Chatham County in North Carolina is a lovely rural environment, just perfect for artists to create and show their work. In this blog, I will keep you up to date on our local arts scene and what's exciting with Chatham Artists. Forrest

Monday, September 28, 2009

Take a walk on the far side at the Carolina Brewery


What happens when you mix the minds of Andy Warhol and Gary Larson? You get something like the art of Chatham’s own Roger Person. You can walk through that special place that is Person’s brain at the October/November exhibit at the Pittsboro Carolina Brewery. His recent dazzling selection of animals and pure forms will transport Brewery goers into a space far away and exciting. Meet Roger Person at an artist reception from 4 to 6 pm on Sunday, November 1st at the Brewery.

Roger Person considers himself a mixed media artist whose work often reflects his off-beat sense of humor. “I try to incorporate different materials in each piece that I create,” he explains. “I enjoy the challenge of designing large metal sculptures that are simple to build with standard materials and visually different from the materials I use.” For 25 years he worked in the engineering and construction business, and at one point, he ran a company specializing in building domestic elevators. Along the way, Person picked up a substantial knowledge of many materials and processes.

Another hallmark of Person’s art is vibrant color, influenced by Native American themes. “I had a winter home in Tucson, Arizona, where I studied the work of Native American artists. I began incorporating their themes and colors into glass work, and it evolved into much of my sculpture, paintings and prints,” he explains.

Roger Person will never forget the day in 1990, when he was standing on a ladder cutting a limb from a large tree. The branch released, knocking him from the ladder resulting in a crippling spinal cord injury. In that instant, this physically active engineer and adventurer was fated to life in a wheel chair. That instant also was the beginning of the career of an important artist (http://persontopersonart.com).

Over the years, Person lived a very physically active life. He was a horseback rider, skier, tennis player, sailor, golfer and runner. But, that all changed that day on the ladder.

As Person recovered, he began to work with stained glass, as his artist wife Linda was working on stained glass projects at the time. To satisfy his curiosity, Roger started incorporating ceramic sculpture into his glass projects which produced unusual glass pieces. Working from a wheelchair presented special challenges for an emerging artist. “I actually enjoyed figuring out how to accomplish complex fabrications from my wheelchair,” he remembers. “I wanted to turn large wooden bowls, so I designed a special lathe that accommodated working from a wheelchair.” No matter what art project he undertook, he did it with great enthusiasm. “We are only limited by our desires,” Person stresses. As time went by, Person developed a network of skilled crafts people who fabricated the elements of his large assemblages, always working according to his designs and engineering specs.

Forrest Greenslade, President of the Chatham Artists Guild, comments: “When you look at a painting, sculpture or print by Roger Person, you can’t help but be impressed by the humor expressed in every piece. Person explains that, “When I was in the hospital, I had to find a way to make things lighter for myself. I met a lot of disabled people there, and I wanted them to know that you can have a really fun life.” Person began working with Very Special Arts (VSA), an international, nonprofit organization founded by Ambassador Jean Kennedy Smith to create a society where all people with disabilities learn through, participate in and enjoy the arts.

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

NC Potters to be featured in a Nationwide TV Broadcast



September 18, 2009

On Wednesday, October 7th, at 8 pm, PBS TV, will air a nationwide broadcast of a brand new episode of the Peabody award-winning series, “Craft in America,” that features two well-known North Carolina potteries. “Craft in America” producer, Carol Sauvion, explains why. “North Carolina pottery has inspired and influenced potters from all over the world,” says Sauvion, “It is authentic, original, and powerful in its simplicity. By including Jugtown and the Hewitt pottery in its new episodes, the Craft in America series showcases their significant contribution to the history of craft in America.”

Jugtown potters, Vernon and Pam Owens, and their children Travis and Bayle, and Mark Hewitt in Pittsboro, are proud to represent the state’s pottery tradition in this stunning documentary that serves as a tremendous affirmation of North Carolina’s role in shaping the ceramic heritage of United States.

Both Pam Owens and Mark Hewitt are on the board of the North Carolina Pottery Center in Seagrove, NC, and have helped organize a series of simultaneous “viewing parties” across the state on October 7 to coincide with the broadcast, and to raise funds for programming at NCPC.

