september 2015, nashville arts magazine

116

Upload: nashville-arts-magazine

Post on 23-Jul-2016

231 views

Category:

Documents


6 download

DESCRIPTION

This month's cover is our very own Nancy (comic strip)​ drawn by Guy Gilchrist​.

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine
Page 2: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine
Page 3: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine
Page 4: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

DOWNTOWN NASHVILLE5TH AVENUE OF THE ARTS

Word of MouthNew Works by

ELIZABETH WINNEL

September 5–30, 2015

The Rymer Gallery / 233 Fifth Avenue / Nashville 37219615.752.6030 / www.therymergallery.com

THE RYMER GALLERY

First Saturday Art Crawl Downtown 9th Anniversary

Rymer_0915.indd 1 8/19/15 3:25 PMSept2015.indd 4 8/20/15 4:55 PM

Page 5: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

DOWNTOWN NASHVILLE5TH AVENUE OF THE ARTS

Word of MouthNew Works by

ELIZABETH WINNEL

September 5–30, 2015

The Rymer Gallery / 233 Fifth Avenue / Nashville 37219615.752.6030 / www.therymergallery.com

THE RYMER GALLERY

First Saturday Art Crawl Downtown 9th Anniversary

Rymer_0915.indd 1 8/19/15 3:25 PMSept2015.indd 5 8/20/15 4:55 PM

Page 6: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

TM

Nashville Arts Magazine is a monthly publication by St. Claire Media Group, LLC. This publication is free, one per reader. Removal of more than one magazine from any distribution point constitutes theft, and violators are subject to prosecution. Back issues are available at our office for free, or by mail for $5.05 a copy. Email: All email addresses consist of the employee’s first name followed by @nashvillearts.com; to reach contributing writers, email [email protected]. Editorial Policy: Nashville Arts Magazine covers art, news, events, entertainment, and culture in Nashville and surrounding areas. The views and opinions expressed in the magazine do not necessarily represent those of the publisher. Subscriptions: Subscriptions are available at $45 per year for 12 issues. Please note: Due to the nature of third-class mail and postal regulations, issues could be delayed by as much as two or three weeks. There will be no refunds issued. Please allow four to six weeks for processing new subscriptions and address changes. Call 615.383.0278 to order by phone with your Visa or Mastercard number.

EDITORIAL & ADVERTISING OFFICES644 West Iris Drive, Nashville, TN 37204

615-383-0278

ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT Cindy Acuff, Keith Wright

615-383-0278

DISTRIBUTION Wouter Feldbusch, Peyton Lester

SUBSCRIPTIONS AND CUSTOMER SERVICE 615-383-0278

BUSINESS OFFICE Pam Ferrell, Adrienne Thompson

40 Burton Hills Boulevard, Nashville, TN 37215

PUBLISHED BY THE ST. CLAIRE MEDIA GROUPCharles N. Martin, Jr., Chairman

Paul Polycarpou, PresidentEd Cassady, Les Wilkinson, Directors

www.facebook.com/NashvilleArts

www.twitter.com/NashvilleArts

www.pinterest.com/NashvilleArts

SOCIAL MEDIA

CONTACT INFORMATION

EDITORIALPAUL POLYCARPOU

Editor and CEO [email protected]

SARA LEE BURD Executive Editor and Online Editor

[email protected] PIERCE

Education Editor and Staff Writer [email protected]

MADGE FRANKLIN Copy Editor

EDITORIAL INTERNSJENNIFER HARTSELL

Harding UniversityKEELEY HARPER

Belmont UniversityDESIGN

TRACEY STARCK Design DirectorADVERTISINGCINDY ACUFF

[email protected] WRIGHT

[email protected]

