Jasper Welcomes Ginny Merett to Sound Bites Eatery as July's First Thursday Artist in Residence

RECEPTION THURSDAY JULY 7TH AT 6 PM

SOUND BITES EATERY

1425 SUMTER STREET

Ginny Merett

Jasper welcomes Ginny Merett to Sound Bites Eatery as the First Thursday Artist in Residence for the month of July! Merett’s signature collage work has become her trading card over the past few years creating a one-of-a-kind aesthetic that has yet to be duplicated. Bright and whimsical, the work often offers a first impression that is lighthearted but, upon further inspection, proves to contain powerful messages and social commentary.

Ginny Merett has been an artist and art educator in the Columbia community for over three decades. Through those years she used various media to create art but for the last ten devoted her time to creating multimedia collage pieces. Inspired by stylish women and ordinary faces and images, she portrays unique characters using parts and pieces from current day and vintage media.


Ginny’s collage pieces have been shown at Stormwater Studio, ArtFields, Koger Center for the Arts, the Jasper Project, USC School of Visual Art and Design’s McMaster Gallery, SC State Library, and other local venues like Trustus Theater, She Festival, Cottontown Art Crawl and Melrose Art in the Yard. Her work is published in the Jasper Project’s Jasper Magazine, Spring 2019 edition and in Sheltered: SC Artists Respond During the 2020 Pandemic; and in Bullets and Band-Aids Volume 3. 

She gives back to the community by visiting and sharing her work with various area schools and donating art to local charities.


Ginny was born and raised in Denver and has lived in South Carolina since 1987. Art has 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 studied art education where she explored a wide range of disciplines and mediums; and taught art in the 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 and is an Artist Peer with the Jasper Guild. Look for her at ginnymerett.com and on all social platforms.

Merett’s exhibition will run from Sunday July 3 through the end of the month. The public is invited to a an opening celebration on First Thursday, July 7th at 6 pm at Sound Bites Eatery at 1425 Sumter Street.

The Supper Table Goes to Jasper County!

THE MORRIS CENTER FOR LOWCOUNTRY HERITAGE

We’re delighted to announce that the Supper Table, the Jasper Project’s most ambitious project to date, is traveling to the South Carolina Lowcountry this summer for a 6-month-long residency at the Morris Center for Low Country Heritage in Ridgeland, Jasper County, South Carolina.

The Supper Table, an homage to the 40th anniversary of Judy Chicago’s 1979 epic feminist art exhibition, is a multidisciplinary arts project celebrating the history and contributions of 12 extraordinary South Carolina women and featuring the work of almost 60 of South Carolina’s most outstanding women artists in the visual, literary, theatrical, and film arts.

Place setting honoring SC artist Eartha Kitt by Mana Hewitt

The Supper Table was created between 2018 and 2019 and began touring the state in November 2019, traveling from Columbia to Irmo, Camden, Florence, Lake City, and more, but its itinerary was interrupted by the Covid-19 pandemic. For more information on the women honored with seats at the table created by outstanding SC women artists, as well as the writers, filmmakers, theatre artists, visual artists, and portrait artist Kirkland Smith, please visit the Supper Table page on the Jasper Project website.

Place setting honoring SC’s Dr. Matilda Evans by SC artist Rene Rouillier

The Morris Center for Low Country Heritage has a number of educational and interpretive events planned to further explore and celebrate the Supper Table including the following.


7/16/2022

11:00 AM - 12:00 PM

Table Talk: The Supper Table Opening

Kayleigh Vaughn/Cindi Boiter

Part history lesson, part art installation, all homage. The Supper Table, its origins and impact on South Carolina Women’s History is the topic of conversation with Morris Center Curator Kayleigh Vaughn and Jasper Project Director Cindi Boiter.

https://www.morrisheritagecenter.org/events/table-talk/

 

8/12/2022

6:00 PM - 7:00 PM

Take a Seat: Visual Artists' Panel

Tonya Gregg, BA Hohman, Flavia Lovatelli

Enjoy some lively table talk as several of the visual artists from The Supper Table discuss their role and process in contributing to the art installation.

https://www.morrisheritagecenter.org/events/take-a-seat-visual-artists-panel/

 

Many of the SC artists involved in the Supper Table project

9/20/2022

5:00 PM - 6:00 PM

South Carolina "Herstory"

Dr. Valinda Littlefield

Scores of women have left an indelible mark on “herstory” in the Palmetto State. This inspiring talk connects to The Supper Table.

https://www.morrisheritagecenter.org/events/south-carolina-herstory/

 

10/21/2022

6:00 PM - 7:00 PM

Take a Seat: Writers' Panel

Christina Xan, Claudia Smith Brinson, Kristine Hartvigsen

Food for thought? In conjunction with The Supper Table, several writers share about their role and process contributing to the exhibition.

 

11/18/2022

6:00 PM - 7:00 PM

Take a Seat: Filmmakers' Panel

Ebony Wilson, Carleen Maur, LeeAnn Kornegay

Food for thought? In conjunction with The Supper Table, several filmmakers share about their role and process contributing to the exhibition.

 


Art Show by Jasper Magazine Spring 2022 Cover Artist Lindsay Radford Wiggins Opening at 701 Whaley on July 10th

with Linda Toro

Artist Lindsay Radford Wiggins’ show, Stardust, will be featured at the hallway gallery at 701 Whaley St. in Columbia, SC July 10–Aug. 27. The public is invited to view the artwork and meet the artist, as well as purchase original works and prints during a reception on July 10 from 6–8 p.m. 

Radford Wiggins is the cover artist for the Spring 2022 issue of Jasper Magazine which is circulating around Columbia now. 

Stardust features a series of oil and watercolor paintings that embody a spiritual authenticity and Wiggins’ signature whimsical flair. Influenced by German expressionism and women surrealists, the works speak of the artist’s personal experiences, connections, and emotions, making each piece a diary-like entry of celestial swirls. The playful imagery and repetition of symbols invite the viewer to call upon their own life experiences and create their own personal dialog.  

The exhibition offers an opportunity to see the breadth and depth of Wiggins’ work – in addition to larger canvases and watercolors, a series of her smaller paintings will also be on view. Wiggins says, “The process of painting many small works in one sitting helps with meditative flow and opens me to being more playful with imagery.” 

Born and raised in Alabama where she attended the Booker T. Washington Magnet Art School, Wiggins says that the experience helped shape her as a young artist. Now living in Columbia, SC, where she completed her BA in Studio Art at Columbia College, Wiggins says, “Art, for me, is a therapeutic way of moving what is inside me into a physical form. My hope is that my work uplifts, inspires, and empowers others to seek their own voice.”