These “viewing parties”, described as, “a collective group hug for all the potters and pottery lovers across the state,” demonstrate a remarkable show of support from North Carolina pottery guilds and patrons across the state. This support acknowledges the camaraderie among North Carolina potters, and validates the role that the North Carolina Pottery Center plays in promoting public awareness and appreciation of the history, heritage, and ongoing tradition of pottery making in North Carolina.

Eight pottery Guilds, from the coast to the mountains, are hosting “viewing parties” for their members and supporters, including the Coastal Carolina Clay Guild in Wilmington, the North Carolina Pottery Collectors Guild and the Triangle Pottery Guild (both in Raleigh), Durham Clayworks, Carolina Claymatters and Carolina Clay Connection in Charlotte, and the Potters of the Roan in Bakersville and Penland. There will also be a gathering at UNC-Asheville.

The Umstead Hotel & Spa in Cary, NC is partnering with NCPC, Craft in America, and UNC-TV, to host a Gala Dinner, Dessert and Viewing Party.

In addition, there are seven parties being held at the homes of NCPC patrons in cities across the state – in Edenton, Fayetteville, Seagrove, Asheboro, Winston-Salem, Charlotte, and Pittsboro.

Visit www.ncpotterycenter.com or phone 336-873-8430 for more information about attending one of these events. To contact Jugtown Pottery visit www.jugtownware.com or phone 910 464 3266, and to contact Mark Hewitt visit www.hewittpottery.com or phone 919 542 2371.

Captions: Left, Mark Hewitt Right Vernon and Pam Owens

Press Release
Paulette Badgett, Manager · paulette@atomic.net
233 East Avenue · PO Box 531 · Seagrove, NC 27341
(336) 873-8430 · www.ncpotterycenter.com

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Chatham emerging artist takes honors at NC Gourd Festival


The theme of the 68th Gourd Festival exhibit at the NC Fairgrounds was "By the Seashore". Carol Kroll entered a large carved and painted gourd depicting the energy of the ocean. The exterior was done in deeply carved ripples, representative of the ocean's rhythmic waves or patterns one would see left behind in the sand. “I painted the interior in swirling shades of aqua, inviting the viewer to look inside, she explains. Kroll’s first entry in the Gourd Festival, in the novice division, won 1st place and the President's Award.

Carol Kroll started painting at a young age with a private teacher and continued taking art classes through her teens. She later attended Newark School of Fine And Industrial Art in New Jersey and graduated with a diploma in textile design. For most of her adult life, she held a successful career as a textile designer in the home furnishings industry. Then she needed to redirect her life.

“I worked as a designer close to 30 years,” recalls Kroll. “I loved my work and felt fortunate that I had a career I enjoyed and at which I was good. My company relocated me to Burlington NC, and then had a major restructuring, moving most of their operation to China. I soon discovered that textile companies all over the country were doing the same. Manufacturing and even design were outsourced. That is when I discovered Central Carolina Community College and the Sustainable Agriculture program.”

Kroll soon conceived the idea of combining gardening and design, creating beautiful sculpture using her home-grown gourds. ”I love growing things, but my first love, art, kept tugging at me. I wondered how I could combine them. "The carving and painting techniques I use evolve with each piece, and are as varied as the gourds themselves." Kroll is continuing her studies at CCCC, in the sculpture program; she is learning how to market her work through the marketing class.
"Creating fine art on gourds seems to come naturally, but marketing them is a whole different ballgame."

