Category Archives: Art

Sunset River Marketplace will present fiber art show


Sandy Adair, tapestry, Dead Man’s Bay

Sunset River Marketplace in Little River, SC, is set to showcase Elemental Visions: Fiber Art by Adair, Sharpe and Vasanto  from Feb. 1 through March 9. The opening reception will be Feb. 1 from 5 to 7 p.m. The exhibition features abstracts, wearable art, macramé, tapestries and more created by Sandy Adair, Susan Sharpe and Vasanto. The Blue Ridge Mountains with their ever-changing moods provide inspiration for these three western North Carolina artists. Color, texture and textile artifacts are combined expertly by the hands and hearts of these women.

Adair says, “Like many families searching for a simpler, closer to the earth life, our family of four with two kids, an aquarium full of fish and five cats arrived in Boone, NC in 1974 in an old VW van. That was the beginning of a wondrous adventure.”

She started creating macramé plant items and abstract landscape wall hangings. Soon, after a tapestry course with Susan Sharpe, she was creating abstract tapestry landscapes. After receiving scholarships to Penland Craft School, she was juried into Southern Highlands Craft Guild in 1986.

She has received numerous awards including Featured Tapestry Artist of the Year for the Year of the Tapestry and the Biltmore House in Asheville, NC. Her piece titled “Appalachian Sunset” was featured in the movie 28 Hours. Her work has also been included in several books and publications, including Fiber Arts Design Book V, Better Homes and Gardens, Making Amazing Art, 1000 Artisan Images, The Romance of Country Inns, Southern Aviator magazine and Wilma magazine. Today, Adair is still inspired by her love of the earth and nature.

Vasanto (her public art name) learned to knit as a child, and then began spinning, dyeing, crocheting, weaving and felting with wool fiber. She says, “Soft, rich and extremely versatile, wool is a natural fiber that yields beautiful dyed colors and sculptural forms.”

Her wearable art includes felted wool hats in a variety of shapes and forms that convey unique personalities and vibrant energies. She creates nuno felted scarves in silk and wool by layering color and texture. Nuno felting is a fabric felting technique developed by Australian Polly Stirling in the 90s. The name is derived from the Japanese word “nuno” meaning cloth. The technique bonds loose fiber into a gauzy lightweight fabric.

Vasanto explains, “I often start with a single color or combination that I want to play with. Colors inspire me and stimulate ideas and imagery both from my past and the present. Lately I have been making felt fabric collages, some abstract, others more pictorial or landscapes.”

Vasanto studied with a number of respected fiber artists, including Beth Beede, Inge Evers, Chad Hagen, Jean Hicks and Polly Stirling. She went on to teach her own workshops at SAFF (Southeast Animal Fiber Fair), Tryon arts and Craft center, Northwood Farms, and the John C. Campbell Folk school. She is also a member of Local Cloth, a nonprofit organization in Asheville that brings awareness to the world of plant and animal fiber.

According to Susan Sharpe, she chooses to work with fiber and fabric media because it forms the common thread in diverse human cultures across time and around the world. She says, “Using traditional hand-forming processes such as paper-making, spinning, dyeing, weaving, and sewing, I imbue my visual images with the spirit of nature. Adding found objects and textile artifacts into my work engages me in the narrative process, and a story forms slowly.  I want the viewer to find their own story within my work, and perhaps to find many stories there.”

To that end, Sharpe dyes and creates her own fabrics. With wool, alpaca mohair and silk fiber, she creates non-woven tapestries with wet felting processes. She uses natural indigo to dye fleece and yarn for woven tapestries. She also creates her own papers using milkweed, hops, yucca and iris fiber that she harvests from her garden. For Sharpe fiber art is her own creative journey. Her work ranges from realistic to abstract and includes weaving handmade paper, quilting and surface design.

Sharpe has lived in western North Carolina since 1970. With graduate degrees from Appalachian State University and East Tennessee State University as well as study at Penland School, the artist has exhibited in regional and national competitions, earning numerous awards. Workshops in drawing, design, paper making, dyeing and screen printing are available at her Redwing Studio.

