Jasper Galleries Announces Art Shows at Harbison Theatre featuring David Yaghjian, Michael Krajewski, Lori Isom, and Olga Yukhno

David Yaghjian

The Jasper Project is delighted to announce the next several artists whose work will be featured in the Gallery Space of MTC’s Harbison Theatre at 7300 College Street in Irmo, SC.

Following the closing of the Steven White show on October 28th, we will be opening an exhibition by renown Columbia-based artist, David Yaghjian. Yaghjian’s work will show from early November through mid-January. We will celebrate Yaghjian’s art with a special reception on Sunday afternoon, December 11th in conjunction with the Holiday Pops concert by the SC Philharmonic. The reception will begin at 2:30 followed by the concert at 3:30. While the reception is free tickets to the concert may be purchased at Harbison theatre.

Following the Yaghjian exhibit, Jasper will welcome Columbia-based artist Michael Krajewski on Friday, January 20th, 2023. Krajewski’s exhibit will coincide with a concert featuring the comedy offerings of Tom Papa. A (free) reception for Krajewski’s work will begin at 6:30, followed by the Tom Papa show at 7:30. Tickets.

Lori Isom

On Friday, February 24, 2023, Jasper has invited Columbia/Camden-based artist Lori Isom to open a show of her work in conjunction with a concert by Camden native and country rockstar Patrick Davis. Reception (free) at 6:30 and concert at 7:30. Tickets.

And on Saturday, April 1st, artist Olga Yukhno will open a showing of her 2D and 3D ceramics at the Harbison Theatre Gallery in conjunction with a Concert by the tenor trio GENTRI. Reception at 6:30 and concert at 7:30. Tickets.

For more information on Harbison art please contact the Jasper Project at   jasperprojectcolumbia@gmail.com. For more information about performances please contact Harbison Theatre at  Harbisontheatre@midlandstech.edu

Lori Starnes Isom Explores Emotion Through Faces and Figures in New Tiny Gallery Show Sentimental Mood

Jazz Stylist

As we bundle up and get prepared to gather around tables and share thanks with ourselves and the ones we care for, consider expressing that love with an irreplaceable drawing or painting from Lori Starnes Isom, Jasper’s featured November Tiny Gallery artist, whose show Sentimental Mood is up now. 

Lori Starnes Isom is a New Yorker at her origins, born in Brooklyn and growing up in Queens, where she went to an arts high school and college. Her first interest in art came far before school, however, around age six.

 “I remember drawing lots of go-go dancers wearing white boots - probably inspired by the show ‘Laugh-In,’ which most likely inspired my desire to be a dancer as well!” Isom recalls. 

Though her schooling in art absolutely aided in Isom’s understanding of the genre, she roots most of her ability to “voraciously” consuming and studying other artists’ work as well as art content in print. This seed continued to grow not just as a student but a teacher, with Isom having taught children's art classes at the private level.

 As an artist, Isom is proficient in a plethora of mediums, though her favorite is charcoal due to her longstanding history with it and its “depth and richness.” When it comes to painting, specifically, she prefers watercolor due to its translucent texture and visuality. 

Visionary

“At first my work looked really stiff because I was trying to control the paint. But after a while, I learned that watercolor works best if you let it do its thing,” Isom explains, “I eventually switched over to acrylics because framing charcoals and watercolors got way too expensive!”  

Acrylic also provides a “versatility and ease of use” that allows Isom to repaint and alter art while already in-progress, which works in tandem with her personal style that she refers to as “loose [and] painterly.” In contrast to this is the detail she puts into faces, with figures and portraits often being the subject of her work. 

Isom credits artists such as Mary Cassatt, Johannes Vermeer, and John Singer Sargent as being inspiring forces for her. This compounds with her personal motivations in storytelling.  

“My driving force is always to tell a story or pursue an idea. I work from old photos a lot because I'm familiar with the people in them, and I deeply enjoy the challenge of bringing life to them,” Isom intimates, “I also really enjoy working in monotone and large, solid swathes of color because it causes the viewer to focus more on the story.”   

Isom’s process is one of balancing the freedom of ideas and maintaining simplicity, which allows for a striking expression of emotion and affect, finishing a piece when there is “nothing more that needs to be said.” 

For this Tiny Gallery show, Isom offers an intimate exploration of humanity, focusing on what she loves most: people. Sentimental Mood is a collection of 8 new and old pieces in multiple mediums.  

