An Election Day Poem by Ed Madden

At the Most Worshipful Prince Hall Grand Lodge,

Columbia, SC, October 31, 2020

 

Across the parking lot, a man with a mic

is calling out drop, pop, and roll, and two

women just in front of us in line dance

along. It’s getting a little festive, a little

restless as we get closer to the door,

where they let in six or seven at a time.

One woman shuffles the heel-toe in fluffy

pink house shoes. They name the moves,

call out a few they don’t think quite right.

 

A golfcart bumps by with boxes of popcorn.

A church offers bottled waters at a table

where the line curls along the back fence.

It’s been a two-hour wait. We got here early

enough, but the line was already around

the building. Everyone is wearing masks except

a middle-aged white couple in black and

sunglasses, taking occasional deep pulls

on their electric cigarettes. Most of us look

 

at our cellphones as we wait, another

kind of social distance. The line wraps

around the building then coils around

an adjacent parking lot. An old woman

leaves crying because the county isn’t

providing provisional ballots for early voting

sites. I don’t know why. Once inside

we line up on the thick strips of gray

tape that mark off the floor. A poll worker

 

behind a plastic shield stares at my license

a bit—I can’t tell if she’s comparing

signatures or if it’s just the COVID hair. Finally,

she hands me a slip of paper, a cotton swab,

points me toward the wall of voting machines.

I use the cotton swab to touch the screen.

I get an “I Voted” sticker when I leave.

—Ed Madden

Ed Madden is the poetry editor for Jasper Magazine and Muddy Ford Press, a full professor at the Uof SC, the poet laureate for the city of Columbia, and the author of four books of poetry--Signals, which won the 2007 SC Poetry Book Prize; Prodigal: …

Ed Madden is the poetry editor for Jasper Magazine and Muddy Ford Press, a full professor at the Uof SC, the poet laureate for the city of Columbia, and the author of four books of poetry--Signals, which won the 2007 SC Poetry Book Prize; Prodigal: Variations; Nest; and Ark. His chapbook My Father’s House was selected for the Seven Kitchens Press Editor’s Series. His poems have appeared in Best New Poets 2007, The Book of Irish American Poetry, and in journals such as Prairie Schooner, Crazyhorse, Poetry Ireland Review, Los Angeles Review, and online at The Good Men Project.

Muddy Ford Press Releases Second Collection in Laureate Series with Ann-Chadwell Humphries’ An Eclipse and a Butcher

I'm in awe of the masterful clarity, the perfectly weighted brevity of Ann Humphries' poems. There's an immense comfort in her vivid scenes, her people and places so rich in presence, and her clear gaze. … A stunning collection!”

Naomi Shihab Nye, Young People's Poet Laureate

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This month, local poet Ann-Chadwell Humphries is releasing her first collection of poetry with Muddy Ford Press as the second feature of their Laureate Series.

Muddy Ford Press is a family owned publishing company dedicated to providing boutique publishing opportunities particularly to, but not limited to, South Carolina writers, artists, and poets. The founders of the press, husband and wife team Bob Jolley and Cindi Boiter, created the Laureate Series with the goal of initiating relationships across South Carolina poets.

“We wanted to promote mentorship between established poets and beginning poets,” Jolley describes, “So we invite all the poets laureate in SC to choose an emerging poet who they are willing to work with, and the laureate then helps build and edit their protégé’s first book.”

The selection of poets for the Laureate Series is the decision of the South Carolina laureates. The first book in the series, as well as this upcoming collection, were both written by poets selected by Columbia Poet Laureate Ed Madden.

The first collection, Theologies of Terrain, featured poet Tim Conroy. Conroy ruminates that, through this series, Muddy Ford Press provides the guidance and care that only poet laureates can deliver to a poet's first collection.

“I am so happy that Muddy Ford Press selected Ann-Chadwell Humphries as the second poet in their Laureate Series,” Conroy shares, “Ann's poetry raises the bar for all to follow. Her award-winning poetry is lyrical, deeply observed, and sound haunted.”

Ann-Chadwell Humphries - photo courtesy of the author

Ann-Chadwell Humphries - photo courtesy of the author

Several years ago, Humphries was diagnosed with retinitis pigmentosa, a genetic condition that caused her vision to get smaller and smaller until she could no longer see. However, while this was an obstacle, it carried with it a gift with which to see the world anew.

While always a lover of literature, Humphries, who had worked in the medical field, had never tried her hand at creative writing. Then, she started taking creative writing classes at the Shepherd’s Center with her friend.

“I remember where I was sitting,” Ann reflects on the day she was first introduced to Mary Oliver’s poetry, “and I thought, ‘I have to do this’.”

This emerging love for poetry became concrete when, in Fall 2016, Humphries audited a graduate poetry workshop with Nikky Finney at the University of South Carolina. This workshop was one of the first times Humphries had the chance to work so closely with her ideas and form.

“It demands careful attention, it demands truth, honesty, and essence,” Humphries remarks on the writing process, “It helps me find goodness.”

Since that workshop, Humphries has published poems in Jasper Magazine, Emrys, Indolent Books, The Collective Eye and more. When Madden and Boiter approached Humphries about the Laureate Series, she had a mix of surprise and pride.

“’What? Really? Me?’ a voice in my head said,” Humphries recalls, “But then I said, ‘Why not me’—I dropped self-doubt at 65.”

With an arsenal of poems and a constant thirst for writing, Humphries knew she had the materials to make a collection, but stitching them together into a book was a different story. Luckily, she had Madden by her side to edit the collection.

"Ann Chadwell Humphries is a poet of many eclipses—celestial, such as the unexpected 'metallic light' beheld with solar glasses, but also eclipses of vision as her sight was lost later in life to the ravages of a recessive gene. And though these poems beautifully document that loss and its attendant difficulties, An Eclipse is the record of a woman who sees with her entire being.”

Nickole Brown, author of Fanny Says and

Jessica Jacobs, author of Take Me With You, Wherever You’re Going

Madden says that when Humphries first sent him a selection of poems, his priority was to give her a sense of her voice and an idea of some overriding themes that were running through her work. Specifically, his work as an editor is a two-fold process.

“I divided poems into yes and no and maybe, and I started arranging poems around my living room in groups that seemed to work together, to speak to each other,” Madden reflects. “Ann was a master at revising, always attuned to line and sound and image, and I enjoyed working with her.”

What stood out for Madden in this collection were the poems about solar eclipses. Once he read them, he knew they could anchor the book, punctuating it with the seen and unseen.

“Thinking how one thing can eclipse another seemed such a resonant theme for her memory poems, her family and relationship poems, and her poems about coming to terms with blindness,” Madden shares. “Once I had those three anchor poems, the book seemed to almost organize itself, like iron shavings organizing themselves around the poles of a magnet.”

From her experience with Madden, Humphries learned valuable lessons, not just about this collection but herself as a poet.

“It was a willingness to say yes, and to put myself in the position where I allowed myself to receive kindness,” Humphries says of the experience, “It was better than I ever imagined. To be in the company of good writers who are helping me grow, I really flourished in that.”

Of course, there is more than just the poems. Humphries worked with her dear friend, Susan Craig, and her niece, Eleanor Baker, and together they crafted a cover, featuring an image from Humphries’ childhood on the front.

Once Madden and Humphries finalized selection of poems and a cover, it went to Boiter and Jolley for edits. Boiter copyedited, proofed, and built the book, then Jolley laid it out in In Design before sending it to the printer, where he ensured the final product was as it was supposed to be.

“Ann Humphries’ debut collection of poems, An Eclipse and a Butcher, is anchored by poems about the solar eclipse, which serve as the perfect metaphor for the blindness experienced by the poet.  But Humphries tells us that “blindness provides insight.” … Humphries is a survivor, and we are so lucky she has chosen to share her words and her wisdom.”

Marjory Wentworth, former South Carolina

Poet Laureate

Now, after months of work from all parties, a book, a collection of stories, recollections, dreams, and hopes has come together.

From the titular poem, “An Eclipse and a Butcher,” that recalls a July childhood day in 1963 to a reminisce of her own father’s birth to the experience of tracing the waves of Van Gogh’s art, Humphries’ collection takes the reader through the throws and thrills of life with a final promise to walk with you wherever you may go.

“It’s myself. It’s a piece of me. It’s an honest gift,” Humphries declares. “It’s a piece of beauty in the world where there’s a lot of ugliness.”

The launch event for An Eclipse and a Butcher will take place via Zoom on November 22nd at 4:00pm. Muddy Ford Press will not sponsor any public readings until after pandemic precautions in the area have been lifted. The book will be $15 and available for purchase via Amazon, BandN.com, and via the author.

By Christina Xan

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

JASPER: How were the organizations involved chosen?

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

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

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

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

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

Thanks, Lee!

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

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

WELCOME to our new space!

WELCOME to our new space!

CORONA TIMES - Jasper Talks with Robb Kershaw #BLACK ARTISTS MATTER

robb shaw 2.jpeg

JASPER: Let’s start with getting some demographics out of the way. How old are you, where did you grow up and, if you’re not from Columbia, what brought you here?                                                                                     

KERSHAW:  I’m 29 years old, born and raised in Columbia to be more specific Hopkins, SC.

JASPER: Describe, please, yourself as an artist. What medium(s) do you use? Are you self-taught or formally trained? If the latter, where did you get your training? If the former, how did you get into this line of art?

KERSHAW: This question always stumps me because at most I don’t see myself as an artist. Yes I create things but I think everyone in some medium creates things. I just tend to conceptually piece things together in an abstract nature that is easy for mass consumption. I view myself as the creator, I have an eye so I deem it worthy in my universe and I welcome those who would like free space to enter my realm. I’m a musician at times, then I write, I may sketch some stuff, but none of that accurately details an answer. I’m self taught I learn from my interaction from others, I tend to latch on and study. I view the studying of others peaceful and I learn a lot from it.

JASPER: Are you a full-time artist or do you have a day job?

KERSHAW: As much as I would love to commit to my art in the fullness I do have a day job. I never let anything art wise fall short I tend to keep a level balance on both to help me stay afloat and not sink any ship I have docked. 

JASPER: Who have been your greatest inspirations as an artist?

KERSHAW: For me I love Prince, I have the nickname Baby Prince because I truly idolize everything that energy was. It’s one of the reasons I took on a one name moniker as ROBBIEBADBOI. Though I should say this as well I don’t like tossing names out as inspiration. I do rather toss certain works that inspired me by said artist rather than glorifying the artist themselves. It takes a very special energy for me to just stop the press and praise namesakes.


JASPER: You answered that you see yourself as a creator more than an artist. Can you tell us about 2 or 3 of your most recent art projects?

KERSHAW:  I feel as if the word artist limits us as creators into a hub that labels us within only a certain spectrum. I feel The world creator is infinite and can’t really be defined as just one set thing. I want to be able to do it all if not try.

So far I was able to release two projects this year I was able to drop a short web comic that is now being reimagined in a serious manga drop. The project is called Binkie Babes which centers around 3 magical girls and their fight to stop the dark universe. Fun fact I started this series back in middle school with a similar concept in mind ha.

And I can’t forget the music, I currently released my first project as a solo artist “MISSING: HAVE YOU SEEN BADBOI, THE LOST TAPE VOL1” which was crazy scary especially after being within a group dynamic for so long you kinda lose a sense of self so I’m regaining a lot of that back with the BADBOI project. 

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JASPER: How has the pandemic impacted your ability to create?

KERSHAW: This pandemic has presented a lot of negatives but I have to examine the positives from it and I must say that it has given me the time to hone in. I don’t believe I would be as focused as I am to write the projects I’m currently in the middle of without this happening. I was so busy traveling and running around that I never got the true time to sit and just create. So I’m truly proud of the things that are coming.

Coming from an alternative rock project (NEPOTISM) I thrived from live interactions but since our indefinite hiatus I locked myself away from most public interactions only popping out so often because I wanted to find myself. So yeah I’m grateful for the calm (though it’s anything but)

JASPER: What's next up for you creatively? Where and when can we experience your upcoming work?

KERSHAW: So currently I’m working on a few animation projects. Animation has my entire heart ha. I have a manga (comic) project coming later this year called Binkie Babes and will be releasing another project next year called KOLUH (COLA) it’s a series pretty much about a Supernatural Columbia but I want to explore and reimagine the history of South Carolina as a whole.

Tiny Gallery Highlight: Jennifer Hill Shares Creatively Creepy and Cute Life Reflections with New Collection of Creatures

Woodland Nymph specimen

Woodland Nymph specimen

This month, Jasper is delighted to be hosting Jennifer Hill, aka Jenny Mae Creations, for our October Tiny Gallery show. Hill is featuring a delightful array of little creatures: 13 needle felted, two plush, and one voodoo. 

Hill grew up in Chapin on Lake Murray, and her aunt, an artist and a painter, introduced her to the Brian Froud Faeries book at a young age, which she claims left an impression that still affects her work today.

Before she found her way to dollmaking, Hill’s first love was theatre, which she started doing in middle school. “I can't really explain why I chose to do it; it was just something I thought I would enjoy,” Hill recalls, “And I didn't just enjoy it. I fell in love with it.”

Now, years later, Hill is a Company Member at Trustus Theatre, which she considers her home, and the people there, family. Since then, she also started performing on the street as a living statue.