On March 10, Sharpe and Vasanto will conduct a Nuno Felt Scarf workshop at Sunset River Marketplace. The cost is $95 per person and includes materials. Space is limited, so anyone interested should contact the gallery as soon as possible. More information can be found on the gallery website.

Charleston Artist’s Work Sparkles with Color – and Gold


Kate Hooray Osmond, Departures, oil and gold leaf on canvas, 60 x 40 inches.

Painter Kate Hooray Osmond admits she likes sparkly things. “I use gold leaf in my work because if I didn’t, I would probably cover my paintings in glitter. I’m only partly kidding about that,” the artist said in an interview with the Coastal Community Foundation of South Carolina. 

Light Shine Down, an exhibition of Osmond’s oil and gold-leaf paintings accompanied by some installation work, will be displayed at the Franklin G. Burroughs-Simeon B. Chapin Art Museum in Myrtle Beach, SC, from Jan. 10 – April 28. An opening wine and hors d’oeuvres reception featuring an artist-led gallery talk will be held from 1 – 3 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 13. The reception is free for Museum Members and $20 per person for non-members. 

Osmond’s paintings, many of them large-scale, are architectural, even industrial in style. Often they feature aerial views of cities or landscapes she experienced flying in a helicopter, which she has done for more than a decade.

“We go through life each day and drive on streets that are familiar,” the artist says. “When we get to view a bigger picture of that daily experience, things shift inside of us.” 

These images may be familiar – as in a representation of Charleston’s Ravenel Bridge – or bordering on abstract, such as an urban cityscape where residential neighborhoods commingle with oil storage tanks.

While acknowledging that her works rarely contain a human figure, she feels each of her landscapes or aerial views depict a human story. 

Osmond was named the State Fellow for South Carolina in 2018 by the South Carolina Arts Commission and was named 2017 Griffith-Reyburn Lowcountry Artist of the Year. She is an MFA candidate at Maryland Institute College of Art, and her work is found in both private and public collections, among them the College of Charleston and HBO Productions. 

Light Shine Down appears concurrently with Elizabeth Bradford: Time + Terrain, and Collection Connections: A Visual Exploration of Southern Heritage and The Scape of Water: Works from the Art Museum’s Permanent Collection. 

Admission to the Art Museum is free at all times but donations are welcome.

NC Artist Memorializes Natural World Lost to Modern Life

Elizabeth Bradford, Wisteria Vines, 2014, Acrylic on canvas, 60″ x 48″

Artist Elizabeth Bradford, a descendant of generations of North Carolina farmers, weaves her Southern heritage into works of stunning color, texture and realism.

“My father and grandfather rode a tractor over our acres,” she writes in her artist statement, “and in my own way, I continue that tradition as a contemporary painter – working that same land with my eyes and my brush.”

Her brilliantly hued images of the land – as she remembers it – and of her native rural community are featured in an exhibition titled Elizabeth Bradford | Time + Terrain, opening Jan. 2 at the Franklin G. Burroughs-Simeon B. Chapin Art Museum in Myrtle Beach, SC. An opening reception, featuring an artist-led gallery talk, will be held from 1 – 3 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 6 and is free for Art Museum members and is $20 per person for non-members.

Regular gallery hours will be from 10 a.m. – 4 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday, 1 – 4 p.m. Sunday, through April 28. 

During much of her adult life, Bradford has watched the loss of open spaces, the harvesting of old growth forests and the construction of new subdivisions-what she calls “the final harvest.” She sees her paintings as “an elegy for the land as I remember it and as it can still be found-in hidden pockets of the forests.”

The 27 paintings of various scale included in the exhibition are an attempt by the artist to capture the look and feel of these wild places before they are forever changed, and to perhaps cause the viewer to consider the cost of those changes.

 Bradford studied art at Randolph Macon Woman’s College, the University of North Carolina and at Davidson College. She recently completed a residency at the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts and VCCA’s outpost in France, Moulin à Nef. Her work has been included in the US State Department’s Art in Embassies Program, which places work by American artists in embassies around the world. She was chosen in 2006 as the featured artist for North Carolina’s first statewide Women’s Conference. She has had many solo exhibitions, including shows at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, Davidson College, Davidson NC and Hood College, Frederick, MD. 

