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News The Fly-By

Fly on the Wall

Neverending Elvis

London’s Daily Telegraph has given the name “Elvis” new meaning. In an article titled “Find an Elvis to help share the company’s vision,” Mind Gym CEO Octavius Black makes the case that people don’t trust CEOs and should identify or hire an “Elvis,” defined as someone employees trust, who becomes a double agent for helping the CEO accomplish his vision.

Verbatim

“Tennessee has got a big honkin’ black eye in Russia’s view.” — Jim Savley, executive director of Small World Adoption as quoted by The Tennessean. Savley suggested that Russia’s decision to ban U.S. adoptions may have been influenced by Torry Hansen of Shelbyville, who, in 2010, put her 7-year-old adopted son on a plane back to Russia with a note describing the child as violent.

Words, Wisdom, etc.

Ever the role model, Quinton “Rampage” Jackson, the Ultimate Fighting champion and A-Team star from Memphis, told USA Today that he fights everything. Well, everything except for the urge to fight. “I’m a fighter,” he said. “I fight everything. That’s my problem. I don’t win all my fights; I fight everything. I just say, ‘You know what, forget it.'” Jackson is entertaining becoming a boxer.

Social Graceland

The childhood home of Johnny Cash is being restored in Dyess, Arkansas. But according to a report in The Guardian UK, there will be one big difference between the Cash site and the Elvis mansion in Memphis: “Just as Dyess was born out of a social experiment to give people hit by the Depression, like Cash’s parents, a second chance, the hope is that the Cash connection will give the entire town and its population of 500 a fresh start, transforming the dusty, dilapidated streets into a living museum of the era.” Or as the people behind the plan call it, a “socially responsible Graceland.”

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Italian in the ’Burbs

The Italian restaurant Pasta Italia started in Biloxi, Mississippi, moved to Collierville after Hurricane Katrina, and spent a year-long stint in Chattanooga. Now, owners Michele Doto and Laura Derrick are bringing their restaurant back to the area, this time to Cordova near Germantown Parkway and Macon Road.

Owned by Italian transplants — Doto is from Modena, Derrick is from Venice — Pasta Italia serves what the owners call authentic Northern Italian.

“We try to bring everything from Italy and do an authentic Northern Italian cuisine,” Doto says. “We import most of the cold cuts, cheeses, extra virgin olive oils, and specialty items directly from Italy.”

Pasta Italia is set to open in Cordova sometime in mid-February, and fans from the restaurant’s days on the Collierville Town Square will find the menu little changed, except for a few new items Chef Doto has up his sleeve.

Diners can expect homemade pasta: ravioli, baked pastas, and rosette di pasta, sheets of pasta layered with prosciutto, mascarpone, fontina, and bechamel and rolled into the shape of a rose. The menu also features Italian favorites like veal shank osso bucco, lesser-known items like baked rock salt red snapper, and traditional desserts such as tiramisu.

Pasta Italia will have a full wine list with primarily Italian wines and will be open Monday through Thursday from 5:30 to 9:30 p.m. and until 10 p.m. on Friday and Saturday. Lunch will be served Wednesday and Thursday only, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. A lunch special is served for around $12. Dinner entrées range from $18 to $28.

Pasta Italia, 8130 Macon Station, Cordova (751-0009)

In July, Bruno Russell opened Evergreen Grill on Overton Park Avenue in the heart of the Vollintine-Evergreen neighborhood. Five months later, Russell took on a second restaurant: the revival of his Bruno’s Italian Restaurant, which closed its Madison Avenue location in 2009. “An opportunity fell into my lap,” Russell says. “It’s a great location. As soon as I walked in the door, I knew it was right. I was ready to get the Bruno’s name back out there.”

Russell and his cousin Marvin Mims opened the new Bruno’s in the former Pig ‘n’ Whistle in Bartlett. Russell carries over menu items from the location on Madison, such as lasagna, eggplant Parmesan, and beef ravioli. Some items from the Evergreen Grill menu also made the cut, such as Evergreen Chicken over asparagus and orzo, topped with garlic cream sauce. Russell’s mother, Justine, makes the restaurant’s cannoli cake, a white cake layered with ricotta, marsala wine, chocolate chips, orange zest, and chocolate ganache.

Bruno’s has a full wine and beer menu and is open every day at 11 a.m. and closes at 9 p.m. Monday through Thursday, 10 p.m. on Friday and Saturday, and 8 p.m. on Sunday. Dinner entrées range from $12 to $16.

Bruno’s Italian Restaurant, 2740 Bartlett (474-7596)

The historic Farley House, former location of Fresh Slices in Cordova, is now home to Cafe Fontana, a contemporary Italian restaurant.

