Categories
We Recommend We Recommend

The Memphis Flower Show Returns to the Dixon

Memphis is known for a list of things that I won’t name here for fear of being accused of leaving something out, but was the Dixon Gallery & Gardens’ biennial Memphis Flower Show on the list you were running through in your head?

Well, it should be. It’s a pretty big deal.

As Julie Pierotti, the Dixon’s Martha R. Robinson curator, says, “It is one of eight major Garden Club of America flower shows across the country. The Memphis Flower Show stands out among all of those as one of the longest-running shows. It is known for being the most cutting-edge of all flower shows.”

For this year’s show, titled “Rhythm & Hues,” participating floral designers have selected a piece of art in the Dixon’s latest exhibition, “Memphis 2024,” to interpret in their arrangements. The competing creations, Pierotti says, are “sort of like avant-garde floral design[s]. It’s unusual plant materials that the floral designers use to interpret works of art through organic materials. It’s not like a bouquet of roses or anything. They use birds-of-paradise and all these sort of exotic plants in a lot of their arrangements.”

The floral designers will travel from all over the country for the presentation, but the show is also an opportunity for local contemporary artists to shine. After all, “Memphis 2024,” the coinciding exhibition and inspiration for these arrangements, solely features Memphis artists: Jimpsie Ayres, Jamond Bullock, Kevin Burge, Ben Butler, Kelly Cook, Brantley Ellzey, EMYO, Nelson Gutierrez, Amy Hutcheson, Thad Lee, Pam McDonnell, Carl E. Moore, Kong Wee Pang, Cat Peña, Nikii Berry Richey, Lonnie Robinson, Laurel Sucsy, and Mikayla Washington.

“It is a great sampling of the art that’s being made right now,” Pierotti says of the exhibition. “It’s different media. We’ve got mixed media, metalwork, ceramics, fiber art, painting, sculpture, everything. It’s just a little bit of everything and I think there’s something for everyone in the show.”

While “Memphis 2024” will be on display through June 30th, people will only be able to see the works in conjunction with the floral arrangements this weekend during the flower show. In addition to floral design, the show will highlight conservation, horticulture and natural compositions, photography, and jewelry and accessories embellished with botanical life.

“It’s our biggest weekend every two years,” Pierotti adds. “The last time we did a flower show we saw close to 5,000 people over the course of a weekend, which for the Dixon, that’s a lot of people.”

Memphis Flower Show: Rhythm & Hues, Dixon Gallery & Gardens, 4339 Park Avenue, Saturday, April 13, 9 a.m.-6 p.m. | Sunday, April 14, 11 a.m.-5 p.m., free.

Categories
We Recommend We Recommend

“Who Is That Artist?” Exhibition at the Dixon

Growing up in Colombia, Johana Moscoso resented the fragility of the two porcelain figures her mother treasured, figurines whose fingers and nose would always break. Years later and now living in Memphis, she stands in the gallery housing the Dixon’s collection of decorative porcelain — equally untouchable, fragile, and overwhelmingly European — but in the room over, in the interactive gallery’s “Who Is That Artist?” exhibit, Moscoso holds the hands of her life-size recreations of porcelain figures in the collection. These pieces are structured with recycled cardboard and paper, with their exteriors clad in used denim. “I wanted to create something that people can touch,” she says.

In creating her sculptures, Moscoso took inspiration from the Colombian New Year’s tradition of Año Viejo, where friends and family make an effigy of the past year to burn as a way to welcome the next and say goodbye to the last. Likewise, the artist hopes to burn these sculptures, honoring her roots and looking to the future, but for now, she strives to make accessible what was once inaccessible in the porcelain. For instance, in one piece, where the original depicts a woman assisting a young lady at a vanity, Moscoso doesn’t include the young lady; instead, a stool sits for anyone to take her place and to see themselves as part of the art.

Similarly, Danielle Sierra, another artist in the exhibit, also aims to make visitors a part of her art. In her typical work, Sierra reinterprets Mexican milagros, religious charms used to pray for miracles. Instead of saints, images often found in milagros, Sierra renders faces of those in her life enshrined in rays of gold and surrounded by flowers. “I wanted to focus on the human being the miracle,” she says. “We tend to not see the beauty in ourselves, but we’re so quick to see it in flowers and plants and creation.”

In the exhibit, Sierra has created a photo stand-in for guests to see their own faces as part of one of her milagros. “It’s a matter of you becoming those things that you see as beautiful,” she says.

The third artist in the exhibit is Karla Sanchez, who challenges visitors with a comic-making station to reflect on what plagues their minds — their hopes, fears, worries. As an artist who has struggled to understand her complex identity as a DACA recipient from Mexico, she has found comics to be a therapeutic outlet to express her experiences as an immigrant. She hopes that by sharing her illustrations in the exhibit, she can inspire others to find healing in creativity, whether that’s in drawing or writing or something else entirely.

Altogether, the three Latina artists hope to uplift their respective cultures and welcome others into their work. For more information on the exhibit and the artists, visit dixon.org.