SCENT by Heather LaHaise Opens at Stormwater Studios Wednesday June 15th

In the new Heather LaHaise art show, Scent, opening on Wednesday June 15th at Stormwater Studios in Columbia, SC, the artist says, “Dogs possess an amazing sense of smell and the scents they gravitate to inspired this series. They have the unique capability to analyze smells well beyond any human. Aside from being our best friends, They sniff out bombs and drugs, pursue suspects, find dead bodies, and even help find cures for disease.”

She continues, “In SCENT. I have researched and then selected 20 scents (one per painting) they are drawn to. I hope to acknowledge the scent, while at the same time create a work that appeals to the human visual sense!”

While LaHaise’s portfolio certainly includes her share of abstracts and attractive, inviting interiors, like the one above, it is her collection of canine portraits for which she has become well known.

Macron

The Stormwater show at 413 Pendleton Street runs from June 15-19 with a reception June 16 from 5 - 8 pm.

The public is invited to attend.

Jasper Welcomes Cindy Saad to the Tiny Gallery

By Emily Moffitt

Jasper is happy to announce the launch of Cindy Saad’s breathtaking jewelry art in our Tiny Gallery for the month of June.

Saad is an artisanal jewelry maker who draws inspiration and creativity from the natural world around her, soaking in the beauty and artistic value of anything from a beach scene to a beautiful sunset. Her creative process for many of her works, including those featured in Tiny Gallery, revolves around the subtle manipulation of the stones and thin wire in order to create undulating works of wearable art. Other pieces for Tiny Gallery include paperweights, cufflinks, and many of her pendant necklaces. 

Saad’s portfolio has been showcased in many art galleries, including the I. Pinckney Simons Gallery, the Columbia Museum of Art, and the City Art Gallery. Alongside these honors, Cindy also placed 2nd in the State Fair Open Media category and was selected to the American Craft Council Southeast Region Spotlight in 2003. 
Saad’s work will be available to peruse and purchase via Jasper’s online gallery until the end of June at https://the-jasper-project.square.site/tiny-gallery.

Jasper Talks with Tiny Gallery Artist Lucy Bailey on Her Molding of Nature and Whimsy

We’re in the final week of our Tiny Gallery show with Lucy Bailey, a collection of dreamscapes in both 2D and 3D. Learn more about Bailey and her process below!

 

JASPER: Tell me a bit about where you’re from and how you came to art.  

BAILEY: I grew up on Lake Murray in an idyllic setting, back when the lake was quiet and there were few residents. My parents weren’t artists, but both were creative craftsmen in their own right. As a teenager I spent every nickel at The Dutch Door craft supply store at Boozer Shopping Center and would decoupage Holly Hobbie wrapping paper and bits of wallpaper onto anything that couldn’t outrun me. 

 

JASPER: Did you ever go to school for art? 

BAILEY: My degrees are in theatre, clinical counseling, and school psychology. Anything I know about making art has been from a few master classes or through trial and error. I tend to learn what I need to know to do a particular thing. 

 

JASPER: I know you enjoy a few different mediums, particularly clay – how did you find it? 

BAILEY: Before beginning in clay, I was an admirer of all things ceramic and collected on a shoestring. In my mid-40’s I bought a bag of porcelain to try hand-building masks, unaware that porcelain was akin to marshmallow fluff. Someone at Southern Pottery set me up with a decent low-grog earthenware and building became much easier! 

JASPER: Why do you keep coming back to clay?

BAILEY: There’s something viscerally satisfying about working with clay and there are endless possibilities. Yet, there are significant limitations: it’s fragile and heavy and often big and bulky. Those limitations are exasperating and, simultaneously, challenging. In my next life I hope to fall in love with creating small plastic jewelry or satin bow ties: anything small, light, and easy to ship.

 

JASPER: Well, I know you do some 2D work as well and recently started experimenting with scratchboards, right? 

BAILEY: While clay is my go-to, drawing and making scratchboards has been a productive detour for me. My drawings are small scale and done with colored pencils and ink. The scratchboards are a thin layer of white clay covered by black ink. Compared to ceramics, which requires building time, drying time, multiple firings, etc., drawing and scratchboards are more immediately satisfying, and I can pivot to them while ceramic pieces are in one of those various stages.

 

 

JASPER: In 2 and 3D you make a lot of fun, expressive faces. Have you always been drawn to faces?  

BAILEY: We are hard-wired visually to seek out and identify faces. Figurative work is definitely what I’m most drawn to, with a focus on busts and faces/masks. In terms of sculpting, faces are fickle. Early on a face will have a particular look and later in the process it has adopted a different quality. 

 

JASPER: Do you find that some images repeat themselves? 

BAILEY: There are certain ideas or imagery I’ll play with for a while then move on to another, and usually circle back to an earlier idea again later. A small skull stamp is commonly found lurking somewhere in my work as a memento mori. There’s a series of what I think of as coins from doodles back in college used in many pieces. Lately I’ve been in a moon phase (pun intended) crossing over from mixed-media-plus-ceramic wall pieces to pendants. For me it’s not about striving to conceive of an image because the images are finding me.

 

JASPER: How long does it usually take you to feel “finished” with a piece? 

BAILEY: Mary Ann Haven recently told me that older work should just be considered raw material and I love this conceptualization. With ceramics there’s only so much you can do once a piece is fired, but there are still many post-firing possibilities. I have a couple of larger (for me) pieces from a show at Stormwater Studios with K. Wayne Thornley last May and those will be reworked soon by adding wire and photographs.

 

JASPER: Tell me about this show specifically. What kind of pieces have you decided to show, and why? 

BAILEY: The Tiny Gallery grouping is all connected to clay, even the scratchboards. It felt important to have a couple options for small-scale figures, so I made the three moon cap figures and the three pieces with glaze bands around the base. While glazes don’t feature heavily in my work, this color is really perfect for the sea tides motif.  I wanted to include wall-mounted figurative works, so I created several new masks and included two older ones as well. The (imagined) Lover’s Eye pendants (which are graphite drawings on earthenware) and scratchboards are included to pull 2D into the mix.

  

JASPER: What’s in the future for you? 

BAILEY: A big change for me is coming up at the end of June when I retire from my day job! I have just started working on a series combining vintage (think late 1800s-mid 1900s) children’s clothing with photographs and other mixed medium—no ceramics involved. There’s also a nascent project integrating larger pieces of wood into the design. And I want to return to some very early ideas and explore them in more depth. 

Some of the new work will be ready this November when K. Wayne Thornley and I host our second annual Art on the Pond open studio, so we hope everyone will come see us then. 