In one, a watercolored woman stands tall, gazing above her at something just off canvas. In another, a couple with soft, blurred faces yet stark emotion stand pressed against another, with an emerald green dress its center. Another zooms in close to a singing woman, mouth open in the ecstasy of song, fingers softly tendrilled around her microphone. 

“As far as a favorite,” Isom shares, “I think that would be "Close to My Heart", because it's a simple pencil drawing of my mom and her mother, Daisy, whom I never got to meet.”  

Close to my Heart

Within or outside the show, Isom has and continues to make a mark on our community with her expressive, pointed, and unique work. “I am acutely aware that it's a gift to be able to express myself in a creative way and know that I am in full control of how far I allow that creativity to grow,” she effuses. 

Isom’s show will be up until November 30th at Jasper’s online gallery, which is accessible 24/7: https://the-jasper-project.square.site/tiny-gallery.    

Concurrent to and after the show, Isom’s work can be viewed at the new Gallery 537 in Camden, South Carolina. You can also follow along her journey on Instagram and Facebook @loristarnesisom. 

 

—    Christina Xan

REVIEW: Lady Day at Emerson's Bar and Grill Brings Billie Holiday Back

“… the key to the success of this Trustus show lies squarely at the feet of the women involved in its production.”

Katrina Garvin as Billie Holiday - photo by Jerimiah Greene

Katrina Garvin as Billie Holiday - photo by Jerimiah Greene

Had you asked me last week if I knew who Billie Holiday was, I would have answered, Of course! Who doesn’t know about Billie Holiday? 

But I would have been wrong.

I learned how much I didn’t know about Billie Holiday last Saturday night when I attended the second performance of Lady Day at Emerson’s Bar and Grill at Trustus Theatre, the company’s first presentation since quarantine.

Set in 1959 at the seedy South Philly Emerson’s Bar and Grill on a fictional night just before her death from Cirrhosis later that year, Lady Day at Emerson’s Bar and Grill, written by Lanie Robertson, takes the audience back in time and gives Holiday the microphone to do more than sing. Played by seasoned musical theatre artist Katrina Garvin, Billie Holiday tells her life story in provocative anecdotes in between performing more than a dozen of the title character’s classic tunes.

In an almost disturbingly casual manner we learn throughout the evening how the abuses of her childhood, including a rape at age 10, transformed Eleanora Fagan, which was Holiday’s birth name, into the stage’s Billie Holiday who adopted the name of her father, Clarence Halliday, a jazz musician who had abandoned her and her mother when Eleanora was born. We also learn about Holiday’s struggles with addiction and crippling insecurity both likely resulting from the institutional racism that plagued her professional life from the time she began singing in nightclubs in Harlem as a teenager, to her stint in prison by way of Carnegie Hall, until her untimely death at age 44.

Lady Day premiered in Atlanta in 1986 before moving to Off-Broadway and finally to Broadway in 2014 where it featured the incredible Audra McDonald in the title role. It is remarkable how well the play has held up and how fitting it is that Trustus Theatre decided to present it at this time of a renewed dedication to social justice in the country. The fact that it is essentially a one-woman show, with a musical accompanist, makes it a good choice in our quasi post-Covid times, too.

Lady Day opened to a sold-out Columbia audience and the house was almost full on Saturday, followed by another sold-out show on Sunday afternoon. I don’t expect many empty seats in the run of this show, and the key to the success of this Trustus show lies squarely at the feet of the women involved in its production.

Katrina Garvin, who most may remember from previous Trustus performances like Dreamgirls, In the Red Brown Water, and Constance performing under the name Katrina Blanding, was perfectly cast in the starring role as Billie Holiday. To say that Garvin embodies Holiday is an understatement. Keep in mind that Garvin already brings to the stage exceptional vocal skills but fortified with the wisdom imbued via direction from Jocelyn Sanders and backed up with dialect coaching by Marybeth Gorman and vocal coaching from Katie Leitner, Garvin subsequently delivers a performance that literally takes the audience’s breath away. And this is no small challenge given Holiday’s distinctive vocal stylings.

Garvin conveys all the same pain, frustration, and despondency that Holiday brought to the stage as well as the remarkable talent behind her interpretations of such difficult numbers as What a Little Moonlight Can Do and even Strange Fruit, one of the most painfully powerful songs ever written or performed.

Garvin’s stage partner, Shannon Pinkney in the role of Holiday’s piano accompanist, Jimmy Powers, more than holds up his corner of the stage with exceptional musical chops whether he accompanies Garvin or takes over the theatre for an extended solo while Garvin exits for a brief period near the end of the performance.