“We love traditional Italian. That’s just not what we do,” says Valerie Schranz, who owns Cafe Fontana with her husband, Chef Thomas Schranz.

Instead, Chef Thomas, formerly of Cafe 1912 and La Tourelle, serves an eclectic mix of Italian-inspired dishes, everything from a torta di formaggio with mascarpone, pesto, and sundried tomatoes to a shrimp and grits. Valerie says the idea is to be upscale but not pretentious, so that grouper al forno with grits and greens can exist on the same menu as a pizza cheeseburger without sending anyone’s world into a tailspin.

“There’s something for everyone,” Valerie says. “We want people to feel they can come in in their blue jeans and a T-shirt and not spend a fortune but still have a really good dinner.”

To that end, Cafe Fontana offers a variety of sandwiches, even on the dinner menu, and half portions of the pastas — linguini with clams to penne with Bolognese. Prices range from $9 to $25 for dinner entrées, and most wines on the menu run from $24 to $29 per bottle. And, Valerie adds, everything is made from scratch.

“There is no microwave here,” she says.

Cafe Fontana is open for lunch Tuesday through Friday and a champagne Sunday brunch from 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Dinner is served Tuesday through Thursday from 5 to 9:30 p.m. and Friday and Saturday from 5 to 10 p.m.

Cafe Fontana, 8556 Macon (529-7526)

Categories
Music Music Features

Blues Invasion

Beale Street may be the “Home of the Blues,” but this week, perhaps more than any other time of the year, that’s true, with more than 200 blues acts from around the globe — bands, duos, and solo artists — descending on the fabled street for the 29th International Blues Challenge. And the three-stage contest itself is merely the cornerstone of a week’s worth of events celebrating the genre. Some of the highlights:

The Contest

A four-day, three-stage contest will winnow down the field of more than 200 entrants to individual winners in both band and solo/duo competitions. Quarterfinal heats will take place in venues all along Beale on Wednesday and Thursday, with high scorers passing on the semifinal events in the same clubs on Friday night.

Finalists in both competitions will gather at the Orpheum on Saturday for a final, blowout competition, after which winners will be crowned. Combining band and solo/duo finals into one event rather than separate ticketed events is the biggest change this year.

Hopefuls have landed in Memphis from every corner of the country and, increasingly, from all over the globe, with acts from Spain (Belceblues), Switzerland (Fabian Anderhub), Croatia (Delta Blues Gang), the Netherlands (Sugar Boy & the Sinners), the Philippines (Kat Magic Express), and Slovakia (Lubos Bena & Charlie Slavik) only the tip of the international iceberg.

Most are, to this point, unknown outside their home territories. But some come with bigger resumes. One that might be worth keeping an eye on is Little G Weevil, representing the Atlanta Blues Society. A young Hungarian immigrant who spent some time in Memphis before settling, for the moment, in Georgia, he combines rough juke-joint riffs and Bo Diddley beats into a warm-toned sound that suggests vintage and modern all at once. Little G Weevil’s most recent album, The Teaser, was named one of 2012’s 10 best blues albums by the British music magazine MOJO.

Regional Entrants

The Memphis area is well-represented in this year’s contest. The Memphis Blues Society is sponsoring acts in the band and solo/duo competitions. In the band arena, the Memphis Blues Society entrant is Fuzzy Jeffries & the Kings of Memphis, led by longtime sideman Kevin “Fuzzy” Jeffries, who has backed up traditional soul and blues artists such as Otis Clay, Little Milton, and Bobby Rush. Jeffries is a strong, growly singer and guitarist adept at both rhythmic precision and flash. The band is contemporary electric blues at its most authentic.

In the solo/duo competition, the Memphis Blues Society is putting up Little Boys Blue, a West Tennessee country-blues combo making a return trip after finishing third in the IBC back in 1996. The duo is made up of Jackson-based slide guitarist Steve Patterson and Brownsville harmonica player Jimmy D. Taylor.

The Memphis Blues Society-sponsored competitors aren’t the only acts with a strong local connection.

Competing under the banner of the Crossroads Blues Society of Rosedale, Mississippi, is the young Memphis-based sextet the Ghost Town Blues Band, which released its second album, Dark Horse, last year on the local Inside Sounds label. Deploying instrumentation that ranges from a two-man horn section to cigar-box guitars, this band draws from Memphis’ roots-blues and soul heritages.

And Leslie, Arkansas’ Buffalo River Blues Society is sponsoring David Kimbrough, son of the late north Mississippi blues legend Junior Kimbrough.

Other Events

Among the many ancillary events happening around the IBC, here are some potential highlights:

A. Schwab on Beale will be hosting midday “Talking the Blues” conversations with notable local blues scholars. These occur from 10 a.m. to noon each day.

