Posts Tagged ‘Visiting St. Helena Island SC’

Lowcountry Store to Host the 7th Annual Lowcountry Arts Festival at Frogmore on St. Helena Island, SC – Nov. 1, 2014

September 30, 2014

Frogmore’s Lowcountry Store, located at 736 Sea Island Parkway in St. Helena Island, SC, is hosting the 7th Annual Lowcountry Arts Festival at the Lowcountry Store from 10am-4pm on Saturday, Nov. 1, 2014.

Many of the Lowcountry’s finest Artisans will be on site with their art, photography, woodwork, sculptures, fine crafts, quilting, pottery, basket weaving, stained glass, jewelry, local foods and other fine arts.  The 2013 Festival featured 24 of the Lowcountry’s finest artisans and this year’s program will feature many returnees and some talented newcomers.

Our past Festivals have been exceptionally well attended.  It is a unique opportunity to meet and talk to the artists, craftsmen, growers and producers and view demonstrations as well as discuss and purchase unique works of art from the Artisan personally.  Many artists our able to customize pieces and we have found that those attending get a first-hand look at the remarkable abilities of these artists from the Lowcountry and an interesting perspective of the features of the Lowcountry of South Carolina.

Local Musicians will be performing and Lowcountry Foods with Gumbo, Tomato Pie, Frogmore Stew, Pimento Cheese and other Lowcountry Favorites will be available.

All local artists, woodworkers and craftsman are welcome to participate.  Applications are available by at Frogmore’s Lowcountry Store, via e-mail at (info@lowcountrystore.com) or by calling 843/838-4646.

Frogmore’s Lowcountry Store on St. Helena Island, SC, to Host the 6th Annual Lowcountry Arts Festival – Nov. 2, 2013

October 4, 2013

Frogmore’s Lowcountry Store, located at 736 Sea Island Parkway in St. Helena Island, SC, is hosting the 6th Annual Lowcountry Arts Festival at the Lowcountry Store from 10am to 4pm on Saturday, Nov. 2, 2013.

Many of the Lowcountry’s finest artisans will be on site with their art, photography, woodwork, sculptures, fine crafts, quilting, pottery, basket weaving, stained glass, jewelry, local foods and other fine arts.  The 2012 Festival featured 39 of the Lowcountry’s finest artisans and this year’s program will feature many returnees and some talented newcomers.

Our past festivals have been exceptionally well attended.  It is a unique opportunity to meet and talk to the artists, craftsmen, growers and producers and view demonstrations as well as discuss and purchase unique works of art from the artisan personally. Many artists our able to customize pieces and we have found that those attending get a first-hand look at the remarkable abilities of these artists from the Lowcountry and an interesting perspective of the features of the Lowcountry of South Carolina.

Local musicians will be performing and Lowcountry foods with gumbo, tomato pie, Frogmore stew, pimento cheese and other Lowcountry favorites will be available.

All local artists, woodworkers and craftsman are welcome to participate.  Applications are available at Frogmore’s Lowcountry Store, via e-mail at (info@lowcountrystore.com) or by calling 843/838-4646.

Red Piano Too Art Gallery on St. Helena Island, SC, Honors Charles Desaussure Passing with Summer Show

July 31, 2013

A great tree recently fell in the world of Lowcountry art.  Artist, Charles Desaussure, died in the Charleston (SC) Veterans Hospital on July 16, 2013. Desaussure had been an artist at the Red Piano Too Art Gallery for twenty years.

This year the gallery is dedicating the twentieth annual “August Summer Show” on August 3, 2013 to the memory of Charles Desaussure. Desaussure attended every year.  He always took up residence on the front porch of the gallery setting up his paints, easels, and supplies. He loved people, especially young people, he encouraged them to paint as they gathered around to watch him work. Desaussure often supplied them materials so they could draw too. He encouraged them by saying, “Go where the spirit leads you.”

Becky Kiester, gallery staff, recalls how Desaussure loved Charmaine Inabinett’s Pistachio Cake, which she sells on the porch during shows. It is a gallery memory that Inabinett had to make Desaussure his own cake. That way he could have some whenever he wanted and didn’t have to constantly send a child to get him another piece of cake.  While reflecting on Desaussure and his life we remembered his vintage navy blue Mercedes. He loved that car!   As he would chill at the gallery he would often take time to give the car a wipe so it looked just as good going to Charleston as it did coming to St. Helena.