“It's a whole other way of performing that I fell in love with,” she says on street performing, “There's nothing like sharing a theatrical moment on the street with a curious stranger — a performance that only requires me and whoever happens to walk by.”

This aspect of performance is similar to what Hill chases in her physical creations as well. “The relationship I draw between [performance and art] is that it's me expressing myself and putting it out to others and connecting with them,” she states, “Which is something I always feel the desire to do.” 

voodoo dolly

voodoo dolly

It was in her early twenties that Hill made the venture that resulted in this connection. Between her performance projects, she wanted another creative outlet and found her way to crafting collages and voodoo dolls with found objects.

“I started with collage because I love the practice of taking things a part and creating something new out of it”, she shares, further saying, “I've always been weirdly obsessed by the idea of voodoo dolls ever since I saw an episode of Scooby-Doo when I was a kid that featured one.”

This is just one example of themes from Hill’s childhood popping up in her work. Because of a love of dolls from childhood, she was led to a DIY sock monkey kit at Christmas one year. From there, her love for fiber art sparked, leading to a plethora of creations representing a reflection of Hill’s inner self.

“When I'm making things, I'm often processing something that's going on inside me. I think that's why creating is so essential to me,” she ruminates, “And I really like the juxtaposition of something being cute but also a little unsettling and raw. There's often a dose of humor in my work.”

two-headed woodland nymph

two-headed woodland nymph

When it comes to the art of making, Hill is completely self-taught. One day during the process of self-teaching and experimentation, she decided to walk into an art gallery with a box of dolls and see if they were interested – they were.

“My big break came when the art director for the film Mr. Magorium's Wonder Emporium emailed me that he saw my plush creations online and wanted to use them in some of their background shots,” she recalls, “I was STUNNED.”

Since then, Hill is always searching for new mediums and modes of inspiration, two years ago, she came across needle felting. For those who are unfamiliar with the process, Hill shares that you start with loose wool, mold it into a loose shape, and then stab it repeatedly with a barbed needle. As you stab more and more, the wool becomes more tangled and then firmer until you end up with a finished object.

“I really love the sculptural aspect of it. The freedom to start with a pile of wool and mold it into whatever I want,” she shares, “I love that it's fiber, but I can sculpt with it using a needle in a way I can't with regular fabric and sewing. I feel like I have more control in a way.” 

Whether with needle felting, plushes, or voodoo dolls, Hill keeps walking her “fine line” between cute and creepy, making wounded creatures that don't actually exist and often come from her childhood. 

Afraid

Afraid

Hill hopes that in showing these personal representations of her own hopes and fears, others might find a sense of reflection and thus comfort in her work.

“I hope that the wounded misfit inside them feels seen. That their inner child may be delighted or even soothed,” she pauses, “We're all strange and hurting in some way, and there's a human connection in that, and if nothing else, they may spend a few minutes with their childhood self that's still in there wanting to be seen.”

Hill has been opening this path to people for years, having been part of several art shows, some local, some in other parts of the country, and one in Italy. “The wonderful people at The Columbia Museum of Art gave me my first one night only solo show when Mr. Magorium's Wonder Emporium came out,” she remembers.

As uncertain as some aspects of living may be right now, Hill knows creating is her one constant.

“Since COVID, live theater, acting with others, and street performing has pretty much been put on hold,” she admits, “So, I feel very lucky to still have this other way of expressing myself creatively because it is essential in my life, and I plan to just keep creating anyway I can. It's what I need to do to be happy.”

mushroom specimen

mushroom specimen

You can follow Hill on her Instagram @jennymaecreations or her Facebook page @Jenny Mae Creations.

Hill’s show will be up until the end of October, so be sure to check out her strange and wonderful creations on the Jasper website—perfect for Halloween and for anytime you want a fun little version of a part of you sitting on your shelf.

Street performer Jenny Mae - photo by Crush Rush

Street performer Jenny Mae - photo by Crush Rush

Jasper Galleries Welcomes Thomas Washington to Motor Supply Co.'s Walls (Copy)

For more interviews with the many exciting Artists of Color in the Greater Columbia Arts Community,

please search for

BLACK ART MATTERS

in the search box on the Jasper Project Blog Page

Artist Thomas Washington aka Thomas the younger

Artist Thomas Washington aka Thomas the younger

Jasper Magazine visual arts editor and board member of the Jasper Project, Laura Garner Hine, has been busy installing a brand new show of art in the gallery spaces at Motor Supply Co in Columbia’s historic Congaree Vista. Our featured artist this quarter — Thomas Washington, aka Thomas the younger!

It was my sincerest pleasure to interview Mr. Washington just before his show was installed last week.

~~~

Hi Thomas, and thanks for spending some virtual time with the Jasper Project. We’re excited about the show of your artwork recently installed at Motor Supply in Columbia’s Vista. But first we want to catch up any readers who aren’t familiar with your work.

JASPER: Tell us, please, a little about your background. I know you’re from Springfield, Massachusetts, but what brought you to Columbia, SC and did you go anywhere else along the way?

WASHINGTON: We moved south when my father’s job laid him off, starting a classic cascade of loss. This included the house we’d always known (to foreclosure); friends; community. My mom’s from this area, so we were—in a real sense—following her “home”.

JASPER: How did you get into painting – are you self-taught or did you study under someone else?

WASHINGTON: I’m self-taught...but every piece I’ve ever seen informs me. One way or the other.

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JP Galleries .jpg

JASPER: Who has influenced you most as an artist?

WASHINGTON: Amy Windland’s trees; Travis Charest’s details; Keith Tolen’s focus; Joe Madureira’s structuring; the tenebrism of Humberto Ramos; Stephen King’s storytelling, as well as Ann Patchett’s; Moebius (Jean Giraud); Giger; Whelan; everything about Lucas Sams; the depth of Darrell K. Sweets; Michael Krajewski’s economy; the exquisite technicians, Margaret & The Brothers O’Shea; The Brothers Hildebrandt; The Brothers Lopez; Michael Anastasion’s intensity; every woman I’ve ever loved too deeply, and every woman who returned it; my children; my sorrows and madnesses, too; every soul who ever appreciated anything I generated, especially when I want to wash my hands of it all—I owe much to many, and could not finish their naming in a sitting. 

JASPER: how would you describe your work in terms of genre and what mediums and format sizes do you prefer to work with and why?

WASHINGTON:  I must leave that “description” to others. I will work in any medium I can afford to acquire, and in any dimension(s).

JASPER: There is a dreamy, magical quality to so much of your work – as if you are telling a story with your paintings. Is there magic in your art? Are you telling stories? If so, what are your stories about?

WASHINGTON:  I have a universe. Every project is connected to The One Project...and I imagine this is actually true for most creators, though the degree to which each of us engages that truth...varies. The tale cannot be told, nor summed—it’s a web, and still being woven.

Thomas Washington 3.jpg

JASPER: You go by Thomas the younger – can you please elaborate on this name?

WASHINGTON: My father—Thomas the Elder—is an artist, as well. (I don’t use “Washington” when I use “the younger”, and I don’t capitalize the initial letters. On occasionally doffing the family name: I’m a black sheep, and I can acknowledge that. When we needed less names, we were more human—I use the archaic moniker because it isn’t dead. Just buried. Capitalization...feels wrong.)

JASPER: I know that your children also influence your work as an artist – can you tell us about your children and how they influence you?

WASHINGTON: My children were born into a dark world. I have no clue how to brighten it—I am, perhaps, too acquainted with its darkness. They, themselves, are lights. Their faces, their spirits, their tableaux—my work is infused with these. Sometimes, in direct homage.  

JASPER: You have a Jasper Project sponsored show up at Motor Supply Co. Bistro now. Talk to us about the art being exhibited at the restaurant. Did you paint specifically for the show or did you select from items from your inventory to show?

WASHINGTON: As of this writing, only new work is in the show. If 2020 serves up some 2020esque catastrophe—a flood; a fierce gale; a destructive fury, wherein which I destroy pieces—I’ll adapt. I’ve got too many pieces stacked up in here. Always. 

JASPER: If there is a theme to the show, what is it all about?

WASHINGTON:  I’m still tightening most of them...which means I’m afraid to commit to a theme. There’s more than one, anyhow. I suppose that description, too, should be left to others.

thomas washington 5.jpg

JASPER: How has the current BLM movement affected you and your work? Are you optimistic – why or why not?

WASHINGTON: There’s no victory without perfect victory...so there’s no victory. Humanity cannot grow out of this inhuman stage, it seems. That’s reality...and we don’t like reality. 

JASPER: Artists across the color, gender, and discipline spectrums are particularly challenged now by both the COVID pandemic and the lack of support from the state and federal government. There is no question that it is more difficult to practice your art and make a living at it if you are an artist of color, correct? Can you please address this reality and offer your opinions or ideas on how our culture can better support and promote artists of color?

WASHINGTON:  As long as we function under a capitalist model, people of color will merit “a blank check”. This will likely never be issued. Thus—without the interventions/intercessions of wealthy patrons and benefactors willing to pour millions (maybe even billions) into finally lending ballast to we outliers ... we outliers will predictably continue to flounder on the cusp of chaos. This is actually true for the entire swath of poor, marginalized, and systematically destroyed humans—not just “artists of color”. For now, we’re (instead) inundated via “trickle-down wreckonomics”. An incessant deluge. 

thomas washington 2.jpg

JASPER: How do you feel about the strength and efficacy of the Black artist in the Columbia arts community? Are Midlands area artists as unified across racial lines as we should be? What needs to happen to create and nurture a racially healthier community of artists?

WASHINGTON:  Humans are formatted to prefer an “us” over a “them”. It seems nearly impossible to convince “us” that “us” is the only category. Educate humans to that effect, however, and one could subsequently watch these issues rectify themselves. Effortlessly. There is one race. Regardless of what the colonialist elites enacted. Regardless of how well it worked on the freshly-minted category (“white”), turning them against their allies. Regardless of how we’ve been enculturated. One.

JASPER: What’s up next for you and your work and where can readers find your work on the internet?

WASHINGTON: My website’s thomastheyounger.com, and the work there is never done. Releases, updates, et cetera—betwixt that site and following my Facebook Page (“The Works of Water”), it’s relatively easy to keep up with pending projects.

— cb

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Jasper Galleries Welcomes Thomas Washington to Motor Supply Co.'s Walls

For more interviews with the many exciting Artists of Color in the Greater Columbia Arts Community,

please search for

BLACK ART MATTERS

in the search box on the Jasper Project Blog Page

Artist Thomas Washington aka Thomas the younger

Artist Thomas Washington aka Thomas the younger

Jasper Magazine visual arts editor and board member of the Jasper Project, Laura Garner Hine, has been busy installing a brand new show of art in the gallery spaces at Motor Supply Co in Columbia’s historic Congaree Vista. Our featured artist this quarter — Thomas Washington, aka Thomas the younger!

It was my sincerest pleasure to interview Mr. Washington just before his show was installed last week.

~~~

Hi Thomas, and thanks for spending some virtual time with the Jasper Project. We’re excited about the show of your artwork recently installed at Motor Supply in Columbia’s Vista. But first we want to catch up any readers who aren’t familiar with your work.

JASPER: Tell us, please, a little about your background. I know you’re from Springfield, Massachusetts, but what brought you to Columbia, SC and did you go anywhere else along the way?

WASHINGTON: We moved south when my father’s job laid him off, starting a classic cascade of loss. This included the house we’d always known (to foreclosure); friends; community. My mom’s from this area, so we were—in a real sense—following her “home”.

JASPER: How did you get into painting – are you self-taught or did you study under someone else?

WASHINGTON: I’m self-taught...but every piece I’ve ever seen informs me. One way or the other.

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JP Galleries .jpg

JASPER: Who has influenced you most as an artist?

WASHINGTON: Amy Windland’s trees; Travis Charest’s details; Keith Tolen’s focus; Joe Madureira’s structuring; the tenebrism of Humberto Ramos; Stephen King’s storytelling, as well as Ann Patchett’s; Moebius (Jean Giraud); Giger; Whelan; everything about Lucas Sams; the depth of Darrell K. Sweets; Michael Krajewski’s economy; the exquisite technicians, Margaret & The Brothers O’Shea; The Brothers Hildebrandt; The Brothers Lopez; Michael Anastasion’s intensity; every woman I’ve ever loved too deeply, and every woman who returned it; my children; my sorrows and madnesses, too; every soul who ever appreciated anything I generated, especially when I want to wash my hands of it all—I owe much to many, and could not finish their naming in a sitting. 

JASPER: how would you describe your work in terms of genre and what mediums and format sizes do you prefer to work with and why?

WASHINGTON:  I must leave that “description” to others. I will work in any medium I can afford to acquire, and in any dimension(s).

JASPER: There is a dreamy, magical quality to so much of your work – as if you are telling a story with your paintings. Is there magic in your art? Are you telling stories? If so, what are your stories about?

WASHINGTON:  I have a universe. Every project is connected to The One Project...and I imagine this is actually true for most creators, though the degree to which each of us engages that truth...varies. The tale cannot be told, nor summed—it’s a web, and still being woven.

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JASPER: You go by Thomas the younger – can you please elaborate on this name?

