Friday, April 27, 2012

The finished exhibition - you have a month to see it

Thanks to everyone who came out on opening night to take in Install It 2 as part of Artista Vista.
Now that the exhibition is open we'd refresh your memory about the show and artists as well as share photos of the finished pieces.
Install It 2 will be on display through May 26. All the works are outdoors and available for viewing any time.

 For this year’s installation art exhibition, Install It 2, seven artists tap into the history and natural and built environment of the Vista. This exhibition marks a new collaboration with the McKissick Museum at the University of South Carolina with the artworks connected through material, content and location to the Museum’s commitment to telling the story of Southern life: community, culture and the environment.
Khaldoune Bencheikh and Mary How, in collaboration with community members, created Rangoli: Giant Bird Feeder at the corner of Lady and Lincoln Streets. The work is based on the rangoli, a folk art from India where women create decorative floor patterns to welcome deities during religious festivals. This biodegradable performance art installation accentuates our relationship with nature, especially the avian variety, even in an urban environment.
Bencheikh is a master of fine arts candidate at the University of South Carolina, and How, an art therapist, is owner of Angelfish Creations. 


Located in the yard of the Zion Baptist Church at Washington and Gadsden streets, Wendell George Brown’s figurative sculpture grouping Ascension is inspired by African-American quilting, spirituals and burial grounds, as well as African grave markers and wooden figures created for healing and protection. Through the source materials and location, the piece reflects upon the African-American history and culture of the area. Founded in 1865, Zion Baptist Church has been at this location since 1870. Washington Street was the primary African-American business district of Columbia during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Ascension overlooks Memorial Park. 
Brown, a Benedict College faculty member, has shown his work at the Japan International Quilt Show, the American Folk Art Museum in New York and the Corcoran Art Gallery in Washington D.C. 

 
 

Kara Gunter’s Ghost Trees in the alleyway near Gervais and Gadsden Streets repopulates an alleyway of stumps with trees made of layered paper and adhesive.
The work contrasts the development of the area from natural to mostly man-made. While much of what we are aware of in the Vista is that which has been built there during the past 100 years, the natural world cannot be stopped and declares its ongoing power in places such as this alley.
Gunter holds a master of fine arts degree from USC and has had solo exhibitions at the S.C. State University and Lander University galleries.


 



The loading dock of City Market Antiques Mall, near Gervais and Gadsden, is the site for Michaela Pilar Brown’s I Have Loved You So Long. Made of kudzu, grape vine, recycled tire tread, steel and grass, the work examines the intersection of family history, memory and myth by using familiar materials in the creation of an other-worldly environment. It continues the artist’s exploration of “home” as a repository for memories which are malleable and transient
 
 Brown has recently been resident artist at the McColl Arts Center in Charlotte and the Vermont Studio Center and had solo exhibitions at the Harvey Gantt Center for African American Art and Culture in Charlotte and S.C. State University.

 

 Next to the Adluh Flour-Allen Brother Milling Company, south side of Gervais on Gadsden Street, Eileen Blyth’s Seven Doors is made by mining the materials and the memories of the Vista. Constructed of objects scavenged in the area, the piece connects to the industries which once dominated the area and how those that remain are add to a vibrant, contemporary urban space. The piece is set against “seven strange, square doors” at Adluh, a historic industry and landmark in the Vista for a century.
Blyth holds degrees from the College of Charleston and USC and has had solo exhibitions throughout the region.
 

Blue Spheres by Virginia Scotchie at Senate and Gist Streets (near the Congaree River) is linked to the brick and tile-making industry once located in the Vista and to Columbia’s place on the geological “fall line.”  A fall line is where rivers descend from upland to the lowland creating rapids. While the fall line limited river navigation, the falling water provided power for grist mills, sawmills and textile mills. In the Southeast, the fall line also demarcates a narrow belt where high-quality kaolin clay deposits are found.
Scotchie, a professor of art at USC, has had her work exhibited in France, the Netherlands, Australia, Taiwan and throughout the United States and in May has a solo exhibition at Hunter College, The City University of New York.

Exhibition curator is Jeffrey Day, who organized the 2011 Install It  exhibition, is an arts writer whose work has been published internationally.

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Work day two - less than two until the show opens

Two days out and Tuesday was the day most of the artists started making the big drive on their work. Everyone ran into a few of the expected snags for an exhibition that is in six different locations with a lot of other things going on all around them.

For instance Eileen Blyth was working close to a crowd of about 1,500 people at an outdoor concert. And the wind was blowing like crazy. There was a question of where one might plug in a drill.

A number of folks, including two small buses of small people, helped out on the Rangoli installation. You can too - just show up Wednesday or Thursday and help create this 50-by-50 sculpture of natural materials. If you'd like bring some of your own - flowers, pine cones, bird seed, sweet gum balls.


Eileen Blyth and crew starting to erect the steel at Adluh Flour and Allen Brothers Milling Co. She was very drawn to the shadows on the side of the building and with materials scavenged from around the Vista, she's creating some more.