 

JASPER: Finally, where can we find your work? 

BAILEY: Newer work is on Instagram and Facebook (both @lucybaileyclay). At this point my website (http://www.lucybaileyclay.com) is an archive but it may get revived soon. My business name is officially Lucy Bailey Studio.

 

To see Bailey’s effervescent scratchboards dancing with figures and faces and her delicate yet striking sculptures each with their own expressive quirks, go to Jasper’s virtual gallery: https://the-jasper-project.square.site/tiny-gallery

In Memoriam: Wim Roefs 1959-2022

In Memoriam – Wim Roefs

This has been a particularly difficult week for the Columbia Arts Community. On Monday May 9th, Wim Roefs, founder and owner of If Art Gallery and one of the founders of 701 Center for Contemporary Art, suffered a crashing heart attack at his gallery on Lincoln Street. On Thursday, the 12th, Wim passed away, leaving his wife Eileen Waddell and hundreds, if not thousands, of international friends and colleagues behind.

The pain of the loss of Wim Roefs from our arts community cannot be overestimated. Wim brought a sense of gravitas to us that many people didn’t know was missing. He reminded us that while art is in no way an endeavor of the elite, it should be taken seriously and respected for the vital role it plays in daily life. Wim made contemporary art accessible to all of us and, thankfully, his legacy will live on as long as art in Columbia does.

When I first realized we would be losing Wim I felt certain that he had done his job well and that the cultural legacy he leaves behind would continue to thrive and inform us.

But I worried a bit about his social legacy. Social media being what it is,  there has been no shortage of folks chiming in about how “sweet” Wim was—that he was “nice” and “pleasant.” This disturbs me. I’m not saying Wim couldn’t be sweet or nice, but congratulations to those who had the unique experience of being around Wim when he was in such a mood.

For the most part, Wim did not indulge in the subterfuge of Southern hospitality or the artifice of American social politics. I don’t know if it was because he was Dutch or because he was Wim, but he and his personality defied any number of platitudes about how we are meant to interact with one another. Instead, he behaved with complete and transparent honesty. Wim was my favorite kind of person in that there was no second-guessing when it came to how he felt about you and your work. His honest and straightforward demeanor required a tough skin and a healthy sense of self. If you didn’t have both when you entered into a relationship with Wim, it was imperative that you develop them for your relationship to continue. I appreciated that.

Sweet? Sure, at times. Sincere? Always.

To that end, we turn this editorial over to some of the folks who knew Wim best and will miss him most. I asked them to share, with sincerity, their thoughts and feelings on the loss and legacy of Wim Roefs.

Condolences to all as we mourn the passing of one of our most respected—and beloved—community members.

And thank you, Wim, for everything you taught us.

-Cindi Boiter

 

Coming out of teaching at Benedict College Wim was well versed in Delta Americana and its accompanying political and social American commentary. I recall first meetings at his home where he and his wife Eileen would host cutting edge artist showings complete with an impressive euro cuisine and assemblage of artists that rarely ventured from their studios, which in turn led to incredible gatherings that ignited discourse on art and culture and cultivated  new friendships and ideas.

The  founding of if Art marked the debut of a New York standard gallery presence in Columbia. Early on, Wim populated the gallery with a cutting-edge stable of artists, local and international, all with a common thread of Art Spirit; art being who they are, not what they did, this often manifested itself by continuous exhibitions of work challenging patrons and the general public. This if Art gallery model presented a thoroughness which included artist cataloging, lectures, and talks with showings, and meticulous hanging and presentation, this would shortly expand to include poetry readings and exploratory music concerts as well.

Wim was quick to recognize the art spirit in young artists and go to lengths to encourage and supply support and materials to further their unique callings, he was also quick to herald  iconic artists such as Laura Spong and showcase their work as assets to the rich fabric of urban culture. He constantly pushed to highlight The Vista and its rightly achieved formal status as Cultural District in Columbia,  and knowingly worked consistently toward an ongoing goal of Columbia as a cultural destination for future citizens not  fixated on collegian over emphasis.      

Wim's youthful background as a former band drummer, and a political reactionary

surreptitiously pasting political bills at night served him well to establish his distinct curatorial criticism concerning art and culture. He united Columbia artist with our German sister city Kaiserslautern to produce an ongoing relationship of international exchange exhibitions and public sculpture. This in turn established the Lady Street Sculptural Corridor as a hallmark of urban design and international influence raising the bar for future architectural and green space concepts.

And, he loved his cats. 

-Stephen Chesley

 

It is difficult to express in words the void that's left by Wim Roefs departure. he set the standard for Contemporary Art in Columbia both through his gallery, and his advocacy work in civic organizations including 701 CCA.

His work throughout the state and southeast region as an independent curator was important in laying the path for new voices. He had exacting standards, he believed in risk taking and  championed challenging art and conversations. He made space for emerging talent. His interests were broad. Music, film, theatre, visual art, and dance. His politics were clear. he believed in and practiced inclusion, not as an exercise in political correctness, but as a way of living, a way of being. He brought lots of different kinds of people into shared orbits. He called bullshit when he saw it. He was sincere.

-Michaela Pilar Brown

 

Wim’s passing is a staggering loss. His passion, intellect, and commitment to the arts in this region are gigantic. We all loved to participate in his presentations of local and international talent. His carefully curated exhibits at If Art, 701CCA, and Art Fields have become a part of our cultural psyche. The wealth of talent here and abroad Wim found and represented is vast and diverse. His boundless energy has raised our cultural consciousness and will continue to elevate the visual arts throughout our community. Wim, Thank you. You are forever in our hearts and minds…

-Clark Ellefson  

Wim with the late Laura Spong

During the 11 plus years my office has been two doors down from if Art there were many days and nights where I was able to stop in and just enjoy a talk with Wim about any number of interests we shared. 

We both parked our cars in a garage a block away from our shops. For me, I walked past the large window at the entrance of If Art on my way to my car every day. This was the showcase window. It allowed anyone walking down Lincoln St., one of the busier pedestrian streets in Columbia, to walk past if Art and view what Wim had to showcase that day, week, or month. 

My thoughts in the past few days, walking past that large window, have turned to the fact that for the past 11 years I have seen every artist that Wim has hung in that window. There have been local, upcoming artists in that window. There have been nationally recognized and established artists in that window. I’ve seen beautiful small painting of flowers, and large painting that served as a bit of a middle finger to whoever walked by. Wim brought us the art he liked to champion and make no mistake, want you to buy so you could show it off to your friends. I was lucky enough to see it all. 