“Who Is that Artist?”, Dixon Gallery & Gardens, on display through April 16th.

Categories
Art Art Feature

Escape For the Homebound Just a Click Away

Thanks to the Great Quarantine of 2020, we don’t get to visit galleries, hang out at juke joints, or take in a play. But creative people are relentlessly creative, so you don’t need to go without, you can just go online.

Here’s a sampling of who is doing creative programming that you can enjoy from home:

  • Tennessee Shakespeare Company’s Decameron Project on its Facebook page presents literary readings and speeches by the Bard. Goes live at 10:15 a.m. Mondays-Fridays.

    Peter Pan

  • The Facebook page of Playhouse on the Square (POTS) is featuring “Story Time in Neverland” with Peter Pan reading the classic story and teaching some choreography to boot. The POTS page also has scads of videos of many of its productions with interviews and performance excerpts.
  • New Moon Theatre Company has been posting a Shakespeare blowout, full performances of past shows on its Facebook page, from Hamlet to Titus Andronicus (adults only!) to 12th Night and more.
  • The Memphis Symphony Orchestra’s FB page has plenty to hear, such as the Lockdown Sessions — check out the “Horns in Time of Plague” duet with Caroline Kinsey and Robert Patterson.
  • Hit up the FB page of the Art Museum of the University of Memphis and you’ll find plenty to see. Artworks, of course (photos by Lawrence Jasud, for example), and interviews (Carl Moore), and an opportunity to be part of the “In 7, 6, 5…” exhibition.

  • Find our more about the Memphis Brooks Museum of Art’s Virtual ChalkFest at its Facebook page.
  • The Dixon Gallery and Gardens virtually continues its weekly Tours at Two with curator Julie Pierotti talking about various works in the museum’s collection. And there are pictures of flowers. So many pictures of flowers. 

  • Art Village Gallery’s Online Viewing Room has the new exhibit “‘Twas Her Undoing,” provocative works by several local women artists.
  • The Pink Palace is offering its Museum To-Go experience with activities, movies, planetarium shows, and more.

More things are going on as well, from at-home jookin’ lessons (New Ballet Ensemble), to the Digital Aria Jukebox from Opera Memphis.

Just look and listen around you — art is everywhere.

Categories
We Recommend We Recommend

Easter Events

There has not been a want for “eggstravaganzas” around these part. Case in point: the Eco EGGstravagnza at Shelby Farms (Saturday, April 4th, 10 a.m.-4 p.m.), which kicks off the park’s month of Earth Day events. This family-friendly event includes an egg hunt, environmental exhibits, eco crafts, a fishing rodeo, nature hikes, live music, food trucks, and more. The park’s new Treetop Adventure course and zipline will be open as well. The Memphis Botanic Garden is holding a Family Egg Hunt (Saturday, 1-4 p.m., $10), with age-specific hunts. The Easter Bunny will be there for photo opportunities and there will be a magic show and crafts. The Dixon’s also in the egg-hunt game (Saturday, 10:30 a.m.-noon, $10). Reservations are required for this one: 761-5250.

Konstanttin | Dreamstime.com

Also happening Saturday are the annual Bunny Run in Audubon Park (9 a.m.), a 5K and fun run benefiting SRVS, which helps children with special needs, and the Easter Eve Concert at Levitt Shell (6-9 p.m.) featuring family-friendly music by the Passport and more from the students of Visible Music College.

All that egg-hunting can build up an appetite, so head downtown for eighty3’s Easter brunch (Sunday, April 5th, 10:30 a.m.-3 p.m.). The special menu includes an andouille sausage pie, brown sugar smoked ham, and a trio of desserts to choose from, including carrot cake ice cream sandwiches with ginger ice cream and lime caramel dipping sauce. Reservations: 333-1224. The Peabody will be having its annual Easter brunch (10:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m., $22 for children 5 to 12, $64 adults). This is a massive feed with 100s of dishes to choose from and a 32-foot-long dessert table. Reservations: 529-4183.

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

L’Ecole Class, etc.

• Teach a man to fish and you feed him for a lifetime. Teach a man to how to make fish pudding … well, that’s something else all together. 

On Friday, Chef Emmett Bell will lead a “Fish on Friday” class at L’Ecole Culinaire. Bell, a former chef at Calvary, home of the famous Lenten Waffle Shop, will teach students how to cook fish to perfection and will recreate the Waffle Shop’s fish pudding. 

The class is Friday, March 20th, 6-9 p.m. Cost is $95 per person. 

More info here

Another Broken Egg Cafe, a Southern-style breakfast chain, opens its first memphis restaurant on Monday, March 30th. On Friday, March 27th, 9 a.m.-1 p.m. it’s holding a preview event benefiting St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital. 

Reservations are recommended: 759-7020.

• Food Truck Fridays returns to the Dixon, starting with a “Sneak Peek” Friday, March 27th, 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. 

The trucks on site that day will be Fresh Gulf Shrimp, Fuel, and Memphis Dawgs.