Elizabeth Bradford | Time + Terrain is curated by Carla Hanzal and organized by the Blowing Rock Art & History Museum, Blowing Rock, NC. 

Admission to the Art Museum is free at all times but donations are welcome.

Wine Fest Art Contest 2019 Deadline

 Deadline is Nov. 1, 2018

The Ocean Isle Museum Foundation’s annual Wine Fest fundraiser will be on April 27, 2019, at the Museum of Coastal Carolina. Proceeds from the fundraiser benefit the Museum of Coastal Carolina in Ocean Isle Beach and Ingram Planetarium in Sunset Beach. The theme for the event is “Wine on the Island.”

Local artists are encouraged to submit their island-themed original artwork to the 2019 Wine Fest Art Contest. The winning artwork will be used in the Wine Fest promotional materials and auctioned off during Wine Fest’s live auction on April 27.

Artwork may be dropped off at the Museum of Coastal Carolina anytime befpre November 1, 2018. There is no restriction on size or medium. Each piece of artwork should be accompanied by a biography and contact information of the artist and the estimated value of the artwork. The winning artwork will become the property of OIMF. Other artists submitting artwork may choose to have their art donated for the silent auction to support the event or picked up by the artist.

The Museum of Coastal Carolina is located at 21 East Second Street, Ocean Isle Beach, NC. Admission to the museum is free for members. Non-member all-day admission is $9.50 for adults, $8.50 for seniors, $7.50 for children (3-12), and free for age 2 and under. A 7-day summer vacation pass is just $75 for two adults and up to four children. Admission is free for active duty military and disabled veterans plus one guest; must include military ID cardholder. For more information about the Museum of Coastal Carolina, call 910-579-1016 or visit www.MuseumPlanetarium.org.

Native SC Watercolorist Featured in Art Museum Exhibit

Artist and South Carolina native Sherry Strickland Martin spent much of her career creating images for commercial products such as housewares, notecards, fabric designs and sports artwork. But a bout with breast cancer led her to relocate from Hilton Head Island to Myrtle Beach to be near family, to teach and to return to the traditional watercolors and mixed media work with which she began her career as an artist.

Sherry Strickland Martin, Royal Doulton Garden, 2010, watercolor, 32″ x 39.5″

An exhibition of these works, titled Roots Run Deep, will be on display from October 4 – December 16 at the Franklin G. Burroughs-Simeon B. Chapin Art Museum. An opening reception featuring a talk by the artist will be held from 5:30 – 7:30 p.m. Thursday, October 11. The reception is free and open to the public. Regular gallery hours for the exhibit are 10 a.m. – 4 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday, 1 – 4 p.m.  Sundays.

Sherry Strickland Martin, Time Between Rivers, 2017, oil, 13.5″ x 21″

Martin’s highly representational watercolor and mixed media works range from richly detailed landscapes to intimate portraits of people who might be found anywhere in the Lowcountry.
“Roots Run Deep . . . speaks to a return in doing what nurtures your soul,” the artist writes in her artist statement. “Second, it’s that salt air, plough mud, and the sweet smell of oyster beds that never leave you, but bring you and family home again, where roots run deep.”
Martin, who grew up in the South Carolina upstate, received her BA in Studio Art at Limestone College in Gaffney, SC (1982). She began her art career by producing work for galleries and juried museum exhibitions as well as teaching workshops and doing commissioned work throughout the Carolinas. That led to her commercial work in licensed images marketed through a wide range of retail outlets as well as professional sports organizations; a career that was sidelined by her illness.
As well as dealing with her personal health, Martin’s art career faced a further obstacle. In April 2009, she lost her home and most her art, over 300 works, in a wildfire. “I’ve had a lot of catching up to do to begin showing my work in Myrtle Beach,” says Martin. “I have been working on that diligently with a refocus on producing work that speaks to me and challenges my skill level.”
It wasn’t until 2014 that Martin started exhibiting her paintings again. That year, the South Carolina Watermedia Society awarded her “Signature Member in Excellence” in their annual juried exhibition.
In addition to teaching visual arts at St. James High School in Murrells Inlet, Martin continues to paint professionally and regularly shares her work with her students as a teaching aid and for inspiration.