On Wednesday, January 30th, the featured guest is author Robert Gordon, who penned the Muddy Waters biography Can’t Be Satisfied. On Thursday, it’s folk and country blues musician Andy Cohen. On Friday, it’s University of Memphis musicologist and performer David Evans.

At the Hard Rock Café on Thursday, Danish harmonica master Lee Oskar — of the ’70s rock-funk group War — will conduct a workshop on the instrument. At 1:30 p.m. at the Hard Rock, crossover blues star Keb’ Mo’ will perform as part of a rally for the “Raise the Roof” capital campaign to build a Blues Hall of Fame as part of the Blues Foundation.

Also on Thursday, from noon to 5 p.m., the Memphis-based Blind Raccoon firm will host their annual IBC showcase at Purple Haze, adjacent to the Westin Hotel, which will be highlighted by the pairing of Memphis harmonica great Billy Gibson and flamboyant Mississippi-blues guitarist Vasti Jackson.

International Blues Challenge

Wednesday, January 30th-Saturday, February 2nd

Quarterfinals and semifinals: various Beale Street venues Wednesday-Friday

Finals at the Orpheum Theatre: Saturday, 11 a.m.

Full festival pass: $100

Quarterfinals: $10

Semifinals: $15

Finals: $42.50

For more information, see blues.org.

Categories
News The Fly-By

What They Said

About “Bill Boyd and Janis Fullilove Duke It Out Over Forrest Park Controversy”:

“Two words: CAGE MATCH” — Remote Patroller

About “Guns and Government”:

“How many people have died in car accidents since 1969? Banning assault rifles will do nothing except make liberals feel like they have finally won a battle. It will have nothing to do with the murder rate. As it turns out, the mental case that killed those poor children in Newtown killed them with handguns, not an assault rifle. How come the press hasn’t picked up on that yet?” — HAL

About “Memphis Police Director Comments on Shooting of Steven Askew”:

“I think any reasonable person who saw someone sleeping in his car in a dangerous neighborhood, with a gun next to him on the seat, would at least have to consider the possibility that if someone bangs on the window while blinding him with a light, he might instinctively grab his gun to defend himself.” — GWCarver

About “20<30” and young Memphians shaping our city’s future:

“Yes yes yes!! Please do more stories like this! This city gets better and better every year, and with positive media such as this article, the positivity spreads in the hearts and minds of the readers.” — cdn

Comment of the Week:

About “Campers Get Slots in Optional Schools”:

“We’re talking about kids and their education. We’re talking about the future of this city and this country, and we’re leaving that up to who is willing to camp out and who is lucky enough to get a good draw in the lottery. Those kids whose parents can’t camp out, or who don’t get a lucky draw, are left to fight over the crumbs.” — jeff

Categories
Opinion The Last Word

The Rant

It’s still permissible to use the word “pissant,” isn’t it? Merriam-Webster defines it as someone or something without
significance or obsolete. That’s the very word that came to mind while  watching congressional Republicans attempt to skewer Secretary of State Hillary Clinton over the attacks in Libya last September that left four Americans dead, including the ambassador.

Jose Gil | Dreamstime.com

Hillary Clinton

The knives were out for last week’s hearings, and the GOP had been salivating for weeks, wanting a chance to place blame for attacks on the American embassy in Benghazi. Fox News bloviators like Charles Krauthammer accused Clinton of developing a case of “Benghazi flu” to avoid testifying, which turned out to be a blood clot on her brain that required hospitalization. But there would be no apologies coming from the right, as gnat after insignificant gnat tried to make their bones trashing the former first lady.

Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky, reacting as if he’d just smoked a bowl of bluegrass, said, “Had I been president at the time … I would have relieved you of your duties,” undoubtedly drawing guffaws from White House staffers watching on television. The very thought of a Rand Paul presidency set the tone for the ridiculous spectacle to follow. Permanent grouch John McCain, still in recovery over his loss to Obama in the 2008 presidential race, stated that Clinton’s answers “are not satisfactory to me,” as if that still actually mattered. McCain continued, “The American people deserve answers, and they certainly don’t deserve false answers,” implying that Mrs. Clinton was lying. Senator Ron Johnson claimed that Clinton’s emotional and tearful testimony about greeting the returning caskets of the four slain Americans was merely “theatrics” to avoid his tough questions. Johnson told CNN that Democrats were playing “election politics” with the Clinton hearings, tone-deaf to his own party’s desperate political posturing. 