WASHINGTON: My father—Thomas the Elder—is an artist, as well. (I don’t use “Washington” when I use “the younger”, and I don’t capitalize the initial letters. On occasionally doffing the family name: I’m a black sheep, and I can acknowledge that. When we needed less names, we were more human—I use the archaic moniker because it isn’t dead. Just buried. Capitalization...feels wrong.)

JASPER: I know that your children also influence your work as an artist – can you tell us about your children and how they influence you?

WASHINGTON: My children were born into a dark world. I have no clue how to brighten it—I am, perhaps, too acquainted with its darkness. They, themselves, are lights. Their faces, their spirits, their tableaux—my work is infused with these. Sometimes, in direct homage.  

JASPER: You have a Jasper Project sponsored show up at Motor Supply Co. Bistro now. Talk to us about the art being exhibited at the restaurant. Did you paint specifically for the show or did you select from items from your inventory to show?

WASHINGTON: As of this writing, only new work is in the show. If 2020 serves up some 2020esque catastrophe—a flood; a fierce gale; a destructive fury, wherein which I destroy pieces—I’ll adapt. I’ve got too many pieces stacked up in here. Always. 

JASPER: If there is a theme to the show, what is it all about?

WASHINGTON:  I’m still tightening most of them...which means I’m afraid to commit to a theme. There’s more than one, anyhow. I suppose that description, too, should be left to others.

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JASPER: How has the current BLM movement affected you and your work? Are you optimistic – why or why not?

WASHINGTON: There’s no victory without perfect victory...so there’s no victory. Humanity cannot grow out of this inhuman stage, it seems. That’s reality...and we don’t like reality. 

JASPER: Artists across the color, gender, and discipline spectrums are particularly challenged now by both the COVID pandemic and the lack of support from the state and federal government. There is no question that it is more difficult to practice your art and make a living at it if you are an artist of color, correct? Can you please address this reality and offer your opinions or ideas on how our culture can better support and promote artists of color?

WASHINGTON:  As long as we function under a capitalist model, people of color will merit “a blank check”. This will likely never be issued. Thus—without the interventions/intercessions of wealthy patrons and benefactors willing to pour millions (maybe even billions) into finally lending ballast to we outliers ... we outliers will predictably continue to flounder on the cusp of chaos. This is actually true for the entire swath of poor, marginalized, and systematically destroyed humans—not just “artists of color”. For now, we’re (instead) inundated via “trickle-down wreckonomics”. An incessant deluge. 

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JASPER: How do you feel about the strength and efficacy of the Black artist in the Columbia arts community? Are Midlands area artists as unified across racial lines as we should be? What needs to happen to create and nurture a racially healthier community of artists?

WASHINGTON:  Humans are formatted to prefer an “us” over a “them”. It seems nearly impossible to convince “us” that “us” is the only category. Educate humans to that effect, however, and one could subsequently watch these issues rectify themselves. Effortlessly. There is one race. Regardless of what the colonialist elites enacted. Regardless of how well it worked on the freshly-minted category (“white”), turning them against their allies. Regardless of how we’ve been enculturated. One.

JASPER: What’s up next for you and your work and where can readers find your work on the internet?

WASHINGTON: My website’s thomastheyounger.com, and the work there is never done. Releases, updates, et cetera—betwixt that site and following my Facebook Page (“The Works of Water”), it’s relatively easy to keep up with pending projects.

— cb

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Melrose Heights Art in the Yard Epitomizes Grass Roots Arts Organization - Sunday, October 4th

all photos courtesy of Lee Ann Kornegay

all photos courtesy of Lee Ann Kornegay

JASPER loves nothing more than grass roots arts organizing, so we’ve been watching from behind our masks as MELROSE ART IN THE YARD has grown from its first small gathering of neighbors in need of sharing their art to an almost-but-not-quite full fledged arts festival.

The heart-child of Lee Ann Kornegay, Harriet Green, and Lila McCullough, Melrose Art in the Yard held its first gathering of artists in May when, after 6 weeks of sheltering in place, the women and their neighbors were beginning to not only experience cabin fever, but to yearn for the unique kind of mental and spiritual stimulation that viewing a collection of art can offer. With COVID-sponsored safety and social distancing being a top priority, the neighbors made use of the shared resource they have in abundance - the streets and yards that connect them. Melrose Art in the Yard was born.

“My motivation was that I really wanted to have something my elderly parents could participate in and look forward to,” Kornegay says. “Knowing we had many artists in the area, we picked a date and had a handful of folks participate. We brought in a food truck and invited the neighbors to get out with their families and stroll the historic community as a distraction from the lock down.” 

“People loved it,” she continues, “and now we are on our third event with over 30 participants.  Most actually live in the neighborhood while other artists have asked to join in, not having very many options at this time to show their work in a safe environment.”

Participating artists are spread throughout the neighborhood with most of the activity centered around Shirley, Hagood, and Gladden Streets. The list of artists includes but is not limited to Betty Kornegay-Kaneft and Jack Kaneft, Julie and Larry Webster, Betsy Kaemmerlin, Alex Ruskell, Bob Waites and Jenks Farmer, Rubin Garcia, Laura Ray, Melissa Ligon, Kathryn Van Aernum, Flavia Novatelli, Bohumila Augustinova, Valerie Lamott, Diko Pekdemir-Lewis, Jane Dillard, Laura Rav, and Rob Shaw. Elaine Delk and Hope McClure will have antiques and vintage items. Columbia City Ballet soloist Anna Porter will prove she is as talented in the kitchen as she is on the dance floor with her baked goods. And, in addition to Kids’ Tables, Historic Columbia and the League of Women Voters will be there along with noshes from Mary’s Arepas, Brown Sistaz Island Vibz, and Lick Pops.

Artist - Angela Hughes Zokan

Artist - Angela Hughes Zokan

Artist - Krissy Walters Militello

Artist - Krissy Walters Militello

There will even be music in the streets! Preach Jacobs will spinning from 3 - 5 pm on Melrose Street and The Defenders, featuring Rhodes Bailey and Jake Erwin, will perform on the corner of Hagood and Melrose from 5 - 7.

There is no admission to attend and Jasper isn’t sure if there will be potties available. Don’t count on being able to use your credit cards either, though some folx may have that capacity. This is truly grass roots, y’all. But we do know that hand sanitizing stations will be situated throughout the area and SOCIAL DISTANCING AND MASKS WILL BE REQUIRED.

Congratulations to all involved for this inspiring example of problem solving, cooperation, and community spirit. Let us know about other opportunities to enjoy the arts in the area and we’ll do our best to share the news.

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Jasper Talks with Benjamin Moore, aka Farticus, about the "Plandemic," Egon Schiele, Basquiat, BLM, His Parents, and the Way Forward for the Columbia Arts Community

“Brown artists in alignment with the BLM movement aren't asking to be placed on a pedestal until things somehow "blow over", we aren't asking anything at all. We're demanding that in exchange for our support (the black dollar) that we share the spaces where decisions formulated.”

- Benjamin Moore, aka Farticus

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I first met Farticus a few years back when he was in the middle of installing a group show at the old Tapp’s Art Center on Main. Caitlin Bright, director of the center, introduced us and it was in those last few chaotic hours before First Thursday when the old building would absolutely pulse with the music and the energy of our favorite night of the month.

I’m not sure how or why I missed the opportunity to better get to know Farticus back then, but that is what it was - a missed opportunity.

The young artist and Columbia, SC native was kind enough to participate in a virtual interview with Jasper last week and we’re honored now to share his honest and evocative perspectives with our readers.

-Cindi Boiter

JASPER: First, tell us about the work you do -- what is your discipline/medium, how long have you been at it, are you formally trained (if so, where and when) or are you self-taught? 

MOORE: I am a self-taught, multi-disciplinary visual designer and creative director best known for my experimentation with texture, typography, semiotics, color theory and reinvention of pop culture references. I use nostalgic and sci-fi elements to translate an abstract perspective of daily life in an aesthetically consistent, distinct, and relatable format. I’m experienced in textile mediums (collaging, watercolor and acrylic painting, crayon, colored pencil, marker, and more). The spectrum of my pieces varies from detailed, layered and seemingly chaotic mixed media to clean and simplistic layouts emphasizing composition, juxtaposition, and effective advertisement. I’ve been experimenting with mediums of expression for nearly a decade. 

 

JASPER: How old are you and how would you describe yourself philosophically?  

MOORE: I’m not one to give age too much power. I feel it can misrepresent maturity in a lot of ways, so I tend to think of it purely as an indicator of inherited wisdom. Experience is just as good a term. Not to say that inherited wisdom and experience is always applied. I’m 29 but when most people ask, I just tell em I’m 8… turned to the side. Philosophically speaking, I’m a black man with heightened intuition. 

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JASPER: Who have been your major influences as an artist?

MOORE: Artists that have had a major influence on me are: Jean Michel Basquiat, Romare Bearden, Frank Stella, Egon Schiele, Mark Rothko, Ellis Wilson, Vincent Van Gogh, Pablo Picasso, Hajime Sorayama, Tekashi Murakami, Kanye West, and of course my parents. 

JASPER: Can you talk about how your parents have influenced you as an artist?

MOORE: Well, outside of showering me with support and encouragement, they're two of the most resourceful, self-motivated, and inspiring people in my life. My father is an entrepreneur. That's a different level of creativity. And my mother is an interior designer. They're both sticklers about quality, thoroughness, and professionalism but they don't take shit from anybody. Their taste and attitude are most definitely hereditary.  

“I truly believe we navigate on a timeline of tasks. Some are born undoubtedly aware of their purpose and contributions to the human experience. Others like myself spend a lifetime figuring it out. As artists, we help those that are less expressive understand, appreciate, and better document their individual timelines.”

JASPER: It's super interesting that both sci-fi and nostalgia find voice in your art. Care to speculate on why that may be?

MOORE: Nostalgia is a lot like DNA. It's a shared consciousness to those that experienced whatever visual, sound, or event. I feel it's unavoidable being that history repeats itself. As for sci-fi, it's an alternate reality, oftentimes future tense. You mix memory with prophecy or premonition and you've got artwork that's timeless. When I incorporate these elements, I'm inserting my personal preferences into an agreed upon "reality" to create my own. 

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JASPER: I was glad to hear you mention Egon Schiele as one of your influences. You probably know that Schiele died at the young age of 28 during the Spanish flu pandemic. It's heartbreaking to think of the loss of such a powerful artist at such a young age -- and especially when we're experiencing a similar pandemic in 2020. Can you reflect on this as a young artist and share your thoughts with us?

MOORE: I hadn't realized the Spanish flu was his cause of death, but I too found his early demise interesting and unfortunate. It helped me appreciate self-portraits that much more. Inspired me to make as many of myself as I could. If you've ever heard of The 27 Club, Jean Michel Basquiat too had an untimely transition. I truly believe we navigate on a timeline of tasks. Some are born undoubtedly aware of their purpose and contributions to the human experience. Others like myself spend a lifetime figuring it out. As artists, we help those that are less expressive understand, appreciate, and better document their individual timelines. The way art appreciates once an artist transitions may have everything to do with the messages and documentation in which they dedicated themselves to, finally being exalted. It's all in divine and supreme timing.  

JASPER: Can you tell us about your pseudonym please? What is its origin and do you/will you continue to use it as an artist?

MOORE: The pseudonym is an icebreaker and an easy way for me to gauge personality types. Some refuse to call me it, some are apprehensive but accepting of it, others can't stop themselves from saying it. I have friends that abbreviate my name to PDF, honestly, both Fart and Farticus were given to me as nicknames. Of course, Fart came first. An ex-girlfriend began calling me Fart once we had gotten comfortable enough to fart around one another. It helped me realize we only fart around people we love. I've since referred to the moniker as me humbly saying I feel as though I'm the shit and that anything we feel deep in our gut is worthy of being expressed. As for the .PDF portion, I enjoy comparing humans to large computer files. All these aspirations, insecurities, abilities, secrets, and desires compressed into this single mind and body, we're more computer like than we'd like to admit.  Above all else, the name is unforgettable, and I have a theory that 3-5-character words have the highest success rate of being both popular and iconic.

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JASPER: How has the pandemic impacted you and your ability to work and share your work as an artist?

MOORE: This plandemic (not a typo) has been fruitful to those closest to me. As artists, rebirth and abrupt adaptation is nothing we're unfamiliar with. What this moment is allowing is a more purposeful and accurate perspective of life. Once again, my ideas of past and future welding into one are being presented all around me. I've always imagined at what point will the future have progressed so much so that it would become the past. I see people getting to the core of who and what matters most, individually, and collectively. We're divvying our days more wisely, giving attention to our diet, curating our abodes, enjoying our environments in a more mindful way, and promoting personal space. 2020 has pushed us into our own realities and broken us into tribes that build trust through health and wellness. My artworks are no more difficult or easy to share than before, but the connection with my audience is greater. My audience actually grew by several hundred. I used these moments of stillness to get more familiar with commerce and production, I discovered I have a passion for cooking and preparing brightly colored dishes, my determination to make my home double as a creative space even encouraged me to transform my front room into a functioning gallery. I can't describe how motivated that keeps me to produce full show concepts with ready to hang artwork, something I would never expect to be thinking about given the current predicament and recent events.

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JASPER: How can we, as a community of artists and arts lovers, support and promote the BLM movement in a way that you and your cohort of young artists of color would realize?

