played a cat loving gun dealer, both of which were directed by David Axe, who is also nominated as Jasper Artist of the Year 2019 in Film. And in the Trustus play Marjorie Prime, she played the Lead role.

~~ MUSIC ~~

ROBERT GARDINER

ROBERT GARDINER

Gardiner is professor of Music at Lander University. As the founder and artistic director of the SC Jazz Masterworks Ensemble his performances include Wycliffe Gordon Swings and Chris Potter Plays the Great American Songbook with the SC Jazz Masterworks Ensemble at the Newberry Opera House, Carolina Shout and Art of the Big Band at Harbison Theatre, Kenny Barron at W. Hootie Johnson Hall, and Big Band Holidays at the Fine Arts Center of Kershaw County. As Musical Director of the Lander University Jazz Ensemble as well as Musical Director of the Lander University Jazz Combos he has managed rehearsals and performances throughout the year, taught a full course load, and he also served as executive director of the SC Jazz Foundation a 501 c# supporting Jazz and Jazz education in SC. As the Director of the Capitol City Big Band, he performed 11 shows at retirement centers and churches and as the leader of the Robert Gardiner Jazz Quartet, 110 shows at local clubs, restaurants, and music venues across the region.

KRISTEN HARRIS

KRISTEN HARRIS

In addition to being the South Carolina State Fiddle Champion for 2019, Harris’s performances include the Jam Room Music Festival, the Freeway Music Festival, Arts & Draughts, Southeast Regional Folk Alliance, (Chattanooga, TN) Official showcase all with Boomtown Trio. She performed at The Mothlight and at the Crow and Quill, and Sierra Nevada Brewing, all in Asheville, NC, and at Prohibition in Charleston with Resonant Rogues; as well as at Haynes Auditorium (Batesburg-Leesville, SC) with Blue Iguanas bluegrass band; at Saluda Shoals Park Jazz Series, and Cola Jazz Fest with Flat Out Strangers; at the Papa Jazz Session for SceneSC and at the White Mule with Dirty Gone Dolas and at St. Pat’s in Five Points with Boomtown Waifs. She hosted the "Raucous Square Dance" (Columbia, SC) in January 2019, played at the First Baptist Christmas Pageant, and toured the United Kingdom with The Resonant Rogues from Asheville, including 24 performances throughout England, Scotland, and Wales in July 2019. Her recordings include pieces with the Resonant Rogues “Autumn of the World” May 2019, Kelley McLachlan “Misty Valley” June 2019, and Boomtown Trio “Wild Wanderer”. Harris is a Violin teacher at Suzuki Academy of Columbia, Midlands Arts Conservatory, and Freeway Music, a Masterclass Clinician at Suzuki Association of SC Festival, and an adjudicator for SC Music Educators' Association Orchestra Concert Performance.

KATIE LEITNER

KATIE LEITNER

Leitner began the year participating as a vocalist in the Love Is Love cabaret in the Pastors Study at Lula Drake to raise funds for Trustus Theatre where, a month later, she starred as Daisy Buchanan in Trustus Theatre’s The Great Gatsby. She then went on to start an alternative pop band “Say Femme” with Max Geiger and Desirée Richardson. Since the formation of “Say Femme” the band has played a number of local music venues including New Brookland Tavern, The White Mule, and Art Bar, as well as the feminist art festival Girls Block. Say Femme also just finished recording their first 5 song EP entitled “Souvenirs”. She spent the summer months starring as Veronica Sawyer in Trustus’ Theatre’s production of Heathers: The Musical. During the day she provides private voice lessons to those who seek to improve and understand the vocal instrument to further the art.

 

~~ LITERARY ARTS ~~

C. HOPE CLARK

C. HOPE CLARK

Clark published two mysteries, both in the Edisto Island Mystery series; Dying on Edisto (April 2019) and Edisto Tidings (October 2019), as well as Writing Contests with Hope, a FundsforWriters publication (March 2019). She served on the faculty at conferences at Henderson Writers Group - Las Vegas, NV, St. Louis Writer's Guild - St. Louis, MO, and North Carolina Writers Conference NW, Sylva, NC and conducted Book Signings at Newberry, Pelion, Chapin, Irmo, Saluda, Batesburg, Greenwood, Summerville, and Edisto Beach. Her reviews/interviews appeared in Chapin Magazine (December 2019) and Writers Forum, UK (March 2019). She narrates her novels at the SC State Library for their Talking Book Services for the sight and physically impaired, and in 2019 completed Palmetto Poison, Newberry Sin, and Dying on Edisto. Her work earned acceptance into the National Library System's BARD program, making the books available nation-wide. She ranks as the most checked out author in the South Carolina Talking Book system. Clark gives back to her writing community through her website FundsforWriters. The success of the website and newsletter earned it a place on Writer's Digest Magazine's 101 Best Websites for Writers for the 19th year.