Admission to the Art Museum is free at all times but donations are welcomed.

Sunset River Marketplace to Present ‘Skies of Coastal Carolina’

Artist Rachel Rourke Sunnell, Anchor Watch, acrylic

Sunset River Marketplace, the eclectic art gallery in Calabash, NC, will present works by Rachel Rourke Sunnell in a show titled Skies of Coastal Carolina, which is set to run from Sept. 5 through Oct. 6. Viewers will have an opportunity to meet the artist at the gallery’s Saturday Open House on Sept. 8 from 2 – 5 p.m.

Artist Rachel Rourke Sunnell, Darthia’s Barn, acrylic

Sunnell is a graduate of Rhode Island School of Design with a Bachelor of Fine Arts and Bachelor of Landscape Architecture. She furthered her painting studies with Maine artist Mary Brooking and attended painting retreats on Monhegan Island and at other Maine locations. After moving to Ocean Isle Beach, she joined Studio 12, a painting group that meets weekly at Sunset River Marketplace.

She says, “As an acrylic painter, I use loose brush strokes and color that evoke the idea of subjective realism. This refers to the reality inside your mind, perhaps a memory or a feeling. I strive to capture something that just feels good, past or present. My goal is to share my observations of nature with visual clues of light, movements and color.”

Artist Rachel Rourke Sunnell, Sea Oats, acrylic

Sunnelle’s work recently earned her a First Place award at the 2018 Waterway Art Association Annual Show.

Rachel Rourke Sunnell is a member of Brunswick Arts Council, Waterway Art Association and Associated Artists of Southport. She is also a licensed landscape architect in North Carolina and Maine.

Sunset River Marketplace showcases work by approximately 150 North and South Carolina artists, and houses some 10,000 square feet of oils, acrylics, watercolors, pastels, mixed media, art glass, fabric art, pottery, sculpture, turned and carved wood and artisan-created jewelry.

There are two onsite kilns and four wheels used by students in the ongoing pottery classes offered by the gallery. A custom on-site framing department is available. There are realistic and abstract art classes as well as workshops by nationally and regionally known artists. During select months, the gallery hosts Coffee With the Authors, a series of presentations by local and regional authors.  The gallery address is: 10283 Beach Drive SW, Calabash, NC 28467. For more information, call 910.575.5999 or visit the website at www.sunsetrivermarketplace.com. Daily updates are available on the gallery’s Facebook page.

Upcoming Events

  • Ruth Cox Student Art Show

Sept. 1 – 22, 2018

Meet the Artists Open House, Wednesday, Sept. 12, 3-5 p.m.

Free

  • Coffee With the Authors: Jeff Siebold

The Crisp Poleward Sky, a Zeke Trainer Mystery

Sept. 13, 10 – 11 a.m.

Free, RSVP

  • Coffee With the Authors: Brent Hensley

Nebulous Deception • Initial Deception

Oct. 11, 10-11 a.m.

Free, RSVP

  • Brunswick Arts Council Fall Show

Oct. 15 – Oct. 20, 2018

Reception & Awards Presentation

Oct. 18, 5 – 7 p.m.

Free

  • Trees: a Different Dimension

Photography exhibition, works by Louis Aliotta

Oct. 10 – Nov. 10, 2018

Free

  • Farm to Table

Group exhibition

Nov. 2 – Dec. 1, 2018

Opening Reception Nov. 2, 5 – 7 p.m.

Free

Calabash NC Gallery to Host Float Your Boat

Sunset River Marketplace, the eclectic art gallery located in Calabash, NC is featuring a group exhibition titled Float Your Boat, which runs from Wednesday, June 20 through Saturday, July 28. The collection of 20-plus paintings pays homage to the coastal love affair with boats, be they recreational or work-related.

Artist Ortrud Tyler, Best Friends, oil, 9×12

Says gallery owner Ginny Lassiter, “We’re located in a coastal fishing village. Everyone’s drawn to the water – our artists, our visitors and our locals. Paintings that feature boats and beaches or other coastal scenes are always in great demand, and our artists do a beautiful job. They’re so talented.”

