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Art Exhibit M

Crosstown Arts’ MemFeast III

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Crosstown Arts recently put on the third annual MemFeast in collaboration with Indie Memphis in the cavernous domain of the Sears Crosstown building’s lowest level. This time around, projects were limited to film and devoted entirely to the unifying theme of “neighborhood.”

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While most of the selected filmmakers chose a more straightforward, traditional approach, with documentaries and narratives based inside the borders of a specific neighborhood, some branched out to the greater concept of the Memphis community as a whole. Out of eight hand-picked proposals, stretching across the city from Binghampton to Vance Avenue, the work of Nicki Newberger, Alan Spearman, Mark Adams, Morgan Jon Fox, and Sean Faust was chosen by the audience of more than 250 locals to receive a $5,000 grant – funded by ticket sales from the event as well as sponsor donations.

The exceptionally talented collaboration took a unique and somewhat risky strategy, producing a sort of preview of the film to come. April will tell the story of a 9-year-old girl living in what has become the marginalized neighborhood of Soulsville, the former site of Stax Records and current home to the Stax Museum of American Soul Music.

Named after a special tree in the area that the little girl turns to as a source of shelter and comfort, her tale of hope mixed with fear is juxtaposed against the hard reality of a middle-aged woman in failing health and ever-dwindling opportunity within the same boundaries, to merge the compelling story-telling of a narrative format with the unyielding truth of a documentary.

In line with the overall focus, Paul Taylor of the Stax Music Academy will compose the soundtrack for April, with plenty of input from his students. The completed film is set to premiere at this year’s upcoming Indie Memphis Film Festival, on Nov. 1-4.

The medium of film is decidedly close to the heart of one of Crosstown’s founders, Christopher Miner. An artist himself, Miner came to film after a roundabout career that primarily focused on photography and writing. With the organization’s goal of inspiring creative dialogue about Memphis through film, and the unshakeable power of April‘s preview in mind, we spoke with Miner about his personal views on art and the fundamental vision of Crosstown Arts.

What is your background as an artist?

I grew up in Jackson, Mississippi and went to the University of Tennessee at Knoxville for my undergrad degree, studying photography and creative writing. Then, I went for a Master’s degree in teaching English as a second language, thinking I would go back to Mexico — where I did a photo project as my undergrad thesis — but while I was there I ended up studying creative writing with Barry Hannah and writing fiction for my master’s degree. The next year I went to Yale for graduate school in photography. We had an assignment for the whole class to make something other than what you normally do. The point was to shake up your mode of work.

When I would show my photographs in critiques at Yale, the major criticism was that my stories were more interesting than the pictures themselves, so for this assignment somebody suggested that I make a video. All of my work prior to this point was traditional black and white photography: in my process I would just walk around and get mixed up with any kind of situation, sort of in explorer mode. I had never decided what my work was going to be about before I made it, I’d always just go out and discover something. Basically, that video ended up being like the cornerstone of my art career. It was in the greater New York show at MoMA PS1, and pretty much everything, even the content of my work flowed from this one starting point.

I finished at Yale in 2000 and all my friends were moving to New York, to be famous and successful in the art world, and I just wanted to live in Memphis. It’s the coolest, most perfect place in the world. It’s Southern and random and eclectic. When I came to Memphis from New Haven I had this idea that I should start a nonprofit to teach photography to kids, but I had no idea who to connect with or what to do. I was trudging all over town looking at old buildings, and — it was fully naive — I sat in the parking lot of the Sears building and had no idea what it was, thinking it would be an amazing place to do something with.

Why did you choose Memphis?

I moved back to New York and ended up teaching photography at Hunter College and video at Yale for a couple of years. Then we moved back to the South. It feels like in this city there’s a figure from a movie around all the time, the whole place feels like a set. It’s real-world stuff, and there’s an authenticity to the people.

What led to the formation of Crosstown?

I left New York with my wife, Amanda, and moved to Mississippi to help run my dad’s business when he was diagnosed with multiple melanoma. He owned health clubs in Jackson, and actually, it’s kind of crazy how much that involvement has helped with our project. I think this opportunity wouldn’t have even come about if I hadn’t had some experience in business.

