Tag Archives: Myrtle Beach area

Calabash gallery features Cape Fear Perspective in January 2022

Sunset River Marketplace, the eclectic art gallery in Calabash, NC, will showcase works by Wilmington, NC artists Janet B. Sessoms, Sharon Jones, Sandy Nelson and David Starbuck in its upcoming exhibition, Cape Fear Perspective, which opens Wednesday, January 12 and runs through Saturday, February 26. A public reception is set for Friday, January 14 from 5 – 7 p.m. at the gallery.

The exhibition marks the first event of the gallery’s celebratory 20th year in business. According to gallery owner Ginny Lassiter, “We will be celebrating all year with special exhibits, charity events, artist demonstrations, gallery talks, live music and more. I’m thrilled to open the year with this exhibition of oil paintings by these renowned artists.”

Sun Breaking Through, oil by Janet B. Sessoms, 30×24 inches

Janet B. Sessoms is known for her lush oil paintings and has had her work featured in many local and regional publications. She has been honored in many shows, including, most recently, the 2021 Yadkin Art Council Show, 2021 Wilmington Art Associates Spring Show, and was accepted into the 2020 Catharine Lorillard Wolfe Art Club’s 1st Online Associate and Non-Member Show, New York, NY.

By the Light of the Moon, oil  by Sandy Nelson,  24×24 inches

Sandy Nelson has been named one of the top 200 artists by Artist Magazine. Her landscapes have been accepted to national juried competitions from Main to California. Nelson’s works are also included in two prestigious art books, Best of America: Oil Artists and 100 Southern Artists.

Waiting On the Tide, oil by Sharon Jones, 36×24 inches

Often honored for her sensitive portrayals of coastal wildlife and landscapes, Sharon Jones has been featured in local exhibits and publications including the Official Cape Fear Resource Guide 2021.

Birds of a Feather, oil by David Starbuck, 40×30 inches

A transplant from Silicon Valley, CA, David Starbuck is a full-time, award-winning, and published wildlife artist. He has been featured on the cover of Wrightsville Beach magazine and has had his work juried into the NC Wildlife Resources Commission Wildlife Calendar.

About Sunset River Marketplace

Located in coastal Brunswick County, Sunset River Marketplace caters to both tourists and a growing local community of full-time residents seeking fine art for their homes and businesses. Featuring work by approximately 150 North and South Carolina artists, the gallery is well known in the area for its collection of oil paintings, watermedia, pastels, photography, hand-blown glass, fused glass, pottery and clay sculptures, turned and carved wood, unique home décor items and artisan jewelry.

There are two onsite kilns and five wheels used by the gallery’s pottery students. Art classes and workshops are currently being offered on a limited basis. Call the gallery for details.

The gallery address is: 10283 Beach Drive SW, Calabash, NC 28467.  Hours are Monday – Saturday, 11 a.m. – 5 p.m. For more information, call 910.575.5999 or visit the website at www.sunsetrivermarketplace.com. Daily updates are available on the gallery’s Facebook and Instagram pages.

The FrameCenter, located within the gallery, is open Wednesday through Friday, 12 noon – 5 p.m. and by appointment. Call framer Louis Aliotta directly at 910.368.7351.

Special Covid 19 Notice: To meet North Carolina State guidelines, Sunset River Marketplace requests that patrons who are not fully vaccinated wear face coverings and requires the use of hand sanitizer plus six-foot social distancing between gallery visitors and at the cash register.  The gallery staff conducts thorough cleaning of surfaces upon opening and closing and during the day and has placed complimentary hand sanitizer throughout the gallery for visitor use. Depending on alerts from the Governor’s Office, this advisory may change.

December Literary Luncheons

For 24 years, the Moveable Feast has been held at area restaurants throughout the year on Fridays (and some
Tuesdays), 11 AM-1 PM. The author’s presentation precedes the meal. For each feast, the chef prepares an exquisite
menu, typically unavailable during the restaurant’s public hours. Food allergies and Lent are accommodated with
advance notice. Individuals, couples, friends, book clubs and other small groups are assigned table seating at four-,
six- and eight-tops. Through 2021, most Feasts are $30, with books available for purchase and signing at the event.
*Exceptions are noted when the book is included in the ticket. Beginning in 2022, each Moveable Feast is priced
individually. The base price will be $35, however increased venue costs, book with ticket, and author fees will be
accommodated.