Desaussure, an Air Force veteran, had an easy and open manner. People immediately liked him and wanted to get to know him better. He enjoyed “just chillin’ and meetin’ the folk” as he relaxed on the swing at the gallery. Born in Yemassee, SC, his family moved to President Street in Charleston, where he grew up. Early on Desaussure was interested in art, the world around him was rich in Gullah culture. The urban influence was emerging in his work with paintings of Juke Joints, musicians, street vendors, sweetgrass gathering, and sweetgrass basket sewers chatting happily in the Charleston market. Almost every painting Desaussure created in the beginning had the old Cooper River Bridge in the background. Once he told us that he played under the bridge as a boy, marbles, basketball, bike riding, skateboarding, and chasing the little girls with fiddler crabs. In addition to work on canvas and paper, Desaussure was a skilled sign painter and muralist.  His signs and murals are on many buildings throughout the Lowcountry and Washington, DC. He painted the signs on the Red Piano Too building. “Ravenel Seafood” on US 17 in Ravenel, SC, boasts a mural by Desaussure. He was working on a sign for a business on King Street in Charleston when he became ill, went to the hospital and died.

Desaussure was very proud of the logo he designed for the US Naval Clinic in Charleston. He received special recognition at the dedication. More recently he was chosen to create the art for the 2013 Charleston Moja Festival held in Charleston.

Desaussure’s art is in collections all over the world. South Carolina artist, Jonathan Green owns work by him. Rolling Stone guitarist, Kieth Richards owns, “WEST 59th STREET”, a painting of a musician which captures the essence of the urban jazz scene.

This man, Charles Desaussure,  was very dear to us as a friend and as a great talent in the world of the self-taught Southern artist. He will be missed greatly. He will be missed by his family, his friends, his collectors. His extended family at the Red Piano Too will never forget him.

The Red Piano Too “August Summer Show” will be held on Saturday, Aug. 3, 2013 from 10am to 5pm. The tribute is free and open to the public. The gallery has created a display of works by Charles.  Please join us as we celebrate our friend and fellow artist.

For further info call the gallery at 843/838-2241 or visit (www.Redpianotoo.com).

Red Piano Too Art Gallery on St Helena Island, SC, will Offer Book Signing with Jonathan Green

April 20, 2013

Lowcountry artist Jonathan Green will be at the Red Piano Too Art Gallery on St Helena Island, SC, signing the newly released book “Seeking”, on May 17, 2013, from 1:30 – 3:30pm.  “Seeking” is a compilation of poetry and praise inspired by the art of Jonathan Green. Twenty-nine different authors and poets were inspired to write about paintings by Green.

413red-piano-book

Edited by Kwame Dawes and Majory Wentworth, this collection features sixteen color paintings by Green in addition to a preface on the history of the project, information on the painting “Seeking”, and an artist’s statement.

A prolific author and editor in myriad genres, Kwame Dawes has written sixteen collections of poetry, most recently “Back of Mount Peace and Wheels”.  Dawes won an Emmy Award for his poetry and reporting on HIV/AIDS in his native Jamaica, and he is also the recipient of a Pushcart Prize, the Forward Poetry Prize, and the Hollis Summer Poetry Prize.  Dawes is the Glenna Luschei Editor of Prairie Schooner and a Chancellor’s Professor of English at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.

South Carolina Poet Laureate Majory Wentworth’s poems have been nominated for the Pushcart Prize four times.  Her collections of poetry include “Noticing Eden”, “Despite Gravity”, “What the Water Gives Me”, and “The Endless Repetition of an Ordinary Miracle”. Wentworth is also the author of an award-winning children’s book, “Shackles”, and of “Taking a Stand: The Evolution of Human Rights”, with Juan E. Mendez.

In the preface of the book Wentworth writes: “This book demonstrates the inherent power of one painting to communicate universal feelings and experiences that unite us all. Jonathan Green’s infectious excitement for the arts and his passion for collaboration are embodied by this project.  His painting ‘Seeking’ deeply touches everyone who sees it, and the stories and poems created in response articulate much of the shared experience…. By bringing people together in celebration, once again Jonathan reminds us that we are not alone on our spiritual journey.”

The best art has the uncanny ability not only to give pleasure to those who view it but also to lead to a desire to respond. The best artists are a force for all art, and renowned Gullah artist Jonathan Green’s work has inspired a wide range of responses from artists around the world. In “Seeking”we see how Green’s art prompts works of poetry, prose, and memoir. “Seeking’s” evocative power lies in the intimacy of this dialogue, which speaks to the shared sense of landscape and culture that Green stirs in these writers, ranging from close friends and fellow artists from his home state of South Carolina to nationally established authors who regard Green’s work as an important cultural institution.

The contributors have allowed themselves to be challenged by Green’s brilliance, his honesty, his intense spirituality, and his deep love of people. Inspired by a personal quest toward induction into a spiritual community, Green’s painting “Seeking” is rich with history, myth, and truth. The writers in this collection have found fertile ground for their own responses to Green’s work, and the result is an engaging and enlivening chorus of celebratory voices.