The Rangoli: Giant Bird Feeder really started taking shape with some help from volunteers. The outline is flour and the fill is mulch and sand.





Michaela Pilar Brown arrived at the loading dock of City Market Art and Antiques with a very full car - balls of tire tread, balls of broken glass, pine tree limbs, blue wax and some wonderful little houses made of birch bark.
 




A behind the scenes look at works in process

Wendell George Brown constructing figures for Ascension.

The artists taking part in Install It 2 have in most cases been doing preliminary work on their pieces for several months. 
For all of them though the work isn't finished until it is installed at the site for which it was made. 
While several of the artists have been able to do a great deal of work in advance, most will also be doing much during the coming days. 
This is especially true for the Eileen Blyth and the team of Khaldoune Bencheikh and Mary How who are creating their pieces completely or mostly on-site. 

 

Virginia Scothie in her studio working on Blue Spheres.
Scotchie is a long-time professor at the USC Art Department who has shown her work and taught around the world.



Michaela Pilar Brown with portions of her installation. Brown recently was awarded residencies  at the Vermont Studio Center in and the McColl Arts Center in Charlotte, as well as a solo exhibition at the Harvey Gantt Center for African American Art and Culture in Charlotte. 



Wendell George Brown has taken his inspiration from African grave markers and sculptures. A quilter as well as a sculptor, his artwork  has been exhibited at the Japan International Quilt Show, the American Folk Art Museum in New York and the Corcoran Art Gallery in Washington D.C.






 








Kara Gunter  attaching paper to real trees to create Ghost Trees.
A USC graduate, Gunter was in last year's Install It exhibition. Her next exhibition will be at Frame of Mind in Columbia opening in May.






Eileen Blyth gave us this glimpse of why she fell in love with the wall at Adluh Flour-Allen Bros. Milling Co. where her work will be installed. One might call this a sketch.  

Monday, April 23, 2012

Rangoli installation started - come see it in progress

Khaldoune Bencheikh and Mary How began work early Monday morning on Rangoli: Giant Bird Feeder at the corner of Lady and Lincoln Streets.

The work is based on the rangoli, a folk art from India where women create decorative floor patterns to welcome deities during religious festivals.The one they are creating celebrates the natural world that co-exists with the built environment in the Vista, especially bird life.


All this week the artists with volunteers from the community will be working on the project. Stop by, check out the progress and pitch in.


Friday, April 20, 2012

Say hello to the handsome text panels


I'm so excited about the Install It 2 text panels I put them on display in my front yard.

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Install It artist taking part in Open Studios this weekend

Eileen Blyth is working hard on a new piece for the 2012 Install It exhibition, but this weekend she will be in her studio at the Arcade Building on Main Street for Open Studios. Go by and say Hello. Here she is checking out what ultimately became her site for Install It 2 at the Adluh Flour-Allen Brothers Milling Co.

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

How do you make a giant rangoli? You get some help

One  project for Install It 2 is Rangoli: Giant Bird Feeder and while all of the works in the exhibition are unusual, this one will have an added element of intensive community involvement. Although two artists are behind it, Khaldoune Bencheikh and Mary How, many others will be involved with constructing it. Starting early next week the artists and members of various parts of the community, many walks of life and all ages will start work on the rangoli and that will go on through the opening night of Artista Vista Thursday.
A rangoli is a folk art from India where women create decorative floor patterns of rice, flower petals and other natural material to welcome deities during religious festivals. The rangoli for Install It 2 will be made of natural materials as well including bird seed.
Rangoli at Tapp's Arts Center
Bencheikh organized a rangoli making project at the Tapp's Arts Center Last year. Watch a video of that process at this site http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w1zYipW2OLI

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Install It 2 will transform several locations around the Vista in just two weeks. Here are the sites where seven area artists will create installations for the exhibition. 

  

1. Rangoli: Giant Bird Feeder by Khaldoune Bencheikh and Mary How in collaboration with community members  

Lincoln and Lady streets

 

  

 

 

2. Ascension by Wendell George Brown
Church yard at Gadsden and Washington streets

 

 

 

3. Ghost Trees by Kara Gunter
Alleyway near Gadsden and Gervais

 

 

 

 

4. I Have Loved You So Long by Michaela Pilar Brown
Gervais Street near Gadsden

 

 

 

5. Seven Doors by Eileen Blyth
South Side of Gervais Street on Gadsden Street 

 

6. Blue Spheres by Virginia Scotchie
300 Senate (near river)


Friday, April 6, 2012

Install It 2 has big plans for the end of April


Install It 2 – installation art for Artista Vista

Taking art outside traditional venues has long been a part of Artista Vista, an art event that takes place each spring in Columbia’s Congaree Vista. Install It 2, an exhibition by seven Midlands artists, will fulfill that mission for the 2012 Artista Vista. 
 
Install It 2 marks a new collaboration with the McKissick Museum at the University of South Carolina with the artworks connected through material, content and location to the Museum’s commitment to telling the story of southern life: community, culture and the environment. 