For reservations, 843.235.9600 or visit www.ClassAtPawleys.com

Dec. 3 ~ Kevin Mitchell and David Shields (Taste the State: Signature Foods,
Recipes and their Stories) at The Village House, Litchfield ($30)


From the influence of 1920s fashion on asparagus growers to an heirloom watermelon lost and found, Taste the
State abounds with surprising stories from South Carolina’s singularly rich food tradition. Here, Kevin Mitchell
and David S. Shields present engaging profiles of eighty-two of the state’s most distinctive ingredients, such as
Carolina Gold rice, Sea Island White Flint corn, and the cone-shaped Charleston Wakefield cabbage, and
signature dishes, such as shrimp and grits, chicken bog, okra soup, Frogmore stew, and crab rice. These portraits,
illustrated with original photographs and historical drawings, provide origin stories and tales of kitchen creativity
and agricultural innovation. Historical “receipts” and modern recipes, including Chef Mitchell’s distillation of
traditions in Hoppin’ John fritters, okra and crab stew, are also provided. Kevin Mitchell is a 2020-21 SC Chef
Ambassador and the first African-American instructor at the Culinary Institute of Charleston.

Tues, Dec. 7 ~ Roger Newman (Will O’ the Wisp: Madness, War & Recompense), Ocean One ($30)


Polarizing, fire-eating discourse, propaganda, and aversion to reason bred secession madness in Charleston, S.C.
and sold rebellion to a population with virtually nothing to gain and everything to lose. Men who should have
known better and had become inured to the abomination of human bondage failed to step up. As Southern
nationalists raced into Civil War, blockade runner Jack Holmes and wealthy Charleston shipping magnate,
George A. Trenholm, do what they can to sustain their city and the Confederacy. Their actions and experiences
result in a sweeping adventure story played out on both the land and sea. With the outcome of the war obvious,
Jack Holmes and George Trenholm conspire to steal the Confederate gold as Jefferson Davis flees a burning
Richmond. The two men accept their responsibility for what proved to be a misguided and tragic rebellion and
seek to adapt and redeem themselves in a post-slavery South.

Literary Luncheon

For 24 years, the Moveable Feast has been held at area restaurants throughout the year on Fridays (and some
Tuesdays), 11 AM-1 PM. The author’s presentation precedes the meal. For each feast, the chef prepares an exquisite
menu, typically unavailable during the restaurant’s public hours. Food allergies and Lent are accommodated with
advance notice. Individuals, couples, friends, book clubs and other small groups are assigned table seating at four-,
six- and eight-tops. Through 2021, most Feasts are $30, with books available for purchase and signing at the event.
*Exceptions are noted when the book is included in the ticket. Beginning in 2022, each Moveable Feast is priced
individually. The base price will be $35, however increased venue costs, book with ticket, and author fees will be
accommodated.

For reservations, 843.235.9600 or visit www.ClassAtPawleys.com.

Nov. 26 ~ Robert McAlister (Wooden Ships on Winyah Bay) at Caffe Piccolo ($30)

Local author (Pawleys Island: An Old Man’s Love Story) and wooden boat enthusiast (Cruising Through Life)
“Mac” McAlister shares the epic history of Winyah Bay’s wooden boats, stretching back to 1526 when Spanish
explorers sailed through the inlet and were greeted by Native Americans in dugout canoes. Spanning the
beginnings of the legacy of rice and indigo plantations in the early 1700s to Lafayette’s landing at Winyah Bay in
1777, the book covers the end of the lumber boom from the end of the Civil War until the beginning of World
War II when hundreds of wooden schooners loaded lumber in the Port of Georgetown and braved storms off Cape
Hatteras to deliver cargo to northern cities, while fishermen fished the rivers and the bay in wooden dories,
bateaux, and skiffs. Historic photographs, restored by Anne Swift Malarich, illustrate the fascinating history of the
rare ecological treasure that is Winyah Bay.