-Wade Sellers

 

Wim changed the landscape of visual arts in Columbia. He was a powerhouse of knowledge and his demand of excellence and passion helped to create an environment that thrust local artists to a whole new level. As a founder of 701 Center for Contemporary Art his vision helped to shape what has become a leading institution for contemporary art in the region. The team at 701 is saddened by his sudden departure and he will be greatly missed. But we are so grateful for all he has done to raise the bar for cultural arts in this town. 

-Lee Ann Kornegay 

 

Since I met Wim thirty years ago, he has been a constant force in the South Carolina arts scene, and it won’t be the same without him. He cultivated friendships and fostered collaborations among artists. His knowledge, enthusiasm, and passion for the arts and making things happen was unmatched in our arts community. Wim will not be forgotten and was a hell of a friend.

-Mike Williams

 

This is a devastating and sudden loss for our community, within which Wim was such a force at 701, at if Art, and beyond. Such a presence. Deep condolences to Eileen and to Wim’s family. I thought of him as the “old fashioned” type of gallerist: if Art is no pristine white cube with an intimidating attendant, but a jumble of walls and levels all filled with art and with books, open and inviting to all, presided over by Wim from his perch in the loft. There is no prevailing style or medium among the artists represented. Simply those Wim thought were good and to whom he was deeply committed. Wim ran if Art more as an art center than gallery, hosting musical events, performances, and book launches—including mine. When I asked Wim if we could do a launch in the gallery the answer was simply: “Sure, when do you want to do it?” No red tape to cut, no waivers to sign. Just set up the table, put out the books and the chairs and do it. He was always open to conversations and to events that would stimulate them. The first public event we attended during the depths of pre-vaccine COVID was at the gallery: Michaela Pilar Brown’s moving sculptural performance mourning her mother’s passing, compellingly enacted by her and Terrance Henderson. The set and the performances were extraordinary; but just sharing a live experience with other people was cathartic for us, as I hope it was for Michaela. Wim created a space in which you felt safe to have deep and perhaps unsettling aesthetic and emotional experiences like this, even during a pandemic. I hope that as a community we can find ways to honor Wim’s life and extend his legacy and commitment to creating spaces for art and experience.

-Peter Chametzky

Wim with Diane Gilbert, Kirkland Smith and James Smith

Wim was a giant in the art community and his passing  is such a loss for his family and friends! 

He made a lasting impact through his work with 701 CCA and his gallery if Art, as well as facilitating the artist exchange with our sister city Kaiserslautern, Germany. He  was passionate about the value of art and passionate about the artists he valued. He will be dearly missed. 

-Kirkland Smith

  

“I feel heartache for having lost a friend, but also for the wider loss to our art community and the direction of local art. His honesty, drive, and support are irreplaceable. Wim is irreplaceable.”

-Scotty Peak

 

We were introduced to Wim when we first arrived in Columbia. He and Eileen opened their home and hearts and welcomed us from the beginning. His smile, dry sense of humor, and strong opinion made him the kind of friend we valued and appreciated. We truly loved him. Wim will be missed, and we will miss his voice floating from the loft of If Art Gallery as he greeted us when we arrived.

-Thaddeus and Tanya Wideman-Davis

 

Wim did so much for Columbia arts and music. But for me personally, during my days at Free Times, his presence offered reassurance that approaching our small but determined creative community with honest criticism (and some well-intentioned snark) was not just OK but necessary for its continued growth. 

-Jordan Lawrence

  

Wim could be disagreeable and cantankerous and have a need to be right at the exact same moment he was incredibly kind and accepting. A person of great integrity who wasn’t above fucking with you in a good-natured way. Fun and sneaky funny. He was a fierce champion not only of the arts but of people. Mostly people. There was only one Wim. We were so lucky to know him. Zaire and Michaela myself will always remember the One Woman show he gave the Bird at If Art when she  was five(I think). Or how we used to talk about “real football “ , soccer. And how he was helpful . Always helping. Miss you man. Love you Wim. A singular presence in Columbia. 

-Darion McCloud

  

Wim Roefs was a gift pure and simple. 

-David Yaghjian

The Tarot - Alejandro Garcia-Lemos at Stormwater Studios May 17 - 22, 2022

Jasper is delighted to learn that Columbia-based artist Alejandro Garcia-Lemos will be showing his new project, The Tarot, May 17 - 22 at Stormwater Studios, 413 Pendleton Street in Columbia’s Vista. An opening reception will be held Thursday, May 19 from 5:30-8:30 pm.

“The Tarot García-Lemos was entirely conceived and drawn in 2020 during the Covid-19 Pandemic in Columbia, South Carolina,” Garcia-Lemos says. “I eventually added the four suits to the major arcana to provide additional texture, resulting in a unique 26 card deck. In 2021, the collection was selected to be shown at the pandemic-themed ‘1593’ art exhibit at the Koger Center for the Arts in Columbia, SC. Recently, the deck was presented in the mystic city of New Orleans which provided the perfect environment for the final version. It consists of 27 gouache paintings on panel.”

There will be a limited edition of 100 printed decks for sale and probably a very special Tarot reader at the opening reception on Thursday, May 19th from 5:30 to 8:30 pm

For more on the creation of the Tarot Garcia-Lemos check out the artist’s narrative and reading instructions here.

Jasper Chats with May's First Thursday (slightly off Main) artist - Alex Ruskell

Attorney Alex Ruskell is the Jasper Project’s Featured Artist this month at Sound Bites Eatery.

His Art Show opened on First Thursday, May 5th and will run through the end of May.

Alex, thanks for sharing your work with Jasper at Sound Bites Eatery throughout the month of May. Is visual art a new endeavor for you? We know you more as a musician and member of the eclectic musical group, The Merry Chevaliers. When and how did you get started creating visual art as well?

  • I started painting during COVID lockdown – my friend, Lila McCullough, of Lila’s Happy Flowers, created Melrose Art in the Yard and asked me if I would like to do something for it.  Lila paints flowers on boards, so I thought I could do the same thing but with monsters and aliens.

How would you categorize your aesthetic and what other artists have inspired you?

  • My favorite visual artists are Daniel Johnston, who is mainly known as an indie musician combatting severe mental illness, and Henry Darger, a custodian who wrote and illustrated a 15,145-page fantasy novel that was discovered after his death.  I do like the simplicity of their stuff, but I mainly love the spirit behind it.  There’s a kind of wonderful futility and love —these are guys that weren’t supported or encouraged and just did it anyway.  My buggy-eyed aliens are clearly based on Johnston’s frogs (famous from his “Hi, How are You?” mural in Austin, TX and a t-shirt that Kurt Cobain of Nirvana used to wear). I bought one of Johnston’s signed drawings right before he passed away, which I have up in my office.