MOORE: The BLM movement (not the organization because we truly have no idea how that crowdfunded money is being used) is one of Utopian coexistence via equality and updated legislation. The thing is, abolishing privilege in a system and society founded on what can be viewed as injustices, would require a new system and society in its entirety. I don't like using words like oppressed to describe people that look like me, but that's the reality of it, and pacifying any specific group with minimal revisions to a system that rewards acts of oppression will never yield long term results. It's the equivalent of taping a dam with more leaks than logical for it to work efficiently but choosing to continue doing so rather than completely destroying and rebuilding the dam. Performative acts are counteractive. Brown artists in alignment with the BLM movement aren't asking to be placed on a pedestal until things somehow "blow over", we aren't asking anything at all. We're demanding that in exchange for our support (the black dollar) that we share the spaces where decisions formulated. We either need more companies and brands built on the premise of equal representation or more that represent only us. Enterprises founded before equality was worth mentioning, ones that failed to even the playing field and instead capitalized on our disadvantages are simply outdated. The standard of white supremacy be it beauty, success, whatever, is outdated. I guess what I'm saying is, including us (as much as I hate that word and sentiment) in the genesis of an idea rather than as an afterthought is the best way to support and promote our voices to those willing to listen. 

Fall Lines 2020 Saluda River Prize for Poetry Winner LISA HAMMOND talks with Jasper & Shares a New Poem

Hydrangeas 

by Lisa Hammond

They plant them in trailer parks. I am standing

between the topiaries and the statuary, mossy urns

hiding me from the women’s view. Fragrant hoops

and balls, rising spires of rosemary—they do not

know I can hear them, back behind stone fountains

splashing, zen temple bell, the little St. Francis.

Poor Hortensia, with her matronly name, flowers

I mostly see now run rampant alongside fallen fences,

old foundations, old fashioned, blowsy pink or blue.

At home I have the county extension agent’s flyer,

Change the pH of Your Soil, and I remember

how the grandmothers buried tin cans at the roots,

to bring out their blue eyes. I loved the fat conspicuous

blooms, thick-barked stems, how they’d overtake beds

when your back was turned. One neighbor poured hot

bacon grease on roots to kill hers—come spring they’d leg

themselves right up over her sorry fence again. Standing

in the nursery next to the pot feet, those two old ladies

so like that cranky neighbor, I remember the spring

I planted mine, my first year in the new house, how

I hoarded catalogues, Ayesah or Annabelle, Blue Bunny

or Snowqueen, how the first years it struggled, every

winter I thought it dead, every spring it crept back

a bit, a lone small nosegay budding, nothing like

the wild oakleaf outside my old bedroom window.

I had thought them so Southern Living, lacecaps

and mopheads trailing with grapevine over the silver

and linen. I carried them at my cousin’s wedding,

thirsty bouquet drooping alongside the sheer ribbon

before well before the toasts, photographs hurried.

O Dear Delores, O Silverleaf, O Brussels Lace,

here your solitary representative, a potbound pink

Everlasting tucked away behind begonias, object

of scorn. O Endless Summer, unhurried maiden,

I wait months for your snowballs, each heavy flower

spreading open to the wind, minding her own business.

~~~

Lisa Hammond

Lisa Hammond

Earlier this summer Jasper announced the winners of the Fall Lines 2020 Broad River Prize for Prose & the Saluda River Prize for Poetry and shared some of winner Randy Spencer’s prose and process.

Today we’re delighted to talk with Lisa Hammond, winner of our poetry prize.

Welcome Lisa!

JASPER: For the Jasper followers who haven’t had the pleasure of meeting you yet, please tell us a bit about how you got to where you are now. For example, where did you grow up and go to school, and how and when did you make your way to Columbia?

HAMMOND: Cindi, thank you so much for the chance to meet some new friends through Jasper! I’m originally from South Carolina, born in Florence, and I’ve lived in South Carolina most of my life. I was a first-generation college student at Francis Marion and then went to graduate school at the University of Alabama. I felt like such a country girl on campus (well, I was such a country girl!)—it was a big, exciting university, amazing faculty and writers, beautiful architecture, a great library and natural history museum. When I finished my PhD, I taught for two years at Michigan State University. I loved the fall in Michigan, but winters seemed endless. I was very fortunate to find a job at a small university in Lancaster, South Carolina, close to my family, and I have been there ever since.

JASPER: Call you tell us about your work as a professor as USC Lancaster? What do you teach and what is your area of research?

HAMMOND: Most of my teaching is first-year composition, general education courses—so ENGL 101 and 102, Intro to Poetry, that sort of thing. I enjoy teaching those courses because I remember so well what it felt like to be a new college student who had no idea what to expect from college. I love helping students learn to see from different perspectives, to understand their preconceptions and to test those—do they always hold up? how does new information change your first way of thinking about and seeing a question? how do you present your ideas in a persuasive way? You hear a lot these days that college professors indoctrinate students—goodness, sometimes it feels like a victory if I can get them to do the reading! I think what we are actually seeing is students beginning to understand new ways to read, interpret, analyze. Those processes, fully engaged, change your thinking and your life.

Most of my research falls under the broad category of gender issues in American literature and culture. I’ve done a good bit of research on teaching with technology—I taught my first online women’s studies class in 2000, which is hard to believe now. I’ve written a great deal about Ursula K. Le Guin, one of American’s most talented and powerful writers. I study contemporary American women’s memoirs about motherhood. And I gave a talk at a conference about a year and a half ago called “What We Did in the Resistance: Public Poetry, Political Response, and the Women’s March” that I should really finish up as an article, but the political landscape is changing so quickly that it’s hard to keep up with. I’ve lately focused more on writing and publishing my own poetry as my scholarly work, but I like to stay in touch with my academic research areas too—my interest in one area informs my work in the other. Sometimes that means it takes me a long time to finish a project, but I think the work is richer for the connections.  

JASPER: Does your work at the university inform your writing much? How so?

HAMMOND: Grant Snider, the artist of the Incidental Comics series, has this great comic called Day Jobs of the Poets. I am pretty sure that if I won the lottery and suddenly could write full-time, I wouldn’t want to. I’m very lucky to have a professional life with a lot of range, many interesting projects and colleagues and students, so I often stumble across ideas at work that plant writing seeds. One drawback to my work for my writing life, though, is that I write a great deal for my job; the larger part of my job the last few years is my work as Director of Institutional Effectiveness and Research at USC Lancaster. I write a series of large reports every year. I just finished our annual state agency accountability report for the Governor and the General Assembly. Writing a university reaccreditation compliance document and writing a poem are two very different projects, but they both use my writing brain. So when I’m on deadline for large work writing projects, my own writing really dwindles in those periods.

My teaching, though, often brings me back to my own writing. Teaching any kind of writing keeps you close to your own writing, I find. In the last few years, I’ve been teaching more upper-level courses writing courses. I teach a senior-level business writing class that is fascinating—so much analysis of your audience there, understanding how to direct a message. I’m teaching an internship class right now, helping students learn outside the classroom; those students work in all kinds of organizations and businesses, so I have the opportunity to learn more about their careers and interests and am always running across interesting new ideas as I respond to their writing. I occasionally get to teach a 300-level creative writing class, which I LOVE because I write alongside my students. I write so much more in the semesters I teach that class because I stay in a daily writing practice with them. I find that writing a little every day means that I rarely finish a first draft of a poem in a sitting, but I write more over time. If I waited until I have big blocks of time, I’d never write another poem again.

JASPER: Are you primarily a poet, or do you practice prose writing as well?

HAMMOND: My prose writing is largely strategic planning documents! I am working on a prose poem series right now, which is something of a surprise for me, because I have always been in love with the poetic line and stanza form. Where does the line break? How does using couplets change the rhythm of the poem? The prose poem is an interesting challenge because you can’t rely on the line break to help you signal the importance of a word, for example. It’s also freeing; sometimes I spend so much time worrying a poem over stanzas and lines, but with the prose poem, you just start and keep going. The rhythm of a prose poems is different too, more accumulative, sometimes faster, so there’s an interesting opportunity to find ways to vary those rhythmic patterns. I’m finding these poems great fun to write, although I sometimes have to stop myself stewing over a line that ends with of, for example, or the—it’s not really a line, I have to tell myself. But often I tweak the spot that’s bugging me to shift the end word anyhow.

My mother took me to the library every week, usually when we came into town to the laundromat. She tells me I was an old soul early on

JASPER: Are you a life-long poet or did you begin writing later in life? What was the impetus for you to start writing?

HAMMOND: I can’t remember starting to write, so I’d say that qualifies me as a lifelong poet! (That sounds like a grand title, doesn’t it?) I come from a family of storytellers. My mother took me to the library every week, usually when we came into town to the laundromat. She tells me I was an old soul early on; I remember a second-grade teacher who made a deal with me—as soon as you finish your work for the day, you can skip recess and read the rest of the day. What a great year that was! I teach students who want to be writers that first they must read, often and widely. It may be that writing just runs in the family, though. One of my cousins is a poet, and so is my daughter. My daughter is at least as good a poet at twenty-five as I am now after a lifetime’s practice. Maybe better, if you consider that she won this same prize in 2018. I have a dear artist friend who says that it takes three generations to make a real artist. Now, having said that, let me hasten to add—talent is not inborn. What makes a writer is writing. Practice and persistence and putting the pen to the page, the fingers to the keyboard. 

JASPER: Who has influenced your writing and who are some of your favorite writers?

HAMMOND: I mentioned Ursula K. Le Guin above; one thing I love and admire about her writing is that her books can be so different from each other. When people ask me what Le Guin they should read, I say, well, if you like myths and fairy tales, The Wizard of Earthsea. If you like politics, The Dispossessed. If you like exploration, The Left Hand of Darkness. I love how she challenges her readers and herself. When The Left Hand of Darkness was published, she faced criticism for using male-gendered pronouns to describe an androgynous race. She defended her thought experiment and found it good—and then she came back several years later and said, wow, wasn’t I defensive? and I was wrong. She wrote an afterword for a later edition acknowledging her critics’ and imagining other ways she could have written the book. She changed the pronouns in three different chapters—three different approaches to the pronoun problem—so readers could see how the change affected their perception of the characters. She couldn’t rewrite the book, but she never stopped seeing it again either. I think she would have loved to see the current moment when the third person pronouns have been accepted by major style guides. What a gift, to watch a writer grow and change over such a long and amazing career.

I read a great deal of contemporary poetry, keeping a stack of books in rotation on my desk when I am writing: Claudia Emerson, Camille Dungy, Louise Glück, Kevin Young. Chelsea Rathburn, Tina Mozelle Braziel, Li-Young Lee, Eavan Boland, Nikky Finney. I tend to stay close to the lyric exploration of ordinary moments, so I love Linda Pastan, and Pablo Neruda’s Odes to Common Things is a special favorite. I am also fascinated by how we understand history through poetry—Robin Coste Lewis does amazing things in Voyage of the Sable Venus. And Terrance Hayes’s American Sonnet for My Past and Future Assassin, wow. I love poetry anthologies as a way of meeting new poets and finding things outside of what I might normally first reach for. Sandra Beasley’s Vinegar and Char: Verse from the Southern Foodways Alliance. Sam Hamill’s The Erotic Spirit: An Anthology of Poems of Sensuality, Love, and Longing. Sandra Gilbert’s Inventions of Farewell: A Book of Elegies. You can while away quite a few lovely quiet hours with food, sex, and death.

And once you see something a new way, you can’t unsee it.

JASPER: You are the winner of the Saluda River Prize for Poetry in this year’s Fall Lines – a literary convergence for your poem, Hydrangeas, with which we opened this post. What can you tell us about the roots, if you will, of your poem Hydrangeas?

HAMMOND: Hydrangeas come in so many beautiful varieties, with all these amazing names.  Some names suggest the flower itself, like Brussels Lace, while others have these old-fashioned people names like Hortensia. The names are a song by themselves.

Hydrangeas seem to embody the contradictions of the South, lovely and vexed all at once. As part of the traditions of Southern entertaining, they suggest wealth and elegance, but some see them as common pests. I’m not sure they are actually classified as invasive plants, but some people do seem to see them that way. And they can change colors, like magic! How can the same plant mean such different things? But this is true throughout the South, with the many ways we tell our histories. The same wedding venue through one set of eyes is a gracious home, but through another, it is a haunted gravesite of enslaved people whose names have been erased. And once you see something a new way, you can’t unsee it. I can’t imagine wanting to. Hydrangeas grow in elegant Charleston gardens, but they also grow in ditches. In our grandmothers’ gardens, Alice Walker might say.

I was working on this idea at a retreat and went one afternoon to a greenhouse in Pawley’s Island, where I did actually overhear the first line of the poem. In some respects, this poem feels unfinished to me, perhaps because as Le Guin did, I am always learning to see things a new way. I don’t think the poem says everything I want to say. But at a certain point, the poem is done. You have to go write another one. And I’m still not very good at growing hydrangeas, although I do have a big beautiful bunch of them dropping those little blue speckles all over my desk right now.

JASPER: What do you do with yourself when you aren’t writing, teaching, or doing research?

HAMMOND: I’m a photographer and I love to draw. My poor family—I am always taking photos of them and writing poems about them. Art is another way of seeing, and my poetry and art are deeply connected, but for me the visual arts feel more like play. When I travel, the first thing I do is find the local museums and bookstores and art supply stores.

I don’t think our world will go back to what it was, and I don’t want it to—this moment is teaching us how we can change. But whoever said change is hard was seriously not kidding.

JASPER: How has COVID-19 affected you and your ability to practice your art?

HAMMOND: Artists are struggling, as we all are. Most people I know have either lost their jobs or are working harder than they’ve ever worked. One minute things seem ordinary, and the next you realize you left your mask in the car. Someone you know is sick or dead. The anger boiling in this country, George Floyd, Breanna Taylor, and who knows who will be next. The protests that we march in, or are afraid to march in because we are at risk. Well, we are all at risk. We pass some horrifying marker, 100,000 dead in the United States, 150,000, and we’re approaching 200,000. How do we even understand these numbers? I can’t read anymore—books from before seem very much from before. The real world is as frightening as any apocalyptic novel now.

I’m lucky, I know, to be in the camp of folks who are working harder than they’ve ever worked, though some days that luck feels like hard luck—helping my students navigate the transition to online learning, working with several faculty one-on-one to help them with their classes, working on our university-wide reaccreditation. I’ve written exactly two poems since March, and that I finished anything feels like a miracle. I don’t usually write in the moment—I would love so much to be able to write and publish a poem in Rattle’s Poets Respond! Instead I keep journals and I draw. I note a thing or two each day that in a year I will come back to, will try to see again. I read as best I can and to have faith that I will come back to the writing as we settle more into this moment, the next. I don’t think our world will go back to what it was, and I don’t want it to—this moment is teaching us how we can change. But whoever said change is hard was seriously not kidding.

Sometimes you write your life, and sometimes you live it.

JASPER: Do you have any hints or recommendations for other poets on how to get through this strange period in all of our lives?

HAMMOND: I am doing several things to try to take care of myself.

A big piece of this is managing how I follow the news. The early days of the pandemic, we were all refreshing our newsfeeds constantly. That continuous exposure to changing circumstances meant constant adrenaline, constant anxiety, for me and I believe for many. I am not great at not looking at my phone first thing in the morning, but I do try. I have cut way back on my social media—this makes me a little lonely, but it gives me more time and lets me choose when I can take hearing the day’s bad news. I subscribe to a daily email summary from a small handful of trusted news outlets. I’m grateful for Heather Cox Richardson’s daily Letters from an American, but I have no idea how she writes that and teaches and sleeps. I can’t wait for the day I can read that collection and remember this time, and it will be history.

I feel a great need to do something to help, so I have chosen a few causes and significantly upped my donations. I certainly am saving a lot of gas money working from home, and it makes me feel I am making some small difference. I wish it were a bigger difference, but maybe together all our small differences will make the bigger change.

And I try not to beat myself up, for not being ok, for not getting through everything I need to do, for not having the energy some days to even text a friend. I would never talk to a friend the way I talk to myself in my head, but I have to remind myself of that pretty regularly. Of course you didn’t get through all those papers to grade today, of course you will write again.

I’m a slow writer in normal circumstances—I recommend Louise DeSalvo’s The Art of Slow Writing: Reflections on Time, Craft, and Creativity. Time is so strange in this moment—fast and slow, the markers we normally use to note the progress of our days and years gone or fundamentally changed. It’s ok to take time to sit with this grief and wonder. When you are ready to write again, write a little every day. It’s ok if it’s bad. It’s ok if you don’t finish. A little every day will take you places, when you are ready.

Sometimes you write your life, and sometimes you live it.