Holiday Book Events

Nov. 28, 1-4 PM: Book Signings at Pawleys Island Old Town Hall

The Waccamaw Neck Arts Alliance is holding a Christmas exhibit at the Old Town Hall, Nov. 19-29, 10 AM-3 PM daily, with terrific artwork by local artists at reasonable prices. The two Sundays will feature book signings with Tanya Ackerman (Chasing the Light and Seasons of Light), Marc Davison (Beach House Card Tricks and More …), Millie Doud (Caretta’s Great Adventure), Mac McAlister (Pawleys Island: An Old Man’s Love Story and Wooden Ships on Winyah Bay) and Billy Woodson (Waccamaw Gold).

Tuesday, Nov. 30, 5-7 PM: Special Dessert Party at Litchfield Books 

Best-selling “Cake-Mix Doctor” Anne Byrn presents her newest baking book – New Take on Cake: 175 Beautiful, Doable Cake Mix Recipes for Bundts, Layers, Slabs, Loaves, Cookies, and More! Icing demonstrations, coffee, desserts, a book signing, and a presentation by the author. $5, purchase tickets ahead or at the door at Litchfield Books (11421 Ocean Hwy, in the Fresh Market Commons). 

Friday, Dec. 3, Noon-4 PM: FOWL Holiday Book Sale at Waccamaw Library

Wonderful like-new holiday books, puzzles, cookbooks, coffee table books and children’s books. Noon-2 PM, Cindy Hedrick will be signing her books Tails from SC CARES and Love at First Sight. At 2:30 PM, join us for Story Time with Lee Brockington reading Caretta’s Great Adventure, written and illustrated by Millie Doud and published by CLASS LLC as a fundraiser for the Friends of Waccamaw Library. Books will be available for purchase ($15) and signing. 

DICKENS CHRISTMAS SHOW & FESTIVALS OPENS

 Dickens Christmas Show & Festivals is continuing November 11th – 14th, 2021, at the Myrtle Beach Convention Center, to celebrate its 40th annual event!

Including Victorian Teas and Holiday Tours, this show is a kick off for the holiday season. The show’s floor will be filled with new and returning vendors, along with entertainers, local charities, and vintage décor.

The show allows attendees to step back in time into an ever-changing Victorian Holiday Marketplace setting where shoppers can find a multitude of period-clad vendors hawking their wares among the sites & sounds of a Victorian winter wonderland. The show’s floor offers everything from fine arts and crafts, holiday decorations,children’s toys, clothing,jewelry, imported items and more.

Victorian row houses, streetlamps, and more are the props that help create the vintage feel. Oneof the show’s oldest and most memorable exhibits is Santa Through The Ages. Follow the transformation of Santa from Medieval Times through modern day. You can never know too much about this magical man from the North Pole. Elegantly costumed and life sized,the history of each Santa will amaze and enthrall even the biggest scrooge.

Visit each of the festivals that benefit various local charities. Old Saint Nick visits each year in his Victorian Castle benefiting the Barnabas Horse Therapy Foundation, the child in all of us is encouraged to come alive!

The Festival of Trees provides an array of fifty magnificent Christmas trees, each dressed in its own unique
holiday theme. Beautifully decorated and sold at silent auction with all sales going to the LIFE Program with Coastal Carolina University.

Then there is the Festival of Wreaths, offering fifty spectacular, one-of-a-kind creations, all offered for sale to benefit the Kiwanis Children’s Charities.

The Festival of Tables features an elaborate display of 50 different centerpieces, offering themes from Thanksgiving, to Christmas, and everything in between. Sold to support the Waccamaw Animal Rescue Mission.

Last but not least, the Festival of Stockings that showcases fifty individual beautifully designed Christmas Stockings. These stockings include a variety of accompanying gifts, anything from restaurant certificates to baby items, depending on the theme. All are available at a silent auction benefiting A Father’s Place.

The Festival of Worlds offers Holiday traditions and foods of selected countries from around the world.

The show’s floor also offers many entertainment opportunities such as Punch and Judy Shows, performed by Sean Keohane along with his Marionette Performers.

At Door Ticket Prices:
Single Day Adult: $12
Multi Day Adult: $15
Single Day Child: $5
Multi Day Child: $6.50
Single Day Group Rate: $10
Multi Day Group Rate: $13.50

The event producer will follow the suggested CDC Guidelines at the time of the event, to err on the side of caution.