COLUMNSEMME NELSON BAXTER Paint the Town

MARSHALL CHAPMAN Beyond Words

JENNIFER COLE State of the Arts

LINDA DYER Appraise It

RACHAEL McCAMPBELL And So It Goes

JOE NOLAN Critical i

ANNE POPE Tennessee Roundup

JIM REYLAND Theatre Correspondent

MARK W. SCALA As I See It

JUSTIN STOKES Film ReviewTONY YOUNGBLOOD Art in Formation

www.nashvillearts.com

Sept2015.indd 6 8/20/15 4:55 PM

Page 7: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

©Mandy Rogers Horton

©Edward Belbusti ©Jodi Hays ©Christine Patterson ©Brother Mel

5TH AVENUE OF THE ARTS • DOWNTOWN NASHVILLE

Fall Art Season 2015Opening September 5, 6-9 pm, during First Saturday Art Crawl Downtown

September 5

October 3

October 3 November 7 December 5

215 5th Ave of the Arts N. • 615.254.2040 • www.theartscompany.comFresh. Original. Contemporary.

Sept2015.indd 7 8/20/15 4:55 PM

Page 8: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

8 | September 2015 NashvilleArts.com

on the cover: Guy Gilchrist, Original drawing for

Nashville Arts Magazine Article on page 28

COLUMNS

eptember

FEATURES

2O1512 Spotlights

18 Crawl Guide

20 Brunk Auctions

28 Guy Gilchrist

34 Donna Rizzo Customs House Museum

36 Kelly Corcoran Q&A

43 Susan DeMay and Edward Belbusti The Arts Company

46 Jim House

54 Abstract Nashville by David Morel

58 Soo Sunny Park Cheekwood Courtyard Gallery

60 Thomas Dodd and Gwil Owen Corvidae Collective

64 Patrick Brien Cumberland Gallery

68 Baldwin Lee Tennessee Arts Commission Gallery

74 Josephine Sculpture Park Frankfort, Kentucky

80 Light Meander

82 Williamson Medical Center

5 t h Av e n u e o f t h e A r t sDowntown nAshville

237 5TH AVENUE NORTH | NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE | 615.255.7816 | WWW.TINNEYCONTEMPORARY.COM

HOURS: TUESDAY - SATURDAY, 11 AM - 5 PM, AND BY APPOINTMENT.

SEPTEMBER 5 - SEPTEMBER 26, 2015

TINNEY CONTEMPORARY

OBSERVATIONS, INTEGRATIONS, PAREIDOLIA, AND POLYSEMY

NEW WORK BY JAMES PERRIN

42 5th Avenue Under the Lights

67 As I See It by Mark W. Scala

71 And So It Goes by Rachael McCampbell

78 Symphony in Depth

86 Public Art by Van Gill Maravalli

88 Critical i by Joe Nolan

90 Art & the Business of Art Arts & Business Council of Greater Nashville

92 Art in Formation by Tony Youngblood

93 Film Review by Justin Stokes

94 Theatre

96 The Bookmark Hot Books and Cool Reads

97 Backstage with Studio Tenn

98 Art Smart by Rebecca Pierce

104 Art See

108 NPT

113 Beyond Words by Marshall Chapman

114 My Favorite Painting

60

46

68

98

20

43

80

S

Sept2015.indd 8 8/21/15 2:59 PM

Page 9: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

5 t h Av e n u e o f t h e A r t sDowntown nAshville

237 5TH AVENUE NORTH | NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE | 615.255.7816 | WWW.TINNEYCONTEMPORARY.COM

HOURS: TUESDAY - SATURDAY, 11 AM - 5 PM, AND BY APPOINTMENT.

SEPTEMBER 5 - SEPTEMBER 26, 2015

TINNEY CONTEMPORARY

OBSERVATIONS, INTEGRATIONS, PAREIDOLIA, AND POLYSEMY

NEW WORK BY JAMES PERRIN

Sept2015.indd 9 8/20/15 4:55 PM

Page 10: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

Art Creates a CityPUBLISHER'S NOTE

Paul Polycarpou Publisher

2104 Crestmoor Road in Green HillsNashville, TN 37215Hours: Mon-Fri 9:30 to 5:30Sat 9:30 to 5:00Phone: 615-297-3201www.bennettgalleriesnashville.com

Judy Shreve

He is the Only One Who Could Make Her Feel the Magic, 12" x 12"

Featuring

September CuStom Framing Sale

Tell a friend and you both receive

20% off!