Predictably, satire turned to farce when the circus moved to the House of Representatives. Congressman Jeff Duncan of South Carolina shook his finger at Mrs. Clinton while accusing her of allowing the embassy in Benghazi to become “a death trap” and inquiring, “What does responsibility mean to you, Madam Secretary?” This coming from a former auctioneer who’d never been 50 miles away from Greenville until his election to the House. The clear motive of these inquisitions was not to find facts concerning the Libya attack but to issue grandstanding attacks on the secretary of state. At the hearing’s end, there was no resolution over what actually took place in Benghazi, and Secretary Clinton made the political opposition look like an assortment of opportunists and fools.

This is exactly the image the Republican Party was trying to change at its post-mortem winter meeting in Charlotte, North Carolina, last week. Governor Bobby Jindal of Louisiana again rebuked the GOP for being “the stupid party” and urged future candidates to avoid saying things that were “offensive and bizarre.” Jindal said, “It’s time for a new Republican Party that talks like adults.”

Governor Bobby must believe that we forgot about the time he gave his party’s rebuttal to the State of the Union address by coming on television speaking to the American public like he was the newly elected mayor of Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood.

To underscore the image of the “new” GOP, one of the invited and honored keynote speakers was Newt Gingrich. The meeting devolved into another Obama hate-fest, although they paid particular care not to call him a Marxist this time. The GOP-ers believe their principles are solid and that it’s just a matter of changing their messaging that will return them to relevancy. They believe that by softening their rhetoric on women’s issues, they’ll retain more of the female vote. Perhaps not trying to parse the definition of “rape” might be a good start.

Oddly, the emerging Sunday spokesman for Republican “values” seems to be the unrepentant loser Paul Ryan, who attempted to use the term “forcible rape” in his own anti-abortion legislation. In fact, the GOP began the 2013 legislative term by introducing dual bills to defund Planned Parenthood, a “personhood” amendment that would outlaw certain forms of contraception, and offering harsh anti-abortion measures that mirror similar efforts in states with Republican-controlled legislatures. It’s tough to do a lot of soul-searching when you have no soul.

The reelection of Reince Priebus as chairman of the Republican National Committee does nothing to dissuade the “stupid party” label. After Rick Snyder’s attempts to declare martial law in Michigan and Rick Scott’s voter-suppression measures that backfired in Florida, Priebus actually said, “Our principles are more conducive to minorities than the Democrats’.” Fellow in-denial Republicans echoed the refrain that their problems arise from an inability to “explain their values” and the ordinary citizens’ incapacity to “understand our conservative principles.” The meeting then unanimously approved a resolution to strip Planned Parenthood of federal funding on a voice vote.

A Republican lawmaker in New Mexico just introduced a new bill that would require the victim of a rape who was impregnated from her ordeal to carry the child to term in order to preserve the fetus as potential evidence at a criminal trial. This begs the question: Who benefits from such a “trial” — the victim or the rapist? House speaker John Boehner made a speech to the conservative Ripon Society and said, “We’re expecting to be the focus of this administration as they attempt to annihilate the Republican Party.” Austerity champion Paul Ryan further opined, “If we had a [Hillary] Clinton presidency, I think we would have fixed this fiscal mess by now.”

Democrats need do no more than stand back and watch in awe, since the current Tea Party-enthralled Republican Party will most likely collapse of its own accord. With enemies like this, who needs friends?

Randy Haspel writes the “Born-Again Hippies” blog, where a version of the column first appeared.

Categories
Film Features Film/TV

Local zoo doc nearing completion, raising funds.

Memphis has, by many accounts, one of the country’s best zoos. But while the stars of the show are the pandas and polar bears and those randy giraffes, how often do visitors stop to think about the human companions taking care of these creatures?

“Zookeepers are a fascinating subculture,” says local documentary filmmaker Joann Self Selvidge, who, in partnership with Detroit transplant filmmaker Sara Kaye Larson, is working on The Keepers, a feature-length documentary project that will take viewers behind the scenes at the Memphis Zoo.

“It’s something that so few people do and so few people really understand,” Self Selvidge says. “They either think it’s just the people out there shoveling dung and look down on them or think about them in this fantastical, little-kid mold, like Dr. Dolittle.”

In following the zookeepers, Self Selvidge and Larson, who are working on the project via Self Selvidge’s True Story Pictures company, will look at “the intricate balance of conservation, ethics, and entertainment that every zoo must consider every moment, every season, every year,” according to the film’s online “pitch.”

The idea originated with Larson, who moved to Memphis three years ago and started taking walks through the zoo. After months of meetings with Self Selvidge, the pair zeroed in on the idea of making a film from the perspective of the keepers and approached Memphis Zoo president and CEO Chuck Brady, himself a former keeper.

“We didn’t come to the zoo until we’d made up our minds to approach it from the point of view of the keepers, what it’s like to take care of wild animals in captivity,” Self Selvidge says.

They approached the Memphis Zoo as independent filmmakers, not as partners.