My wife and I got married in Clarksdale and had a big wedding weekend at the Shack Up Inn. All of our friends from New York needed somewhere to stay, so we found this perfect place, and I got to be friends with the owner. He has a building on the property that’s an old feed-house and didn’t know what he was going to do with it. I thought it would make a great artist residency program, so I started a non-profit organization in Jackson to put a program in this feed-house.

In New York I was surrounded by a big art world, and I didn’t think I needed any of that stuff to be an artist. Jackson was an opportunity to have all this space and time, but within months I was devastated. I didn’t realize that seeing my friends and going to their shows kept me engaged. The idea was to bring in artists from all over the world to Mississippi to be a source of inspiration there.

I came to Memphis to talk to Todd Richardson about it, we had been friends for a long time. The people who were affiliated with the Sears building heard about the idea for the feed-house, and also knew that Todd had been talking about how the Sears building could be used. Things like MASS MoCA and other large-scale industrial recaptures of old buildings for arts purposes were happening at the same time, so Todd and I decided to put a plan together.

What are your goals for the organization?

The thing people don’t totally understand about the building is that it’s over a million square feet. It’s monstrous. It’s more like an urban village with a major emphasis on the arts inside. Studio space for artists was not even a part of our original concept. Rent is one thing that nobody is hard up for in Memphis, that’s not the point. It includes a residential program, a gallery space dedicated to bringing art to Memphis, with an equal amount of attention placed on exhibition opportunities for local artists. Then there’s plans for an art-making facility, sort of like shared labs for local artists so that people like you and me don’t have to go out and buy a kiln.

Why did you choose to pursue art?

I am naturally inclined to operate in an imaginary place more than a real one. As making art takes shape, it’s that same impulse that the world makes more sense in a kind of fictionalized version, like how a movie makes more sense than reality sometimes because it can get at some higher truth in a more accentuated way.

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Art Art Feature

Boxing Day

For our first Flyer Box Art contest, we chose 13 artists to take some beat-up newsstands and create their own individual statement. What we got back were incredible pieces of public art that will soon be on display all over town.

Wednesday, March 28th, marks the official unveiling at Material Art Space (2553 Broad), so stop by from 5 to 7 p.m. and see for yourself the amazing things our artistic community can produce.

Be sure to vote in our “Reader’s Choice” through April 4th. To vote, scroll to the bottom of this page, select your favorite box, and click VOTE to submit. The winning artist will receive $500.

Check out this map to see where the boxes are located around the city.

Thank you to the Art Center Supply Store for providing the artists with a materials stipend.

DANIEL TACKER

Daniel Tacker grew up reading comic books and began drawing his own illustrations at a young age. A Memphis native, Tacker left to attend the University of Tennessee at Knoxville where he studied photography, film, and video for his degree in media arts.

He returned home to work in graphic design and continued to develop his artistic abilities, moving beyond the realm of photography into the wide world of painting. There Tacker found his true calling, looking to street art and graffiti as the form in which he could combine all of his interests into the highly polished and decidedly urban works he currently creates. This box can be found on Main St. outside the Green Beetle and Frank’s Deli.

ANDREA MANARD

Andrea Manard honed her creative skills as a stay-at-home mom, dabbling in paint and collage until people began to suggest she try to sell her work. After a successful run at the Cooper-Young Art Festival, Manard opened several internet shops for her creations, one of which is tailored to customers with an eye for Memphis history.

Her box portrays a Memphis from the turn-of-the-century with photographs of the downtown skyline, the Cossitt Library and Post Office, and the Memphis Zoo, courtesy of the Library of Congress digital archives. The letters used to make up Memphis Flyer were even cut out of a map from the 1870s.

“It’s a bird’s-eye view of the city,” Manard says. This box can be found at the intersection of Main St. and Butler Ave.

TONY MAX

Tony Max decided to go with spray paint for his space-themed newsstand, starting with shapes that would be easy to stencil: a city, a moon, paper planes. But from a look at his finished product it seems that Max, a self-employed artist and tattooist for Midtown’s No Regrets, had no trouble with the box at all, aside from the fact that a bout of rainy spring weather forced him to do most of his spray-painting indoors, making his apartment a little fumey.