Participating artists include Marcus McClanahan, Ann Parks McCray,  Ortrud Tyler, Louis Aliotta, Richard Staat, Rachel Sunnell, Henry “Hank” Pulkowski, Yuriy Petrov, Karen Casciani, Freeman Beard, Mary E. Smith and Ann Lees, among others.

“We hope y’all come by,” Lassiter invites.  “There’s going to be a lot of beautiful work here.”

Artist Marcus McClanahan, Filigree, oil, 42×42

Sunset River Marketplace showcases work by approximately 150 North and South Carolina artists, and houses some 10,000 square feet of oils, acrylics, watercolors, pastels, mixed media, art glass, fabric art, home décor, pottery, sculpture, turned and carved wood and artisan-created jewelry. There are two onsite kilns and four wheels used by students in the ongoing pottery classes offered by the gallery. A custom on-site framing department is available. There are realistic and abstract art classes as well as workshops by nationally and regionally known artists. A Coffee With the Authors lecture series features presentations by local and regional authors. For more information, call 910.575.5999 or visit the website at www.sunsetrivermarketplace.com.

Sunset River Marketplace is located at 10283 Beach Drive SW (Hwy. 179), Calabash, N.C.  Hours are Monday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. For daily updates, “like” the gallery’s page on Facebook.

Myrtle Beach Art Museum Celebrates a World of Water in Summer Exhibits

Water, water everywhere . . . at least, at the Franklin G. Burroughs-Simeon B. Chapin Art Museum this summer. Beginning May 29, the Museum will present an exhibition titled The Water’s Fine, featuring works by five contemporary artists depicting – what else? – people in the water, in black-and-white photography and hyperrealistic painting.
The exhibition, which runs through Sept. 2, features artists Samantha French (Brooklyn, NY), Carl Kerridge (Myrtle Beach, SC), Wayne Levin (Honolulu, HI), Matt Story (New York, NY) and Charles Williams (Greensboro, NC). Gallery hours are from 10 a.m. – 4 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday1 – 4 p.m. Sundays.
Perfectly fitting for viewing at an art museum located just a stone’s throw from the ocean, museumgoers will see a variety of striking, large-scale images of people swimming, floating, turning flips, body-surfing, diving into or contemplating getting into the water.

Samantha French, Slow Exhale, 2018, oil on canvas, 54″ x 64″

Samantha French, a graduate of the Minneapolis College of Art and Design, captures the idea of escape, the tranquility and nostalgia for the lazy summer days of her childhood summers spent in the lakes of Northern Minnesota through images derived from multiple photographs translated into oil paintings. In her artist’s statement she notes that her works attempt to recreate “the feeling of being immersed, cool and wet, warm and sun-drenched.”

Carl Kerridge, Beauty Beneath #9, 2017, metallic photographic print on acrylic, 45″ x 30″

Carl Kerridge, a native of Norwich, England, learned his love of photography as a child; he currently runs a full-time digital media studio in downtown Myrtle Beach. His series of abstract photographs titled Beauty Beneath explores the play of light, shadow and rippled reflections surrounding nude figures below the water’s surface.
Wayne Levin has spent a career photographing the vast and mysterious underwater world in black and white. A graduate of the San Francisco Art Institute in CA and his MFA from Pratt Institute in NY, he is also a published author, receiving the Hawaii Book Publishers Association’s award for Book of the Year (1998); as well as a recipient of photographer’s fellowships from the Ohio Arts Council (1989), and the National Endowment for the Arts (1984).

Matt Story, Yellow Back Cross, 2015, oil on panel, 45″ x 60″, courtesy of the artist and Robert Lange Studios, Charleston, SC.