RAY MCMANUS

RAY MCMANUS

McManus’s publications include “Where Bullies Come From” Fall Lines V, Fall 2019, “Angels Already Know” Binder Summer 2019, “Past the Banks” (Essay) Gather at the River: Twenty-Five Authors on Fishing, Anthology, Hub City Press, May 2019,  “Diehards,” “Manifest Destiny,” “Caveman Bias,” “How to Forget a Nation,” We Had Lots of Specimens, but We Ate Them,” and “Undertow” Open-Eyed and Full Throated: Irish American Poetry. Ireland: Arlen House Press, Spring 2019.  “Homo Habitus” and “In the Museum of Men and Machines” SC Review, Fall 2018, and “Smoke Signals,” “When the Men are Talking,” “Finding Teeth in the Yard,” “Jacking,” “Pioneer Diorama” Talking River, Fall 2018. He has also served as Writer in Residence, Columbia Museum of Art creating programs such as the Write-Around Series (writers included to date: Ray McManus, Ed Madden, Tim Conroy, Joy Priest, Nathalie Anderson, Len Lawson, Jennifer Bartell, Cindi Boiter, Michele Reese, Vurtis Derrick, Lisa Hammond, and Derek Berry), With Nothing to Hide: Four Writers Responding to Renée Cox and Imogen Cunningham (Writers included: Jillian Weise, Monifa Lemons, Maya Marshall, Liz Elliott),  Tender Savages: The Masculine Construction of Jackson Pollock’s Destruction (writers included: David Joy, Adam Vines, Ray McManus), Stretching the Frame: Unconventional Ekphrastic Poetry Writing Workshop (writer included: Adam Vines), Poet’s Summit (writers included: Ashley M Jones, Nickole Brown, Jessica Jacobs). McManus also serves as the Chair, Board of Governors, South Carolina Academy of Authors

JON TUTTLE

JON TUTTLE

Tuttle’s most recent book, The Trustus Collection, was published by Muddy Ford Press in March.  It includes the six plays that have premiered at Trustus Theatre since 1994: The Hammerstone, Drift, Holy Ghost, The Sweet Abyss, Palace of the Moorish Kings and Boy About Ten.   He discussed that collection and his career as a playwright at the 2019 Deckle Edge Book Festival.   Boy About Ten was also a finalist for the Screencraft Stage Play International Competition and excepted in 100 Monologues From New Plays 2020. His short story, “Elsie Peaches Boulware,” was nominated for a Pushcart Prize after being published in Short Story America Vol. VI and winning second place in the 2019 Porter Fleming Literary Competition. With Cindy Turner, he is the author of One Another, which was published in Smith & Kraus’ Best Ten-Minute Plays of 2018. Jon has spoken at a number of academic/scholastic conferences, serves on a number of arts and awards committees, and directed the creation of the position of Poet Laurate of the Pee Dee (now occupied by Jo Angela Edwins).

 ~~ FILM ~~

DAVID AXE

DAVID AXE

Axe wrote, directed, and edited the feature film SHED in March 2019. SHED premiered at the Motor City Nightmares film festival in Detroit in April before playing at nine festivals in 2019. SHED was selected for U.S. distribution by Wages of Cine in October. Axe wrote, directed, and edited the short film THERE’S NOTHING IN THE SHED in June 2019 which played at 19 festivals in 2019. He also completed the feature script MONGER which won the WriteMovies Horror Award 2019. He wrote, directed, and edited the short film WHERE’S THE FUN in July 2019 as well as the short film CLEVELAND in October.  Cleveland was screened at the 2019 2nd Act Film Festival. Axe also wrote, directed, and edited the feature film LECTION ending in November 2019, the script of which was selected by the South Carolina Underground Film Festival. Axe says he proudly paid all his cast and crew on all productions for a total of around 150 people in 2019, helping to support and grow the Columbia film industry.

LYNN CORNFOOT

LYNN CORNFOOT

A “visual storyteller for over 30 years,” Cornfoot is responsible for the broadcast and Web distribution of the following segments for the News Magazine show Palmetto Scene:  10.28.19 - A Spooky Good Time at Deceased Farms; 10.16.19 - The SC State Fair’s Ride of Your Life Scholarship; 8.20.19 - Goat Yoga: From Om to Awe!; 2.19.19 - A Gentleman’s Ride; 11.15.18 - Comedian Ian Aber; and, 10.23.18 - Chocolatier Providing Free Lunches. Lynn was also a videographer/crew member on Betsy Newman’s Emmy Award winning documentary Charlie’s Place, as well as other SCETV shows throughout the year.