Among the native Memphian’s other projects are commissioned comic books and album covers and a custom tarot deck that’s just sold out in his online shop. Max says the tarot deck will appear in a sci-fi movie in the future — a fitting destination for work by the man who turned the Pyramid into a spaceship.
This box can be found outside Lenny’s and YoLo on Cooper.

MEREDITH WILSON

Meredith Wilson’s box is adorned with a signature of sorts, the latest phase in a succession of pairings of animals with pastries — in this case, owls with donuts for eyes. A graduate of both the University of Memphis and the Memphis College of Art, Wilson has been teaching art in the Arlington school system for the last eight years, and her work with middle and high school students informs her lighthearted approach to painting.

Wilson says this project may be the last sign of the owls for a while. A recent trip to Paris left her brimming with ideas for a new direction, moving from gouache to acrylics (and paint pens for her box). We can bet that wherever her inspiration takes her next, there will be a healthy dose of Memphis grounding her work. This box can be found outside Kriby Wines

SHAWN MATTHEWS

A self-taught artist from Portsmith, Arkansas, Shawn Matthews says he has a fascination with the city’s Egyptian ties. His box depicts the ancient capital’s triad of gods: Ptah was the major deity of Memphis, a high priest described as the creator of other gods and declared the master of destiny. His wife, Sekhmet, is shown with a blazing sundial overhead to portray her fiery position as the goddess of destruction and war. Their son, Nefertum, was created as the patron of healing arts and beautification, to bring the trio full circle.This box can be found outside Starbucks on Union Ave.

GREG CRAVENS

Greg Cravens has been drawing for the Flyer almost since the paper’s inception, beginning with the illustrations that appeared alongside Lydel Sims’ popular column. Indeed, his 21-year career as a professional artist has been built, in part, on creating silly cartoon characters that are filled with imagination.

Cravens took a signature approach with curious characters on each side of his box. The most peculiar has to be the small purple alien adorning the backside of this one-of-a-kind artwork. It’s sure to send our readers on their way not only with the latest issue but something to talk about. This box can be found outside Cafe Ole in Cooper-Young.

JAMOND BULLOCK

If you’ve been to an open-mic poetry night in the last month, chances are you saw Jamond Bullock working on his newsstand. The Whitney Elementary School art teacher has been doing live-painting for several years now. Bullock paints at festivals, open-mic nights, and even weddings.

Once you’ve taken a look at Bullock’s box, you’ll start noticing his distinctive style of work around town — in galleries, on a store counter, in an upcoming mural he’s working on with the UrbanArt Commission. And look closely: Bullock has hidden tiny newsstands and characters around his box for observant viewers to find. This box can be found at the BP Station on Riverside Drive.

BOB X

When Bob X first entered then-Memphis State University to pursue an art degree, his adviser told him that he didn’t have any talent. He eventually left school and entered a technical college to take courses in drafting, a more practical field in which he excelled. But that didn’t stop him from doing what he loved, and over the years Bob X has produced work for advertising, for local bands and organizations, and for merchandise like T-shirts and helmets in a style of underground art closely related to that of Robert Crumb. Yet, his box can be described as an homage to both Jackson Pollock and psychedelic art, with his current style evolving toward the abstract.

“It’s always an ongoing process. I don’t look too far down the road. You have to adjust to situations as they come along,” he says. “There’s no great wealth in art, at least in my world, but there’s a great deal of satisfaction in it.” This box can be found outside American Apparel at Main St. and G.E. Patterson.

DARLENE NEWMAN

Darlene Newman has recently gotten back into illustration after delving into custom portrait work and mural painting, and her stylized but realistic representation of the Flyer‘s content is true to the kind of work she’s done for some of her clients — among the big projects she’s worked on in the past was an illustration gig for The Wall Street Journal fresh out of school.

Newman was born in Memphis but has degrees from New Orleans’ Dillard University and Savannah College of Art and Design. She has a background in business as well as art, which helps ground her work as a self-employed artist. Newman has recently finished illustrating a few children’s books by local authors and hinted at some exciting projects coming up. She said she wasn’t yet able to share details, but we think we’ll know it when we see it.
This box can be found near the University of Memphis at Patterson St. and Norriswood Ave.

