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Spring Arts Guide 2024

With winter melting away, now is the time to spring into the arts as new exhibits, performances, and happenings begin to pop up all over town. So be like the groundhog and come out of your hidey-hole. Spring has sprung, Memphis.

Painting on the River Series

With March being Women’s History Month, Cossitt Library has teamed up with five local women painters for a Painting on the River Series, offering a painting class each Saturday in March on the riverfront.

Each week, Ariel Cobbert, the series’ organizer, says the library will share in-depth profiles, interviews, and highlights of the featured artist, in anticipation of their class. Sarai Payne, who was the featured artist March 2nd, taught a class that mixed painting with collage work. Teaching the following classes will be Alexandra Baker on March 9th, Rachel Mattson on March 16th, Taylor Jackson on March 23rd, and Amanda Willoughby on March 30th.

“We’re just trying to create an initiative that aligns with our commitment to promoting diversity and just celebrating women’s achievement,” Cobbert says. “I really wanted to highlight a lot of different artists. Me being in the art scene, it’s easily noticeable that sometimes the same artists are always on the pedestal, so I like to highlight local artists to just give them a platform. That’s something that the library can contribute since everybody can’t book out larger venues and stuff.”

Each artist will introduce their own style, Cobbert says. Baker will do a class on healing through watercolors, for instance, while Willoughby will focus on portraiture. “People should be able to find their fix within this group of five talented women.”

The classes are completely free, with all supplies provided through the Memphis Library Foundation. “We plan to have tables outdoors, so people can touch the grass a little bit and just paint,” Cobbert says. “It’ll be a way to build community through people who see painting as a hobby or a career and just come and learn.”

Register at memphis.librarycalendar.com, where you can also keep up with other library programming.

Art by Design

ARTSmemphis’ Art by Design will bring in vignettes of living spaces. (Photo: Laquita Tate)

After a pandemic pause, ARTSmemphis is bringing back its Art by Design fundraiser, a five-day series of events highlighting Memphis’ interior design community. At the core of the fundraiser is the gallery showroom where just over 20 designers will have created vignettes of living spaces. There will be arts activations, music, food, and more, during the showroom’s hours.

“It’s a great way for people to come and not only maybe get inspiration for their own houses, maybe buy a few things, maybe learn about some new Memphis artists they may not know about, but also to support our process,” says Elizabeth Rouse, ARTSmemphis president and CEO. “Most of our work is really focused on raising money and then granting it out and supporting arts organizations and artists in a variety of ways, and so this is just a really unique opportunity for interior designers, who in some cases are competitors, to come together for Memphis and to showcase their own work, which is very different.”

This will also be the first year that Art by Design will implement its Emerging Designers program, through which it will waive the vignette fee for regional emerging designers Colin Chapman, Brittney Murckson, Jurnee Kelley, and Baylor Pillow. “We really see this as an opportunity to help strengthen the interior design field in Memphis and bring that community together,” Rouse says.

Designer Carmeon Hamilton created this program in 2020, and even had designers prepared to participate, before the event was canceled due to Covid. Laquita Tate was one of those initial emerging designers, but she will now be joining Art by Design as a “fully emerged designer.”

“We were able to at least get together and plan some things out [in 2020],” Tate says. “I was able to see how some things work behind the scenes, which helped me, and so I’m just really excited to be able to do this even now, four years later. ”

Ultimately, though, Tate hopes that people will come out to the event for the sake of community. “Memphis is rich with a variety of different types of arts here,” she says, “and people might miss out on some of that with some of the other things that are going on currently in the city, but that should be the most important piece: Come out, support us, support the city of Memphis, and support the arts.”

Art by Design will have several accompanying events in addition to the showroom, such as Dinner with Designers, The Art of Mahjong game night, Cocktails by Design, and a special speaker. For more information and to purchase tickets, visit artsmemphis.org/art-by-design.

Art by Design will take place April 3rd to 7th at Agricenter International.