 

Can you talk about your technique?

  • I used to collect comic books, so when I was trying to figure out how to paint, I lifted whatever my technique might be from how comic books are made.  In comic books, there’s usually a penciller who draws the art, an inker who inks the pencil in, and then a colorist who adds the colors.  I pencil, then I paint it in, then I go over the pencil lines with a paint pen.  It’s shocking the difference the paint pen makes.

 

You used unconventional material as canvasses in your Sound Bites show, such as fence posts and ceiling tiles – is this something you do regularly? 

  • Yes – I initially got the idea from Lila, because she uses fenceposts and wood collected from the side of the road for her paintings.  But there are a few other reasons I like using recycled stuff – one, it’s cheap so I don’t have to charge much for paintings; two, I started out in environmental law way back when, so it fits with my idea of sustainability and recycling; and three, my favorite scene in any documentary is from It Might Get Loud, a guitar documentary about Jack White, the Edge, and Jimmy Page.  At the beginning, Jack White builds a “guitar” out of a board, string, nails, and a bottle and says, “Who says you need to buy a guitar?”  I love that sentiment.  A few weeks ago, I gave a talk for art day at Oak Pointe Elementary in Irmo to about 500 elementary school students.  I have no clue what the students’ socio-economic status is, but I figured if there is some kid who wants to make art and can’t afford much, I could show that kid you don’t really need much except the desire to do it and a little creativity.  I showed them paintings I had done on posts, ceiling tiles, and record covers (although they thought the record covers were books).  Although I use acrylic paint, I told them about Henry Neubig, who is a Louisiana artist who actually paints with mud.  I wanted them to get the idea that there is no real barrier to entry to making art, and I like my own paintings to reflect that a little.

 

You have unusually affordable price points for your art, too. Is this by design and, if so, can you speak to that please?

  • My wife, Kerry Egan, is a writer and hospice chaplain.  She spreads good in the world with her books, ministry, comforting words, empathy, etc.  I am not smart enough for any of that, but I am pretty good at being goofy.  The $10-$20 price point is for the exact same reason we dress up as French noblemen and play songs like “Hot Moms” in my band, Les Merry Chevaliers.  For the band, I always imagine someone wandering into the Art Bar or someplace after a horrible day and seeing us onstage doing our nonsense and feeling like their burden is lifted a little.  My art pricing is in the same spirit  – people are so delighted when I say something is less than $20.  You can actually see a cloud pass sometimes.  Less than $20 is small enough to make people happy and large enough that I can take my wife out to Henry’s after a show without feeling guilty about it. 

 

Do you ever dabble in other mediums or are you interested in venturing into anything else?

  • I have an MFA in fiction from the Iowa Writers’ Workshop and a Master’s in Creative Writing from Harvard that I have done absolutely nothing with – I’d like to fix that before I die.  I’ve got a finished novel about a lawyer with a unicorn horn stuck to his head, so we’ll see if anyone bites.

Where else can patrons find your work once your show at Sound Bites comes down at the end of May?

  • I do Soda City every so often, and Melrose Heights Art in the Yard when we have it.  A Little Happy in Five Points sells stickers I have made of some of my stuff.  There is also a new store opening at the end of June called Lyons General Store on the corner of Rosewood and Assembly in Columbia.  They’re going to be selling t-shirts with some of my designs. Finally, I take requests – aruskell@gmail.com.

 

Thanks, Alex!

Announcing the DRAW JASPER Contest - Deadline August 15, 2022

Win YOUR SPOT on the Cover of Jasper Magazine!

Have you always wondered what Jasper would look like if Jasper was a real living and breathing entity? Would they have purple hair and sexy eyes or be bald and bodacious? Would they have a big nose and bigger ears, bowed legs or knocked knees? Hairy arms? A shiny grill?

Now you can let your imagination run wild as you create an image of Jasper as you see them!

The winning entry will score the coveted spot as the Cover Artist for the Fall 2022 issue of Jasper Magazine as well as a $250 cash prize.

All accepted images will be included in the Draw Jasper Art Show and available for purchase at the artist-designated price, with the artists receiving 75% of the sale price and 25% going toward the publication of Jasper Magazine.

 

small print:

  • All entries must be submitted as an image of the original art (the original art will be exhibited in the Draw Jasper Art Show) and should be 8.5x11”, CYMK and at least 300 dpi.

  • The original art should not exceed 8.5 x 11 inches and there should be space allowed for the masthead along the top or bottom of the image.

  • Any medium is allowed as long as the original is 2-D.

  • Jasper may be depicted full-length, as a portrait, or anything in between.

  • Images should be emailed to JasperProjectColumbia@gmail.com no later than August 15, 2022 and should include your name, contact info, and the price point for your original art. PLEASE DO NOT SUBMIT ORIGINAL ART.

  • Finalists will be notified by September 1, 2022 and details of the Draw Jasper Art Show will be announced then.

 

Jasper Project Intern Stephanie Allen Opens Honors Show at McMaster

By Emily Moffitt

One of our interns with the Jasper Project, Stephanie Allen, has put together her undergraduate honors solo exhibition on UofSC campus!  

Her exhibition, titled “In My Skin, Her Skin” is a culmination of works and themes from her undergraduate years in combination with her experiences and the experiences of other women and nonbinary individuals. The works called for plenty of experimentation, incorporating new surfaces to work on like acetate and media like graphite powder. Experimentation was crucial for the large-scale pieces to work as the use of acetate added the layering effect that Allen needed for her messages to shine through the portraits.  

“I wanted two separate spaces for different facets of identity,” Allen states. “I finger painted, used India ink, and had a lot of flexibility with materials. It was also my first time working on such a large scale and working on each corner of the page was definitely a challenge.”

 The exhibition calls back and converses with previous works by Allen as the perception of the body-most often female-through the lens of the church or more conservative ideations has always been something Allen critiqued. Now, “In My Skin, Her Skin” highlights the feelings of others through layering of abstracted mark making and fine-tuned, anonymized representations of the interviewees.  

For this particular series, the interview process was completely integral to the work,” Allen states. “The work was wholly dependent on how that person expressed their relationship with their body.” Each of the larger-than-life portraits have two layers; the first graphite layer is based on a photograph provided by each of the interviewees, with the freedom of posing and positioning completely in their hands. The project captures not only the freedom that these interviewees feel in regard to their bodies but is indicative of how they wish to present themselves to the world. The interview process takes on a grander meaning with the second, abstracted layer as Allen listened carefully to the answers of her subjects in order to provide inspiration for color palettes and the style of mark making that she would opt for on that particular person’s portrait.  