DANIEL COUNCE

The one artist to take on the depths of the inside of the box, Daniel Counce takes his art pretty seriously. A Memphis native, Counce briefly attended the Memphis College of Art, where he took a painting class for one week before dropping it. He now divides his time between working at a frame shop in Germantown and making pieces of fine art to sell at Cooper-Young’s Painted Planet.

The artist has a talent for surreal imagery, blending obscure references like the manatee that made local headlines with tiger stripes and transforming the all-seeing eye of Egyptian mythology into the all-seeing fly. Get it? This box can be found at Archer Records on Nelson Ave.

MATT OWENS

Matt Owens says he likes to work spontaneously, using materials as his guide with a wide variety of media. The longtime cooking enthusiast and daytime chef at McEwen’s on Monroe says that he thinks of cooking as an extension of his work as an artist, which encompasses commissions for paintings and sculptures ranging from the miniscule to the larger-than-life.

As a young Memphian, Owens found his way into the art world through experimenting with the loose, dynamic nature of street art, visible in his work even now. Whether it’s customizing a display for a local restaurant, hand-painting a pair of shoes for a client, or crafting a small wooden toy for his kids, Owens marries that spontaneity to a dedication that shows. This box can be found at Whole Foods on Poplar.

LAUREN RAE HOLTERMANN

A recent graduate of the Memphis College of Art, Lauren Rae Holtermann dreams of publishing her own graphic novels, but for now she’ll settle for taking on creative projects around town and running the Rozelle Artists Guild.

Holtermann picked her three favorite things about Memphis — music, food, and basketball — as a concept for this project, while the skeleton figures draw upon an inspirational trip to Mexico City. She even used the Flyer as a play on words, with all three characters in states of flight. This box can be found at Fino’s from the Hill at Madison and McLean.

SCOTT & REMI JENKINS

Neither of the Jenkins family duo is a full-time artist. By day, Scott works for BNSF Railway and hosts WEVL’s Modern World on Friday mornings; Remi spends her days at Dogwood Elementary as a fourth-grader.

But the two have a history of working together, from taking a pottery class for Remi’s birthday to creating a cardboard mock-up of their proposed Flyer box. Scott says he’s dabbled in the arts on his own time and that working on this project was a great way to encourage his daughter’s creative side. They came up with the concept of painting iconic Memphis imagery together — the idea to include flying pigs came from Remi.

If you see Remi in the next couple of days, wish her a happy birthday! The budding artist celebrated her 10th birthday the day before this issue came out. This box can be found inside the Forest Hill Cinema.

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Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Sound Advice: Hive Dwellers, Nots, and Michael Peery at Otherlands

K Records founder and indie-rock icon Calvin Johnson hits Memphis this week with his new band, Hive Dwellers, performing at Otherlands Coffee Bar.

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Calvin Johnson is a guitarist, songwriter, and producer from Seattle and the founder of influential indie label, K Records. At the age of 15 he began volunteering at KAOS-FM, nearby Olympia’s community radio station. The station’s unique programming policy mandated playing music from independent and artist-owned labels rather than more corporate media, and the do-it-yourself ethos was a great influence on Johnson’s notably whimsical career.

He established K Records 1982 and formed the band Beat Happening the same year, early leaders in the indie rock and lo-fi movements.

Johnson moved on to create the Go Team, a project based around the core duo of Johnson and punk-rock feminist Tobi Vail (later of Bikini Kill and Kill Rock Stars), with a rotating cast of collaborators that included Kurt Cobain, Billy Karren, and Donna Dresch. He then started Dub Narcotic Sound System — named after his accomplished analog recording studio — with another collective that included Larry Butler, Todd Ranslow, and Brian Weber (members of hip-hop group Dead Presidents). Johnson has also previously worked with Modest Mouse, Beck, Heavenly, Jens Lekman, and the Gossip, among many others.

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We Recommend We Recommend

PYT

When Pinkney Herbert, of Marshall Arts Gallery, visited Travis Carrier’s New York studio last summer, he was struck by the talent of the young painter. Travis is the son of celebrated Memphis restaurateur Karen Carrier. He grew up in Memphis and graduated from the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD) in 2010 with a BFA in painting. He now lives in the Willliamsburg neighborhood of Brooklyn and keeps a studio in nearby Bushwick.