Terrance Henderson, Garvin’s musical partner in IndigoSOUL (along with Kendrick Marion), served as movement coach to Garvin, and Colleen Kelly served as stage manager for Sanders. Bad Boy Roy Brasley, Jr. styled Garvin’s hair into an elegant updo with a shock of white gardenias wrapped around the back; Abigail McNeely was costume designer; and Curtis Smoak handled lighting and the simple but convincing set for the show, easily creating the feeling that we were all sipping our drinks as we watched Lady Day at the end of her career and, sadder still, the premature end of her days.

Kudos to Trustus Theatre for bringing us back in our roles as audience members with the perfectly timed presentation of a play that reminds us of the power of art to confront the inadequacies of an imperfect culture.

Lady Day will run through June 20th on Thursdays through Sundays. For tickets and more information, visit Trustus.org.

And be sure to visit the lobby for an outstanding exhibit of art by Lori Isom. (See Below)

Art by Lori Isom.

Art by Lori Isom.

Announcing the 2021 Tiny Gallery Artist Line-Up!

TENNYSON CORLEY K. WAYNE THORNLEY

SHELBY LEBLANC BETSY KAEMMERLEN

B.A. HOHMAN GINNY MERRETT

RON HAGELL ASHLEY BENNETT

BOHUMILA AUGUSTINOVA RENEE ROUILLIER

LORI ISOM

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Jasper’s Tiny Gallery began in October 2018 as a fresh opportunity for artists and art lovers alike. With the goal of offering small pieces at small price points, the Tiny Gallery series provides artists the chance to create special worlds in compact dimensions and provides patrons, who may have smaller budgets, be burgeoning collectors, or longtime collectors with little remaining wall space, to enjoy new artwork.

In June of last year, Jasper decided to re-focus Tiny Gallery into a virtual show so that artists could tell their stories and continue to do the work they love in challenging, unprecedented times. We are so glad that, in 2021, we will be able to continue this journey with over 12 wonderful artists. 

Get to know them and their work below, and be sure to mark your calendars for their shows!

 

January: Tennyson Corley

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Our year has already kicked off with Tennyson’s Corley’s show, Microcosm. Her show of nature paintings sold so quicky, she had to add more pieces to her exhibit.. You can still view and purchase pieces from her show until January 31st: https://the-jasper-project.square.site/tiny-gallery  

Corley is a contemporary painter living and working in Columbia, South Carolina. Showing professionally since 2010, she has been honing her painting style in acrylics and mixed media. She works out of her studio on her small farm minutes from city proper. Corley attended Columbia College for a degree in Fine Art. 

Tennyson captivates her audience with depiction of native flora and fauna. Her pieces pay homage to her work as a horticulturalist and love of nature. Seeking out new inspirations through her travels, she strives to portray the beauty of the South East region to her viewers.

You can see more of her art on Instagram at @tennyson_corley_art and on Linktree at linktr.ee/TennysonCorleyArt

February: K. Wayne Thornley

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K. Wayne Thornley’s show is coming up in just over a week, starting Monday, February 1st.  

Figure Studies serves as an initial purview into larger works that will be shown at Stormwater Studios in May 2021 alongside the clay work of Lucy Bailey. They also continue a theme he has worked on for many years, “figures surrounded by or floating within minimal, barren landscapes—emerging from my father’s Alzheimer’s experience.”  

Thornley is an artist working in mixed media painting and assemblage and is a graduate of the University of South Carolina where he studied art, design and marketing. His award-winning work has been shown in group and solo exhibitions throughout the Southeast and purchased for several private and corporate collections including The Greenwood Genetics Center and Wells Fargo. 

Recent juried exhibitions include the South Carolina Watermedia Society Annual Exhibition (Signature Member) and the Greenville Artists Guild Annual Small Works Exhibition. Mixed media work by the artist has been selected for exhibition at Artfields (2018 & 2019), an annual art competition and survey of Southeastern art held annually in Lake City, SC. 

Check out Wayne’s work on his Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/kwaynethornley/?hl=en

 

March: Shelby LeBlanc

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Shelby LeBlanc’s bright colors and beautiful imagery will decorate “little pieces” in the month of March. 

LeBlanc is a contemporary painter from Columbia, SC, and has been active since 2015. She favors acrylic paint for most of her work, however some of her works delve into watercolor, inks, crayons, or mixed media incorporating book pages, maps, or glass.  