Allen’s mission for her exhibition lies within creating and portraying a wider visual vocabulary of what can be considered feminine. “The point of the show is to show that a body does not dictate identity. The pieces share commonalities of queerness and femininity, and those things don’t have a specific aesthetic.”  

By creating works of art with a variety of body shapes and posing, they force us to question what our predilections of femininity include, questioning the heteronormativity of gender roles. Allen notes that we as humans are often predisposed to associating looks with the character of an individual, causing our perception of femininity to often lie within physical attributes rather than mentality or emotion. Through the grand scale of the models and universal theme of questioning what we perceive as a feminine individual, Allen hopes to evoke self-reflection in the audiences as we view her work, letting ourselves reevaluate how we see femininity out of the liminal scheme of exclusively womanhood.  

Viewers of Allen’s past work definitely see that the connecting threads between her existing body of work, and the passion she harbors for this exhibition is clear.

“In My Skin, Her Skin” is on display in McMaster College’s Passage Gallery on the first floor through May 14th. A reception will be hosted at 6 PM on May 5, and some of Allen’s earlier but relevant work is also still up on display in Cool Beans! across from Wardlaw College.

 

Jasper Welcomes the Multi-talented Alex Ruskell to First Thursdays (slightly) Off Main at Sound Bites Eatery

After a resounding success at Jasper’s first First Thursday featuring artist Michael Shepard in April, we are thrilled to be back at the new arts downtown dining den, Sound Bites Eatery, for First Thursday in May.

May brings us the bright and whimsical art of Alex Ruskell!

When Ruskell isn’t serving as the director of Academic Success at the UofSC Law School, he is a member of the equally bright and whimsical band, the Merry Chevaliers.

A champion of silliness and advocate of art in all its frivolity, Ruskell’s art offers a dose of something most of us have come to cherish of late — a reason to smile.

Joining Alex for this opening event will be Dick not Richard who will be laying down the groove and keeping our heads bopping and our hips swinging.

Come out for an evening of visual art, music, and fabulous food!

Free and open to the public — See You Thursday at First Thursday (slightly) off Main at Sound Bites Eatery - 1425 Sumter Street.

Something Blue at 701 Whaley Hallway

1st Place - Kim Kim Foster

2nd Place - Kim Kim Foster

3rd Place - Russel Jeffcoat

Better Days by Kim Kim Foster

PhotoSC presents Something Blue featuring the work of 15 local photographers interpreting of the concept ‘blue” in a photographic exhibition which opened on Thursday, April 7, 2022 at 6:00 p.m. in the Community Hallway at 701 Whaley.

The prospectus asked photographers to address the concept of blue – “a color – what shade, tint or hue? An emotion – what does it feel like? A time of day – dawn or dusk? A memory of who, where or what?”

Photographers juried in the show include Sandy Andrews, Kimberly Case, Steve Chesley, Kim Kim Foster, George Fulton, Susan Hogue, Latrease Holman, Russell Jeffcoat, Mathew John, Tracy Martin, Fred McElveen, Maggie Mullin O’Hara, ML Miller, Yeshua Perez, Ed Shumnes, and Sam Wolfe.

Kim Kim Foster is awarded the first and second place prize in the show, beautifully illustrating both the color and the emotion in her two photographs, ‘Better Days’ and ‘Where from Here?’ Dark and moody, these two photographs reach out to the viewer in on an emotional level as well as thru her color palette.

The second place went to Russel Jeffcoat, a well-known Columbia photographer, for his unique cyanotype print, ‘Abandoned,’ an image of old tires heaped in a pile. Cyanotype is one of the oldest photographic processes with a distinctive blue color, often used for botanicals, it is known as a blueprint.

The exhibition was juried by Leslie Burns, a noted alternative process photographer from Charleston, SC. Burns has been exhibited internationally and published in Cyanotype: The Blueprint in Contemporary Practice by Christina Z. Anderson. She has been featured on Fotosavant.com, Lenscratch.com and OneOneThousand.org. In June 2012, Burns was named as one of the “100 Under 100: The New Superstars of Southern Art” by Oxford American Magazine. She has been an Instructor of Photography at University of Georgia, Trident Technical College, College of Charleston and Redux Contemporary Arts Center.

The juried exhibition features 31 images that span the genres of abstract, architecture, alternative processes, fantasy, landscape, nature, portraiture, still life, and street photography and will hang thru the end of June 2022 in The Hallway at 701 Whaley.

PhotoSC is a 501C3 non-profit arts organization dedicated to the exploration of photography and visual culture. Supported by the SC Arts Commission, our long-term plans are to illuminate the general public and the art community about the photographic canon through education and gallery shows, to address visual literacy and photography’s role in society, and to create spaces where photographers can reveal their work to a larger public thru in a dedicated facility

Jasper presents Line-Up for First Thursday Featured Artists at Sound Bites Eatery

It almost feels like we’re back to normal.

But really, what is normal? Will we ever be normal again? Were we ever normal to start with?

You can help answer these questions and more by joining Jasper as we bring back one of our favorite pre-pandemic events - gathering with the Jasper tribe (that’s YOU!) to welcome art from a featured artist to our walls. But now, given that the Jasper Project no longer has walls on Main Street we’ll be gathering for First Thursdays Slightly Off Main at Sound Bites Eatery at 1425 Sumter Street, one block off Main Street between the Taylor and Hampton Street blocks.

After an exciting launch of our new series in April with featured artist Michael Shepard, we’re thrilled to announce our line-up for the season below:

May 5 – Alex Ruskell

June 2 – Kimber Carpenter

July 7 – Ginny Merett

August 4 – Marius Valdes

September 1 – Quincy Pugh

We’ll start at 6 pm and the artists will be in the house to chat with you about their art and maybe grab a photo with you when you pick out a treasure to take home.

Terri Mac and Mai Turner will have the kitchen open so plan on grabbing a delicious dinner or glass of vino or beer to enjoy while you check out new art and either catch up with friends or meet some new ones.

In the meantime, stop by Sound Bites Eatery by the end of April for some yummy food and the art of Michael Shepard!

REVIEW: Emily Moffitt's "Dreamscapes"

Dreamscapes by Emily Moffitt - Passage Gallery, McMaster College at USC, March 20-April 2,2022

Emily Moffitt dreams in the third person.

It is in part these dreams that inspired her recent show, appropriately named Dreamscapes. Combining abstractions with representational figures and landscapes, Moffit explores cultural identity, grief, and family trauma.