“The Concert Photography of Jack Robinson”

“Horns High, Sam & Dave Horn Section, Soul Together” (Photo: Jack Robinson | The Jack Robinson Archive, LLC)

In partnership with the Jack Robinson Archive, the Stax Museum of American Soul Music’s latest exhibit presents 15 of Robinson’s finest images from the iconic Soul Together Concert of 1968. Held just two months after the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., the Madison Square Garden concert raised more than $75,000 for two charities, and Robinson was on the job for Vogue magazine, capturing the star-studded roster of Atlantic recording artists such as Aretha Franklin, Sam & Dave, King Curtis, and more.

“Jack Robinson’s work is so well-known,” the museum’s executive director Jeff Kollath says, “and he has this incredible connection to Memphis. People have seen Jack Robinson photographs — they just might not know that they’re a Jack Robinson — but we’ve all seen Jack Robinson photographs. … His style and how he practiced his craft is just so unique and interesting and it really shows in these photographs.”

Yet unlike Robinson’s typical portraits and studio shots, the photos in this temporary exhibit are on-the-scene, so they have a different kind of “energy and raw power,” Kollath says. “He’s taking photo after photo after photo and they show how he’s able to capture movement in a way that still shows so much clarity — especially at a Sam & Dave day concert, where they’re dancing, the band is dancing, and you sense this movement, this speed at which they’re all moving and yet the photos are so clear. He’s a remarkably skilled photographer.”

Robinson’s photographs will be on display through the end of March.

ON DISPLAY

Coe Lapossy’s “School of Ool”

“School of Ool: Whose Views Ooze Muse”
Coe Lapossy revisits artifacts of queerness wedged within a seemingly straight world.
Clough Hanson Gallery, through March 22

Memphis Germantown Art League Annual Spring Juried Exhibition
Exhibition of work by members of the Memphis/Germantown Art League (MGAL). 
Memphis Botanic Garden, through March 30

“Breaking the Rules”
Seventy-five paintings, watercolors, and drawings spanning the entirety of Paul Wonner’s and William “Theophilus” Brown’s careers.
Dixon Gallery & Gardens, through March 31

“Marking Time”
Remy Miller’s landscapes and Joe Morzuch’s still-lifes and self-portraits.
Dixon Gallery & Gardens, through April 14

“Radical Jewelry Makeover: The Artist Project”
An innovative community-mining project that repurposes jewelry to create sustainable art.
Metal Museum, through April 14

Curtis Arima, Shifting Hierarchy, 2014. Recycled silver, copper, enamel, recycled gold, found objects. Courtesy of the Artist.

“Shelby Canopy: Our Shared Connection”
An immersive public art project that aims to raise awareness of natural resources.
Wolf River Greenway, through April 19

“Iliumpta”
Birdcap’s retelling of Homer’s Iliad set in the Southernmost bayous of Mississippi.
Crosstown Arts, through April 28

“The Earthworm and the Hawk”
Melissa Dunn generates drawings intuitively from her imagination.
Crosstown Arts, through April 28

“What Were You Meant For?”
Kevin Brooks uncovers the seldom-seen layers of Black male identity.
Crosstown Arts, through April 28

“Everyday People: Snapshots of The Black Experience”
A photography exhibition showcasing Memphis artist Eric Echols’ photo collection of 20th-century African Americans.
Museum of Science & History, through July 14

“Branching Out”
Discover intricate connections between students, teachers, and casting communities.
Metal Museum, through September 8

“A World Apart”
Roger Allan Cleaves’ paintings exist in a rich and wondrous multiverse.
Sheet Cake Gallery, March 9-April 27

“Christian Siriano: People Are People”
Drawing from American designer Christian Siriano’s archive of bold creations.
Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, March 22-August 4

“Rhythm and Hues: A GCA Major Flower Show”
A brief but brilliant display of beauty.
Dixon Gallery & Gardens, April 13-14

“Progression”
Exhibition of work by Sowgand Sheikholeslami.
Dixon Gallery & Gardens, April 14-July 7

Kong Wee Pang, Voyeur Moment, 2023, featured in “Memphis 2024” (Photo: Courtesy Kong Wee Pang)

“Memphis 2024”
A dazzling array of work by the most creative men and women working in the Mid-South today.
Dixon Gallery & Gardens, April 21-June 30