“Most zoos would say, ‘Hell no, you can’t come in here with cameras,'” Self Selvidge says. “They’re concerned with public perception, because people take images and take them out of context, especially animal activists. There was concern that we would provide fodder [for that]. We persuaded them that we weren’t approaching it as anti- or pro-zoo but with the goal of thoughtfully showing, as honestly as possible, what it’s like for the people who keep the animals. Wild animals in captivity is oxymoronic, but it’s a reality. And it’s becoming more so with so much of their habitats being destroyed.”

Self Selvidge and Larson have been filming since last fall, starting with a bunch of different keepers then finding a couple to focus on.

“We’ll shoot a few more months to have enough to pull together into a character-driven documentary film that’s going to hold people’s attention for 90 minutes,” Self Selvidge says.

When the duo began, they were thinking of doing a short film but found the community of keepers too rich to flesh out in that time frame. Now they’re putting together a feature film they hope can find an audience on the indie festival circuit and hopefully beyond.

In the meantime, the duo is raising funds to complete the film. Much of the fund-raising is being done via individual donors and grants, but they also have a grassroots, small-donation campaign active at the moment, via the website indiegogo.com — at indiegogo.com/thekeepersmovie. As of press time, this online campaign was more than a third of the way to its $15,000 goal and was slated to be open through February 7th.

Among the individual supporters are other zookeepers around the country, who have also helped raise the film’s profile via social media.

“We have a ton of keepers from all over the place who have been following us,” Self Selvidge says. “Some are jealous that this is happening at the Memphis Zoo.”

For more information on The Keepers, including a two-minute trailer, see indiegogo.com/thekeepersmovie or truestorypictures.org.

Categories
Film Features Film/TV

Filmmaker’s Lament

hile Lincoln and Silver Linings Playbook and Argo and Zero Dark Thirty duke it out at the Oscars later this month, another of the most heralded films of 2012 will be persona non grata on the Academy stage.

That’s Holy Motors, the audacious fifth feature in 29 years — and first since 1999’s Pola X — from French auteur Leos Carax, which will get a single screening at the Brooks Museum of Art this week. Holy Motors topped 2012 critics’ polls from website indiewire.com (which also tabbed star Denis Lavant for the year’s best performance) and venerable movie magazine Film Comment, while finishing third (behind The Master and Zero Dark Thirty) in the Village Voice‘s annual national critics’ poll.

While it’s certainly difficult in the context of most narrative films, this melancholy, mysterious ode to what Carax seems to see as a vanishing art form — the movies — is such a rich visual spectacle that’s likely to reward the attention of most adventurous filmgoers.

Lavant, a Carax regular, plays “Monsieur Oscar,” who spends a day and night being chauffeured around in a limousine that doubles as a dressing room of sorts, stopping to act out a series of scenarios. He’s a feeble old lady begging in the street along the Seine. He’s wearing a motion-capture suit to help create a sexual/sci-fi scenario. He’s a barefoot brute kidnapping a beauty (Eva Mendes) and taking her to his subterranean lair. He’s a masked assassin. An old man dying. This collection of sequences might be a nod to different aspects of humanity, but they also feel like riffs on film genres. There’s neorealism, fantasy, sci-fi, family drama, musical, crime flick. And embedded within the film are copious film references, from dawn-of-cinema silents to French horror classic Eyes Without a Face to Carax’s own past work.

Along the way, while clear meaning and linear story remain elusive, the film contains many of the year’s most memorable moments and images, and Carax’s lament for the passing of filmmaking as mechanical art — perhaps the “holy motors” of the film’s title — is underscored by a late dialogue scene in which Lavant says, “Some don’t believe in what they’re watching anymore. I miss the cameras. They used to be heavier than us. They they became smaller than our heads. Now you can’t see them at all.”

Holy Motors

Brooks Museum of Art

Thursday, January 31st

7 p.m., $8 or $6 for museum members

Categories
Music Music Features

Lucero at the Hi-Tone Café

Last week, the Hi-Tone Café — which is scheduled to close at the end of February — announced its final concert, which will, on February 23rd, pair two cult-classic Memphis bands of different vintages: recently reunited ’90s garage-punk icons the Oblivians and the broken-up-before-their-time Barbaras, a garage-pop ensemble that splintered into other configurations, most notably the Magic Kids. But before that finale, the Hi-Tone will get another high-wattage farewell in the form of a free show from Memphis rock stalwarts Lucero, which partly launched its career with its first record-release show at the Hi-Tone more than a decade ago. Lucero takes the Hi-Tone stage for the last time on Sunday, February 3rd. The show is free. Doors open at 8 p.m. The Dirty Streets open.

Categories
News The Fly-By

20 Years Underground

Shortly after Angela Russell opened Underground Art in 1993, employees at a competing tattoo shop tossed a Molotov cocktail on the porch after business hours.