A Columbia native, Moffit is a senior English and studio art student at the University of South Carolina. Dreamscapes is the culmination of her work as a student artist.

The exhibition features a variety of approaches—the technique evolved over time as Moffit expanded her thematic goals and widened the range of mediums. Beginning with pieces on mixed media paper, Moffit extended her practice to include collaged bits of mylar and yupo. The latter portion of the show includes works on black canvas.

Regardless of what medium she works with, Moffit likes to start her pieces intuitively, using liquid India inks and spraying them with water to allow the piece to develop organically— marks she calls “meticulously random.” She didn’t put pressure on the images looking perfect in the early stages.

“It was a really random process and I really enjoyed how freeing it started out as, with the ability to get more fine-tuned mark making as the piece progressed,” Moffit says.

Half Puerto Rican, Moffit used these pieces to express and explore her identity. After the recent passing of her abuela, the project helped her pass through stages of grief while navigating healthy ways of coping with trauma.

Pieces feature recurring iconography that stems from symbols of the Taíno people, who resided in what is currently Puerto Rico. Turtles, frogs (coquí), icons for the sun and moon god hide between the color and texture of Moffit’s pieces. These symbols are used heavily in modern life in Puerto Rico and are associated with their culture.

“I remember seeing them growing up since my mom had necklaces of some of them, and I have a coquí sticker on my car.” Moffit says. “It’s little things like that I see that makes me feel that much more connected, so I decided to incorporate them into my pieces.

The shared culture and trauma of the family is an ongoing theme in the work— a complicated subject given Moffit’s mixed heritage and limited fluency in Spanish. This sense of fractured identity is an inspiration for and important facet of Moffit’s recent work.

Moffit always dreamed in the third person, but as her mental health became drained, so her dreams became convoluted and confusing. Already in the practice of processing through her art, Moffit used her work as a way of translating these dreams— and her sense of self.

Moffit’s work was initially illustrative (it was only in college that she learned the difference between illustration and fine art), but Moffit progressed into finding an intentional “fine art” style in the past year. This show was an attempt to blend the joy of creating both.

While Dreamscapes marks the end of Moffit’s work as an undergraduate, she has no intentions of quitting art. Moffit doesn’t know where her process may take her. Whether she will continue mapping out dreams or follow another passion, Moffit’s love for the arts isn’t going anywhere.

Until then, Moffit hopes that viewers can use her show as a “conversation starter” for how their own dreams can be perceived. “I used to think dreams didn’t have much meaning until last year and that’s why I ended up making these works in the first place,” Moffit says.

Dream on, Emily Moffit.

By Stephanie Allen

Irmo hosts the 2nd Annual International Festival -- with ART!

From a small, sleepy, rural town of the 1950’s, Irmo South Carolina has grown into a bustling suburb of our capital city and now has some valuable International influences .  As Columbia has grown and stretched its reach across the river, Irmo has become an extension of urban life and with it come the benefits of a small town enjoying big city shopping, cuisine, music and arts, excellent recreational activities, health care, sports, educational opportunities, and economic growth.

The International diversity has significantly added to the quality of life in this community.

The Irmo schools reflect these changes. Seven Oaks Elementary School has students who speak more than 30 languages. Irmo Middle School is an International Academic Magnet School and Irmo High School is an International Arts Magnet. With its many cultural and faith differences, Irmo is a friendly, peaceful place to live.

Irmo is also an economically successful community, and their International residents contribute to that success.

To celebrate this diversity,  Irmo is hosting its second International Festival on April 24 at the Community Park from 10-5 and it is free to the public. There will live entertainment, food, a Story telling tent, art exhibits, vendors, and an opportunity to help build a Rangoli – a beautiful, giant eco-friendly Indigenous art form created on the ground. (If you want to help build the Rangoli bring a small bag of items  to add  pasta, rice, spices, flowers, coffee grounds, beans, bird seed, corn, etc. You can also work on the Rangoli April 18-23 each afternoon beginning at 5pm – a wonderful experience for nature lovers and creative artists of all ages. Supplies will be provided. )

The Irmo International Festival will be a fun day in the park for family members of all ages.

WELCOME VALERIE LAMOTT to Jasper's TINY Gallery

At Jasper, we can’t get over the work Valerie Lamott has put together for our April Tiny Gallery show!

So many descriptors come to mind when writing about Lamott’s art — grounded in place, meaningful, sentimental, powerful, pristine, Cola-centric — but mostly, exquisite! The detail the artist brings to her jewelry, with each piece being hand-made, unique, and personally inspired, makes the opportunity we have to show and offer this work to Jasper readers a real honor.

Valerie Lamott is a Columbia, SC, based jewelry artisan, but can rarely be found there. She's more likely to be hiking or camping or kayaking in any one of America's state parks. She uses these places as inspiration for her artwork and hopes it inspires others to play outside too.

WE hope you enjoy seeing and perhaps purchasing Lamott’s work as much as we enjoy presenting it.

Visit Tiny Gallery for many more pieces.

Check out the whole lineup of Tiny Gallery Artists for 2022.

Do YOU Have your Birthday Party Tickets Yet?

We have limited the number of attendees to 150 including all the participating artists, so don’t sleep on locking your ticket down!

We have music from Post Timey String Band, pop up art performances from Columbia Reparatory Dance Company & others, live painting by Michael Krajewski & Lucas Sams, an art show featuring work from 20 Soda City - based artists, a raffle like you’ve never seen before, food from Chef Joe Turkaly, a VIP Champagne reception and so much more!

Jasper Presents First Thursday at Sound Bites with Featured Artist Michael Shepard

We're so happy that Mai Turner & Terri MacLaughlin have invited Jasper in to host First Thursdays for them at Sound Bites Eatery -- And that they are letting us feature a new artist each month!

Join us at 6 pm on Thursday April 7th for dinner, drinks, art from Michael Shepard, and/or a comfy place to gather with your arts-loving friends!

Sound Bites is located at 1425 Sumter Street, one block off Main Street between Hampton and Washington.

About Artist Michael Shepard

Michael Shepard, a South Carolina native and long term resident of Columbia, SC, is an eclectic artist currently working in acrylics, soft pastels and mixed media. His styles, techniques and media change with each piece depending on the subject matter and the inspiration it ensues.

When asked what creating art means to him, Michael responded: “Well, I could say Art is an expression of the feelings and interpretations of my situation in the world around me. It’s a means to escape isolation and means to process emotions. It’s a salvation from adversity and destitution and it is also a celebration of well being and happiness…”

“But really, I’m just a guy painting pictures and hopefully creating works people will enjoy.”