Kelly Cook, Amber and Ruth, 2023, featured in “Memphis 2024” (Photo: Courtesy Kelly Cook)

“It’s All Relative”
Morgan Lugo’s pieces speak to the lasting effects of past experiences.
Metal Museum, April 21-July 7

“No Place Like Home”
This brief, month-long installation encourages the visitor to consider the concept of “home” in the queer community, and specifically in metalsmithing.
Metal Museum, May 1-June 2

ON STAGE

Little Women at Germantown Community Theatre (Photo: GTC via Facebook)

Little Women
Jo March gives us her greatest story: that of the March sisters, four dreamers destined to be imperfect little women.
Germantown Community Theatre, through March 17

Succession
Succession explores the world of Black theater through the actions of Steve Harrison, a promising young actor.
Hattiloo Theatre, through March 24

LOCAL: Art Moves Memphis
Dance concert presented by Company d dancers with Down syndrome and inspired by the vibrant urban art and murals throughout the Memphis community.
Wiener Theater, Hutchison School, March 23

Beautiful: The Carole King Musical
This jukebox musical takes you on a journey that realistically documents Carole King’s rise to fame and superstar status as a songwriter and performer.
Theatre Memphis, March 8-30

Peter Pan
Fly with Peter Pan, Tinkerbell, and the Darling children straight to Neverland for a timeless adventure.
Bartlett Performing Arts & Conference Center, March 8-10

(L to R) Axel Bernard Rimmele (Christopher Hillard), Giselle Gutierrez (Lydia Hillard), Rob McClure (Euphegenia Doubtfire), and Kennedy Alexandra Pitney (Natalie Hillard) (Photo: Joan Marcus)

Mrs. Doubtfire
Everyone’s favorite Scottish nanny comes to Memphis.
Orpheum Theatre, March 12-17

You’re A Good Man, Charlie Brown
Experience the magic of childhood and the beloved Peanuts gang in this Tony Award-winning musical.
The Circuit Playhouse, March 15-April 13

Zanna Don’t! A Musical Fairy Tale
Emerald Theatre Company presents a play, set in a world where everyone is gay — well, almost everyone.
TheatreWorks @ The Square, March 15-24

Opera Memphis: La Calisto
A baroque masterpiece of love, lust, vengeance and … astronomy.
Playhouse on the Square, March 22-23

POTUS (Or, Behind Every Great Dumbass Are Seven Women Trying to Keep Him Alive)
Witness the team of women behind a newly elected president.
The Circuit Playhouse, March 22-April 14

MOMIX presents ALICE at GPAC. (Photo: Courtesy GPAC)

MOMIX: ALICE
Presented by a company of dancer-illusionists, ALICE, inspired by Alice in Wonderland, takes audiences on a journey down the rabbit hole.
Germantown Performing Arts Center, March 23

Pink Floyd And The Planets
Memphis Symphony Orchestra presents psychedelic tunes and enchanting melodies.
Cannon Center for the Performing Arts, March 23 | Scheidt Family Performing Arts Center, March 24

Golden Girls – The Laughs Continue
Miami’s sassiest seniors have returned for one more hurrah.
Orpheum Theatre, March 28

Feelings & Other Uncomfortable Things
Get in your feels with this artistic experience centered around listening to music and creating a collage.
Shady Grove Presbyterian Church, March 29

Hattiloo Theatre Presents: Sing, Sistah, Sing
Hattiloo celebrates the indomitable spirit of Black women with concerts, step routines, original all-women dance performances, and spoken-word from talented Black female artists.
Cannon Center for the Performing Arts, March 30

Celia Hottenstein as Glinda and Olivia Valli as Elphaba in Wicked (Photo: Joan Marcus)

Wicked
This Broadway sensation looks at what happened in the Land of Oz … but from a different angle.
Orpheum Theatre, April 3-21

Fairytales on Ice Presents: Peter Pan and Wendy
The beloved, classic story of Peter Pan and his pal Wendy comes to life with dramatic and imaginative enactment, as the Buckman stage converts into an ice rink.
Buckman Performing Arts Center, April 4