15% Off All Orders

Bennett_0915.indd 1 8/18/15 2:33 PM

I love to travel. And there is nowhere that I enjoy more than Italy. I love the food, the art, the architecture, the museums, the clothes, the cars, and on and on. Last year I

found myself in a little Tuscan village called Vagliagli, not far from Vinci where centuries ago their favorite son, Leonardo, was busy changing the world’s understanding of art and science. I was staying in a fifteenth-century farmhouse with views that could easily have provided the backdrop for the Mona Lisa. Each morning, along with the best cup of coffee in existence, I watched a laborer across the way building a stone wall around his property. He would pick up each stone, brush it off, examine it, put it in place, remove it, pick up another, and try the same process over and over until he found the perfect stone. He would then cement it in place, stand back, and admire his handiwork from every conceivable angle. I watched him for two weeks, and I can tell you that progress was hardly noticeable. I wondered how they could possibly afford to do this. I started figuring out the cost based on an hourly wage and concluded that at this rate the wall would cost millions. 

Back in the States, I was having dinner with an Italian friend, and I told him all about this incredible old farm house where I stayed and the beautiful, panoramic views over the Tuscan hills. And then I told him about this laborer building this wall and my fascination with the mathematics surrounding its completion. How on earth, I asked, could they afford to work like this, and was that work ethic common throughout the country. He told me that in Italian they have a saying, I progressi sono la rovina dell ’uminatà, that roughly translates to progress is death. I told him that’s ridiculous and that progress is vital to every civilization. He paused for a minute and asked me to tell him again about the farmhouse where I had stayed. I repeated that it was incredible and that it had been built in the fifteenth century. And then he just stared at me and waited for the penny to drop.

The view across Vagliagli, Italy

Sept2015.indd 10 8/20/15 4:55 PM

Page 11: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

Sept2015.indd 11 8/20/15 4:55 PM

Page 12: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

12 | September 2015 NashvilleArts.com

Tennessee Craft (formerly known as TACA) has been an artist-driven, non-profit organization nurturing

the craft traditions since 1965. With more than 600 members throughout the state, its mission has always been to support Tennessee’s craft makers and connect them with their audience through fairs, exhibitions, and educational programs. Forty-five to fifty thousand discerning craft lovers from around the U.S. attend Nashville’s Spring and Fall Craft Fairs each year. “The Tennessee Craft Fair represents an ongoing romance with the hand made,” said Virginia Fisher, a first-year exhibitor whose work combines metalsmithing with fiber techniques. “It has a great reputation for placing emphasis on the art, unlike other shows where you’re competing with babies performing tap routines on stage.” Married potters Dale and Brin Baucum met at the Tennessee Craft Fair forty-three years ago. “We have repeat customers three generations deep,” Dale said. “Exhibiting at the fair is like getting together with family and friends.” Woodturner Richard Dwyer, who began exhibiting in 2010, won the Best Emerging

Artist award that year. “What’s not to like?” he said. “The show is just the right size, has a great vibe, attracts a lot of people who are educated in the craft arts, and it’s beautifully organized. The way they have it set up, the way it runs, and how it ’s administered is phenomenal. It’s a pleasure for both exhibitors and attendees.” Teri Alea, the Executive Director of Tennessee Craft, is committed to making the fairs relevant to upcoming generations o f exhib i t ing a r t i s t s . “More young craftspeople are exhibiting this year,” said Alea. “We have a Master/Artist Apprentice Program in partnership with the Tennessee Ar t s Commis s ion tha t encourage s emerging makers to learn traditional and contemporary skills f rom master-level crafters. Passing on this knowledge will ensure that new talent will be a continuing part of our community.” September 25 to 27, two hundred juried exhibitors will have their works on display at the Fall Tennessee Craft Fair. Come celebrate Tennessee’s fifty-year love affair with finely wrought objects, ardently made by hand. For more information, please vis i t www.TennesseeCraft.org.