Stay tuned for more about Michael Shepard as we approach First Thursday. Mark your calendars and we’ll see you on Sumter Street and Sound Bites Eatery!

Columbia Open Studios April 2nd & 3rd -

By Emily Moffitt

48"x60" oil on canvas, Walking a Tightrope by Christopher Lane

Columbia Open Studios returns on April 2nd and 3rd! The event is a “self-guided, weekend-long, free tour of artists’ studios in the Greater Columbia, South Carolina area, including all of Richland and Lexington Counties” and gives South Carolinians an opportunity to check out some of the most prominent inventive minds Columbia has to offer.  

It is a free event that offers time to meet with the participating artists individually at the Preview Party, and the event aims to create a direct connection between the artists and audiences both in person and on the web through social media promotion and interpersonal marketing.  

Patrons get to have a sneak peek into the individualized studio life of their favorite local artists by touring their studio spaces.  

Many artists who participate in COS are repeat participants; 2022 will be the fourth year that Christopher Lane participates in the event. A highly successful artist with a passion for making large format paintings that make large statements and one who finds beauty in every inch of landscape that South Carolina offers, Lane finds great value in being a part of the COS artists. “I enjoy it immensely as it allows patrons to observe my work in a more intimate setting and connect in a way we can’t always do in galleries.”  

This sentiment is surely shared amongst the other participants, both on the part of the artists and the audiences. The participant roster features a wide variety of artists from multiple disciplines, with painters, ceramicists, and everything in between, creating lots of chances for visitors to find a new artist’s body of work to fall in love with.  

The event will be free to the public and last from 10 AM to 6 PM on Saturday April 2nd, and from 12 PM to 6 PM on Sunday April 3rd.  

For more information, you can check out their website columbiaopenstudios.org and subscribe to their newsletter! The participating artists with pertinent information about their work and locations are all featured on the website.

Jean-Marie Mauclet and Gwylene Gallimard present DISPLACEMENT, MEMORY, ERASURE Collaborative Challenges in Three Parts at 701 CCA

G & M is not just our favorite place to grab a croque monsieur and a nice Chablis in Charleston, it’s also the initials of the artists who have an exciting installation and program of art at 701 CCA opening next week.

 

According to our friends at 701 CCA –  

The artist-activist duo Gwylene Gallimard & Jean-Marie Mauclet are back at 701 Center for Contemporary Art in Columbia, SC, with Displacement, Memory, Erasure: Collaborative Challenges in Three Parts. A dozen years after the duo’s memorable, gallery-wide Olympia installation at 701 CAA, the French couple and Charleston, SC, residents present a three-part project at the center, where they are currently in residence. 

The exhibition opens Thursday, March 24, 6:00 – 8:00 p.m., with a meet-and-greet-the-artists opening event. On Saturday, April 9, the Charleston collective TINYisPOWERFUL, of which Gallimard and Mauclet are members, will present an all-day communication and learning workshop. On Sunday, April 24, 3:00 – 5:00 p.m., the exhibition closing reception will take place. 

Gallimard’s part of the exhibition, called In Progress…, presents large canvases with drawings, collage and artifacts that relay decades of the duo’s unique art-and-activism collaborations with artists and non-artists alike. “The canvases are dedicated to our many collaborations and our explorations of art in and with communities,” Gallimard says. “It also perpetuates and honors those collaborations.” 

Mauclet’s 3-D constructions in the exhibition are excerpts from A Tale of Charleston, an installation-in-the-making that critiques issues of wealth, class, culture, and race in Charleston. The tale central to the installation, Mauclet says, “actualizes a dream in which the city of Charleston has turned into a living garden. Wealth, class, cultures, race have become assets, a place for all to belong.” Several of Mauclet’s constructions refer to tiny downtown Charleston businesses that are either for sale or no longer exist. 

The project’s third component is the April 9 workshop of TINYisPOWERFUL. The day-long workshop explores art tools and other techniques for collective social engagement, communication, and learning. The workshop, open to the public, will consist of five sessions exploring ways of engaging with and in the community and exploring art as tools for social engagement, activism, and growing communities. The workshop is from 9;30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. and will be a hybrid event with an online and in-person component. For more information, go to www.701cca.org.

About the Artists -

Gallimard (b. 1948, Paris, France) and Mauclet (b. 1942, Meru, France), Charleston residents since 1984, have worked independently and collaboratively for some four decades. Their collaborative works include Charleston’s popular community-oriented French café Fast & French, which they owned for decades, and which was conceived to offer “all the features of an art, social justice and economic sustainability project.” The duo has created installations and exhibitions tackling the health insurance industry, fast food, religious beliefs, refugees and how the past is memorialized. A 2006–08 collaboration, You Comin, brought eight artists and educators to the World Social Forum in Nairobi, Kenya. Their long-running project The Future Is On The Table between 2001 and 2013 was at South Carolina State University in Orangeburg and in Lexington, KY, Charleston, SC, and Jackson, MS. The project led Gallimard and Mauclet to residencies in India and France and an experimental conference on the Trans-Siberian train. Why do they want to be rich without us? in 2007 was part of the project The Changing Face of Charleston. Gallimard & Mauclet 2009 residency and 2010 exhibition Olympia at 701 CCA explored the history and culture of the historic mill district in Columbia where the center is located. Conversations With Time was a 2011 intergenerational art project in West Baltimore, MD. 

Gallimard & Mauclet’s work has received support from France’s Ministère de la Culture; the South Carolina Arts Commission; Charleston’s Spoleto Festival; Alternate ROOTS; Alternate Visions; the Humanities Foundations; and the National Endowment for the Arts. Mauclet studied at the University of Paris, France; the State University of New York at Buffalo, where he received an MFA; and New York City’s Cooper Union School of Art and Architecture. Gallimard studied at Paris’ Ecole Nationale Superieure des Arts Decoratifs and received an MFA from Concordia University in Montreal, Canada. 

The TINYisPOWERFUL collective believes that art and tiny businesses are nimble, adaptable, and profitable for the people. The collective argues that belonging means celebrating many histories and cultures and together becoming all we can be. 

701 CCA is located at 701 Whaley Street, 2nd Floor, Columbia, SC 29201.

 

Dates to Remember: 

Thu, March 24, 6:00 – 8:00 pm, Meet The Artist Exhibition Opening

Sat, April 9, 9:30 – 5:00, TINYisPOWERFUL Workshop

Sun, April 24, 3:00 – 5:00 pm, Exhibition Closing Reception

 

For further inquiries contact Michaela Pilar Brown at director@701cca.org or (803) 319-9949.