Holiday Art Market in Calabash

Sunset River Marketplace, the eclectic art gallery in Calabash, NC will hold its annual Holiday Art Market from Friday, Nov. 12 through Sunday, Nov. 14. Hours are 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. each day.

Mary Cross creates her mussel trees and Christmas gnomes only during the holiday season.

The 10,000 square-foot gallery will be showcasing its wide range of original art, including much that has been designed and created especially for holiday gift-giving: clay sculptures and pottery (including Christmas platters and serving pieces), hand-blown and fused glass, oil paintings, artisan made jewelry, Christmas ornaments and cards, turned wood, baskets, hand-crafted dolls, wood furniture, fiber art, garden art, and more.

There will also be Holiday treats, hot mulled cider, wine and free gift certificate drawings all three days.

Featured artists, many of whom will be on hand during the event, include Gary Baird (wildlife photography), Ruth Cox (oil paintings), Jewel Simmons (silver jewelry), Sherry Godfrey (Kokedama and pottery), Mary Cross (pottery and mussel trees), Betsy Parker (clay sculptures and pottery), Pat White (watercolors and Holiday gifts), Donna Michaux (pottery), Kathie Wolk (pottery), Laura Johansen (fiber art dolls), Vicki Neilon (acrylics), Brenda Riggins (acrylics and ornaments), Ardie Praetorius (pottery), Wes Wagner (wood furniture and other items); Bob Monthie (wood trays and boxes), Marlene Cassidy (jewelry), Kathy Joyce (clay sculptures and pottery), Linda Thomas (miniature paintings), Barbara Bryant (fiber baskets, coasters and ornaments), Leo Dwyer (gourd art), Kakie Honig (fused glass Christmas trees), Rachel Sunnell (acrylic paintings and ornaments), Judi Moore (acrylic paintings), Roseann Bellinger (Holiday miniatures and paintings), Bob Moffett (turned wood), Kathy Duckworth (acrylic paintings), and Sharon Dodge (pottery).

About Sunset River Marketplace

Located in coastal Brunswick County, Sunset River Marketplace caters to both tourists and a growing local community of full-time residents seeking fine art for their homes and businesses. Featuring work by approximately 150 North and South Carolina artists, the gallery is well known in the area for its collection of oil paintings, watermedia, pastels, photography, hand-blown glass, fused glass, pottery and clay sculptures, turned and carved wood, unique home décor items and artisan jewelry.

There are two onsite kilns and five wheels used by the gallery’s pottery students. Art classes and workshops are currently being offered on a limited basis. Call the gallery for details.

The gallery address is: 10283 Beach Drive SW, Calabash, NC 28467.  Hours are Monday – Saturday, 11 a.m. – 5 p.m. For more information, call 910.575.5999 or visit the website at www.sunsetrivermarketplace.com. Daily updates are available on the gallery’s Facebook and Instagram pages.

The FrameCenter, located within the gallery, is open Wednesday through Friday, 12 noon – 5 p.m. and by appointment. Call framer Louis Aliotta directly at 910.368.7351.

Special Covid 19 Notice: To meet North Carolina State guidelines, Sunset River Marketplace requests that patrons who are not fully vaccinated wear face coverings and requires the use of hand sanitizer plus six-foot social distancing between gallery visitors and at the cash register.  The gallery staff conducts thorough cleaning of surfaces upon opening and closing and during the day and has placed complimentary hand sanitizer throughout the gallery for visitor use. Depending on alerts from the Governor’s Office, this advisory may change.

 Chellis Baird Exhibition Underway

Exhibition Chellis Baird | Tethered at the Franklin G. Burroughs-Simeon B. Chapin Art Museum

September 7-December 19, 2021

Chellis Baird, Midnight Twist, pigmented wax, fabric, mulberry paper, wire,on birch panel, 18″x23.5″x4

The beauty and fluidity of movement is at the heart of Tethered, a new exhibit by Spartanburg, SC, native Chellis Baird. This New York-based artist invokes the spirit of her background in textiles and fashion as she creates sculptural paintings by deconstructing, and then reconstructing, traditional tools of canvas and paint. In addition, the exhibit incorporates themes of South Carolina history and industry as it explores and tests artistic parameters. 