ROBBIE ROBERTSON

ROBBIE ROBERTSON

Robertson completed the short film  WHISTLER’S MOTHER, a production of the SC Indie Grants program, in which Robbie was awarded funding based on his original screenplay. The film was screened at the Crimson Screen Horror Film Festival in May 2019 and won the Audience Choice Award. It was also screened at the Myrtle Beach International Film Festival in April, at the Russian International Horror Film Festival in Moscow,; the Philip K. Dick Science Fiction and Supernatural Film Festival in NYC. WHISTLER’S MOTHER was invited to screen on the streaming service SHORTS TV. YOUNG AMERICAN, Robertson’s comedy about a magazine writer's fear of aging, was optioned by producer Alexandra Hoesdorff of European based DEAL PRODUCTIONS in 2019. AT-RISK, a feature screenplay about race relations in Charleston, SC was optioned by L.A. based actress/producer Kristian Alfonso, and JUST FOR HIM, a new short screenplay by Robbie, was a semi-finalist and Top 20 winner in the Get It Made LA production contest.

(Editor’s Note: Jasper will not be awarding a JAY in Dance again this year due to a lack of nominations. However, we would like to recognize Stephanie Wilkins and Cooper Rust, both of whom were nominated and had exceptional years. Keep up the great work, Stephanie and Cooper! You are outstanding ambassadors for your discipline!)

Vote at https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/2019_JAYS

(SC voters only, please!)

Mark your calendars for Friday, January 31st at 7:30 at the White Mule for the 2019 JAY Awards Ceremony and Mardi Gras Ball!

Nominations Open for Jasper Artists of the Year (JAYs) 2019

Jasper is excited to add a new art discipline to the Jasper Artists of the Year Awards this year -- Film!

Filmmakers should have had work screened in a theater, film festival, broadcast, or through a streaming service between November 2018 and November 2019.

Please follow the attached guidelines for submitting your nominations. Deadline is December 1st!

Nominations for

Jasper Artists of the Year 2019

in

Dance, Music, Theatre, Literature, & Visual Arts

Will be accepted from Sunday November 3rd through Sunday December 1st

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Individual Artists, 18 and older, working in the greater Columbia arts community are eligible for the title based upon their artistic accomplishments during the period from November 1, 2018 through November 3, 2019.

Nominations MUST be sent to editor@Jaspercolumbia.com with the subject heading “Artist of the Year” and MUST be accompanied by a numbered list of works or accomplishments produced or performed during the designated time period.

Artists MUST be made aware of their nomination before their official nomination and agree to participate in the competition.

Upon closing of the nomination call, a panel of judges will select the top three candidates in each field, and the public will be invited to vote online for their top choices.

Finalist results will be announced in early December.

The JAY 2019 Awards celebration will take place in January 2020 and the winners will be featured in the spring issue of Jasper Magazine.

The category Dance includes:  performance, choreography, or direction of any form of dance including, but not limited to ballet, contemporary, jazz, tap, ballroom, folk, or dance-based performance art.

The category Theatre includes: directing or acting in one or more local performances.

The category Music includes: conducting, directing, writing, or performing any style of music in one or more local concerts or recordings; both individuals and groups are eligible.

The category Visual Arts includes: the completion & presentation of a form of non-performing or non-literary arts, such as painting, sculpture, ceramics, photography, print-making, mixed-media, etc.

The category Literary Arts includes: the completion, publication, and/or presentation of any form of prose, poetry, or non-fiction writing, as well as playwriting and the writing of executed screenplays.

NEW for 2019! The category Film Arts — Filmmakers should have had work screened in a theater, film festival, broadcast, or through a streaming service between November 2018 and November 2019. Please follow the attached guidelines for submitting your nominations. Deadline is December 1st!

 

Only individual artists may be considered for nomination. While arts groups, such as musical groups or arts troupes, are not eligible for consideration, individuals within those groups may be nominated. The purpose of the awards is to recognize artistic achievements accomplished within a calendar year. There is no fee to enter. Artists may nominate themselves.

 

Past Jasper Artists of the Year

2018

Darion McCloud, Trahern Cook, Monifa Lemons, Marcum Core

2017

Al Black, Fat Rat da Czar, Bakari Lebby, Cedric Umoja

2016

Michaela Pilar Brown, Baxter Engle, Mark Rapp, Len Lawsom

2015

Julia Elliott, Kimi Maeda, Dewey Scott-Wiley, Martha Brim, Craig Butterfield

2014

Catherine Hunsinger, Katie Smoak, Darian Cavanaugh, Kathleen Robbins, Greg Stuart

2013

Vicky Saye-Henderson, Terrance Henderson, The Restoration, Janna McMahan, Philip Mullen

2012

Regina Willoughby, Kwame Dawes, Morihiko Nakahara, Chad Henderson, Susan Lenz

 

And the Winners Are ...