Much of her works are inspired by the time spent away from home, from the Low Country of South Carolina to her trips to Africa, Costa Rica, Mexico, Europe, and Thailand. LeBlanc paints in a variety of styles and mediums over many different subject matters, however, her work is always recognizable- beautiful, dramatic, and demands attention.  

You can see Shelby’s work on her Facebook and Instagram as well as her website: https://www.shelbyleblancart.com

 

April: Betsy Kaemmerlen

 

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Betsy Kaemmerlen’s striking ceramic creations will take us through the month of April. 

Kaemmerlen is a Landscape Architect with strengths in graphics and planting design. As an outgrowth of her profession, she has been working in clay since 1994. Originally taught on the wheel by John Macomber of Greenleaf Pottery, Betsy turned to hand built forms soon afterwards. She originated an active potters group called Clay Arts East in Connecticut and organized the Open Studio Tour of Northeast CT with up to 75 artists, for many years before moving south in 2006.  

Concentrating on functional ware, surface texture and decoration are key to her clay forms, with transparent glazes pooling in the depths. Her inspiration for exploring textured surfaces comes from the origins of pottery when clay was used to protect cooking baskets from the fire. As food was cooked, the clay was fired and so the basket weave impression remained.   

In 2013, Betsy won an Artist Residency in Little Switzerland, NC at Wildacres Retreat to work on both functional pots and sculptural pieces. She enjoys both taking and giving workshops and has learned many hand building and carving techniques. As a garden designer, leaves and natural designs play heavily in her work. And having studied the gardens in Kyoto Japan for five months in 1979, her fascination with Asian motifs is ongoing. She carves roller stamps with cloud, water, Chinese, and Celtic motifs to add richness to her pottery. Lately her focus has been on tiny teapots and vases, along with Ikebana vessels for Japanese flower arranging. 

You can check out some of Betsy’s work on an interview Jasper did with her last year: http://jasperproject.org/what-jasper-said/tag/Betsy+Kaemmerlen

 

May: Ginny Merett

 

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Known for her quirky collage pieces, Ginny Merett has been an artist in the Columbia community for over thirty years. She has used various media to create art but for the last decade chooses collage techniques and processes to represent what she calls “characters.” These characters will be ready to walk into your life throughout May. 

Ginny’s work has won several awards and accolades. Recently, Ginny exhibited her work in the Alumni Exhibit at the University of South Carolina School of Visual Arts and Design McMaster Gallery. She is the cover and featured artist in The Jasper Magazine, Spring 2019 edition; and received First Place and Second Place Awards at the Rosewood Art and Music Festival, Best in Show at Time for Art sponsored by the Jasper Project; and participated in Women Speak Art Gallery at SC State Library 2017, ArtFields 2019, and numerous other exhibits.   

Ginny was born and raised in Denver and has lived in South Carolina since 1987. Art sustained Ginny throughout her life and is the cause for her every success. She constantly sewed, created, and treasured drawing as a child, and sought out every art opportunity in school. Because art was such a passion of Ginny’s youth, she pursued a BS in Art Education from the University of Georgia. She later went on to earn an MA in Art Education and MEd in Educational Administration from The University of South Carolina, where she also served as adjunct for several years. Among some of her greatest accomplishments, Ginny taught art in public schools for 30 years.   

Her influences include David Hockney’s joiners, Robert Rauschenberg’s combines, Hannah Hoch’s timeless collages, and the beautiful execution of John Singer Sargent’s portraits. Ginny is a member of FigurativeArtists.org, the SC Arts Alliance, and South Carolina Artists groups.  

You can preview Ginny’s work at Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and at www.ginnymerett.com 

 

June: B.A. Hohman

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B.A. Hohman’s unique and soulful perspective on life, often seen in grand murals, will make their way into smaller selections in the summer month of June. 

Hohman grew up in Ohio and graduated cum laude from Ohio University with a BFA. Art has always been her ground. She met her husband, Bob, there, and after her graduation they married and embarked on a new life, moving to West Columbia, SC, in 1981. Their two girls, Haley and Taryn, were born here several years later. She moved back and forth across the country before settling back in SC where she taught. Teaching Art was both gratifying and frustrating due to the vast scope of student abilities and behaviors grouped together in often overcrowded classes. Several years later, B.A. made the decision to leave teaching and become a successful muralist and trompe l’oiel artist, painting for clients too numerous to mention, across the state. As the subject matter knew no bounds, B.A. discovered her hidden ability to adapt both subject and style to client desires. Her Art had never had a specific style so this vocation fit well. 