~~~

Elizabeth Warren Dreams of Kissing Babies

by Lisa Hammond

It is good and over, the long campaign, debates, VP

speculation. Would you say yes? Yes. I would help any way

I can. He called himself to tell me, of course. He’s a

decent man. Another disappointment, but not a

surprise. All those pinky promises and all those little girls. The

Zoom convention, a soft cornflower blue sweater,

balancing careful scripted banter with hope. Kamala is

making history. All my plans long ago pulled down from

the headquarters wall and recycled, Empowering

American Workers and Raising Wages, Strengthening

Our Democracy, My Plan to Cancel Student Loan

Debt on Day One of My Presidency. Whether or not I

smile enough. Only the election left, and in truth, there’s

some relief—they cannot blame me for what is

coming. The reporters yelling from the sidelines, will

you be a key player in the new administration? We both

want the same thing. The reporters and the crowd surge

forward, I know it is before because the mothers push

their babies towards me, no one masked, no one

distancing, no one knowing what is coming. Dream big,

the mama says, fight hard, the children reply. I can’t stay

in this crowd and I want to say it again but don’t, I am

running for president because that’s what girls do. The choices

left now. We want this country to work and we want it to work

for everyone. Smiling or strident. Either way my face

hurts.

CORONA TIMES - Clay Artist & Landscape Architect Betsy Kaemmerlen Talks About Coming South, the Combination of Work & Art, and a Simpler Life Courtesy of COVID-19

“We Exist to Revere the Great Spirit of Life and Enjoy All the Beauty of Its Expression.”

Betsy Kaemmerlen and friends

Betsy Kaemmerlen and friends

Hi Betsy and thanks for taking the time to share some info on your art and work with the Jasper Project.

Let’s start by introducing you to the folks who might not have had the pleasure of meeting you yet.

JASPER: I know you’re from Rhode Island – can you talk about your background and how you came to live in SC?

KAEMMERLEN: I grew up in New England and was lucky to spend all my summers on a small island that (back then) didn’t have a ferry for cars.  If you could get a car over there, it generally stayed there – so we all drove around stripped down 1930-50s cars and felt like Bonnie and Clyde.  No license or insurance required.  When they finally cracked down one year, they tested your lights and brakes… if your car passed, you got a big number stenciled on the side of the driver’s door (if there was one.)  

The first time I came to SC was on a road trip to Florida when I was about ten.  Though my dad got caught in a speed trap on Route 301 (this was prior to 95 being completed) we all loved stopping for breakfast and the waitress’ sweet accent when asking if we’d ‘lahk’ any honeybuns!

Fast forward to 2005 when I moved here to work at my engineering firm’s branch office.  I’d applied to several firms down here when fresh out of college, but twenty-five years later, when the firm opened an office in Columbia that was my big chance.  I loved the historic neighborhoods, small downtown, and gorgeous gardens.  I quickly learned how to take jokes about Yankees (called a ‘Carpetbagger’ when I put solar panels on my house) and the ‘War of Northern Aggression.’  Who knew that moving 500 miles south of the Mason Dixon line would be like moving to another country?  The culture shock was unexpected.  But being a plant nerd, I could learn 3 new zones worth of flowers and shrubs!  Between pottery, horticulture, Ikebana, great neighborhoods, and the arts community I’ve met wonderful people here in Columbia. 

JASPER: And tell us please about your education.

KAEMMERLEN: Studying Landscape Architecture at SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry, I was also able to take wonderfully obscure courses at (huge) Syracuse University such as Japanese Aesthetics and Zen Buddhism.  Our BLA program was a five-year set up – the final one spent somewhere studying the cultural response to the environment in a foreign country.  Living and immersing myself in the centuries old treasure of Kyoto, Japan for six months was a peak experience in my life. 

JASPER: I’ve always known you as a clay artist and didn’t realize that you are also a landscape architect, which sounds like a fascinating career. Is it fascinating? Landscape architecture is an artform in itself. Can you talk about the challenges and rewards of doing this kind of work?

KAEMMERLEN: My dad was an architect and he took us to his sites where my brothers and I could play in the stockpiles and run around excavations.  I’ve always loved arts and crafts, construction projects, gardens, stone walls, rivers, lakes, trees… the landscape.  Having a profession that combines all those elements is a dream – definitely ‘pay for play!’  Spatial understanding was always stronger in my mind than math by the numbers.  When I first learned about topography I started dreaming in contours!  The geometry of civil engineering and the beauty of plants and the practicality of how people use the land all came together perfectly.

Loving to draw played into this, until everything became computer driven.  Though I hesitated to dive into CAD (computer aided design) I now love how easy it is to work this way and make changes – no more mylar and eradicator fluid!  But staring at a couple of computer screens all day, necessitates an internet free zone at home.  I much rather go out and pull weeds or play with clay than do any more time on Facebook or in i-prisons!

betsy kaemmerlen.jpg

JASPER: How do you balance your work with nature with your work as a clay artist? Does one inform the other? Which discipline takes up most of your time?

KAEMMERLEN: Clay and pottery is a natural extension of molding the earth.  It just takes a lot less time!  Coming up with an idea and creating that with a soft slab of clay is pretty immediate.  Starting a landscape architectural project, getting it designed, permitted, bid out, and finally seeing the site built and planted, usually takes one or more years!  When I worked at the City’s Art Center it usually meant a few weeks before something was made, fired, and glazed.  Now that I have to fill my own kiln up, it takes more like a few months for that process.  But that means I work more ‘in series’… making something several times with many variables is a great way to learn.  Presently I go to the office four days a week (since COVID started) and have a lovely un-interrupted three days to stay home and work in my studio and garden. 

JASPER: Do you mostly build with clay or do you sculpt or work on the wheel?

KAEMMERLEN: I started out learning to throw clay on a wheel from an amazing teacher who blew his hand up as a kid.  He lost most of his pinkie and had two fingers fused, but he could use that as a throwing tool better than anyone else I’ve known!  I stuck with the wheel for about six months, but then wanted to start working at my own pace, not being restricted to the studio’s availability.

Working first in my kitchen, rolling out slabs, making plates and simple functional items, I progressed into more elaborate forms and sculptural pieces over the years.  I’ve built three of my own studios now, but I still love making a simple plate with a good sturdy foot! 

JASPER: How long have you been working with clay and what do you enjoy most about it?

KAEMMERLEN: I started clay in 1994.  I’ve taken many workshops and organized them for several clay groups I’ve joined both here and New England.  Getting to know other studio potters and sculptors has been one of the most enjoyable aspects.  They are a different breed!

As far as a technique I absolutely love, it is carving.  I used to carve individual pieces but have changed to carving roller stamps out of porcelain. This is a very fine-grained clay with no big chunky particles to disturb the design.  After spending a couple hours getting it just right, I then fire that stamp and have that pattern to use on clay ad infinitum.  I like making ‘families’ of stamps and often utilize Asian, Celtic, and Greek motifs in the design.

Betsy k 2.jpg

JASPER: What is your signature style? Or how would a patron recognize a piece of art by you?

KAEMMERLEN: Since I carve my own stamps, those textures and patterns are unique to my pieces.  Transparent glazes, like celadon, pool in the depths of the impression and show off the surface of the clay beautifully.  I also love lots of color, so ‘brown pots’ are pretty rare in my repertoire.  Putting Fun into Functional ware is my forte.  Also, making vases that lend themselves to Ikebana or Japanese flower arranging is both challenging and rewarding. 

JASPER: Who has influenced you the most as an artist and why?

KAEMMERLEN: Gerry Williams was the founder of Studio Potter magazine.  He was a wonderful teacher, mentor, and publicist to many potters throughout the country.  For many summers I went to his “Phoenix Workshops” in New Hampshire where he would bring a world-renowned artist to teach a group of about twenty.  His generosity with his studio space, equipment, house, and fellow potters was a huge influence on my development as a clay artist.  Learning the background and inspiration of many successful artists was eye-opening.  He encouraged sharing and experimenting with a medium that is often disregarded in the fine arts world.

betsy k 4.jpg

JASPER: How has the COVID-19 pandemic impacted you as an artist – and how have you met the challenges it has presented?

KAEMMERLEN: Quarantining gave me more undivided time to work in the studio.  Being an introvert, I’m happy working on my own, though I do miss loading kilns at the City Art Center and being a part of the community that has developed there.  I sincerely hope that this pandemic has brought more people the simple joys of their own home and garden, instead of always seeking recreation by jumping on a plane or eating at the finest restaurant.  Growing what you eat, cooking it in a beautifully decorated kitchen, and serving out of a handmade bowl is a sustainable, deeply meaningful pleasure.  It improves the land, it keeps artists creating, and improves the mental health of everyone who appreciates your actions! 


The motto I have over my studio door: “We Exist to Revere the Great Spirit of Life and Enjoy All the Beauty of Its Expression.”

JASPER: How can patrons find more of your work?

KAEMMERLEN: I have a few pieces out in the Sumter County Gallery of Art, but you can find me on Facebook.  I post albums of my latest work and if you’re interested, send me a message!

betsy k 3.jpg

— CB

Did you enjoy reading about Betsy & seeing her work? Don’t miss another post from the Jasper Project about the Midlands area arts community & beyond by subscribing to our posts right over there to the right —->

Lindsay Radford Wiggins Uses Vulnerability to Inspire Self-Discovery in Her Tiny Gallery Show Fragments

Lindsay Radford Wiggins

Lindsay Radford Wiggins

Earlier this summer, Jasper transitioned its Tiny Gallery series online as an opportunity for artists to share their work during uncertain times and for members of the community to find a connection in the stories those artists tell.

This month we are featuring the spirited multimedia artist, Lindsay Radford Wiggins, with her oil painting show, Fragments.