“It was more of a biker-run, male-run industry, so a woman coming in and doing something totally different was not cool,” Russell said.

Fortunately, a neighbor saw the fire and called for help in time to save the shop, which is located in a converted historic home at 2287 Young. The building wasn’t damaged heavily, but it did need a fresh coat of bright red paint.

Russell’s competitors never managed to take her shop down, and the boutique-style studio is celebrating its 20th year of business in February.

“At the time we opened, Memphis only had street shops. We wanted to do something different with no flash on the walls and really great artists,” Russell said.

“Flash” is tattoo slang for those pre-drawn tattoos often displayed on the walls or in large display books at tattoo shops. But Russell wanted her shop to have more of an emphasis on artists creating original designs. Most customers today walk in with an idea or original drawing, but Russell said the shop does have a book of flash in case someone needs inspiration. It’s just not displayed prominently in the shop.

“We’re not above flash, but we try to persuade people to get more original work,” Russell said.

At the time it opened, Underground Art was the first Memphis shop with a more artistic slant, and there were only three to five shops across the city. Today, there are more than 20 shops, many of which have that same emphasis on artsy, original tattoos. A few of the artists working at other studios got their start at Underground Art.

Unlike some shops, where customers can walk in off the street and get a tattoo on the same day, Underground Art requires a consultation before the customer can make an appointment.

“We want the customer to sit down and talk to the artist first. A lot of people have that fast food mentality, and they want a tattoo right now. But that doesn’t work in tattooing,” Russell said. “Usually, 95 percent of our customers get it, but 5 percent walk out pissed off.”

Russell doesn’t want to piss anyone off. In fact, her mission is to make everyone who walks through the doors feel comfortable. She advertises the shop as vegan-friendly (they use inks free of animal products) and, from the beginning, has shunned the tough reputation that used to haunt tattoo shops.

“We’ve tattooed stars and basketball players. Because we are more accessible than what people are used to makes a big difference,” Russell said. “People walk in and expect tattoo shops to be either rough and tumble or extra hip, but we really try to make people feel comfortable. We just kill them with kindness.”

Underground Art will celebrate its 20th year with an all-day benefit for Literacy Mid-South at the Hi-Tone Café on Saturday, February 2nd. The party will feature live music by the Gloryholes, Capgun, SnagglePus, and more. Plus, there will be a burlesque performance, a comedy act, a silent auction, a literary costume contest, and a book swap table.

Categories
Cover Feature News

Shock of the Now

Kvetching across a variety of social media platforms began shortly after the list of 75 contemporary Memphis-area artists collected in the Dixon Gallery & Gardens’ ambitious “Present Tense” exhibit was made available online. Not only did artists who’d been overlooked begin to wonder why exactly they’d been overlooked, but artists who made the cut also wondered publicly what unique thing they had that so many of their gifted but unchosen friends didn’t have. The questions and complaints put forward by area artists, both celebrated and snubbed, perfectly echoed those of the show’s own guest curator John Weeden, who had initially imagined the already epic “Present Tense” as a much larger undertaking.

“My first proposal for ‘Present Tense’ — my first ridiculous, non-possible, stupid, could-never-be done proposal — included three times as many artists and over 1,000 individual works,” Weeden says. “Of course, something of that scale is completely preposterous, absurd, and it’s never going to happen. There’s simply not a space big enough to make it happen. Or even if there was a space, there’s not enough time for anyone to take it all in. But the point is, it was all there. The artists are there. The work is there. It was all right there.”

Kevin Sharp, the Dixon’s executive director, gets Weeden’s point. And while he agrees that the initial proposal may have been a little over the top, in the same breath, he acknowledges that the sheer volume of quality work produced by contemporary artists in Memphis practically guarantees that the Dixon will eventually host a “Present Tense 2.” As it stands now, the exhibit will showcase more than 100 works, including bronze sculpture, oil paintings, watercolors, photography, video art, collage, and environmental installations. The assembled artists’ aims range from the purely ornamental to the political, conceptual, and personal.

Memphis’ potential as an international arts city hasn’t gone unnoticed. In 2011, Flavorpill.com, an online city guide with a keen eye for culture, posed an intriguing question: Where are all of the young struggling artists going now that they’ve been priced out of trendier creative capitals like Melbourne, New York, Barcelona, and “all of those other city enclaves that promised low-rent and lots of encouragement”? Although visual arts may not be the first thing most people think of when they think of Memphis, the Bluff City made Flavorpill’s international list of up-and-coming cities, alongside Dresden, Brussels, São Paulo, Jakarta, Las Vegas, and Montreal.