Born in the midst of a booming textile industry, Baird recalls playing with fabric as a child on the floor of a local textile mill. An interest in using fabric to make quilts and doll clothes in her younger years evolved into a professional interest, as she earned a BFA in textiles at the Rhode Island School of Design. In her early career, she worked with designers for Gucci and Chanel, having access to the finest fabric in the world. Baird’s interest in fabric as art led her to the Art Students League of New York, where she began experimenting with tools and craft of painting. 

“I was painting in a traditional format, on either Masonite or on canvas,” said Baird, “and I started to think: ‘I have this rich background from sculpting the human body in fabric and watching the manufacturing. Why am I buying a canvas and painting on it when I have passion for the language of fabric? So I decided to literally punch through the canvas and start creating my own woven language. I began to reexamine what makes up a painting: some fabric, some paint and some wood. I started to consider how could I own these elements to create my personal artistic statement.” 

Baird, whose work is heavily influenced by the color field movement and abstract impressionism, incorporates a blue theme throughout Tethered to represent both the locale’s proximity to the ocean and the industry of indigo, a key agricultural product in South Carolina history. 

“Many of Baird’s monochromatic woven paintings included in Tethered are blue, which hearkens back to indigo dye,” said Liz Miller, Myrtle Beach Art Museum curator. “The ages-old natural, blue pigment was first introduced In North America by way of plantation owner Eliza Lucas in colonial South Carolina, where it became the colony’s most important cash crop after rice. In fact, Georgetown, SC, was one of the crop’s largest producers in the country.” 

Baird has created one piece specifically for the Tethered exhibit in collaboration with North Myrtle Beach celebrity Vanna White. White, who has enjoyed crochet for decades, owns yarn brand Vanna’s Choice, which donated the yarn for Baird’s piece. “The Spin” is Baird’s first circular work and invokes the action central to textile manufacturing.

 “I wanted to pay homage to the wheel and the gesture of spinning because so much of my work is inspired by movement and motion and gesture,” said Baird. 

In addition, Baird’s lifelong interest in dance, also involving fluidity and rhythm, is expressed in Tethered through a series of six white works, all of which reference dance positions and phrases in their titles. 

“Dance has been an important aspect in my artistic process because the habit of moving one’s body through space through choreography is like a puzzle to me,” said Baird. “I often find myself recollecting thoughts and reorganizing concepts through my body as I’m moving through dance.” 

Miller noted that Tethered blends creativity, exploration of media, and historical significance in a way that will resonate with Grand Strand audiences.

 “Just as Baird intertwines her hand-dyed and painted fabrics into their mesmerizingly beautiful compositions,” said Miller, “so too does she inherently weave our region’s history and culture into the very fabric of her work.”

The Franklin G. Burroughs-Simeon B. Chapin Art Museum is a wholly nonprofit institution located at 3100 South Ocean Boulevard in Myrtle Beach. Hours are Tuesday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Components of Museum programs are funded in part by support from the City of Myrtle Beach and the South Carolina Arts Commission, which receives support from the National Endowment for the Arts.

For More Information 843.238.2510

www.MyrtleBeachArtMuseum.org

My Studio: Enter At Your Own Risk

Sunset River Marketplace celebrates art and artists with ‘My Studio: Enter At Your Own Risk’ group show

Sunset River Marketplace art gallery in Calabash, NC will present a group exhibition, My Studio: Enter At Your Own Risk, from May 5 through June 5. According to gallery owner Ginny Lassiter, “Art studios can be chaotic, energetic, emotional places! We’ve invited several of our own artists to share their working studios with us in oil, acrylic, collage and other media. This is going to be a fun and insightful look into the life of an artist! We hope you’ll enjoy it as much as we are!”

Ginny Lassiter “Enter at your own risk”

Participating artists include Ortrud Tyler, acrylics; Sherry Godfrey, pottery and acrylics; Vicki Neilon, acrylics; Ruth Cox, oils; Roseann Bellinger, acrylics; Ginny Lassiter, acrylics; Adrienne Watts, watercolor monoprint and acrylics; Diane Larson, oils; Carol Iglesias, oils; Jenny McKinnon Wright, oils; Rachel Sunnell, acrylics; and Linda Young, mixed media.

Lassiter says, “I’ve always been curious about how other artists work, whether it’s in a dedicated studio or in a corner of the kitchen. Some, like our oil instructor, Ruth Cox, work in a studio overflowing with memories, materials, and inspiration. Others like Roseann Bellinger prefer a simpler atmosphere, with everything in its place. I’m somewhere in the middle!”