Herbert — who nutured his own artistic skills in that very same Brooklyn neighborhood in the 1980s — was delighted to give Carrier an opportunity to show his work in his hometown. Carrier is joined by Andy Pomykalski, a friend from RISD with a similar artistic vision and style.

“I loved the mystery captured in Travis’ oil paintings, and the magical quality of his figures and landscapes. There is a disciplined maturity to his technique,” Herbert says.

For “Pretty Young Thing,” Carrier and Pomykalski journey into the modern subconscious, portraying fantasy and reality as one and the same. Carrier describes his dream-like work as “new age,” with strong elements of realism and established archetypes filtered through each artist’s unique perspective.

“We are exploring the inner psyche and paranormal reality of today’s world through painting. There are also elements of self-reflective narrative throughout the show,” Carrier says.

Opening reception for “Pretty Young Thing: New Paintings by Travis Carrier and Andy Pomykalski” at Marshall Arts Gallery is Friday, March 23rd, from 6 to 9 p.m. and runs through April 15th.

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Art Art Feature

In the Details

At 87 years old, Samuel Nichols is still maintaining a successful artistic career. “Ode to Lonerock,” on display at the Beverly & Sam Ross Gallery at Christian Brothers University, marks his second exhibition at the gallery, and he has also exhibited work in San Francisco, Los Angeles, and Portland, Oregon. Nichols, who studied at the Memphis Academy of Art (now Memphis College of Art) and the Art Center of Los Angeles, says he began painting seriously around 1970.

Nichols began showing his paintings while he worked as a creative and art director for Jantzen Inc., the sportswear company based in Portland. With time and experience, Nichols has come to compose brilliantly understated works with a great feel for color and simplicity.

He first came upon the town of Lonerock — a cozy hamlet in Oregon founded in 1881 as a service center for the surrounding ranch land — while searching for a location to photograph a spring line for Jantzen.

Nichols later moved his life and family to Lonerock and remained there for 12 years, inspired by the lives of hard-working people as well as the quiet beauty of the rural landscape. His “ode” is altogether joyous, with bright white skies and a pastel palette that combines almost impressionistic scenery with skillfully detailed subjects.

The pleasure in creating each painting is palpable — gently overlapping mountains fading into blues and pinks, charming schoolhouses in the midst of open fields, and big, rusty machines.

Nichols has also included a few small, clay sculptures in the exhibit as an extension of his work — what he sees as a jocular way to further express and realize forms.

Through April 13th

The National Ornamental Metal Museum opened a new “Tributaries” exhibition for Chris Irick’s most recent venture, “Flight.” Many of the concepts for “Flight” were inspired by a visit to the Science Museum in London, which includes an extensive gallery reflecting British and international achievements (and failures) in aviation. Drawing largely from the oval shapes and dark colors of Victorian mourning jewelry, Irick has created an elegant series of jewelry that is expertly designed and exquisitely crafted.

The piece Whittle’s Daisy Chain was named after Frank Whittle, who developed the jet engine for Britain. And as an avid bird watcher, Irick has delved even deeper into the roots of flight.

“I knew when I started working with the idea of different planes that I eventually wanted to work with birds,” she says.

The first piece she completed for the series, Feathered Turbine, seamlessly unifies natural and man-made aspects of flight. A semblance of the rotary engine is constructed of actual finch feathers from Irick’s pet finches. She then pierced the finches’ flight pattern on the back, which led to her series of brooches made up of common flight patterns.

Through April 29th

The Metal Museum also recently opened a show of a different variety with the Enamelist Society Exhibition, “Alchemy: Transformation in Contemporary Enamels.” Alchemy is an antiquated, magical principle based on the transformation of matter, particularly attempts to convert base metals into gold. The term illustrates the fascinating process of enameling, as it encompasses the complex and delicate application of glass to metal to create an altogether new material.

“Enamel is powdered glass, and some way or other they magically adhere it to mainly copper or fine silver. Then they fire it, and it melts and fuses into a skin,” says Richard Prillaman, a silversmith and former professor at the Memphis College of Art.