“No medium is too weird for Memphis,” the article’s author concluded, following a brief but ringing endorsement that covered everything from barbecue and blues to some of the city’s most intriguing examples of guerilla art.

Weeden, the principal consultant at Vita Brevis Arts Bureau and a former director of Memphis’ UrbanArts Commission, wasn’t the least bit surprised to see his hometown on Flavorpill’s short-list. The Rhodes alum, who did his postgraduate studies in London at Sotheby’s Institute of Art, describes his city of birth and choice as a contradictory place filled with “grace and grit” and known around the world for “uninhibited creative authenticity.” That’s rock, and that’s soul.

“More than any other form, visual art has the potential to establish Memphis as a cultural capital on the world stage in the 21st century,” Weeden says. “People need to know how many amazing artists there are here. And those artists need a platform. There just aren’t enough venues of rigor and serious practice here. And there’s not a strong enough collecting culture either. So our artists make their living on a combination of commissions and commercial work, or they are partnered with galleries in other cities, or maybe they are working three jobs and painting in their garage in order to put on an occasional show at Otherlands.”

While director of the UAC, Weeden was dedicated to creating more professional opportunities for local artists, and he believes that Memphians will begin to understand just how culturally rich their environment is as more of those high-profile public works come online over the next 10 years.

“There’s an absolute masterpiece by Jeffrey Unthank that will be unveiled on James Road soon,” Weeden says of a several-thousand-square-foot mural project inspired by the history of the neighborhood.

Strong college and university programs have helped attract young creatives to Memphis, but why would they ever settle in a place missing all the vital components Weeden describes?

“Being an artist in Memphis is like being on a roller coaster,” says Jan Hankins, a masterful painter whose large works are often inspired by geopolitical issues and Southern culture. The “horns of the apocalypse” in the upper-right-hand corner of 9-1-1, Hankins’ darkly comic contribution to “Present Tense,” were modeled after the Dixie-playing car horns popularized by the hit ’80s TV show The Dukes of Hazzard.

Roy Tamboli, an artist with four bronze sculptures in “Present Tense,” agrees with Hankins’ assessment. “This is not an easy place for an artist to make a living,” he says. But Tamboli, who keeps his studio in a spacious repurposed garage on Madison Avenue, also thinks the city offers limitless inspiration and a few practical advantages. “In any other place I’d want to live, this kind of studio space either doesn’t exist, or it’s not affordable,” he says.

Photographer Tam Tran, who was born in South Vietnam, says she doesn’t really identify as an artist, although her work was selected to appear in the 2010 Whitney Biennial and the National Portrait Gallery’s “Portraiture Now” exhibit. “I work pretty much full-time doing graphic design,” she says. Tran primarily uses herself as a model, because, as a serious hobbyist, she tends to be impulsive, taking art pictures when she’s free and when the spirit moves her.

“It doesn’t matter where you live,” says Malaysian-born artist Kong Wee Pang, whose large-scale watercolors painted on water-resistant materials are gorgeous studies in whimsy and transformation. Pang, an art director for archer>malmo, says people find her on the internet. In recent years, she has been exhibited in Memphis, Rome, and Barcelona.

Alex “Warble” Harrison, a musician, animator, and illustrator with an instantly recognizable anthropomorphic style, says he’s thankful for all the commercial work that comes his way. Harrison has also found a measure of success on the Internet. “Thankfully, lately I have been selling more from my Etsy shop and shipping my art all over the world,” he says. “My ‘naked air guitar/multi-Elvis’ piece stayed up for two hours and someone bought it.”

“Present Tense” isn’t an entirely unprecedented event. The Dixon has been increasingly supportive of regional talent, and by originating exhibits like 2012’s “Modern Dialect” (an eye-opening alternative history of American art in the 20th century), the museum has shown an eagerness to celebrate not only the acknowledged masters of Impressionism but a great variety of exciting artists who have fallen through history’s cracks.

The Brooks Museum of Art regularly showcases regional artists and collectors. In the 1990s, Leslie Luebbers of the Art Museum of the University of Memphis, partnered with James Patterson and Delta Axis to produce the impressive but short-lived MAX Biennial series. Over the years, various other artists and upstarts have opened and closed a number of indie exhibits showcasing underappreciated talent on the Memphis scene. What sets “Present Tense” apart from previous efforts is a combination of size, purpose, and provenance.

“It occupies the entire building and garden,” says Sharp, who has been occupied with the task of preparing the Dixon’s permanent collection for a tour. He wasn’t sure how all the pieces were going to fit together in the allotted space. “Of course, all the artists wanted to be represented by a major work,” he adds, with mock exasperation.