Painting murals was lifesaving before, during, and after the sudden death of her husband Bob in 2005. Her amazing friends are more precious than gold. Attending art and music events kept her sane and provided well needed inspiration. Finally selling the family home in Irmo, finding her perfect little West Columbia home and studio in 2015 was tonic for the soul. She met more and more of the creative folks who encompass the Art community in and around Columbia and lasting friendships were formed. She continues to revel in their caring inspiration.

B.A. has struggled to create during this past year. Searching for a deeper connection has helped find a sense of peace and hope. Her current artistic goal is to focus on the little things that bring joy as well as the rambling depictions of a mind grasping for meaning. Her new pieces will be depictions of her inner wanderings and glimpses of the small things that keep her mind from spinning off into the gaping chasm. 

Check out B.A.’s work on her Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/bahohman/?ref=page_internal

 

July: Ron Hagell

 

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Ron Hagell’s artwork, which is largely narrative based on social issues, portraiture and dance, will take us through July. 

Hagell is a media artist. His primary work in the past was in film and photography.  Ron became an artist so that he could work more individually and creatively across a variety of media.  He taught media art practice at Royal Holloway - University of London and at the Rhode Island School of Design, Columbia University and on a Fulbright grant in Germany. He has exhibited work in Europe, Canada and the US. His most recent exhibitions were in the UK, Berlin and South Carolina at Artfields 2016, 2018 and 2019. 

Recently Ron has been experimenting with bold color figurative and portrait works in acrylic on canvas as well as revisiting still images from his former dance productions as small individual statements on creative movement. 

Ron has a Master of Fine Art degree from Columbia University and studied at UNC, Rhode Island School of Design and American University. He now lives in Columbia, SC, and has a studio at the Tapps’ Outpost where he invites visitors to see his work by appointment. 

In another life, Ron was an Army Captain with service in Vietnam after which he created many hours of arts and documentary programs for PBS stations including the only ever nationally produced jazz music series, At the Top

You can see Ron’s work on his Facebook and his website: http://www.ronhagell.com/

August: Ashley Bennett

 

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Spirited dancer and jewelry artist, Ashley Bennett, will finish off the summer with her August show. 

Bennett moved to Columbia, by herself, in 2007 and made it her home. She danced in the city's first fringe arts company, Columbia Alternacirque, and became a well-known performer at the Art Bar. For several years, Ashley was a staple shop girl for secondhand store, Sid & Nancy, where she consumed countless iced cappuccinos from Adriana's and smoked a small mountain of cigarettes on the busy sidewalk in front of Delaney's Irish pub.  

Over a decade later, she opened her own artist studio at Tapp's Arts Center, started the Movement Arts Co-op there, and later served a short term as Director of Operations. In 2019, Ashley opened her own communal artist space in West Columbia, Sage Studios. Thanks to the pandemic, the company's vital signs are weak, but stable. She spent the majority of 2020 pacing her house, homeschooling her 5-year-old, eating cheese, and soldering jewelry from sterling silver.  

Check out Ashley’s jewelry on her Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/covenitesilver/

September: Bohumila Augustinová

 

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Bohumila Augustinová’s fantastical wire work, often coupled with her clay creations, ranges from mugs and bowls to gallery pieces. This unique variety of work will be featured in her September show. 

Augustinová was born and raised in communist Czechoslovakia, now Czech Republic. She has a degree in fashion design, and she was always an artist. Bohumila came to the United States in 1998, and after winning Runaway Runway, she quickly became part of the Columbia Art scene. In 2015, she took over Anastasia & Friends Gallery, which closed in 2019. Bohumila is a leader of Yarnbombers of Columbia. She works at the Columbia Art Center where she not just makes art, but also teaches art to others.  

See Bohumila’s art on her Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/art_by_bohumila/  

October: Renee Rouillier

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Renee Rouillier’s sculptural explorations will unravel their stories in October. 

Rouillier has been involved in the arts since her twenties. Raised in upstate New York, she received an MFA in Ceramic Sculpture and 3D Study from the University of South Carolina, BFA with a concentration in Ceramics and a BS in Interdisciplinary Arts for Children from SUNY College at Brockport, and a Certificate of Fine Arts from Rochester Institute of Technology.  

She strongly feels art not only defines who she is, but also mirrors her personal life as well as worldly events and outcomes.  In reflection on 2020, she is emphatic that the deeds of humanity will continue to have a profound effect on harmonious existence and the survival of all. The past year, 2020, has proven that nature and all forms of wildlife can flourish without human interaction and she questions this relationship within her artwork. Rouillier also believes a resurgence of mythology, folklore, magic, and wonder would add a positive dimension to today’s world. 

