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Politics Politics Feature

Medicaid Will Be Focus of TN General Assembly

As much as any other issue impinging on the fortunes of Tennessee is the imminent prospect of federal block grants to pay for the state’s Medicaid expenses. The Trump administration has indicated it intends to shift in the direction of block grants, and Republicans in Tennessee, from the time of former Lt. Governor Ron Ramsey, have invoked a preference for the principle as their excuse for not committing to expansion funds under the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare).

The idea behind block grants is simple enough: Monies are dispatched from Washington not in accord with federally prescribed requirements and formulas for distribution but more or less for the states to dispose of as they see fit.

In his State of the State address Monday night, GOP Governor Bill Lee boasted that “with the encouragement of this legislature, I’m proud that Tennessee was the first state in America to apply for a Medicaid block grant from the federal government.” He went on: “While we do not yet know whether this proposal will be accepted, I am confident that what we’ve proposed would be a good deal for Tennesseans and that no Tennessean would be worse off if it is approved.”

Jackson Baker

Accepting the mic (and an endorsement) from County Mayor Harris, Jerri Green addresses Democrats in East Memphis.

State Senator Jeff Yarbro of Nashville, presenting the Democrats’ response, professed himself “disappointed tonight to see the governor mentioning this ill-fated attempt at a block grant. … It looks pretty clear from what the federal government said last week that it’s not gonna come out well for us.”

The fact that allows for such disparate views is real enough. The federal guidelines released last week aim in a wholly different direction than does TennCare, the state health-care program that is the primary recipient in Tennessee of Medicaid funding.

The Trump administration’s formula, under what is to be called “the Healthy Adult Opportunity Program,” limits its assistance basically to that part of the state population that has least need of drastic remedies. The idea is to free up more of a given state’s existing health-care resources for more serious problems — like the low-income patients and people with disabilities that TennCare deals with. And it is these people, along with pregnant women and children, who would be the direct recipients of federal block grant assistance under the state’s application for a block grant.

Much remains to be worked out if block grants become the primary medium of federal assistance, and undoubtedly some form of accommodation can be arrived at between the state’s and the Trump administration’s goals. But the unspoken feature of block grants in either formulation is that they provide possible loopholes for ad-libbed, unstructured use of the monies involved.

Meanwhile, Democrats campaigning for legislative office in Tennessee tend to make a major issue of the state GOP’s disinclination so far to claim direct Medicaid aid available under the A.C.A. One such is Jerri Green, who, using the slogan “One Tough Mother,” is campaigning to unseat Republican state Representative Mark White in state House District 83.

Green has been endorsed by Shelby County Mayor Lee Harris, who introduced her to a tightly packed crowd of 100-odd attendees at Craft Republic in East Memphis last Thursday night. Both Green and Harris pointed out the $1 billion or so in annual federal Medicaid funding that has gone wanting, as well as the inexact fit for Tennessee of the new Trump guidelines for block grants. It remains to be seen if the issue has legs.

Categories
Sports Tiger Blue

Tigers 79, Temple 65

“Push-ups.”

Larry Kuzniewski

Precious Achiuwa

Memphis forward Precious Achiuwa had a succinct answer when asked Wednesday night what factor helped the Tigers reduce their turnovers in a win over Temple. For the 16th time in 22 games this season, Memphis accumulated more turnovers (16) than assists (15), but the miscues were down significantly from the 24 Saturday afternoon against Connecticut. With solid shooting both from long range (42 percent) and from the free-throw line (79 percent), the Tigers enjoyed their largest margin of victory since December 28th to improve to 17-5. Now midway through their American Athletic Conference schedule, the Tigers are 6-3 in league play.

“That’s a good win for us, against a veteran team in our league,” said Tiger coach Penny Hardaway after his team’s third straight victory. “It’s not always pretty but the boys found ways to get spurts. We finally put a team away. It wasn’t as desperate as it’s been [recently].”