Hamlet
The tragedy by William Shakespeare.
Tennessee Shakespeare Company, April 4-21

Master Class
A fierce and clever production about diva opera star Maria Callas.
Theatre Memphis, April 5-21

Out in the Woods
Friends of George’s presents a dragnificent adventure.
Evergreen Theatre, April 11-20

Blues in the Night
The soul of the blues wails out full and strong in the scorching, Tony-nominated musical.
Hattiloo Theatre, April 12-May 5

Science of Movement: Collage Dance Collective
Witness how a dancer prepares for the stage and experience excerpts from Collage Dance Collective’s repertory.
Museum of Science & History, April 13

Variations on a Theme: La Divina: A Tribute to Maria Callas
Featuring music inspired by Maria Callas and Theatre Memphis’ Master Class.
Opera Memphis, April 13-14

American Roots
Ballet Memphis’ celebration of Americana through dance.
Crosstown Theater, April 19-21

ELEVATE
Collage Dance’s spring program.
Cannon Center for the Performing Arts, April 20-21

Celtic Woman (Photo: Courtesy Orpheum Theatre)

Celtic Woman
A blend of traditional and contemporary Irish music.
Orpheum Theatre, April 25

Steel Magnolias
A touching portrait of women.
Theatre Memphis, performances April 26-May 12

Your Arm’s Too Short to Box With God
An uplifting musical with gospel-inspired music and inspiring storytelling.
Playhouse on the Square, April 26-May 19

Tchaikovsky’s 5th & Wynton Marsalis Violin Concerto
Presented by Memphis Symphony Orchestra.
Cannon Center for the Performing Arts, April 27 | Scheidt Family Performing Arts Center, April 28

A Monster Calls
New Moon Theatre presents this play about a monster that has come walking.
TheatreWorks @ The Square, May 3-19

May The 4th Be With You – The Music Of Star Wars
Feel the force of the music of Star Wars flowing through you with Memphis Symphony Orchestra.
Cannon Center for the Performing Arts, May 4

Orchestra Unplugged: Tchaikovsky’s 1812 Overture
Memphis Symphony Orchestra Music Director Robert Moody brings you inside the minds and music of composers to discover new connections and meaning to incredible works of art.
Halloran Centre for Performing Arts, May 9

Constellations
Quark Theatre presents a play about free will and friendship, but also about quantum multiverse theory, love, and honey.
TheatreSouth, May 10-26

The Hot Wing King
Katori Hall’s searing new comedy that follows a group of friends as they prepare for the “Hot Wang Festival” in Memphis.
The Circuit Playhouse, May 10-June 2

Buckman Dance Conservatory’s Spring Celebration of Dance
An enchanting celebration of ballet and contemporary dance.
Buckman Performing Arts Center, May 10-12

Memphis Symphony Orchestra’s Symphony in the Garden (Photo: Courtesy Dixon Gallery & Gardens)

Symphony in the Gardens
The annual Mother’s Day outdoor celebration in a beautiful outdoor setting featuring the MSO Big Band.
Dixon Gallery & Gardens, May 12

Opera Memphis: La bohème
Puccini’s timeless classic of youth, love, and freedom in a brand-new production.
Scheidt Family Performing Arts Center, May 17-18

Shrek the Musical
This Tony Award-winning fairy tale musical adventure brings all the beloved characters you know from the film to life.
Orpheum Theatre, May 31-June 2

AROUND TOWN

Resident Artist Talks
Crosstown Arts’ spring 2024 resident artists will present artist talks.
Crosstown Arts, March 20

Metal Petals & Healing Roots
A one-day event where artists will create art from disassembled gun parts.
Metal Museum, March 23

Art by Design
A curated series of events and presentations designed to highlight Memphis’ interior design community and simultaneously support the local arts community.
Agricenter International, April 3-7

Barrel to Barrel Grand Auction
Enjoy exclusive wine pairings, premium bourbon tastings, incredible wine and bourbon pulls, and a grand auction filled with unique experiences, rare vintages, and whole barrels of bourbon.
Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, April 6