You can explore Renee’s art on her website: https://www.reneerouillier.com

November: Lori Isom

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Lori Isom’s distinctive reflections on life through portraiture will be up to view throughout November. 

Isom has experienced a varied career as an artist, dedicating years to professional dancing, singing and acting. A figurative and portrait artist for over 20 years, she has been commissioned to do hundreds of individual & family portraits.  

Lori's work has been featured in a plethora of places including American Art Collector. She recently completed a one-year artist residency for the City of North Charleston, during which she had the privilege to work on several community-focused projects. She is currently working to grow in greater artistic expression that moves beyond the influence of societal values. 

Check out Lori’s work on her Instagram and her Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/artinthenow/

December: Multiple Artist Ornament Show

 

For December, we are offering a holiday-oriented show sure to get you in the spirit for your favorite holiday, whichever it may be. Whether you want something to hang on your tree, set on your mantle, or show as a keepsake from 2021, support a local artist with an irreplaceable piece.

Look out for our upcoming announcement of our list of artists for our December show!

Corona Times - Profile of Portraitist Lori Isom

…as if a worldwide virus killing thousands of people weren't enough, now the news of not one, but a string of black people being killed by police and others in succession - Breonna Taylor, Ahmaud Arbery, George Floyd. … I went numb.

— Lori Isom

——-

Jasper continues to check in with Columbia artists to see how we’re all doing during these strangely hypnotic times in which we’re living. Jasper editor Cindi Boiter had the opportunity to chat with Columbia-based portrait artist and fascinating human being, Lori Isom.

Here’s what we learned from Lori.

Artist and baker Lori Isom

Artist and baker Lori Isom

JASPER: You and I met when you joined the Supper Table arts team last year, and I know you are originally from Brooklyn and that you studied at Parsons School of Design. What else can you tell our readers about your background and how you came to live and work in Columbia?

LORI ISOM: I like to tell people that I've had experience with just about all the arts. I had a love of drawing from a young child, and a strange obsession with cooking programs like The French Chef with Julia Child.  I studied fashion illustration in high school and then portrait and figure drawing at Parsons.  Due to an injury that my dad sustained on his job, I was unable to afford to continue going to Parsons, but I felt it was serendipitous because I'd really been wanting to explore my newest obsession which was dance! I went on to study and perform for several years, even creating and performing with my own dance company.   I did go back to college eventually, Hunter College, but again got pulled away following the siren's song of show business.  I spent about two decades of my life as a performer which included some touring and living in different states.  I've acted in several plays, done musical theater, appeared in a handful of T.V. commercials, and even a couple of music videos.

I have lived in Columbia on a few different occasions. My parents left New York and moved here in the late ‘80s, and it was kind of a respite for me at times. During one of those stays I began to earnestly pursue my art again.  I had the opportunity to exhibit my work, created a small business as a portrait artist, and taught children’s' art classes.  I eventually met my husband at Fort Jackson. He was a Drill Sergeant there, and I would set up at the PX to do portrait drawings and paintings of the cadets and other military personnel.   As a result of him being in the military, we lived in a variety of places, and I would navigate my way into the art community so that I could continue to work as an artist.  We moved back to Columbia in 2011 and have been here ever since.

JASPER: Do you consider yourself to be primarily a portraitist? What medium do you prefer?

LORI ISOM: I do consider myself to be a portraitist. I have always been interested in the anatomy of the human face and figure.  Capturing different expressions is also something that I'm very passionate about because facial expressions and body language are instantly relatable.   That said, for my non-commissioned work, I prefer natural expressions rather than posed. My preferred medium is charcoal - it's what we worked with the most in school because knowing how to draw was essential.  Also, to be honest, I really find having to mix colors to get the right skin tone and values to be tiresome.  Charcoal is so immediate, and uncomplicated.  I also really enjoy a simple number two pencil - the retractable kind because the point is always sharp.

Woman 12 by Lori Isom

Woman 12 by Lori Isom

JASPER: You've just finished up a beautiful project called Grey Matters. Can you tell us about this work - how the project presented itself to you, how long you worked on it, what your work entailed, and where we can see it?