Hardaway called the game the most balanced his team has played against an AAC foe this season. Achiuwa notched his 12th double-double of the season (13 points, 10 rebounds), but the finalist for the Julius Erving Award played a supplementary role, with Lester Quinones hitting four three-pointers on his way to 21 points, Boogie Ellis making all eight of his free throws on his way to 18 points, and Malcolm Dandridge scoring nine points and grabbing six rebounds in 16 minutes off the bench.

“Before the game, [Hardaway] told me to shoot every time I’m open. When they moved to a zone, it kind of helped. He wanted to come out and dominate tonight. He really wanted to put them away.”

In addition to the push-up penalties, Quinones noted a collective effort at making the smart pass over the fancy pass to reduce turnovers. “We did a good job at staying calm,” he said, “and relaxing. If they double-team, find the open man. None of those over-the-top passes.”

Larry Kuzniewski

Penny Hardaway

The Tigers led by eight points (33-25) at halftime and stretched the lead to double figures before the midway point of the second half on a Dandridge field goal in traffic. An Achiuwa dunk extended the margin to 15 points (58-43) with just over eight minutes to play and Temple never managed to threaten.

Quinton Rose and Nate Pierre-Louis led the Owls with 13 points each. Temple fell to 11-11 (3-7) with the loss.

“They’re respecting the conference more now,” noted Hardaway. “These kids had no respect for the conference; I could just tell. The league is making them respect. They’re buying in more, because they thought it was going to be really easy. It’s been much harder than they thought [it would be]. Every game is a tournament game for us now. You gotta protect home court. You can’t be giving any more games away. They understand. They know these are resume games coming up.”

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News News Blog

INFOGRAPHIC: Memphis Animal Services in 2019

Memphis Animal Services/Facebook

This graphic, posted to Facebook Saturday by Memphis Animal Services (MAS), shows the work of the agency last year. But MAS said the work was not done alone.

“Hopefully, as you review these stats, you’ll see an ongoing theme: collaboration,” reads the post (see below). “The pets at your city shelter are not saved by the shelter alone. It takes a huge network of people from Memphis and beyond, from adopters and rescue partners, to volunteers and fosters, to community and media partners.

“Ten years ago in 2009, just 19 percent of the pets who came to MAS left the shelter alive. In 2019 with your help, 89.8 percent of the pets were saved.”

See the original post here:

 

INFOGRAPHIC: Memphis Animal Services in 2019

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We Recommend We Saw You

Eggleston, Finders Keepers, Wild Game Dinner, Pegasus

It was great hanging out with the great William Eggleston at a reception prior to his show, ‘William Eggleston and Jennifer Steinkamp: At Home at the Dixon,’ at Dixon Gallery and Gardens.

William Eggleston was the guest of honor at a reception, which was held January 25th, for his family, friends, and supporters at Dixon Gallery and Gardens. The reception was held prior to his show “William Eggleston and Jennifer Steinkamp: At Home at the Dixon.” The exhibit juxtaposes floral, garden, and still life imagery in late-19th and early-20th century paintings with Eggleston photos and Steinkamp computer animations.

Guests greeted the dapper Eggleston, 80, who sat on a sofa during the reception.

They knew Eggleston was coming to the reception, says Chantal Drake, Dixon director of development and communications. They were anticipating his visit, she says.

People enjoyed meeting him and “being in the room with him and his work.”

Dixon director Kevin Sharp says, “It was an honor to have William Eggleston attend the reception for our current exhibitions at the Dixon. And, speaking personally, it was very special to meet and have a little time with a figure of his importance in the history of art.”


Michael Donahue

Jennifer Steinkamp

Michael Donahue

William Eggleston reception

Michael Donahue

William Eggleston reception

MIchael Donahue

Zane Myer-Thornton and Bren Pepke at Finders Keepers

Bren Pepke and Zane Myer-Thornton carried a massive 48-inch-by-60-inch abstract painting out of Memphis College of Art during the school’s Finders Keepers event. The sale and auction consisted of the school’s entire collection of artwork.