The Fall Tennessee Craft Fair

Fifty & FabulousCentennial Park • September 25–27

by Sally Schloss

Virginia Fisher Daniela Ovtcharov Charles Pinckney

Dale and Brin Baucum Chris McCarthy Jack Charney Dale Strand

Richard Dwyer

WRIGHTTAD LAURITZENinstructions included

DAVID LUSK GALLERYDLG

516 Hagan . Wedgewood/Houston, Nashville . davidluskgallery.com

SEP 2015

DLG_NashvilleArts_AD.indd 37 8/12/15 11:24 PM

Sept2015.indd 12 8/20/15 4:55 PM

Page 13: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

WRIGHTTAD LAURITZENinstructions included

DAVID LUSK GALLERYDLG

516 Hagan . Wedgewood/Houston, Nashville . davidluskgallery.com

SEP 2015

DLG_NashvilleArts_AD.indd 37 8/12/15 11:24 PM

Sept2015.indd 13 8/20/15 4:55 PM

Page 14: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

mobile: 615-330-3051 • office: 615-250-7880 • [email protected]

NASHVILLE’S REAL ESTATE SIGN OF DISTINCTION

40 Burton Hills Blvd., Suite 230 • (615) 250-7880 Worthproperties.com

GNAR Award of Excellence Life Member and 9 time Diamond Award Recipient “It’s worth a call to Laura Baugh. I’m never too busy for you!”

3106 DEL RIO PIKE • $1,150,0006513 RADCLIFFE DR • $1,249,000

4509 BALLOW LANE • $1,129,000

31 GOVERNORS WAY • $2,480,000

221 ARROWHEAD RD • $1,139,000 105 HAVERING CHASE• $999,000

815 TYNE BLVD • $1,198,000

5613 OTTERSHAW CT • $1,379,000

25 GOVERNORS WAY • $2,100,000

2017 JOHN J CT • $1,698,000 9276 WARDLEY PARK LN • $1,388,0004124 WALLACE LN • $1,299,000

55 GOVERNORS WAY • $6,450,000

4025 NESTLEDOWN DR • $2,599,000

SOLD

Estate Homes

2828 SAWYER BEND RD • $1,898,000

4505 BALLOW LANE• $1,149,000

410 ST EDMUNDS COURT • $3,860,000170 CHICKERING MEADOWS • $3,659,000

NEW

PRIC

E

SOLD

NEW PR

ICE

101 CHERRY BRANCH LN • $2,295,000

NEW

LISTIN

G

9539 SUNBEAM CT • $1,980,000NEW

LIS

TING

SOLD

NEW PR

ICE

Worth_0915.indd 2-3 8/17/15 9:52 AMSept2015.indd 14 8/20/15 4:55 PM

Page 15: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

mobile: 615-330-3051 • office: 615-250-7880 • [email protected]

NASHVILLE’S REAL ESTATE SIGN OF DISTINCTION

40 Burton Hills Blvd., Suite 230 • (615) 250-7880 Worthproperties.com

GNAR Award of Excellence Life Member and 9 time Diamond Award Recipient “It’s worth a call to Laura Baugh. I’m never too busy for you!”