Central to the Arts Festival
Celebrate the arts with live performances, film showings, fashion shows, and interactive arts booths.
University or Memphis, April 6

Art in The Loop 2024
A juried artists market, plus craft demonstrations and performances of classical music.
Ridgeway Loop Road, April 12-14

Playhouse on the Square’s 46th Annual Art Auction
Over 150+ local and regional artists have donated their one-of-a-kind masterpieces to be bid on.
Playhouse on the Square, April 20

Chalkfest at the Brooks (Photo: Courtesy Memphis Brooks Museum of Arts)

Chalkfest 2024
Join local artists and transform the Brooks’ plaza into the most colorful work of art.
Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, April 27

Spring to Art with Creative Aging
Activities, performances, and discussions for art lovers 65+ and carers.
Dixon Gallery & Gardens, April 30

2024 Art For All Festival
Arts and culture will showcase performances and art-making from across Shelby County through live performances, artist markets, food trucks, and more.
Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, May 11

Here Comes the Sun Community Day
Enjoy art making, garden tours, musical performances, and more at this community gathering designed for all ages.
Dixon Gallery & Gardens, May 11

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Cover Feature News

Carmeon Hamilton’s Reno My Rental

“I have been holding a secret for so long,” says Carmeon Hamilton.

Now, the Memphis-based interior designer, lifestyle blogger, and Instagram influencer can let the cat out of the bag. She is the host, star, and driving force behind Reno My Rental, an unscripted design show premiering Saturday, September 18th, at 10 p.m. Central on the streaming network discovery+, with a simultaneous premiere special on cable channel HGTV.

Hamilton is a graduate of the University of Central Arkansas’ interior design program and has been improving Bluff City living spaces with her firm Nubi Interiors. First through her blog, then on Instagram, she has amassed an impressive online following. Among her fans is Alicia George, a makeup artist for film and television and vice chair of the Memphis & Shelby County Film Commission, who first met Hamilton at ArtsMemphis’ annual Art By Design fundraiser. “She has a style that’s a little Bohemian but very sophisticated. I love all the work I have seen that she has done.”

Hamilton says her goal as a designer has always been to improve her clients’ lives. “Living well, loving the way that they live, and taking those things that most people call the minutiae of life, those smaller things, and really understanding that every single element of the day, whether minor or major, really adds up to how well we live. Whether you’re eating off a paper plate or a ceramic plate, those minor moments are what allow us to understand that we can be grateful for the smallest things. That’s really the philosophy behind what I do — making sure my clients understand the importance of living beautifully.”

In February 2020, the designer was concentrating on using her social media skills to build her business when she was contacted by a casting producer on Instagram who said they were putting together talent for a new competition show. Hamilton says the process was secretive. “They just said it’s an interior design show. I had no idea what network it was for, what kind of vehicle it was, nothing. But they just keep saying, ‘We think you’re a great fit!’ I’m like, ‘A great fit for what?’”

(Photos: Courtesy of discovery+)

A New Design Star

The show, it turned out, was Design Star: Next Gen, a reboot of the popular HGTV reality competition series that premiered in 2006 and ran for eight seasons. Hamilton says she was a fan of the original series and was shocked when the producers asked her to compete against seven other designers from all over America. The grand prize for whomever made it through the gauntlet of challenges was $50,000 and a chance to create a new show for the fledgling streaming network discovery+. At first, she was hesitant to accept the role because she didn’t want to neglect her successful business. But her husband, Marcus, encouraged her to pursue the rare opportunity. “The entire process was very surreal. But definitely one I will cherish for the rest of my life,” says Hamilton.

When she got on set and met her competitors, she discovered she was not the only one with misgivings. “We were all very leery of going into a competition,” she recalls. “There’s always a villain and animosity and drama, and none of us wanted that. We all ended up being really close and really supportive, and I think that aspect made the experience that much more positive. … I walked away with seven new friends.”

Hamilton says at first her goal was simply not to be the first one eliminated. But week after week, through challenges like improving the ugliest room in America, up-cycling post-industrial buildings, and creating a thriving indoor/outdoor space, the other competitors fell away, and she remained standing. Finally, guest judge Jonathan Scott, star of Property Brothers, crowned Hamilton the winner.