She was carrying the painting for her father, Mark Pepke, who bought the Mary Reed painting on the first night of the sale, which ran January 25th to the 29th.

“We were carrying it to the car ’cause it wouldn’t fit in their car,” Bren says. “And it ended up not fitting in our car, either. We had to get another car. But we got it home.”

The Pepke family — Mark and his wife, Amy, and Bren’s sister Karis — showed up early. Mark spotted the painting, which he immediately recognized. “It was in my office for five years,” he says.

Mark, who was director of student life and housing, says, “I didn’t know it was there. I knew the collection was being sold. I wasn’t necessarily looking for that particular painting. But when I saw it on the wall I was like, ‘It’s going home with me.’”

The painting has sentimental value for him, but Mark says he also likes it. “I’m not much of a fan of abstract art, but I like the line quality in the painting with the color.”

He likes the “heavy dark line contrasted with the red and orange.” And, he says, “It has a definite focal point, so your eyes go right to it and wander around a few areas.”

It was a bit stressful after he saw the painting at the sale. “The students were putting up a ladder. I thought they were putting up a ladder to get it off the wall ’cause there was a lady with them.”

Mark put his hand on the painting as if to say, “Hey, it’s mine. Stand back.”

It turned out the woman was interested in something else.

The College of Art also meant a lot to his children, Mark says. The sale had “an element of a sad passing of time for us. The College of Art has been a big part of their lives since they were probably 3, 4, and 5 years old. They’ve grown up down in the hallways with me in my office. They’ve taken classes there. We’ve gone there almost every year for Holiday Bazaar.”

So, where is the painting going? “It’s too big for the house. It’s contrary a little bit to her (his wife’s) color scheme. So I’m putting it in my office now.”

Opening night resembled a Black Friday sale of very cool items. People crowded around tables filled with artwork.

Reed Malkin, one of the guests on the jam-packed opening night, says, “The art was getting in the front door.”

Memphis College of Art president Laura Hine estimates 1,000 to 1,500 people attended  opening night. “It’s very hard to say how many people were here on Saturday night,” she says. “Before we opened the doors, the line was down the front stairs wrapped around the south side of our lawn all the way to the Brooks Museum.”

And, Hine says, “A 30-year faculty member said he’s never seen the gallery as crowded.”

As for how much money was raised, Hine says, “We are not disclosing the amount of money raised during the sale. The sale proceeds are being added to MCA’s operating budget while we teach our remaining students who will graduate in May.

“It was a very emotional experience for the MCA community, especially in the preparation phase when we had to catalog decades of artists’ work. The only thing that made it palatable was that the artwork would find homes and that people will preserve and appreciate it for decades to come.”


Michael Donahue

Finders Keepers

Michael Donahue

Finders Keepers

Michael Donahue

Jimmy Crosthwait at Finders Keepers

Michael Donahue

Laura Hine, David Lusk, Henry Doggrell, and Carissa Hussong at Finders Keepers

Michael Donahue

Finders Keepers

Michael Donahue

Mystic Krewe of Pegasus Mardi Gras Ball XVII

Joseph Osment Is king Pegasus XVII, and Jane Pratt Park is queen Pegasus XVII of the Mystic Krewe of Pegasus.

They were announced at the Mardi Gras Ball XVII “A Night Under the Big Top,” which was held January 25th at Minglewood Hall.

Mystic Krewe of Pegasus is “a Mardi Gras krewe here in Memphis,” says Ball Captain Jesse James. “We are a gay Mardi Gras krewe, but we are way more than a gay Mardi Gras krewe.”

And, he says, “We run the whole gamut. We have straight people. We try to have the most diversity possible.”

About 500 people attended the event, which was a fundraiser for the Shelby County Drug Foundation, says Ball Captain Jesse James.