Matt Story, a graduate of the University of California Los Angeles, has worked not only as a painter but also as a technical illustrator, graphic artist and in film and television production. His painting style, reminiscent of classical masters of the Renaissance, consists of building up thin glazes and painting, as he describes it, “fat over lean.”
Contemporary realist painter Charles Williams’ compelling art intends to capture human emotive responses to the natural environment – especially the ocean. A native of Georgetown, SC, Williams explored his own near-drowning experience in an exhibition at the Art Museum in 2015 titled Swim. His work has been reviewed in publications and media including the Washington Post, NPR and SCETV (PBS affiliate) and is included in the collections of numerous art museums, including the Burroughs/Chapin Art Museum.
Continuing the “watery” theme this summer, the Art Museum will open a second exhibition next month, Making Waves: A Drew Brophy Retrospective, featuring paintings, surfboards and a variety of other art forms from the international renowned surf artist. The exhibit opens June 23.
Admission to the Art Museum is free at all times but donations are welcomed.

Artists Vie for Honors in Arts & Crafts Guild Competition

Over 40 artists from around the region will vie for top honors and over $2000 in cash prizes in the 21st Annual Waccamaw Arts & Crafts Guild Juried Exhibition, opening Thursday, May 3, at the Franklin G. Burroughs-Simeon B. Chapin Art Museum.

Polly Turner, Downtime, 2016, colored pencil and gouache, 24″ x 31″, Best in Show 2017

A reception (free and open to the public) will be held from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m., with awards presentation beginning at 6:00 p.m. The exhibit continues through June 10, with gallery hours from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.Tuesday through Saturday1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Sundays.
Seventy-five two-dimensional and three-dimensional works were selected for jurying. Works selected for display include oil, watercolor and mixed media paintings, photographs and fiber arts. With creations from artists throughout the Carolinas, the show is a perennially popular event with locals and visitors. A large percentage of the works on display will also be available for purchase.
Judge and juror for this year’s competition is Douglas Balentine of Charleston, SC. Douglas Balentine studied at The Parsons School of Design in NY and the International School of Art in Italy. Charleston and its environs offer a seemingly eternal source of inspiration and Balentine continues to live and work there with his family. His work has most recently been shown at the Franklin G. Burroughs – Simeon B. Chapin Art Museum’s 2017 exhibition, Douglas Balentine | Beyond the Horizon. Balentine has also shown work in Paris, France, New York, Miami, and Los Angeles. At the opening reception for this exhibition, Balentine will provide insight on how the works were selected for inclusion in the exhibit and will participate in the awards ceremony.
Cash awards to be given include the $800 Rebecca R. Bryan Best in Show Award, as well as First, Second and Third Place awards of $500, $275 and $100 respectively. An additional 10 works will also be selected for Honorable Mentions.
Admission to the Museum is free but donations are welcome. For further information, call 843-238-2510 or visit www.myrtlebeachartmuseum.org.

Meet Jonathan Green

Jonathan Green (The Freedom Ship of Robert Smalls) at Inlet Affairs  in Murrells Inlet, SC, May 4, 2018

Based on the true story of Robert Smalls, born a slave in 1839 in Beaufort, S.C., who gained fame as an African American hero of the American Civil War. Author Louise Meriwether tells the inspirational story of Smalls’ life as a slave, his boyhood dream of freedom, and his bold and daring plan as a young man to commandeer a Confederate gunboat from Charleston Harbor and escape with fifteen fellow slaves and family members. Smalls joined the Union Navy, rose to the rank of captain, and became the first African American to command a U.S. service ship. After the war Smalls returned to Beaufort, bought the home of his former master, and began a long career in state and national politics. This new edition is graced with unmistakable illustrations by Jonathan Green, iconic lowcountry artist.

 11 AM-1 PM, $30

Literary luncheons with exciting authors at area restaurants

The Moveable Feast is held at area restaurants throughout the year on Fridays, 11 AM-1 PM.  For each feast, the chef prepares an exquisite menu, typically unavailable during the restaurant’s public hours.  The presentation precedes the meal. Individuals, couples, friends, book clubs and other groups are assigned table seating. Each literary luncheon is followed by a book signing at Litchfield Books at 2 PM for those unable to participate in the feast. Each is $30 with a $5 rebate when the featured book is purchased at the Moveable Feast, with some exceptions when the book is included. For reservations, call 843.235.9600 or visit ClassAtPawleys.com.