Wiggins grew up in Montgomery, Alabama, and proclaims that art was part of her life since she was “old enough to hold a crayon”. Beyond an early passion for creating, Wiggins studied art at the Booker T. Washington Magnet Art School. In their photography program she learned a variety of techniques, including processing and developing film.

“I had a really good photography teacher, Andy Meadows, who basically gave us what was equivalent to a college photography program,” Wiggins shares, “Being in that program and school surrounded by so many artist friends really shaped me as an artist through my teenage years.”

Wiggins recalls working in all the local darkrooms in Montgomery during her high school years to make extra money. “Art was an escape for me even at an early age,” she recalls, “I always carried a sketchbook everywhere.” 

Lindsay Radford Wiggins - Birthday

Lindsay Radford Wiggins - Birthday

Wiggins moved to Columbia, SC when she was 18 to work in the same Dermatopathology lab where her grandmother once worked and got certified as a Histotechnologist, a field she still works in today. Several years after the initial move, she attended Columbia College, where she studied painting & drawing under Stephen Nevitt and Mary Gilkerson.

“Not only was I able sharpen my skills in drawing and painting at Columbia College, but I feel it opened the door to the local art community,” Wiggins reflects, “I then became immersed with local artists, and it was amazing to be surrounded by so many amazing creative minds again.”

In was in college that Wiggins found the artists and themes that would end up being of great importance to her. “I had an art history teacher named Dr. Ute [Wachsmann-Linnan], and she really introduced me to German Expressionism, and I think that is a major influence in my paintings,” she reveals, “Women surrealists like Frida Khalo, Dorthea Tanning, and Leonora Carrington are also influencing.”

Lindsay Radford Wiggins - Aspirations

Lindsay Radford Wiggins - Aspirations

Reflecting on her work now, Wiggins shares that it is “very narrative with lots of layers”; she continues, “symbols from nature, animals, family and my personal struggles are recurring themes. I feel like every piece of art I create is like a diary entry.”

In this show, Wiggins is focused on the female perspective and healing from her own struggles. “Nevitt used to say in art class that displaying your art is like running down the road in public completely naked and I do feel that way,” she expresses, “I think all artwork in some sense is a self-portrait.” It is her hope to use her vulnerability to create work that is positive and inspires others.

Fragments features 22 pieces, all of which are a self-reflection of some sort, and often feature the artist and her dog, Ziggy. In these 4x4 oil paintings, you may find a girl enjoying tea as her hair twists in lively coils around her, reflections and ruminations of the female body in vivid color, or women who reclaim their presence with affirmations of “I am enough.”  

Lindsay Radford Wiggins - Overcoming Insecurities

Lindsay Radford Wiggins - Overcoming Insecurities

Wiggins has been showing in Columbia for years and has had the privilege to experiment with a plethora of mediums and genres and collaborate with other local artists. Reflecting back onto her journey, she says the several shows she did with Anastasia Chernoff stand out in her mind.

“One of the memories I cherish is when I co-hosted a surrealism show with her several years ago, and I am so grateful to have been part of those experiences,” she recalls, “I miss showing art through different venues on First Thursdays and the inspiration you get through other artists.”

These days, with all going on in the world, it can be hard for artists to find that inspiration. Wiggins says she tries to focus on the positive. “I think the world has been given a chance to slow down in some ways and refocus & reflect on the things that are more important,” she illuminates, “I think human interaction is more meaningful when we have been isolated.”

It’s hard to know what the future holds, but Wiggins says she plans to continue exploring themes in this body of work. “I think for artists creating art is like breathing,” she intimates, “art is the physical manifestation of what is inside of us.” 

Lindsay Radford Wiggins - Be Brave

Lindsay Radford Wiggins - Be Brave

Artist or not, Wiggins believes within us all is the ability to love and better the spaces around us. “I think the only way you can really change the world is to change your own heart and through the interactions and relationships we have on a day to day basis,” she expresses, “We are all human and having struggles and need more compassion and less judgement.”

When it comes to Fragments, Wiggins wants to embody that very compassion. The artist plans to donate her portion of the proceeds from sold works to SisterCare, a local shelter that helps women & families dealing with domestic violence.

“This is what my heart felt moved to do,” she shares, “and I feel during the COVID-19 pandemic, they could use the help more than ever with so many people being homebound.” 

Wiggins’ show will be up until October 4th on the Jasper Website. You can support Wiggins’ purpose, spread compassion, find a reflection of yourself, and take home a new beautiful work of art 24/7 at the following link: https://the-jasper-project.square.site/tiny-gallery

The purpose of the Tiny Gallery Series is to allow artists an opportunity to show a selection of their smaller pieces of art offered at affordable price points attractive to beginning collectors and arts patrons with smaller budgets. If you are interested in showing at Tiny Gallery, please email Christina Xan at jasperprojectcolumbia@gmail.com

CORONA TIMES - Wade Sellers Catches Up with Multidisciplinary artist & filmmaker Chris Bickel

Chris Bickel - all photos courtesy of the artist

Chris Bickel - all photos courtesy of the artist

Chris Bickel has been a staple in the Columbia creative community for a couple of decades. From his imprint on the local and national punk scene to masterminding one of Columbia’s favorite karaoke show for years, he leaves an incredible mark on any genre he touches. Despite earning a Media Arts degree from the University of South Carolina, he never ventured into filmmaking until a few years ago when he directed the wildly popular THETA GIRL. After being named the 2020 Free Times Best Filmmaker in Columbia Jasper decided to check in with Chris and ask about the progress of his new film and see how he has adjusted to the new landscape we live in.

JASPER: Chris how have you been adjusting to the pandemic? How has the shutdown affected you personally?

BICKEL: It hasn't really affected me that much. My day job (record buyer at Papa Jazz Record Shoppe) never really stopped. Although the store was shut down for a bit, I was still in there working. We wrapped shooting on my new film (BAD GIRLS) right before the pandemic started, so I've been in post-production on that during my evenings and weekends -- so pandemic or no, I'd still be holed up at home working during this time. I'm not the most social person in the world anyhow, so aside from the general feeling that the world is ending, the pandemic has affected me very little. 

JASPER: After the run of Theta Girl ended it seems you went straight into producing your new film Bad Girls. Was producing a 2nd film so soon after Theta Girl your plan from the start?

BICKEL: After THETA GIRL was finished, I did the festival circuit with it for almost a year while trying to pin down distribution -- which ended up being something of a fiasco (par for the course in indie film). Once THETA GIRL had a legitimate release, I began work on a second film called SISTER VENGEANCE. I wrote that script with Shane Silman, casted it, and then set up a production schedule. The lead quit a few days before the first shoot day, having decided that traveling every weekend from Atlanta for two months was going to be too difficult. I tried to recast, giving myself six months to fill that lead role but I couldn't find anyone locally that I thought was a fit, so I shelved SISTER VENGEANCE and set about writing BAD GIRLS which was loosely adapted from a stage play called GIRL GANG RAMPAGE, written by Shane. What may have seemed to someone from the outside as jumping right into BAD GIRLS from THETA GIRL, actually involved -- to me -- a lot of false starts and wasted time.

JASPER: Give everyone a taste of what Bad Girls is about.

BICKEL: Here's the log line: "After robbing a strip club, three desperate teenage girls lead a misogynistic Federal Agent on a lysergic cross-country chase, scoring a duffle bag full of money, drugs, and a crew of willing kidnap victims along the way.” I see BAD GIRLS as a punk rock road movie somewhere at the intersection of FASTER PUSSYCAT, KILL KILL and DOOM GENERATION. It's an existentialist fantasy wrapped in the package of an exploitation film.

L-R Shelby Lois Guinn, Morgan Shaley Renew,  Sanethia Dresch

L-R Shelby Lois Guinn, Morgan Shaley Renew, Sanethia Dresch

JASPER: Theta Girl received great reviews and had great fan response. What was the biggest part of the learning curve for you in directing your first feature?

BICKEL: The hardest part of filmmaking is people wrangling. Working on such a small scale, budget-wise, you end up wearing many different hats and it's impossible to be a master of all of them at once.

JASPER: What experiences did you take with you from Theta Girl to producing Bad Girls to make it a better overall production experience?

BICKEL: The first time you do anything you make a million little mistakes. One hopes that in their second time around they can half the number of mistakes. The number one thing I've learned is that you can't plan ahead enough. The more you think through before the day of shooting, the easier it is when unforeseen problems arise. 

JASPER: How has the shutdown affected post-production and the release of Bad Girls?

BICKEL: The only thing affected really is the release schedule. I still don't know if a theatrical premiere is a wise decision, nor do I know if doing a festival run is a good idea. I may have to rethink the method in which the film is rolled out. I honestly don't even know if we'll have a country left after November. I'd like to have the movie out by December -- if, you know, there's still an America.

JASPER: Micro budget/indie film production can be intensely satisfying and a bit self-abusive in the physical toll it can take. How has your experience been finishing Bad Girls?

BICKEL: I'm not on a deadline, so I'm working at my own pace to make it the best thing it can be. Viewing it as an underground film, it's going to have warts by the very nature of its low budget and the lack of experience of everyone involved (myself included). But I think people are willing to overlook the flaws as long as they are entertained. So, my main focus during this time is doing whatever it takes to ensure that the movie is wholly entertaining and hopefully thought-provoking. All of this would be easier with money to pay other people to do some of the work -- money to not need a "day job." I consider this an obsessive hobby. So even when I'm pushed to the point of exhaustion, it's still FUN for me -- even if in a masochistic way.

JASPER: Any words of wisdom for new micro budget indie filmmakers?

BICKEL: Finishing is the most important thing. 

-WS

Corona Times - Guest Essay Curated by Ed Madden - Essential by Peyton Nielsen

Last spring, as South Carolina went into lockdown because of COVID19, I was teaching a creative writing course. Many of my students found themselves back at home, but some stayed here, working. A couple worked for Instacart. One student took over the homeschooling of her little brothers, another started helping out in his family's liquor store (alcohol, like groceries, ruled essential).

And for a few of them, the disruptions of their daily lives began to appear in their creative writing assignments, in poems, in essays. Peyton was an essential worker, wait staff at a Columbia restaurant that continued to offer curbside takeaway. This little essay captures the anxieties of those moments, the precautions we took (and are still taking), the careful attention to our environment and to those around us. With her permission, we're posting this to our "Corona Times" series -- a moment in the pandemic captured with precision.

-Ed Madden

Jasper Magazine poetry editor

Peyton Nielson is originally from the Chicago Suburbs, 21 years old,  and a senior Public Health major at USC.(photo courtesy of the author)

Peyton Nielson is originally from the Chicago Suburbs, 21 years old, and a senior Public Health major at USC.

(photo courtesy of the author)

Essential

by Peyton Nielsen

lockdown, spring 2020

Twice a week each week, she gets a treat: to not spend every waking moment in the confines of the four walls of her townhome. Usually, waking up for work is a chore. But now she practically leaps out of the shackles of her bed and into the bathroom to put on makeup and look nice. It has been a while since she has brushed her hair. She cuts the chains off the door, skips to her car, which sits idle most of the time these days. The drive is the best part: windows down, sun hitting her left thigh, melodies bouncing around the car. It’s hard not to sing at full volume even if others look over. She sounds bad, but she feels free.

*

The chairs and stools are put up on the tables, only half of the restaurant is lit, and the bar is blocked off. Usually there are multiple coworkers setting up, cooking, cleaning the restaurant. This time, it is just her and her manager, who now works in the kitchen too, and in a pinch is the occasional dish washer. She picks up a pair of extra-large flour-dusted gloves – that’s all they have here – and wraps rubber bands on her wrists so they stay on. She sprays down every surface, prepares the to-go bags, and hangs up signs on the doors so people stay on the curbside. No one is allowed in anymore. But this is her temporary paradise from the stir-crazy she feels the other five days. This is the treat she gets, as long as everyone keeps their hands to themselves, coughs in the other direction (preferably into their elbows, but that is wishful thinking sometimes), and has prepaid online so she does not have to touch cash or a credit card.

*

The sunlight has slipped below the windowsills and into the ground, and she begins to count her tip jar out (with gloves on of course). She lays out each dollar denomination in their respective values and counts it out for herself: part of rent, light bill, water, groceries, and some money to help pay off the new shoes she bought before the shift cuts and layoffs. A decent shift – people are kinder these days. She immediately goes to wash her hands for the umpteenth time. Her hands are dry and beginning to crack from the hot water, soap, the flour from the gloves. She will remember lotion next time.

*

There isn’t any music on the drive home. She calls her mom, so her mom won’t have to call later at two in the morning in a panic wondering if her girl made it home safe. They talk about nothing really. There is nothing to talk about. The windows are up, it’s stuffy, and her work shoes are starting to make the seats smell. She won’t bring them inside when she gets home, that’s probably unsafe. The car is put back into park for another week and is Clorox-wiped before she locks it up.

*

Immediately the clothes are off and in a separate laundry bin to be safe, and she climbs into the shower. Her shins hurt from standing for twelve hours. The arches of her feet ache, and anxiety makes her chest tight, but at least she can pay her rent tomorrow. She dries off and starts over the two-week time clock to make sure no symptoms arise so that she can continue to go to work. She is young, she’ll probably be fine, right? That’s not what CNN said last night, maybe she should quit. At three in the morning, sleep finally finds her. The hum of her oil diffuser replaces the diminished white noise outside.