James didn’t have the total amount of money raised at the ball, but, Jesse says, “We will do a check presentation in April because we still collect money for them through the end of March.”

And, he says, “Up to this year, not knowing what we raised [at the ball], we’ve raised over $300,000 for charities over the past 17 years.”


Joseph Osment and Jane Pratt Park at the Mystic Krewe of Pegasus Mardi Gras Ball XVII

Michael Donahue

Mystic Krewe of Pegasus Mardi Gras Ball XVII

Michael Donahue

Mystic Krewe of Pegasus Mardi Gras Ball XVII

Michael Donahue

Laura and Nick Scott at the Mystic Krewe of Pegasus Mardi Gras Ball XVII

MIchael Donahue

Conrad Phillips at Season’s End Wild Game Dinner & Fundraiser

Conrad Phillips hosted his first dinner at Caritas Community Center & Cafe, where he is chef de cuisine.

His Seasonal Wild Game Dinner, which was held January 25th at the center, featured hors d’oeuvres and four courses paired with wine. Guests began with bacon-wrapped quail breast with a porcini glaze and alligator poppers with chipotle ranch and continued with elk bolognese, duck confit/duck fat Yukon mashed potatoes, and herb-crusted rack of wild boar with smoked gouda grits and roasted asparagus.

Dessert was chocolate Grand Marnier duck crème brûlée. Linda Smith, one of the guests, says, “It was one of the best I’ve ever had.”

During his remarks, Phillips told the diners, “I like to give people something they’re not familiar with. And do it in a way they can accept it — not have to be afraid to try it.”


Michael Donahue

Season’s End Wild Game Dinner & Fundraiser

                                  WE SAW YOU AROUND TOWN
Michael Donahue

Lester Quinones Jr. of the University of Memphis Tigers and Scout at Gibson’s Donuts

                           

MIchael Donahue

Holly Long, Lindsey Gammel, Shawn Whitworth, Lauren Poteet, and Laura Davidson at Gibson’s Donuts. They work or have worked at Ella David Salon.

Michael Donahue

Autozoners from Brazil and Memphis at lunch Downtown

Categories
News News Blog

Lawmakers Want Tigers, Vols Match-Up Each Year

Two Memphis lawmakers want to ensure the University of Memphis Tigers and the University of Tennessee Volunteers play each other each year.

State Sen. Brian Kelsey (R-Memphis) and Rep. Antonio Parkinson (D-Memphis) filed a resolution Wednesday that would ensure that the two schools’ football teams and men’s basketball teams would meet at least once per year during regular-season play.

“While Coach Hardaway welcomes playing the University of Tennessee in basketball, Coach Calipari strongly opposed the idea, and future coaches could do the same,” said Sen. Kelsey. “These are major Tennessee teams. While coaches may come and go, there is no reason these teams should not face each other every year or that such contests be omitted from their schedules.”

The Tigers and Vols met on the court in December. But the football teams haven’t played since 2010. The bill would ensure the basketball teams would play “during future regular seasons. The legislation would be effective for the football teams beginning in the 2025-2026 seasons to provide for advanced scheduling.
[pullquote-1] “I had a brief informal conversation with UT President Randy Boyd about this matter,” Parkinson said. “I think he gets the importance of this rivalry for our state, and the economic impact it will provide.”

Kelsey said, “The fan base remains strong in Tennessee and wants to see this match-up every season. Tennessee fans deserve to see the two oldest programs in the state battle it out every year.”

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News News Blog

Memphis Pets of the Week (2/4/20-2/10/20)

Each week, the Flyer will feature adoptable dogs and cats from Memphis Animal Services. All photos are credited to Memphis Pets Alive. More pictures and more information can be found on the Memphis Pets Alive Facebook page.