“During the competition, they asked all of us, ‘If you had the opportunity to have your own show, what kind of show would it be?’ I think my original idea was named Hometown Hope. From the beginning, I wanted to do a TV show in Memphis. … My husband and I had goals to go into underprivileged and underserved neighborhoods and truly elevate their homes. I want people who are part of those neighborhoods to stay and cultivate those neighborhoods, but using my talents and resources to truly elevate the way they live, so that they have that much more appreciation for where they live.

“I shot Design Star in five weeks, ending in October. The show premiered in February, and I was announced the winner on March 31st. I actually have been working with the producers and the network since December, basically two weeks after I won Design Star, developing my show. I thought it was going to take a long time, but the network was excited. They’re like, ‘We’re ready to go. We want to get this show moving. We want to get you in Memphis.’ And it’s been a whirlwind ever since.”

(Photos: Courtesy of discovery+)

Rental Nation

Reno My Rental is the name of the show,” says Hamilton. “We’re focusing on rentals, but not from the landlord’s point of view. It’s for the people who actually live in these spaces. A lot of renters have a problem with infusing their own personal styles and aesthetics into their homes, and that is what this show is about — showing people that can be done.”

Ming Lee Howell, executive producer of Reno My Rental, has been working in unscripted television for two decades. “There’s no premiere show right now on HGTV or on discovery+ that features or highlights renters,” she says. “A lot of millennials, I think, are choosing to rent because they’re traveling light and they don’t want the responsibility or the burden of a mortgage. They don’t want the maintenance that comes along with a house. So they’re trying to turn their rentals into homes. That’s why I feel it’s really relevant right now — the timing is right. And Memphis is a great place because you can rent whatever you want. There are so many different types of properties, from a historic home to a high-rise apartment building to a loft Downtown. And so, because there are these options, we get to play around with different types of renovations.”

Last summer, Hamilton, Howell, and a team of artisans, builders, and television crew worked on improving properties all over Shelby County. “We’ve been in Frayser, Cordova, Midtown, and Downtown off of South Main,” Hamilton says. “When I said I wanted to do the show in Memphis, they were dead set on making sure we showed as much of Memphis as possible. I have a belief that you can’t tell a Memphis story without telling all of it. It’s not just Graceland and barbecue; they have to see everything. Even the stops that we made in between the projects, like going to my welder’s shop in South Memphis, fabric shopping in East Memphis, my favorite coffee shop in Overton Square, 17 Berkshire — I want people to see the greatness of all of it.”

Six Memphians from all walks of life were recruited for the opportunity to upgrade their rental space. Alicia George was one of them. “A producer of a friend of mine posted that there was a design show coming to Memphis and that they were looking for rental houses. I got really excited. I love interior design, and I had a feeling it was Carmeon’s show because of Design Star. I had been following her for a long time.”

Potential guests on Reno My Rental are asked to submit two or three rooms in their home that they would like to renovate. “I have a unique story,” George says. “I’m a makeup artist that lives in the pink house in Central Gardens. … I have a sunroom that I do makeup in a lot, especially for brides and clients because there’s just a lot of good light in there. I wanted to turn it into more of a makeup studio space but still a livable sunroom, like a live-work space.”

Normally, a job like this would take Hamilton a couple of months, but Howell says they don’t have that kind of time. “We have to turn things around pretty fast, so each one of these is about a two-week renovation. We have two going on at the same time in our production schedule, and we’re doing two spaces at each renovation.”

Last April, Ashley Dyson and her husband Marquise moved from Midtown to a new home in Frayser, where they would have more room for their toddler daughter, Harper. Before the move, Ashley told Marquise she wanted to create a special space for him in their new home. “He was like, ‘Honey, don’t worry about me. Let’s just move into the house and get settled.’”

So when her friend sent her the application for Reno My Rental, Dyson knew exactly what she wanted to do. “So when it just all really started to come together, it was like prayers answered,” Dyson says.