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Tiny Glimpse of the 17th Annual Chatham Tour


Several members of the Chatham Artists Guild preview the 2009 Studio Tour at the PAF Gallery with a show of miniature artworks no larger than 12x12 inches. The Peggy A. Fullington Galleryis at the heart of a flourishing community of artist studios, galleries and eateries in down town Siler City. The PAF Gallery, at the NC Arts Incubator, is centrally located at 223 N. Chatham Avenue in the Historic Downtown District of Siler City, a short drive from the Triangle or Triad. An artists reception will be held at the Third Friday celebration on Friday, September 18th.
The Chatham Artists Guild is a non-profit organization of regionally and nationally recognized visual artists who live or have their studios in Chatham County. Each year, Guild members open their studios to the public through the Chatham Studio Tour. Visitors travel throughout lovely rural Chatham County to meet artists in their own work spaces, and share their ideas on art and the creative process. The 17th Annual Studio will be held December 5&6 and 2&13 2009.
The Guild artists featured in the PAF Preview are: Vidabeth Bensen, Anne Bigelow, Joyce Bryan, Shannon Bueker, Salinda Dahl, Martha Danek, Forrest Greenslade, Mark Hewitt, Julia Kennedy, Kathleen Ladd, Roberta Marasca, Gretchen Niver, Lara O’Keefe, Roger Person, Deborah Sanks, Bruce Saunders, Joan Sommers, Rita Spina, Annabelle Stein, DL Taylor, Michael Thompson, and Eddie White.
Weather your passion is sculpture, pottery, paintings, jewelry, wood, glass or fabric art, you will be delighted by the small wonders on exhibit at the PAF Gallery.
Caption: Petrified Forrest: Windswept, a relief painting by Forrest Greenslade

Thursday, September 3, 2009

CA Gallery Satellite Exhibit

CA Gallery Satellite Exhibit Opening & Reception @ Briar Chapel, Saturday, September 26th, 4 - 6 pm

Enjoy a special reception for the first ever Briar Chapel/ChathamArts Gallery Satellite Exhibit featuring the work of NYC artist and award winning illustrator, Murry Handler. (Mr. Handler now resides in Fearrington Village)

You'll enjoy wine & culinary delights while mingling with other artists and visitors. Attendees will enjoy an exclusive exhibit at one of the Briar Chapel model green-built homes while Mr. Handler discusses his work. One lucky guest will take home a limited edition print of Handler's "Girl with Butterfly" giclee print, among his most prestigious pieces.

Location: Briar Chapel Information Center, 16 Windy Knoll Circle, Chapel Hill 27516

Spread the word, and please RSVP to: 919.951.0707.

ChathamArts 100-Mile Sustainable Cinema Series,


ChathamArts 100-Mile Sustainable Cinema Series, Now Showing:
September 29th, 7:30 pm - Josh Gibson's "The Siamese Connection" @ Fearrington Barn


In his documentary, "The Siamese Connection," Durham filmmaker Josh Gibson documents the lives of Cheng and Eng Bunker, the conjoined twins who became world famous as part of P.T. Barnum's circus and eventually settled in North Carolina.

This feature-length documentary explores the living history of these conjoined twins from Thailand, who settled in the North Carolina foothills during the Antebellum South, married two local sisters and raised 21 children. Using a collage of scenes from Thailand to Mount Airy, NC, we discover that these men still exist vividly in the contemporary imagination and have the power to act as potent metaphors for basic human experiences in both life and art. As their history unfolds through document, lyrical reenactments and artists' depictions, we uncover Chang and Eng's legacy through the course of the Bunker family reunion and explore this startling portrait of race, sexual taboo and body politics that defies popular preconceptions about 19th century rural southern life. Evidence of Chang and Eng's relations with the local citizens, their own wives, and their many slaves greatly challenge widely-held notions of Southern racial inequality and aversion to physical "otherness".

Official Selection: Fullframe Documentary Film Festival, Riverrun Film Festival, Carolina FIlm and Video Festival, Cucalorus Film Festival, Rome International Film Festival, Athens International Film Festival, England International Film Festival, Asian Pacific Film Festival

The 100-Mile Sustainable Cinema series features documentaries and independent films involving producers, directors, subjects and/or locations within 100 miles of Pittsboro. Proceeds benefit ChathamArts, which promotes and presents the arts through monthly cultural programs & events, artists residencies in the schools and community, gallery exhibits, and other community building efforts.

Admission is $5 for adults and $3 for students for films at the Fearrington Barn.

Cash Bar, Candy, and Popcorn Available.

For additional information contact ChathamArts, 919-542-0394, _www.chathamarts.org_ (http://www.chathamarts.org).