[slideshow-1]

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Blurb Books

Picture Perfect: James L. Dickerson Releases Coffee Table Photo Collection

I write this from the Flyer’s offices in Downtown Memphis, surrounded by stacks of books. Novels, short story collections, works of nonfiction, and even a few comic books — all Advance Reading Copies, or ARCs, in the parlance of book reviewers, literary agents, and booksellers — line my bookshelf, sit atop it, and sometimes even linger on my window ledge. It’s pure heaven for a bibliophile such a myself. It does mean, however, that sometimes a really excellent book will get lost in the shuffle. I hope, fellow readers, that for this sin, I can be forgiven. Such is the case with journalist and photographer James L. Dickerson’s coffee table photo collection Mississippi on My Mind: Random Life Through the Eyes of a Journalist (Sartoris Literary Group), released at the tail-end of 2019, when this reviewer had his mind on the holidays.

The book collects some of the many photographs taken by Dickerson over the course of his career as a journalist — and a lover of the arts, music in particular. The photos are often accompanied by excerpts from interviews with the subjects, poetry, or touching or humorous anecdotes. On the page opposite a photo of late Texas guitarist and singer Stevie Ray Vaughan, Dickerson remembers allowing the legendary bluesman to break a strict no-smoking policy the journalist had and light up in his car. Dickerson recalls, upon hearing the news of Vaughan’s untimely death in a helicopter crash, rushing out to his car to look at the half-smoked cigarette, alone in an otherwise-pristine ashtray.
James L. Dickerson

Stevie Ray Vaughan

One of my favorite series of photos in the book is a delightful six-page spread of glam-pop, power-pop band The Bangles, looking decidedly ’80s and L.A. when placed next to Dickerson’s other, mostly Southern subjects. Next to a photo of bassist Michael Steele, Dickerson prints an excerpt from a phone interview — one in which every member of the band is in a separate bathroom in a “cavernous house in the heart of Los Angeles.” My particular favorite photo is one of Susanna Hoffs playing a solid-body Rickenbacker guitar slung low over a purple-white blouse with enormous shoulder pads. It is excellent.

Mississippi on My Mind includes photos of Estelle Axton (co-founder of Stax Records), Bobby Womack, Waylon Jennings, Tom T. Hall (who penned the lyrics to “Harper Valley P.T.A.”), George Klein, and Scotty Moore, Elvis Presley’s legendary original guitarist. It’s no surprise that Moore is numbered within the volume’s subjects; my first encounter with Dickerson’s work was his biography of Moore, That’s Alright, Elvis. There are also photos from beloved local landmarks such as the Memphis Zoo and the Levitt Shell.

James L. Dickerson

For the most part, Mississippi on My Mind can be broken down into three sections — Memphis, Mississippi, and Nashville. It’s a true trinity of Southern arts and music, and Dickerson knows his subject matter well. All in all, the book is a fun read, and it seems ample evidence of the truism that, in photography and journalism, there is no substitute for being there at the right time. For those who weren’t, though, Dickerson’s book makes a worthy passport. 

Categories
News News Blog

House Committee Delays Vote on Forrest Bust to End of Session

Nathan Bedford Forrest Boyhood Home/Facebook

A resolution to remove a bust of slave trader Nathan Bedford Forrest won’t be heard by a state House committee until sometime closer to the end of the year’s legislative session.

Members of the House Naming, Designating, and Private Acts committee approved a motion from Rep. Andy Holt (R-Dresden) to suspend any further votes on the move until the last meeting of that committee later this year.

Rep. Rick Staples (D-Knoxville) brought a resolution to the committee last week. It would remove the bust, “replacing it with tribute to a more deserving Tennessean.” After hearing from the state commander of the Sons of Confederate Veterans and a historian last week, the committee decided to hold the vote for one week.

A process for the bust’s removal is set in motion. When the Tennessee Capitol Commission meets on February 20th, they could vote to ask for a waiver to remove the bust from the Tennessee Historical Society. The resolution would not change anything about the process, but Staples told committee members Tuesday it was important.