LORI ISOM: A few years ago, it began becoming obvious that my aged parents would start to require more of my attention and help than just a few short years before. Of course, as time moved on, their mental and physical health continued to decline which made them increasingly reliant on me. These are my parents and I would do anything I could to maintain their quality of life, however I didn't realize it at the time how deeply I was being affected by their deteriorating health issues.  Simultaneously, I started looking at my own life and asking myself questions like am I pleased with where I am at this stage of my life? And, more importantly, WHO am I at this point in my life'?

The "Grey Matters - Women in Progress" series developed out of the reality that I had in fact crossed over into a new age group.  I was now a senior, and that was a shock to my system.  I started journaling my feelings and sought out voices of other women whom I could relate to and receive inspiration from.  So, I went to social media and asked women of my age group and beyond if they would send me photos of themselves participating in things that brought meaning to their lives, of course getting their permission to utilize them in a series that I was going to be working on.  It took the better part of 2019 to do the paintings, however, it might not actually be completed.  The work is not currently on display, but I did exhibit them this past February in North Charleston at the City Gallery. 

Woman 4 by Lori Isom

Woman 4 by Lori Isom

JASPER: And I understand that not only our current COVID-19 situation, but also the myriad other challenges humanity is now facing has brought a new influence on your work. What can you tell us about what you've been pursuing lately?

LORI ISOM: Indeed. The onslaught of the Corona virus was something I took very seriously right from the start.  No one had to persuade me to take precautions since I'd started following the news about it quite early on.  As a matter of fact, they laughed at me at my job because I came in talking about it AND wearing a mask as soon as I was able to get one! A couple of weeks later as more information started coming out on an ongoing basis, the laughing subsided.  I was, however, taken aback by the initial lack of response, and then the slowness of action by my employer.  It confirmed for me how much you must take ownership of your own behavior and actions.  No person or entity can do your thinking for you. If you see things going on around you, and you try to seek out as much information about it, then you have to weigh it through your own filter, and do what's best for you.  I learned that from my momma!

Then, as if a worldwide virus killing thousands of people weren't enough, now the news of not one, but a string of black people being killed by police and others in succession - Breonna Taylor, Ahmaud Arbery, George Floyd. Then toss in the performance of the young woman making a call to the police alleging that an African American man was assaulting her in the park, as she practically hanged her dog on live video.  I went numb.

So, one of the pieces that I recently finished is a self-portrait drawn in charcoal over a background of words that are partially covered by white gesso.  Words like climate control, racism, poverty, mass shootings, and other issues of the day. It's drawn on mixed media paper that I fashioned like a piece of loose-leaf paper.  The current title is "What Will We Teach Them. What Will They Learn", but it may change.  Right now, I've been taking photos of as many people as I can - all ethnicities, ages, and backgrounds - with their faces behind masks.  I'm still waiting for inspiration from my muse for this one!

JASPER: Your work is so empathetic, sincere, and authentically moving. When something as horrible as the murder of George Floyd happens, are you compelled to address it with art? To do so must be heart-crushing - does it help or hurt more? Do you have advice for others who are grappling with how to use their art to try to place such wrong-minded act of inhumanity somewhere in their world?

LORI ISOM: Thank you for that beautiful compliment.  I would say that in the past, I never really tried to express my feelings in response to anything I'd seen or heard about in the news or elsewhere.  Honestly, I felt incapable of taking my emotions about something external and successfully interpreting them on canvas. Even now, it continues to be a learning process for me; but at least I'm no longer running from it. I allow myself time to sit with my feelings in response to something that captures my attention and figure out how to best interpret those feelings in a way that's sincere and honest. I also find it helpful to write down ideas, descriptive words, and random thoughts about a new piece, even if they seem unrelated. I suppose the biggest piece of advice I would offer other artists is to keep working through things that are uncomfortable for you. 

JASPER: What drives you as an artist? What makes you create?

LORI ISOM: As an artist, I am driven by the need to express something in a different way each time I venture to my easel.  I don't ever want to feel that my work is stagnate and predictable.  When I see the work of artists who I admire, or listen to music that moves me, or read something that uplifts me, that's what keeps me wanting to create and keep improving.  I really want to know how far I can go as a creative person.

Woman 2 by Lori Isom

Woman 2 by Lori Isom

JASPER: What is your favorite piece that you have created during our sheltering in?

LORI ISOM: During our time of sheltering in, I have been drawing or painting something pretty much every day. I've had the pleasure of doing several commissioned charcoal and pencil drawings, and finally completed and delivered a large painting of two sweet little boys. 