Accompanying Green at the signing will be Saint Helena Island resident and author of “Amadeus the Leghorn Rooster”, Deloris B. Nevils. She is also one of the contributors to “Seeking.”

Commenting on the book, American poet and Virginia Tech professor Nikki Giovanni wrote: “Art is as necessary as wine to our happiness. Each has a special place and, properly used, makes our days more gentle, our touch more loving, our loving more perfect. Jonathan Green and poems are challenge and caress; query and conclusion; that which is sought and SEEKING. We bath in and drink this water. We watch it unfurl. It is so refreshing. We exhale.”

In further comments, Simmons College, Michael Weaver wrote: “The writings in ‘Seeking’ celebrate the visionary art of Jonathan Green, a member of the Gullah culture whose body of work affirms the sacred and the spiritual as spaces that are alive. In the Gullah culture, a pilgrimage into the world of nature evokes God’s presence in the dreams of the seeker, and the poems and prose works in this collection celebrate that journey, that faith, and that hope. Inspired by Green, the writers in this collection take us back time and again to the scared place in our interiors. The world of nature is a dwelling place for the divine that lives both inside us and outside of us. The dangers lie everywhere, according to Green’s work, but so do the signals of how to cherish the ‘ways of being’ that account for resilience. This is a tender collection marked by what inspired it, an abiding faith in the beauty of what is in the woods and the truthfulness of what the woods are.”

Gallery owner, Mary Inabinett Mack said, “We are extremely pleased to have Jonathan come to the Red Piano Too and sign his book.” The signing is free and open to the public. Try not to miss this extraordinary opportunity to meet a nationally recognized artist and lowcountry native Jonathan Green.

For information call the gallery at 843/838-2241 or e-mail to (Redpianotoo@islc.net).

Lowcountry Store in St. Helena Island, SC, to Host the 5th Annual Lowcountry Arts Festival at Frogmore – Nov. 3, 2012

October 2, 2012

Frogmore’s Lowcountry Store, located at 736 Sea Island Parkway in St. Helena Island, SC, is hosting the 5th Annual Lowcountry Arts Festival at the Lowcountry Store from 10am-4pm on Saturday, Nov. 3, 2012.

Many of the Lowcountry’s finest artisans will be on site with their art, photography, woodwork, sculptures, fine crafts, quilting, pottery, basket weaving, stained glass, jewelry, local foods and other fine arts. The 2011 Festival featured 37 of the Lowcountry’s finest artisans and this year’s program will feature many returnees and some talented newcomers.

Our past Festivals have been exceptionally well attended.  It is a unique opportunity to meet and talk to the artists, craftsmen, growers and producers and view demonstrations as well as discuss and purchase unique works of art from the artisan personally. Many artists our able to customize pieces and we have found that those attending get a first-hand look at the remarkable abilities of these artists from the Lowcountry and an interesting perspective of the features of the Lowcountry of South Carolina.

Local Musicians will be performing and Lowcountry foods with gumbo, tomato pie, frogmore stew, pimento cheese and other Lowcountry favorites will be available.

All local artists, woodworkers and craftsman are welcome to participate.  Applications are available by at Frogmore’s Lowcountry Store, via e-mail at (info@lowcountrystore.com) or by calling 843/838-4646.

 

 

 

Frogmore’s Lowcountry Store on St. Helena Island, SC, to Host the 4th Annual Lowcountry Art Festival – Nov. 5, 2011

October 4, 2011

Frogmore’s Lowcountry Store, located at 736 Sea Island Parkway in St. Helena Island, SC, is hosting the 4th Annual Lowcountry Arts Festival at the Lowcountry Store from 10am to 4pm on Saturday, Nov. 5, 2011.

Many of the Lowcountry’s finest Artisans will be on site with their art, photography, woodwork, sculptures, fine crafts, quilting, pottery, basket weaving, stained glass, jewelry, local foods and other fine arts. The 2010 Festival featured 32 of the Lowcountry’s finest artisans and this year’s program will feature many returnees and some talented newcomers.

Our past Festivals have been exceptionally well attended.  It is a unique opportunity to meet and talk to the artists, craftsmen, growers and producers and view demonstrations as well as discuss and purchase unique works of art from the artisan personally. Many artists our able to customize pieces and we have found that those attending get a first-hand look at the remarkable abilities of these artists from the Lowcountry and an interesting perspective of the features of the Lowcountry of South Carolina.

Local musicians will be performing and Lowcountry foods with gumbo, Frogmore stew, pimento cheese and other Lowcountry favorites will be available.

All local artists, woodworkers and craftsman are welcome to participate. Applications are available by at Frogmore’s Lowcountry Store, via e-mail at (info@lowcountrystore.com) or by calling 843/838-4646.