Install It 2 will be unveiled during Artista Vista’s gallery crawl April 26 from 5 to 9 p.m. All the installations will be located outdoors and will remain on display through May 26.

The project is receiving primary support from the Congaree Vista Guild, McKissick Museum and Lexington Medical Center. Bernstein & Bernstein Attorneys, Zion Baptist Church, Dupre Catering and Events, Adluh Flour-Allen Brother Milling Company, City Market Antiques and Carolina Imports have generously allowed Install It 2 to use their properties as sites. 

When it began 21 years ago, Artista Vista was a mix of exhibitions at traditional galleries and installation art, the latter inspired by Places with a Past, a site-specific installation art exhibition at the 1991 Spoleto Festival USA in Charleston. As the Vista developed during the booming 1990s, spaces artists could use for unusual art installations became hard to come by and the installation projects disappeared. In 2011 to mark the 20th anniversary of the event, installation art returned with Install It

The 2012 Install It 2 projects and artists:

Khaldoune Bencheikh and Mary How, in collaboration with students and community members, are creating “Rangoli: Giant Bird Feeder” at the corner of Lady and Lincoln Streets. This giant sculpture of natural materials is based on a colorful Indian floor sculpture believed to welcome good luck and fortune. The biodegradable performance art installation aims to accentuate our relationship with nature, especially the avian variety, even in an urban environment.
Bencheikh, a master of fine arts candidate at the University of South Carolina, has created several community-based projects including a rangoli at the Tapp’s Arts Center and a mosaic wall installation. How is an art therapist and owner of Angelfish Creations. For more information go to http://www.khaldoune.com/ and http://www.facebook.com/RangoliProject

By the former railroad siding at Adluh Flour, south side of Gervais on Gadsden Street, Eileen Blyth’s “Seven Doors” is made by mining both the materials and the memories of the Vista. Constructed of objects scavenged from the area, “Seven Doors” connects to the industries which once dominated the area and how those that remain are still part of a vibrant, contemporary urban space. She is locating the piece against what she calls “a textured wall with seven strange, square doors” at Adluh Flour-Allen Brother Milling Company, a historic industry and landmark that has been in the Vista for a century.
Blyth holds degrees from the College of Charleston and USC and has had solo exhibitions throughout the region. http://www.eileenblyth.com/

Michaela Pilar Brown is engaged in an ongoing series exploring the notion of “home” as a repository for memories which are malleable and transient.  At the loading dock area of City Market Antiques Mall, near Gervais and Gadsden is "I Have Loved You So Long." Made of kudzu, grape vine, recycled tire tread, steel and grass, the work examines the intersection of family history, memory and myth, by using familiar materials in the creation of an other-worldly environment.
Brown was resident artist at the McColl Arts Center in Charlotte in 2011 and the Vermont Studio Center in 2012, and recently had solo exhibitions at the Harvey Gantt Center for African American Art and Culture in Charlotte and S.C. State University. http://www.michaelapilarbrown.com/ 

Located in the side yard of the Zion Baptist Church at Washington Street and Gadsden Streets, Wendell George Brown’s figurative sculpture grouping “Ascension” is inspired by African-American quilting, spirituals and burial grounds, as well as by African grave markers and wooden figures embedded with adornments for healing and protection. The Zion Baptist Church is an African-American congregation founded in 1865 that has been at this location since 1870. Washington Street was the primary African-American businesses district of Columbia during the early late 19th and early 20th centuries. “Ascension” will overlook the Memorial Park which has monuments commemorating those who have died in several wars and the Holocaust. Through the nature of the work, its source materials and location, “Ascension” will reflect upon the African-American history and culture of the area.
A faculty member at Benedict College, Brown has exhibited his work at the Japan International Quilt Show, the American Folk Art Museum in New York and the Corcoran Art Gallery in Washington D.C. http://www.wendellgeorgebrown.org/

Kara Gunter’s “Ghost Trees” in the alleyway near Gervais and Gadsden Streets will repopulate an alleyway of stumps with trees made of layered paper and adhesive. The work will contrast the development of the area from natural to mostly man-made. While much of what we are aware of in the Vista is that which has been built there during the past 100 years, the natural world cannot be stopped and declares its ongoing power in places such as this alley.
Gunter holds a master of fine arts degree from USC and has had solo exhibitions at the S.C. State University and Lander University galleries. http://karagunter.com/home.html

The 20 clay pieces at 300 Senate and Gist Streets (near the Congaree River) that make up “Blue Spheres” by Virginia Scotchie are linked to the brick and tile-making industry once located in the Vista and Columbia’s location on the geological “fall line.” Scotchie, a professor of art at USC, has had her work exhibited in France, the Netherlands, Australia, Taiwan and throughout the United States. She will have a solo exhibition at Hunter College, The City University of New York starting in May. http://www.virginiascotchie.com/

Exhibition curator is Jeffrey Day, who organized the 2011 Install It exhibition, is an arts writer whose work has been published internationally. He has recently written essays for the Morris Museum of Art in Augusta and Hampton III Gallery in Greenville.