Award-Wining Photographer Crush Rush Shares the City We Know and Love Through a Fresh Lens

The artist - Crush Rush

The artist - Crush Rush

Earlier this summer, Jasper transitioned its Tiny Gallery series online to make viewing art accessible to all those seeking light in recent times. Recently, we marked the halfway point of our fantastic show with local photographer, Crush Rush.

Rush, 33, is featuring his collection, Eye Spy, an assemblage of photos that depict the city we all hold dear, both in ways we recognize and those we don’t.

For Rush, while art was not part of his family growing up, he came to it in unexpected ways early in life. “I got into photography rather young as I found a love for disposable cameras,” he recalls, “On Nintendo 64 I fell in love with the game Pokémon Snap.”

However, it was after his great grandmother’s experience with dementia that Rush’s taking and making photos transformed into a passion. Since then, he has continually honed his skills. “Traditional learning styles have never kept me captivated enough,” he shares on his journey as a self-taught artist, “And I’m fortunate for the success and access I have in that regard.”

Rush started professionally pursuing photography in 2008, following the economy crash. “I was unable to find employment after losing my job at Verizon Wireless, and a buddy of mine asked me to start doing the photography of the club that he was managing,” he continues, “One thing led to another, and here I am some 12 years later – a whole established full-time photographer.”

While photography has always been part of his life, it actually is not his first love on the art spectrum. “Music has and always will have a place in my heart,” Rush reveals, “I used to produce EDM before it gained the popularity that it has nowadays, and I also have played a few instruments in my time that range from brass instruments to percussion.”

Within photography itself, digital work is his forte. “I love photography because it is an instantaneous art medium,” he ruminates, “I can move in and out of moments in time and capture them in fractions of seconds. It almost makes me feel like I have superhero powers at times.”

Candy-Colored Murray Sunset by Crush Rush

Candy-Colored Murray Sunset by Crush Rush

Rush practices with both photojournalism and taking and editing photos for artistic purposes. “With my artwork I hope that I can open people's eyes to the beauty of nature, our city and our planet,” he professes, “With my photojournalism, I strive to show people just how different but insanely alike we all are in our pursuits of happiness.”

In this show specifically, which he has titled Eye Spy, Rush used his artistic talents to focus on a familiar scene. “The artworks that I have chosen to feature in this show are pieces that are native to our area,” he shares, “I really wanted to display the city in a beautiful way as we haven't been able to truly appreciate and go out in it due to the Covid-19 pandemic.”

Our city is a perfect example of what often inspires the photographer. “I generally think about places and themes that everyday people know and love. I then try to capture those places and themes at their absolute best moments,” Rush states, “Sometimes I'll add a creative spin to make something that is everyday normal extraordinary. I also like to focus on small things that people see every day but may not pay much attention to.”

Of course, the spaces around us are constantly fluctuating, especially as of late. “As a black photojournalist that has been covered everything from New Black Panther Party rallies to Neo Nazi/Klan Rallies since the Charleston Massacre in 2015, this year's BLM movement is just another day at the office,” Rush reflects, “I have covered about 90% of our local BLM movement happening here in the city so that it has made its way into my work would be an understatement.”

Observing humanity and freedom has led Rush to not just document the unprecedented times we currently find ourselves in but to reflect on his own practice. “COVID-19…has caused me to shift my technique to accommodate social distance practices and to find creative ways to show off raw emotion displayed by people who have half of their faces covered,” he notes, “I have unfortunately also covered anti mask / end quarantine rallies so the mask in itself or lack there off has become a political movement that I have documented.”

Bridging the Gap - Crush Rush

Bridging the Gap - Crush Rush

Rush’s passion for the people and places around him has not gone unnoticed. He received the Creatable Award from Able SC in 2019 for his work with the organization, documenting various causes and events over the years, and recently, he was awarded Best Photographer by Free Times Best Of 2020.

Even with the uncertainty of our current times, Rush is prepping for the future. “I have been having to completely recalibrate my system to make sure that I am able to remain a full-time photographer,” he shares, “You can probably expect to see me delving deeper into the noncommercial portrait photography side of things.”

To stay in touch with Crush Rush’s work, follow him on Instagram @CrushRushSC, check out his photoblog crushinthecity.com, and, of course, on follow him on Facebook.

Crush Rush’s show will be up until Sunday, September 6th at the Jasper Website.

 

The purpose of the Tiny Gallery Series is to allow artists an opportunity to show a selection of their smaller pieces of art offered at affordable price points attractive to beginning collectors and arts patrons with smaller budgets. If you are interested in showing at Tiny Gallery, please email Christina Xan at jasperprojectcolumbia@gmail.com

CORONA TIMES - Wade Sellers talks with 2nd Act Alum Tamara Finkbeiner

Tamara Finkbeiner - all photos courtesy of the artist

Tamara Finkbeiner - all photos courtesy of the artist

Tamara Finkbeiner is a Columbia based filmmaker and graphic artist. She is a member of WOW Productions an urban inspirational entertainment company. Through her involvement with WOW and her own independent work she has been leaving a huge creative mark in our area for many years. She is an alum of the 2nd Act Film Project. Tamara’s films took home the 2nd Act Audience Award in the 2nd and 3rd year of the festival.

Wade Sellers

film editor, Jasper Magazine; president, Jasper Project board of directors

 

JASPER: Tamara, how have you and your family been coping with the pandemic shutdown?

FINKBEINER: We've actually been doing pretty well given the circumstances. We've had to make many adjustments, but overall we have become even closer as a unit and that has been a tremendous blessing during this time.

JASPER: For those who don't know about WOW, tell us about Walking on Water productions.

FINKBEINER: Walking On Water Productions (WOW) is an urban inspirational theatre company founded by Tangie Beaty and is run by Beaty (CEO) and Donna Johnson (COO). My business partner, Josetra Robinson and I also run One7evenOne Productions (O7O) and we partner with WOW to mount stage productions and are also looking to venture into television and film. Josetra and myself are part of the management crew at WOW; our emphasis is in visual production and marketing.

Finkbeiner with creative partner Josetra Robinson

Finkbeiner with creative partner Josetra Robinson

JASPER: Introduce us to other members of the team.

FINKBEINER: Josetra Robinson is co-founder of O7O. She's a tremendous talent and I'm honoured we get the chance to work together on so many amazing projects.

JASPER: What project(s) have you and the team been working on during the shutdown?

FINKBEINER: Through O7O, we've been editing for various projects, which has been, again, a major blessing. We've also been writing for a project that we have coming up and that everyone will hear more about very soon. 

JASPER: What is the overall mission of WOW?

FINKBEINER: One of WOW's missions is to produce impactful productions and also cultivate talent in our local community, which aligns with our passion and purpose at O7O. It's been a beautiful partnership.

JASPER: What's next for you or Walking on Water productions/One7evenOne Productions?

FINKBEINER: Many details are still unfolding but we (O7O) will be partnering with WOW again on a really cool project and are looking forward to the team coming together to do what we love and challenge ourselves as we push this next level!

 

 

 

In observance of the 75th anniversary of the US use of atomic weaponry on Hiroshima and Nagasaki -- A poem by Randy Spencer

This month marks the 75th anniversary of the use of the atomic bomb and the atrocities of nuclear war. The United States dropped atomic bombs on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki on August 6 and 9, 1945, leading to the end of World War Two. The explosion in Hiroshima killed an estimated 80,000 people and thousands more would die as the result of exposure to radiation. Midlands poet Randy Spencer commemorates this anniversary with his poem, "Yasuhiko Shigemoto's Walk." No more Hiroshimas.

- Ed Madden

Poetry Editor, Jasper Magazine

The “Shadow” of a Hiroshima Victim, Etched into Stone Steps, Is All That Remains After 1945 Atomic Blast — Open Culture

The “Shadow” of a Hiroshima Victim, Etched into Stone Steps, Is All That Remains After 1945 Atomic Blast — Open Culture

YASUHIKO SHIGEMOTO'S WALK

 

                                                August 6, 1945

 

a curled red oak leaf

crab-walks across a flat stone

our summer will end soon

 

half my schoolmates and I

lunch in cool shadows beneath the bridge

an almost dry river bed

 

my belly exposed,

a white flash in the southern sky

blisters its soft skin

 

sudden, violent heat

as if something touches me

with hot tongs

 

in the bright light

inerasable shadows

where someone stood

 

on a wall, how could

empty space become shadows

light become dark

 

shadows that cannot

move with the changing sun,

trees leveled, no leaves

 

cicadas have hushed,

a silence waiting

the season to reverse

 

a huge jellyfish

a mushroom high in the sky

dust clouds

 

become a column

a pillar of fire rising

in the dark air

 

injured begin

to appear, walking along

the narrow river

 

from their outstretched arms

flesh hangs, sheets of skin drape

from backs, abdomens

 

if their arms drop

pain is overwhelming

screams shatter the calm

 

half of my classmates

were working in the city center.

are they dead? One calls

 

to me from the river

and I fall into the line

marching away

 

pink chrysanthemum

blossoms open their dark hearts

black rain is falling

 

 

Based on "My A-Bomb experience in Hiroshima," a speech given by Hiroshima survivor Yasuhiko Shigemoto on July 29, 1995 at the Plenary Session of "No More Hiroshimas Conference" at London University commemorating the 50th anniversary of the end of W.W. II.

                                               

                                                            H.R. Spencer

                                                            hrspencer@gmail.com

Corona Times - Photographer John Allen

JOHN ALLEN 1.JPG

Today’s Corona Times features Columbia-based photographer John Allen who has used photography for therapy, art, and as a business endeavor.

Welcome John!

JASPER: Can you tell us about your background, John? Where did you grow up and go to school and what part of the city do you live in now and how long have you been there? 

JOHN ALLEN: I have lived in Columbia my whole life, but my parents met in the military and I have family all over. Growing up, I went to Hammond School and then later attended Dreher High School. After that, I went to Midlands Technical College with ideas of being a history teacher, but I ended up in family business. Since then, I’ve been working at the university. I’ve been living on the Western Front (West Columbia) for about 17 years now.

 JASPER:  How did you get into photography -- when and where? Did you train or are you self-taught?

JOHN ALLEN: When I was teenager, I was hit by a car while biking and had to learn how to walk again. It was a near death experience that left quite an impact on me over the years (no pun intended). I shot a lot of photography from travels in the UK and Ireland using old SLR cameras and then stopped for a long time.  About ten years ago, I started working in a design department and learned a bunch of new tricks.

Prior to that, a dear friend of mine died and I spent a few years doing things I wouldn’t normally do; making photos again, art, being a little more adventurous, and social. Someone told me it was called exposure therapy. There’s a lot of people who think art therapy is nonsense, but I can tell you it helps tremendously – I am living proof.  It was really life changing for me.

JASPER: Who are your inspirations?

JOHN ALLEN:  Trey Ratcliff is probably the most prominent photographer I’ve followed. He’s known for HDR landscapes and the like. He was based in Austin, Texas and then eventually moved to New Zealand. He’s amazing. I follow a bunch of other photographers on the Viewbug photo community and a few around town, but that’s about it. I don’t really compare or compete with anyone, I just kind of like doing my own thing. Most of the time I take my camera with me while hiking and biking. It’s more of an activity for me and not just taking photos.

 JASPER: What type of photography do you mostly practice? What challenges you most?

JOHN ALLEN: Well, I have my work-work and then there’s my solo stuff I suppose. Most of the work I do on my own is geared toward a wide variety of photo art, landscapes, portraits, and local events.  I have a home studio and sometimes work on photo projects there as well but not as often. I also enjoy doing digital photo restoration.

The most challenging photography for me is probably photo restoration and night photography. Night photography requires solid knowledge of manual controls and restoration requires a lot of time and effort. When you master manual, in whatever weather, you are going to get a lot of great shots.

JASPER: Can you tell us about one of your favorite gigs and why you enjoyed it?

JOHN ALLEN: Not any single one in particular, but perhaps maybe a culmination of things. I enjoyed doing community events here such as the Runaway Runway fashion shows. The Colajazz City of Stars show was also quite fun especially when you know a lot of the participants already.  That was one was a fundraiser to raise money for children’s music education. Travel stuff. I’ve shot some landscapes in Canada and did a wedding there as well. I’ve also enjoyed collaborating with local artist friends.

I suppose a lot of people know me from sharing photos with Bohumila Augustinova and Diane Hare at the Anastasia & Friends art gallery on First Thursdays the past few years or so. There are many great memories captured from those days that might not otherwise have been recorded.   

I have participated in some of those photo communities like Viewbug and was interviewed a few times.  We used to spend weekends “photo hunting” around to submit to contests. It was fun watching how far our work would go in these online photo competitions.  It was a lot of sheer boyish-enthusiasm for the sake of making photos. Sometimes, friends and I would go on adventures and make art out of just pure enjoyment. I’ve also had a few of my photos accepted into the Artfields competition as well.

Aside from that, I’d say my other favorite “gig” was documenting the Take the Flag Down Rally back in 2015 as an activist. I’ll always remember that day and when the flag came down.

JASPER: What do you do when you aren't behind the camera?

JOHN ALLEN: I really like cooking and I’ve hosted some dinner clubs around town. I’m very much an outdoors person. I like hiking, mountain biking with friends, and occasionally camping and good music. A lot of people don’t know this, but I also do graphic design and tech/web stuff as well as some video work.