The show, made up of the 13th Biennial International Juried Enamel Exhibition and 9th International Juried Student Enamel Exhibition, highlights works that demonstrate remarkable aesthetic and technical expertise in the medium. Categorized by miscellaneous objects, jewelry, and wall works, the exhibition of more than 100 pieces illustrates most of the numerous methods of enameling, often using multiple techniques within a single piece.

“The most common technique is sifting, where they take the powder and a little cup with a screen in it and sift the enamel on top of their frame. For many techniques, that’s the starting point. Then they’ll do things like sgraffito, where you sift on enamel and then take a scribe and actually draw in it to give yourself a design,” says Kevin Burge, a repairs specialist at the Metal Museum.

“Champlevé is a commonly used method that’s like enamel inlay, where they etch into the metal to create a recessed area and lay the enamel in there, while cloisonné is an alternate method using small wires as a border to separate the colors,” Burge says.

Through June 3rd

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Art Exhibit M

Introducing the Vollintine-Evergreen Art Walk

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Alex Smythe is looking to breathe new life into the V&E Greenline with the creation of the V&E Art Walk on April 21st. In the hopes that the event will become an annual occurrence, Smythe and the Vollintine-Evergreen Community Association (VECA) look to stimulate use of the area’s Greenline and raise money to help keep the space safe and beautiful, while also providing another outlet for artists in the community.

“I moved into my house on Lyndale about a year ago, and it backs up onto the Greenline. I started running there regularly and realized how awesome this kind of inner-city trail was,” says Smythe.
“What I was thinking was that I’ve done the Cooper Young Festival a couple of times, why not have a show just like that, but along the Greenline?”

The event, to take place between McLean and Stonewall, will feature local artists as well as student work from the University of Memphis, Rhodes College, and the Memphis College of Art. Participating artists are asked to contribute one piece of work to a silent auction, with all proceeds directly benefiting the V&E Greenline.

Food trucks will be on hand from vendors such as YoLo and Cafe Eclectic, along with live music from local musicians including Jeff Hulett and Paul Taylor. And Memphis area non-profits like the Wolf River Conservancy will also participate in the exciting new endeavor.

Applications for booth space can be picked up at the VECA Welcome Center on Jackson Avenue, or downloaded from the organization’s website. Also, be sure to check out the event’s Facebook page. For more information, contact Smythe at 461-4387 or thealexsmythe@gmail.com.

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Art Exhibit M

Cosmic Trunk Show at the Metal Museum

The Cosmic Trunk Show will take place at the National Ornamental Metal Museum tomorrow from 2-5 p.m., coinciding with the opening reception for Alchemy: The Enamelist Society’s Juried Exhibition.

Owl

  • Tim Pace
  • Owl

Local artists, including Tim Pace, Kingfisher Design, Suzy Hendrix, and Caldwell Forge, will have work on sale in the museum’s stately library building while you enjoy complimentary cosmos and light hors d’oevres.

Cabernet

  • Kingfisher Designs
  • Cabernet
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Art Exhibit M

The Politics of Inclusion

The illustrious Dwayne Butcher has a new show opening at the David Lusk Gallery tomorrow night from 6-8 p.m. Titled The Politics of Inclusion, the exhibition is a rather intimate exploration into Butcher’s own perception, of himself and of the world, but particularly in how the world views the grand stereotype of the Southern, white male, struggling with his own inevitable shortcomings.

“I have always been aware of my weight and accent and the negative connotations that come with each,” Butcher says.

Id Rather Be Painting Landscapes

  • Dwayne Butcher
  • I’d Rather Be Painting Landscapes

The work is the result of honest expression in which Butcher frankly relates his beliefs on art and life by embracing personal insecurities and generalizations. Through private understanding and doubt he displays a sort of living poetry with a variety of media; sculpture, text based installation, digital painting and video.

“I actually am a hillbilly from Arkansas with aspirations of integrating into the highbrow art world. Now, I capitalize on contradictions in pieces that counter my southern masculine roots. I use pastel pinks and baby blues, and feature gay men dressing in suits. I juxtapose classical music against a make shift pool in the bed of a truck and images of me consuming beer and wings. I’m attempting to construct a personality that lives between both worlds,” he says.