“I strongly believe that is the Capitol Commission does not have a resolution urging them to make a move or a direction, they will not do it when they meet,” Staples said. “They will not do it and pass on it. Then, we’ll have to do this again.”

Minutes before Nathan Bedford Forrest’s statue was removed from Health Sciences Park

Holt said a resolution was not the only way for committee members to tell Capitol Commission members they want the bust removed. He said they should “approach those members with the Capitol Commission personally, and express your disgust, anger, or concerns.” He said “the most logical thing to do” would be to delay a vote on the resolution to the last committee calendar of the year.

Rep. Bo Mitchell (D-Nashville) said he felt ‘no pressure of political correctness” over the vote. But it was one of “historical correctness.” He called testimony from witnesses last week “a recreation of fictional history” about Forrest.

Crowds gathered in Health Sciences Park to support the removal of the Nathan Bedford Forrest statue.

“It’s been made very clear that the man was in command of a massacre,” Mitchell said of Forrest’s command of Confederate troops at nearby Fort Pillow, where some 277 mostly African-American Union troops were killed after they had surrendered.

Rep. Jerry Sexton (R-Bean Station) said that no one in the committee room could “know our history is 100 percent correct.” He said last week’s witnesses gave “very different accounts of this” and that some committee members were “trying to tie this man (Forrest) to something that may or may not be true.”

“We know this is about political correctness and I can’t be part of something like that,” Sexton said.

The committee voted 13-4 to move the bill’s consideration to the end of its legislative calendar.

Categories
Music Music Blog

Wilco to Play Levitt Shell in First Fundraiser of the Year

Wilco

The band Wilco has longstanding ties to the Bluff City, reaching back to their 1994 debut, A.M., recorded at Easley-McCain Studio.

Even then, in their alt-country days, they displayed a reliable knack for both classic songwriting and sonic experimentation: a perfect fit with that renowned Memphis studio in its heyday. That such a spirit has remained and evolved with the band over the course of 10 subsequent studio albums is a testament to their collective restlessness with indie-pop conventions.

While the group has seen personnel changes over that time — a stable lineup featuring Nels Cline, Mikael Jorgensen, Glenn Kotche, Patrick Sansone, John Stirratt, and, of course, singer-songwriter Jeff Tweedy — it has endured since 2004. Now, in the wake of a marked ramping-up of Jeff Tweedy solo albums, they’re touring to support 2019’s Ode to Joy, which strikes a middle ground between the solo Tweedy’s more stripped-down approach and the wider sonic palette of previous Wilco albums.

Mellotron Variations at the Solid Sound Festival, 2019 (L-R, Pat Sansone, Robby Grant, Jonathan Kirkscey)

The band’s spirit of sonic exploration has lately infused the most recent Memphis/Wilco cross-pollination, in the form of the Mellotron Variations group, an ensemble of Mellotron players founded here by Robby Grant and Jonathan Kirkscey, which has grown to include John Medeski and Wilco’s Pat Sansone. The group’s concerts and rehearsals have made Sansone a more regular visitor from his home in Nashville, and when they played Wilco’s Solid Sound Festival in Massachusetts last year, the sympatico between Wilco and Memphis’ flair for the unconventional was sealed.

Thus, Wilco’s upcoming performance at the Levitt Shell on April 14th (just announced Tuesday) has a certain resonance with the Memphis music scene. Part of the Shell Yeah! Benefit Concert Series held at the iconic outdoor stage every year, this will precede the Shell’s regular Summer Orion Free Music Concert Series as a rare ticketed event — one of four this year — designed to raise funds for the many free concerts staged by the Levitt Shell.

Shell Yeah! Presents Wilco, Levitt Shell, Tuesday, April 14. 8:00 pm. Tickets on pre-sale February 5, public sale February 7.

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News News Blog

Greg Haller Retrospective at Marshall Arts

Knight Move Geometry

“Gregg Haller: Meditations on Mathematics – a Retrospective” features more than 100 works by the late artist, a longtime manager at Art Center on Union.