Life beats down and crushes the soul

and art reminds you that you have one.” Stella Adler

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The Jasper Project, guests, and guests of honor celebrated an intimate evening of art and joy last night at Columbia’s historic Seibels House and Garden during the Jasper Artist of the Year Salon Celebration. With presentations of poetry and song, and even a rousing group sing-along led by theatre artist Darion McCloud, attendees were able to mingle, chat about processes, projects and possibilities for collaboration, and enjoy food from Chef Joe Turkaly and a bar provided by Muddy Ford Press. All our attending JAY finalists shared their work with those in attendance. Art called some of our finalists away, (we missed you Tim, Michael and Christine). but it was a beautiful night.

Congratulations, once again, to all our finalists:

Music - Marina AlexandrA~ Marcum Core ~ Zach Seibert

Theater - Michael Hazin ~ Christine Hellman ~ Darion McCloud

Visual Arts - Trahern Cook ~ Flavia Lovatelli ~ Andy White

Literary Arts - Libby Bernadine ~ Tim Conroy ~ Monifa Lemons

And the winners are …

Jasper Artist of the Year 2018 in Music - Marcum Core

Jasper Artist of the Year 2018 in Music - Marcum Core

Jasper Artist of the Year 2018 in Theatre - Darion McCloud

Jasper Artist of the Year 2018 in Theatre - Darion McCloud

Jasper Artist of the Year 2018 in Visual Arts - Trahern Cook

Jasper Artist of the Year 2018 in Visual Arts - Trahern Cook

Jasper Artist of the Year 2018 in Literary Arts - Monifa Lemons

Jasper Artist of the Year 2018 in Literary Arts - Monifa Lemons

Many thanks go out to folks and organizations who made the evening a success ~

Historic Columbia, Michael Krajewski, Bohumila Augustinova, Barry Wheeler, Ashley Hayes, Easter Antiques at Red Lion Antique Mall, Muddy Ford Press, 2nd Act Film Festival, Ed Madden, Trahern Cook, Joe Turkaly, Bob Jolley, Annie Boiter-Jolley, Bonnie Boiter-Jolley, the editorial staff of Jasper Magazine, the board of directors of the Jasper Project, Kristine Hartvigsen & all who chose to spend their evening with us.

Jasper Project Executive Director Cindi Boiter and Denise Gadson Receive the Richland Library Friends and Foundation’s 2018 Awards

By: Christina Xan

The Jasper Project is happy to share that the Richland Library Friends and Foundation is honoring two South Carolina women and their dedication to our community.

The Richland Library Friends and Foundation is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization whose mission is to support Richland Library by raising awareness and financial support. Each year they recognize individuals who have supported literacy in Columbia.

This year, the two awards will acknowledge the achievements of women in Richland County who have contributed to our literary community and local libraries in their own unique ways. First, receiving the Lucy Hampton Bostick Award, is our own Cindi Boiter, and second, receiving the Ethel Bolden Minority Scholarship, is Denise Gadson.

According to the Richland Library, “the Lucy Hampton Bostick Award offers a custom, hand-blown glass award and cash honorarium while recognizing a South Carolina author, someone who has written a significant literary work on South Carolina, or someone in the Midlands who has significantly advanced the interest in books or libraries.” This award is named after a long-time head librarian in Richland County and former Richland Library director (1928-1968) who is “credited with fostering interest in Southern literature and history, improving cultural life in Columbia, and promoting library appreciation throughout the state.”

Cindi Boiter has been chosen to receive the award this year as a fierce advocate of the literary arts. Boiter was a freelance writer for 20 years and has published a book of award-winning stories. After teaching Women’s and Gender Studies at the University of South Carolina for a number of years, she went on to become the founder of The Jasper Project and Jasper Magazine, of which she is the Editor-in-Chief.

Likewise, the Ethel Bolden Minority Scholarship provides $3,500 in financial support for students from “underrepresented ethnic and racial groups, who are working toward the completion of a Master of Library and Information Science degree at the University of South Carolina.” This scholarship was created in 2010 and named after Bolden to recognize her years of service to the Richland County community and its libraries.

Denise Gadson has been chosen for this award this year for her continual passion for reading and for helping others, both children and adults, on their journey towards gaining that same passion as well. Gadson is the author of children’s book Penelope's World Famous Cookies and is currently seeking to further her education along in order to continue aiding others in their quest for knowledge.

The Richland Library Friends and Foundation has plans to formally recognize these wonderful women during a reception in 2019 (date TBA).

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for more updates on local artists and events!