Throughout the month-long show, Lassiter says, there will be pop up painting demos and short gallery talks by some of the artists. They will be announced on the gallery’s Facebook and Instagram pages.

About Sunset River Marketplace

Located in coastal Brunswick County, Sunset River Marketplace caters to both tourists and a growing local community of full time residents seeking fine art for their homes and businesses. Featuring work by approximately 150 North and South Carolina artists, the eclectic gallery is well known in the area for its collection of oil paintings, watermedia, pastels, photography, hand-blown glass, fused glass, pottery and clay sculptures, turned and carved wood, unique home décor items and artisan jewelry.

There are two onsite kilns and five wheels used by the gallery’s pottery students. Art classes and workshops are currently being offered on a limited basis. Call the gallery for details.

Special Covid 19 Notice: To meet North Carolina State mandates, Sunset River Marketplace requires that patrons wear face coverings and requires the use of hand sanitizer plus six-foot social distancing between gallery visitors and at the cash register.  The gallery staff conducts thorough cleaning of surfaces upon opening and closing and during the day and has placed complimentary hand sanitizer throughout the gallery for visitor use.

The gallery address is: 10283 Beach Drive SW, Calabash, NC 28467.  Hours are Monday – Saturday, 11 a.m. – 5 p.m. For more information, call 910.575.5999 or visit the website at www.sunsetrivermarketplace.com. Daily updates are available on the gallery’s Facebook and Instagram pages.

The FrameCenter, located within the gallery, is open Wednesday through Friday, 12 noon – 5 p.m. and by appointment. Call framer Louis Aliotta directly at 910.368.7351.

Long Bay Symphony Presents A Tribute to the Beatles

The Long Bay Symphony announced a Pops concert for Spring. Classical Mystery Tour: A Tribute to the Beatles will take place Friday May 7th, 2021 at the Myrtle Beach Pelicans Stadium.

The four musicians in Classical Mystery Tour look and sound just like The Beatles, but Classical Mystery Tour is more than just a rock concert. The full show presents some two dozen Beatles tunes sung, played, and performed exactly as they were written. Hear “Penny Lane” with a live trumpet section; experience the beauty of “Yesterday” with an acoustic guitar and string quartet; enjoy the rock/classical blend on the hard edged “I Am the Walrus.”

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From early Beatles music on through the solo years, Classical Mystery Tour is the best of The Beatles like you’ve never heard them: totally live.

Join the Long Bay Symphony for an unforgettable Pops concert at Pelicans Stadium on Saturday May 7th, 2021 at 7:00 PM, with a rain date of May 8th. Parties with be seated socially distanced, and masks will be required. Tickets are $45-$55. More information on tickets can be found on the Long Bay Symphony website or calling the Myrtle Beach Pelicans office: (843) 918-6000.

From the Sublime to the Ridiculous

The Long Bay Symphony Orchestra Presents: From the Sublime to the Ridiculous, the final Classical Series concert for 2021! In addition to being available to a limited live audience, this concert will also be streamed live from First Presbyterian Church on April 18th at 4:00PM. In person tickets are $30, and virtual tickets are only $15 per household

The Long Bay Symphony concludes its 2021 Classical Series with From the Sublime to the Ridiculous, a program serving up pieces in a fascinating variety of styles featuring narrators/singers Shannon Kessler Dooley and Jeffrey Jones. From Romantic opera composer Richard Wagner’s unique miniature work, Siegfried Idyll (a musical tribute to the birth of his son), to Façade, an edgy yet charming setting by Sir William Walton of Dame Edith Sitwell’s humorously outrageous poetry. Mexican composer Silvestre Revueltas weaves a wild pastiche of motives from native folk tunes in Ocho por Radio, while Gustav Mahler wonderfully conveys the essence of the German folk spirit in his song settings from Des Knaben Wunderhorn.

Join the Long Bay Symphony for the final Classical Series concert of the season on April 18th at 4:00PM.

For more information and to purchase in person or virtual tickets, links can be found on the Long Bay Symphony website, Long Bay Symphony Facebook Events page, and through virtual ticket provider, TicketSpice.