“It spans three decades of his artistic career,” says Luke Ramsey, 26, one of the curators of the show, which is on view through February 7th at Marshall Arts.

Haller had work in international showcases in Denver, Phoenix, and at Memphis Brooks Museum of Art. His work, Peanut Butter Dream, was performed in collaboration with Project Motion in 1992 at Brooks.

Numerous installations and pieces were shown at the Memphis Arts Festival (Arts in the Park) throughout the 1990s. In 1998, his piece, Cheap Shoes, was awarded Best in Show by Lowery Sims, former curator of 20th Century Art at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

In 1995, Haller had several abstract paintings in the show, “Underscene,” at Marshall Arts.

Ramsey got to know Haller when they both worked at Art Center, where Ramsey was a sales clerk and Haller was manager from 1992 to 2018. They got to know each other through their “interest in using math in art.”

They also were interested in Buddhism. “He was a devout Buddhist and a devout mathematician.”

Ramsey described Haller as “very quiet. A pretty insular person ‘cause he was so absorbed in making these kinds of pieces and thinking of these kinds of things. He would spend a lot of time dwelling in his mind. He wasn’t curmudgeonly or anything. He was easy to talk to, but often he wasn’t the one to initiate the conversations.”

Haller had a studio in his apartment, but he also developed his ideas in sketchbooks at work. “He was always working on some sort of project or puzzle at work and then he’d take it home and it would morph into this larger piece.”

Almost all of Haller’s works are abstract. “He’d pick a mathematical concept or idea and let that generate the image. Some of them (the paintings and sculptures) are geometrical and some are organic, but almost all of them are process based. They grew out of an equation or a process that he determined without knowing what the image would look like.”

For example, Ramsey says, “He’d take a basic exponential equation and then he would graph that onto a torus – a grid wrapped in a donut shape. But then he would squash that torus into a two-dimensional shape and then he’d paint the resulting image.”

Haller “would do meticulous sketches beforehand and use those sketches as the basis for the final painting.”

A look through Haller’s notebooks and sketchbooks show “how deeply he thought of these before he created them. It was wild to see the thought process behind it.”

And, he says, “It’s just a really interesting mode of working. Most artists are so focused on the way it looks in the end. He was always more interested in the process of creating it. The meticulous detail in the sketch book and the finished pieces shows his commitment to the craft, his fascination with math, and the meditative act of making it.”

Describing Incomplete Cubes, Ramsey says, “He figured out every possible way you could make an incomplete cube out of smaller cubes. So, all of these cubes have at least one piece of each face of the cube. It’s every possible permutation you could use to create that.”

As Haller, who died of kidney failure at 62 last September, got sicker, Ramsey and Sully Allen “became his caretakers and helped him navigate the medical system. And talked to him about doing a show of his work over the years. He was very excited about it, but we didn’t have time to get it together. His health was declining.”

Also curating the show were Allen and others who knew Haller or worked with him at Art Center: Mia Saine, Zahria Cook, Cassie Wiegmann, and Amber Williams.

Most of Haller’s works “have never been shown before,” Ramsey says. “That’s why we thought it was so important to get it out there for people to see.”

They found more than 200 of Haller’s paintings in his apartment. “We are selling them to fund a mural of his work. We’re trying to find good homes and use that as a way to create a way for him to be permanently remembered.”

They’ve sold a third of the pieces in the show. “I’m hanging onto the ones that I was able to get a more thorough explanation of the content from him.”

Ramsey wants to find a museum that might be interested in Haller’s work. “That feels like the best way to honor his legacy.”

“Gregg Haller: Meditations on Mathematics – a Retrospective” is on view by appointment only ( ldramsey93@gmail.com) through February 7th at Marshall Arts, 639 Marshall Avenue.

Incomplete Cubes

Manifestations of the Unseen

Greg Haller

Michael Donahue

Luke Ramsey