JOHN ALLEN 1.JPG
Model Alexis Doktor

Model Alexis Doktor

Subjects:  Lee Ann Kornegay, Ann Smith Hankins, Diane Hare, John Allen  (photog) Billy Guess, Bohumila Augustinova, Lauren Melton, Paul Kaufmann

Subjects: Lee Ann Kornegay, Ann Smith Hankins, Diane Hare, John Allen (photog) Billy Guess, Bohumila Augustinova, Lauren Melton, Paul Kaufmann

all photos courtesy of the artist

all photos courtesy of the artist

subject Tom Hall

subject Tom Hall

Corona Times -- Cassie Premo Steele talks about poetry, pandemic, and love

“One of the things I’ve learned from all this is that there’s very little under our control as humans. We must work with each other and with the earth in harmonious, healing, and honestly, hard ways if we are to survive.”

—Cassie Premo Steele

Cassie Premo Steele - all photos courtesy of the artist

Cassie Premo Steele - all photos courtesy of the artist

During these Corona Times the Jasper Project strives to continue to support and promote communication among artists and arts lovers. In this interview, Columbia-based poet Cassie Premo Steele shares what both her personal and professional life have been like since the onset of quarantine and we come to realize that there is little separating the personal from the professional these days, and what a gift that might actually be.

Here’s Cassie.

Thanks for sharing with us, Cassie. Let’s start with some basic info for the few people who haven’t had the pleasure of meeting you yet.

JASPER: Tell us about your background, please – where did you grow up, go to school, and how did you come to live in the SC Midlands today? You live in Forest Acres, right?

STEELE: Thanks so much for inviting me. I was born in Detroit, where my grandfather, an immigrant from Czechoslavakia, was Henry Ford’s secretary, and my grandmother, the oldest daughter of Irish immigrants, helped take care of me while my mom was in college when I was a baby. I grew up in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and Winona, Minnesota, before moving to Reston, Virginia, a progressive, planned community outside Washington, D.C., when I was 12. I went to high school at Immaculata on Tenley Circle, which was an all-female Catholic school run by the Sisters of Providence, an experience that is still very important to me today. I settled in Columbia after finishing my Ph.D. at Emory in 1996. I was married to a professor at USC and we raised two girls together, and I have lived with my wife in Forest Acres for six years now.

JASPER: How long were you in academics and what made you leave the academy to write full time?

STEELE: I taught at the undergraduate and graduate levels from 1991 until 2008 – in English, Comparative Literature, and Women’s and Gender Studies Programs at several institutions. I love teaching and I still teach but in a different capacity now, working with women academics and educators from around the world through my coaching business.

As an adjunct for that many years, I had an insider’s view to the inequalities of power and the ways academe reinforces those, especially for women and people of color. I use this to help women academics navigate those treacherous waters and still do the writing and teaching that they care about.

JASPER: You have published quite a few books – can you tell us about them – a chronological listing of your publications would be fabulous.

STEELE: The ReSisters. A #1 bestselling LGBT YA novel about an indigenous teen who decides to try to kill the president after her mother is taken to a detention center, with art by Amy Alley. All Things That Matter Press, 2018.

Tongues in Trees: Poetry 1994-2017. Collected poems published since 1994, plus new poems with #resist and #metoo themes. Unbound Content, 2017.

Beautiful Waters. Poetry about lesbianism, love, and marriage. Finishing Line Press, 2017.

Earth Joy Writing: Finding Balance through Journaling and Nature. Experiential practices, ecofeminist reflections, and writing prompts. Ashland Creek Publishing, 2015.

Wednesday. Poems co-created on Facebook each Wednesday since 2010 with over 300 Facebook friends from around the world. Unbound Content, 2013.

The Pomegranate Papers. Twenty years of poetry about marriage, mothering, and creativity. Unbound Content, 2012.

This is how honey runs. Poetry based on work with clients using writing as a way of healing, finding balance, and empowering oneself creatively. Unbound Content, 2010.

Shamrock and Lotus. Novel set in Ireland, India, and the United States, about the way mothers and daughters can heal from histories of colonization and globalization through renewed connections to each other and the land. All Things That Matter Press, 2010.

Easyhard: Reflections on the Practice of Creativity. Thirteen lessons on overcoming doubt and fear and living a creative life. WordClay, 2009.

My Peace: A Year of Yoga at Amsa Studios. Lyrical essays on the connections between yoga practice and achieving healing and peace in life. WordClay, 2008.

Ruin. Poems about loss and recovery based on work using writing as a way of healing, which Marjory Wentworth, the Poet Laureate of South Carolina, called “A beautiful book: courageous, spiritual, and timeless.” New Women’s Voices Series by Finishing Line Press, 2004.

We Heal From Memory: Sexton, Lorde, Anzaldúa and the Poetry of Witness. A scholarly study of how the writing of Anne Sexton, Audre Lorde, and Gloria Anzaldúa bears witness to and provides visions of healing from multicultural American traumatic histories, both individual and collective. Palgrave, 2000.

Moon Days: Creative Writings about Menstruation. An edited collection of creative writings and art about menstruation. Personal narratives, short stories, and poetry selections that move from reflections on first experiences to visions of spiritual celebration and reclamation. Summerhouse Press, 1999.  Distributed by Ash Tree Publishing.

JASPER: This is the place where we make you crazy by asking you to name your top one or two favorites of your books and tell us why you are most proud of them.

STEELE: It would perhaps surprise you to know that I think We Heal from Memory is my most important book. I trace the legacies of our national collective traumas in that book – colonization, slavery, and sexual violence against women and girls – and walk readers through how poetry can be a way of witnessing to and healing from these legacies. I think, even though it was published 20 years ago, that many people are just now able to begin hearing what that book had to say.

 

cassie maters.jpeg

JASPER: From social media it looks like you and your wife, Susanne Kappler, have really gone back to the land. Did this start before COVID-19 or as a reaction to the pandemic? Can you tell us about your little Eden and how you’ve spent your non-writing time since March?

STEELE: Oh, my goodness, this is one of the things that brings me the most joy in life! We had chickens and a garden before the pandemic but we’ve basically doubled down on providing for ourselves since March. We don’t have a lot of land and we live in a very modest neighborhood, but we make the most of what we have with a vegetable garden in the front yard (our long-term vision is that we can grow enough that this can be a place where neighbors can harvest what they need), and three chickens in the back yard who give us fresh eggs, and the cutest dog in the world who sleeps next to me while I meditate and write and work every day.

I won’t say that being in quarantine has been easy, but it has been filled with joy knowing that we are cooking food from scratch and brewing beer using ingredients we harvested in our own yard and being grateful for what is here, right now, because we are alive and working -- and working in a way that upholds our vision of sustainability and gratitude for the abundance of the earth.

cassie chicken.jpeg

JASPER: What have you missed about the World Out There during our sheltering-in period?

STEELE: I used to love to go out to dinner! It was my go-to treat when I’d had a hard day or something was stressful or I just needed a date night with my wife. You know what? I didn’t really need it after all. We have found that when we’re both working from home and I can spend time cooking in the morning and she can brew on the weekends, then our dinners on the back porch are as fun as anything served to us somewhere else.

JASPER: Is there anything you have come to love tremendously during this time?

STEELE: I have come to love South Carolina in a new way. Every Friday morning, I take a drive with my dog to a state park or heritage preserve and we walk, mostly without seeing any other humans, up and down hills and next to rivers and through swamps and over creeks and sometimes off trail. The land here remembers so much. It’s beautiful. It has stories to tell.

Premo Steele with wife Suzanne Kappler

Premo Steele with wife Suzanne Kappler

JASPER: Now, professionally, can you talk about how the pandemic has affected your work life? Have you been more or less productive? Are there any new projects you can tell us about?

STEELE: Well, honestly, I don’t like the word productive. We are not products. Art is not a product. I would say my writing methods are the same, but the intensity and depth of them is deeper.

I know I just said, “the depth is deeper,” and that bothered me, so I looked up alternate words for “deeper” and found these: bottomless, unfathomable, mysterious, serious, pressing, graver. I think that about sums up the multifarious ways this pandemic has affected my writing—and I’ve been writing both poetry and memoir this year.

And of course, I keep a journal and write by hand every day. I was recently looking through one of my journals from a couple months ago and I found an entry where I was heartbroken that the US had suffered 7000 deaths from Covid.

“Three times as many as 9/11!” I wrote. “And it’s as if no one cares or can really deal with it.”

Now we’ve passed 160,000 deaths. That’s what I mean by graver.

JASPER: What’s next for you as an author?

STEELE: Who knows, you know? One of the things I’ve learned from all this is that there’s very little under our control as humans. We must work with each other and with the earth in harmonious, healing, and honestly, hard ways if we are to survive.

I don’t just mean survive Covid. I mean life on earth, life in this nation, especially for people who are not white, Cis, hetero, males, is very, very hard, and we must be strong enough to find new ways to survive together or not at all.

I hope my writing helps people do that in some small way.

JASPER: Where can our readers find more of your work and where can they purchase copies of your books?

STEELE: All of my books are available online, and people can visit www.cassiepremosteele.com if they want to read excerpts. I also have a series of audio coaching lessons called Joywork that I made available for free on Insight Timer when the pandemic started. [The link for that is http://insig.ht/cassiepremosteele ]

JASPER: Is there anything we didn’t ask you that you’d like to share with our readers? Any advice or wisdom to pass along?

STEELE: Life is very beautiful, and very, very short. Who do you want to love? How to you want to live? What work do you want to do? What legacy do you want to leave? What brings you joy? Go do it. Now.

JASPER: Could we possibly prevail upon you to share a piece or two of your recent work with us?

STEELE: Sure! Here are two recent poems.

Butterflies on the Floor

I saw butterflies once on the floor,

swampy Sunday morning forest, startled

them as they were eating down below

and something dead was sweet

to them, they piled on the wet

carcass like children playing

with a cadaver as children

do when they are starved for

life and their hunger goes deeper

than the body into a kind of

morbidity and pornography

and I felt ashamed for even

seeing this as if it were my

guilt I carried inside me most

moments that had spilled

outside me and I wanted to turn

away or even pretend I had

not seen it but I couldn’t because

the woman I love was with me and

I heard her gasp, “How beautiful.”

 

What I Love About Lesbian

is the island of love in it, the Sappho and

fragments on papyrus, the skin of words

and the she. Moonlight, goddesses, spring

flowers, women’s bodies. The be in the middle

syllable. I will be. You will be. She will be.

They will be. Morphing and transforming

like menses and moon cycles and tides into

I be, you be, she be, they be, we be.

The we of it. The smallness that can only

be seen when you get skin to skin, eyelashes

fluttering, and you notice her lips get bigger

and darker as you come in for a kiss. The les

of the we. The let’s. The less patriarchy, less

male gaze, less misogyny, less gynophobia,

less frat boy drunken haze. The lez, and les,

with a French pronunciation, les girls,

les femmes, les sorcières, les poètes

les philosophes, les mères, les soeurs.

The lay of it, like eggs, like rugs, like soft

round things that lay themselves down

close to the ground, like thighs. Hers

and mine. And the final syllable, an—

as in an opening, an affection, an emotion,

an ideal, an uncovering. The word âne

in French also means donkey, as in ass,

as in what we show to those who disrespect

us as we walk away, and what we watch as

she sidles up to the bar or home base or the

podium or the microphone or the courtroom

or the boardroom or the surgery floor,

taking charge, giving orders calling shots,

making plans, changing laws, changing

lives, saving bodies and so much more.

Lesbian is woman and full and curve and

wave and the too muchness of moon

and earth and ocean pulling on each other

with love and gravity, and no wonder

it came from an island because we are

indeed separate and green and lush and

fertile with our sweet scent of possibility.

 

Sheltered - Jasper's newest project brings 37 artists together to respond to COVID-19

“Has it ever been more clear we must cease what we are doing?

And we must try to do the thing as natural as resting wings to heal a broken bone, pandemic, torn spirit.”

from Unstable Air

by Tim Conroy

Cover art by Jen Ray

Cover art by Jen Ray

Early during the international pandemic, Brian Harmon and Cindi Boiter, art director and editor-in-chief of Jasper Magazine respectively, both sensed that SC artists would have something to say about the novel Coronavirus that was taking over the lives of everyone they knew, and the two decided to do something about it.

Having curated a number of projects commemorating important occasions in the culture of our community before, Boiter reached out to a selection of 35 visual and literary artists inviting them to respond in whatever fashion they felt appropriate. Upon receiving the art, Harmon went to work designing the book that would contain the art. The finished product is called Sheltered.

The Jasper Project is delighted to share that this 92-page, perfect bound, premium color book is now available for purchase. While a proper book launch will follow once we can all safely gather together again, we hope you will go ahead and order your copy of Sheltered now to support the Jasper Project and its mission of providing collaborative arts engineering and community-wide arts communication.

The Jasper Project is indebted to the artists listed below who shared their words, sensations, and talents as we all try to make sense of the strange landscape time has given us to explore.

sheltered back.jpg

In order to ensure the health and safety of the reader, Sheltered is available from both Amazon and BandN where it can be delivered directly to your door.

Thank you for supporting your local arts community via The Jasper Project!