However, there are a couple of original pieces that I really enjoyed doing, each for a different reason.  One is titled "Teaching My Sons to Swim" and the other is called "Banjo".  The first piece was inspired by an old photograph I found amongst my parents' enormous photo collection.  It seems to be from around the 1940s or 50s, and it has three young boys and an older man, all in swimming trunks.  The photo is taken in front of one of those backdrops that used to be so popular in that era.  The idea came to me that this man, who I felt could be their father, wanted to teach his sons something as basic as swimming. This seemingly ordinary skill that he could pass on to them, could not only save their lives, but possibly could help them see themselves and their place in the world differently.

The second piece, "Banjo" is a friend’s dog that I had just recently had the pleasure to meet. I completely fell in love with this lively creature, and he was the first doggie that I'd had close contact with since the loss of my own dog a couple of months earlier.  I took several pictures of him and couldn't wait to do a painting that would capture his joyful personality.

Teaching My Boys to Swim by Lori Isom

Teaching My Boys to Swim by Lori Isom

JASPER: Where can we see more of your work now and in the future?

LORI ISOM: As of this moment, I have several pieces hanging at the public library on Assembly Street in downtown Columbia.  However, due to Covid 19, the library has been closed for the last couple of months.  I'm not sure what their plan is regarding the artwork that's been hanging during this time.  I post work quite frequently on my Facebook page (Lori Starnes Isom) and on my Instagram page (artinthenow). 

-Cindi Boiter

Cindi Boiter is the editor of Jasper and the founder and ED of the The Jasper Project. To support the work of Jasper, including articles like the one above, please consider becoming a member of the Jasper Guild at www.JasperProject.org

Supper Table Spotlight: Lori Isom and Faye Riley

We’re featuring the artists from the Supper Table project throughout the summer. This is the 15th in our series on Supper Table Artists

Septima Clark. A name that should not only be known but revered in the minds of all those living in our country, especially in South Carolina. However, not nearly enough know her name. A 20th century educator and civil rights activist, Clark spent her near 90 years fighting for literacy and equality for black Americans. She developed literacy and citizenship workshops, which she called “Citizenship Schools” in order to educate black individuals on how to not just vote but to fight for their right to vote, to fight for their voice. Her relentless and passionate activism during the height of the Civil Rights Movement led her to be known by Martin Luther King, Jr. as "The Mother of the Movement".

 

Fortunately, two of our artists have dedicated and are dedicating their visual arts to ensure the name of Septima Clark is quick to all our tongues. Our place-setting artist for this task is Lori Isom. Isom has experienced a varied career as an artist, dedicating years to professional dancing, singing and acting. A figurative and portrait artist for over 20 years, she has been commissioned to do hundreds of individual & family portraits. Her work has been featured in a plethora of places including American Art Collector. She recently completed a one-year artist residency for the City of North Charleston, during which she had the privilege to work on several community-focused projects.

Lori Isom

Lori Isom

For her place-setting, Isom used a round baking sheet that she discovered at a local thrift store to represent her own love of baking in the project. Isom recalls that, in creating the piece, she “felt that although [Clark] was certainly a brave, dynamic trailblazer with incredible fortitude, she also seemed to be simple and understated.” Therefore, the artist chose a style for her plate that represented this simplicity. The plate features a portrait of Clark against a red, white, and blue background to represent her fight for voting rights. Colors of red, black, and green are also present to pay homage to her African roots. Quotes from Clark decorate the border of the plate.

 

supper table isom.png

Complementing the style of this place-setting, is a film by artist Faye Riley. Riley has a PhD in Theatre and Film from the University of Kansas and is a teacher, writer, and filmmaker based in Columbia. She has created ten short films and has taught scriptwriting for ten years. Her influences include Agnes Varda, Georgia O’Keefe, Ed Small, and her parents. She is consistently creating and working on new projects and has a feature film in New York in addition to this project.

Faye Riley

Faye Riley

For her film, Riley has selected a handful of archival materials on Clark. She has combined footage, photographs, and quotes masterfully with different soundscapes to represent, in 90 seconds or less, 90 years of passion and love. The aesthetic simplicity of utilizing these found images and recordings of Clark is able to do exactly what needs to be done – tell us who Clark is while proving she was, and still is in spirit, a force to be reckoned with.

 

Isom’s place-setting and Riley’s film will be on view at both opening events for the Supper Table. Our opening night event is Friday, September 6th, at Trustus Theatre, and tickets start at $50. Our second opening event is Sunday, September 8th, at Harbison Theatre, and tickets start at $15.

- Christina Xan