(Photos: Courtesy of discovery+)

Home Work

At the Dysons’ place, Hamilton chose to work on Marquise’s den and the adjacent kitchen. “We focus on things that the tenants can take with them when they leave,” says Hamilton. “So this particular home, working with Ashley and Marquise, I got to know them through the casting process before we could get started with the design process. … I know that Marquise loves to travel, but he has a very stressful job. Ashley is there to support him, but she also loves baking and cooking because she has a connection with her mother, and she has a little girl that she wants to gift with that love for cooking.”

Once there’s a plan in place, the renovations begin. The renters don’t get to see the results until the work is complete. “It’s a weird thing,” says George. “You have to move out of your house for two weeks and totally trust and turn your house over to complete strangers.”

Dyson says the suspense was real. “We were getting little teases of things that were happening in the space, but we still had no real clue of what was going on.”

“We try to incorporate them into small projects,” Hamilton says. “We went to the lumberyard together to pick out reclaimed wood, but they had no idea what any of this stuff was turning into or where it was going. So it’s all a surprise at the end. I’m waiting in the background, holding my breath, hoping they love it.”

Dyson says, when she saw her transformed kitchen, “pleased is an understatement. I was absolutely floored. I walked in and I just could not believe it.”

In Central Gardens, Hamilton transformed George’s sunroom and bedroom, where she kept a special piece of furniture. “It was actually a makeup vanity of my mom’s,” George says. “I probably learned how to do makeup at that vanity, where I saw my mom do it every single day. But it was in really bad shape. The finish had worn off of it and it had been really beat up. I had talked about lacquering, which is a really trendy thing, but I’ve always been scared of actually doing anything to it myself. I didn’t want to ruin it. And so Carmeon took it and had it lacquered, and it looks beautiful. So it was a whole sentimental thing — all the emotions were real when the reveal happened.”

An Emotional Ending

Howell says she believes Hamilton was a genuine discovery. “I’ve worked with a bunch of different types of people — celebrities and designers. For a first-season television designer, she is a star. She’s a natural. She knows what she wants.”

Hamilton says filming Reno My Rental has helped her appreciate Memphis. “I learned that this city is so ready to be seen in a positive light. Everyone has been so willing to do whatever they can to make this show successful because they feel like this is the best Memphis has ever been seen, and what the show could potentially do for the city. I know a lot of entrepreneurs and people who aren’t familiar with this place probably don’t understand the feeling of community. But this city does not struggle with that whatsoever.”

Hamilton says throughout the whole whirlwind of the last year, her husband Marcus was by her side, encouraging her. “He has been the biggest support. He and my son are actually part of the show. You’ll see them by my side.”

As Hamilton and the crew were in post-production, preparing for the show’s debut, an unimaginable tragedy struck. On the afternoon of August 29th, Marcus Hamilton was riding his motorcycle on N. Watkins when he was struck by a Mercedes, which was making a left turn onto Chelsea Avenue. Marcus died at the scene. The driver of the Mercedes, Carl Grandberry, was charged with failure to yield, driving under the influence, and public intoxication.

Hamilton, who was preparing to promote Reno My Rental, has not spoken publicly since the tragedy, except for a heart-wrenching post on her Instagram. “It is with deep sorrow and an eternally broken heart that I tell you that the love of my life, Marcus Hamilton, has passed away,” she wrote. “I am no stranger to loss, but this loss brings something beyond pain. Something I can’t describe. I’m now missing a major part of myself, and that void seems to grow more and more every second. I can’t bring myself to figure out Davin’s and my next step, because there shouldn’t be a need for one. But in the midst of this immense pain came a wave of support from the community of people that we’ve worked so hard to build. They are the only reason I have the strength and ability to put these words in writing. Thank you all for being one of the best parts of our love story, and loudly encouraging us to be the passionately flawed humans we were, living a life well lived. I only ask for grace and privacy as my family and I navigate this extraordinary loss.”

Carmeon Hamilton’s episodes of Design Star: Next Gen are currently available for streaming on discovery+. Reno My Rental premieres simultaneously on discovery+ and HGTV on September 18th at 10 p.m. CDT.