Sharp says he wanted the Dixon to do something more interesting than a simple survey of contemporary local art. He wanted to dig in and tell the story of visual Memphis in the first decade of the 21st century. But by juxtaposing the works of so many teachers with mature pieces by their students and by including influential alt-culture builders like sculptor John McIntire, who opened the Bitter Lemon coffee house in the1960s, and his more conceptual counterpart, Tommy Foster, who, a few decades later, launched the Pyramid Club and Java Cabana, Weeden has managed to tell a much bigger, intergenerational story about landscape and legacy.

Teacher, painter, and collage artist David Hall says he’s honored to be in a show alongside mentors such as abstract painter Dick Knowles and sculptor Greely Myatt. “They were both strong influences on me,” Hall says, recalling how Myatt’s good humor and use of recycled materials captured the imagination of a young student with little interest in sculpture. “I really liked how Greely recycled things,” Hall says. “And you can tell, because in the last 20 years I’ve hardly bought any paint or traditional materials.”

Hall, a former art critic for the Flyer, is a solid example of what Weeden describes when he talks about his desire to include artists who’ve tried to “shake things up.” Hall has organized several exhibits showing the depth and breadth of Memphis’ arts community, while underscoring the economic realities of being an artist in Memphis. His latest effort, the Bottom Feeders art auction, which opens at Allie Cat Arts in Cooper-Young the same night “Present Tense” opens at the Dixon, showcases 30 area artists and criticizes the culture of charity art auctions by assuring buyers that 100 percent of this auction’s proceeds will be donated to the people who created the work.

“Lord save me from more exposure,” says Lurlynn Franklin, one of several artists participating in both “Present Tense” and the Bottom Feeders auction. Exposure, she explains, is the dubious currency offered in exchange for work donated to an endless string of charity art auctions. Franklin’s work in “Present Tense” uses Southern icons such as Scarlett O’Hara and Colonel Sanders to comment on race and class in the American South.

“Artists are known for improving neighborhoods,” Weeden says, considering the impressive contributions of the artists he’s assembled for “Present Tense.” Lurlynn Franklin’s bright rotunda mosaic is a point of pride for Downtown Elementary School, and Nancy Cheairs’ colorful trees form an enchanted gateway to the children’s section of the Central Library. Greely Myatt, Don Estes, and Terri Jones all lived and worked on South Main before it was ever officially an arts district. The Jay Etkin Gallery was an important early tenant in the Cooper-Young and South Main neighborhoods. Pinkney Herbert and Meikle Gardner devoted themselves to the Edge, and Hamlett Dobbins’ Material gallery has been a launch pad for the Broad Avenue comeback. Taken as a whole, the “Present Tense” roster makes a strong case for the relationship between creative types and successful urban regeneration.

Tamboli thinks his work looks “at home” at the Dixon. He says he likes museum shows because people are allowed to enjoy the beauty in the energy of the art without “the distraction of commerce.” Weeden says that’s the whole point.

“Museum exhibitions are done for the purpose of cultural enlightenment,” Weeden says. “If it’s in a museum, it’s deemed important enough to consider.”

“Present Tense” opens at the Dixon Gallery and Gardens Sunday, February 3rd, and runs through Sunday, April 14th. dixon.org

The artists of “Present Tense”:

Veda Reed, George Hunt, John McIntire, Hamlett Dobbins, Huger Foote, Lamar Sorrento, Don Estes, Jan Hankins, Lurlynn Franklin, Meikle Gardner, Nikki S. Lee, Colin McLain, Larry Edwards, Melissa Dunn, NJ Woods, Paul Graham, Pinkney Herbert, Richard Knowles, Wayne Edge, Fred Burton, Beth Edwards, Brian Bishop, John Torina, Phyllis Boger, Susan Maakestad, Twin, Nancy Cheairs, Terri Jones, David Hall, Christian Patterson, Grier Edmundson, Ian Lemmonds, James Clar, Joyce Gingold, Tommy Foster, Maritza Davila, Anne Davey, Bobby Spillman, Declan Clarke, Greely Myatt, Kong Wee Pang, Robert Riseling, Tad Lauritzen Wright, Anthony Lee, Dolph Smith, Maysey Craddock, Jared Small, Roy Tamboli, Jed Jackson, Edwin McSwine, John Robinette, Matt Ducklo, Morris Howard, Pixy Liao, Tam Tran, Frank D. Robinson, Jay Etkin, Jeri Ledbetter, Margaret Munz-Losch, Mary Catherine Floyd, Ben Butler, Carl Moore, Chuck Johnson, Claire Torina, Eli Gold, Jay Crum, Alex “Warble” Harrison, Derrick Dent, Elizabeth Alley, Erin Harmon, Freida Hamm, Nick Pena, Amanda Sparks, Andrew James Williams, Dwayne Butcher, Laurel Sucsy, Cat Pena, and Lester Merriwether.