The exhibition runs through March 31, but in the meantime, check out the latest installation of Caseworks at the Univeristy of Memphis before it closes on Saturday!

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  • Johan Gustavsson

Butcher curates the space, and chose the work of Johan Gustavsson to showcase just outside of AMUM’s main gallery. Gustavsson is a visual artist from Sweden, currently based in the Netherlands, who sees drawing as the central medium of his practice for its singularly intuitive nature. With a fascination in the notion of ugliness, he evokes the innocent honesty of childlike sketches, producing intriguingly simple works reminiscent of the human memory – loose situations that aren’t entirely formed but still have visible boundaries and specific characters.

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Art Exhibit M

Openings Abound!

Check out some great new art shows if the spring weather has you in the mood for fine art, or if you just happen to be out East tonight.

L Ross Gallery is opening a two-person show for Memphis oil painter Pamela Hassler with Light in the Wetlands and Nashville watercolorist Butler Steltemeier with Spring and Sheep, through March 31st. Hassler’s beautiful oils portray spiritual landscapes, while Steltemeier’s animal portraits combine dreamy settings with dead-on realism.

Hummingbird Playground

  • Butler Steltemeier
  • Hummingbird Playground

Harrington Brown launches another appropriately springtime exhibition with New Beginnings: The Vernal Season, featuring the work of contemporary artists Lia Gordon, Tony Saladino, and Sara Good until April 10th.

Untitled Abstract

  • Lia Gordon
  • Untitled Abstract

Artreach will host the work of Dawn Whitelaw, a Franklin-based oil painter who specializes in landscape and portraiture. All openings run from 6 to 8 p.m., so start early! Free wine!

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Art Exhibit M

Cross Currents at the Memphis College of Art

MCA’s newest exhibition in Rust Hall’s main gallery showcases the work of Kendall Carter, Orly Cogan, Margaret Evangeline and Mark Newport. Cross Currents explores the expectations of gender with accepted stereotypes illuminated through the art of these four contemporary artists in an effort to challenge the traditional roles men and women play in society.

Britannia

  • Margaret Evangeline
  • Britannia

“I have been aware of Mark Newport and Orly Cogan’s work for a long time now and it struck me that both were working in ways that were against gendered expectations – men should not knit and women should make pretty embroidered articles for domestic consumption. I looked for two more artists to balance the show, Margaret Evangeline because her metal paintings are composed with gunshots and Kendall Carter because his works assimilate every day objects and question the boundaries of art and design,” says Jennifer Sargent, Associate Professor and Director of Exhibitions at MCA.

Contradictions in subject and form are inherent to the works, although not overt, as most people identify masculinity within the context of a heroic type, tough and unfeeling, while textiles and decorative arts are generally ascribed to the feminine ideal, soft and sweet, flowing with compassion.

Natural Habitat

  • Orly Cogan
  • Natural Habitat

However, Newport captures the male form (including the notably brooding and mysterious Batman) with a variety of quirky, full-body, knit suits. Evangeline’s works inversely transform luminous, often reflective, rigid surfaces into violent canvases shot through with different calibers of guns — in some cases softening the outward blast with glimpses of a delicate motif on ceramic to fully realize her vision. Cogan’s intricate embroidery work completes the show with all too truthful scenes of life, particularly womanhood, to beautifully convey the ugly realities behind closed doors. The exhibition runs until March 25th.

Here for Health

  • Erin Morrison
  • Here for Health

Right down the hall, the alumni gallery has an incredible show of paintings by Erin Morrison, now an MFA Painting Candidate at UCLA. Born in Little Rock, Arkansas, she has exhibited work in galleries from California to New York upon receiving her bachelor’s degree from MCA, and has also been published in numerous arts magazines.

Composed with coffee, graphite, ink, crayon, gouache, acrylic, and pigment, this selection from Morrison’s Flight series demonstrates an impeccable fluency in constructing breathtaking scenes of surrealism. Her paintings are available for purchase, on display until April 8th.

The Longer the Wait, the More There is to Fear