3106 DEL RIO PIKE • $1,150,0006513 RADCLIFFE DR • $1,249,000

4509 BALLOW LANE • $1,129,000

31 GOVERNORS WAY • $2,480,000

221 ARROWHEAD RD • $1,139,000 105 HAVERING CHASE• $999,000

815 TYNE BLVD • $1,198,000

5613 OTTERSHAW CT • $1,379,000

25 GOVERNORS WAY • $2,100,000

2017 JOHN J CT • $1,698,000 9276 WARDLEY PARK LN • $1,388,0004124 WALLACE LN • $1,299,000

55 GOVERNORS WAY • $6,450,000

4025 NESTLEDOWN DR • $2,599,000

SOLD

Estate Homes

2828 SAWYER BEND RD • $1,898,000

4505 BALLOW LANE• $1,149,000

410 ST EDMUNDS COURT • $3,860,000170 CHICKERING MEADOWS • $3,659,000

NEW

PRIC

E

SOLD

NEW PR

ICE

101 CHERRY BRANCH LN • $2,295,000

NEW

LISTIN

G

9539 SUNBEAM CT • $1,980,000

NEW

LISTIN

G

SOLD

NEW PR

ICE

Worth_0915.indd 2-3 8/17/15 9:52 AMSept2015.indd 15 8/20/15 4:55 PM

Page 16: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

16 | September 2015 NashvilleArts.com

Jim McGuire’s Nashville Portraits Willow Plunge Art in the Factory at Franklin

September 23 to October 24

For his show The Nashville Portraits, venerable photographer Jim McGuire hand selected approximately twenty pieces from his extensive body of work. Half of them are well-known, favorite black-and-white images, such as his iconic shot of the Ryman Auditorium. The other images on view have never been shown or published before now and include two very rare color images of Waylon Jennings and Earl Scruggs. McGuire will be on hand during an opening reception on September 23 from 6 until 9 p.m.To see more of McGuire’s work, visit www.Nashvilleportraits.com. For more information, visit Willow Plunge Art on Facebook.

OPENINGS IN SEPTEMBERObservations, Integrations, Pareidolia, and Polysemy

New Work by James PerrinTinney Contemporary • September 5 to 26

Meet James Perrin and see his latest work during an opening reception at Tinney Contemporary on September 5 from 6 until 9 p.m. According to the artist, the paintings in this exhibit shows his unique perspective blending “images and ideas derived from shopping mall interiors, Caribbean beaches, women’s dresses, Walmart interiors, renderings from paintings by Giotto, Masaccio, Enguerrand Quarton, Fra Angelico, and segments from my previous work.” Integrating these pictorial elements and employing a combination of several methods of painting, this dynamic new body of work speaks to our state of being, environments, and experiences. For more, visit www.tinneycontemporary.com and www.jameswperrin.com.

Sam Dunson’s Meet the FergusonsVanderbilt Divinity School Gallery • September 17 to November 12

Sam Dunson’s exhibition title Meet the Fergusons refers to the events that transpired in Ferguson, Missouri, last year. Dunson describes the show as his response to “the unfortunate deteriorating relationship between police and black communities.” He

maintains that he is not trying to create solutions to the problems.“In the end I would like the viewers of the works to understand that it will take work from both sides of the relationship to solve the problem. This is a given, but it ’s necessary to show that this complex problem, which has been with us since the beginning, will only be solved by each individual checking

the mirror to expose their biases. In this show I am looking in the mirror.”The gallery in the Divinity School at Vanderbilt University functions as part of the school’s Religion in the Arts and Contemporary Culture program, which explores the relationship between the arts and religion. Meet the Fergusons opens with a reception on September 17 from 3 until 7 p.m. For more, visit www.religionandarts.com.

Recent Paintings: Bill Killebrew and Warren Greene

Cumberland Gallery September 19 to October 17

Bill Killebrew’s first solo exhibition at Cumberland Gallery and Warren Greene’s second opens with an artists’ reception on Saturday, September 19, from 6 until 8 p.m. While their styles are decidedly different, the pairing of their subject matter is quite complementary. Citing Édouard Vuillard and Giorgio Morandi as important influences, Killebrew says his choice of subject is guided by a particular element of light or a distinguishing spatial feature springing from the beauty of daily life seen in his figures, interiors, landscapes, and still lifes. Warren Greene’s paintings can be described as abstracted landscape. He uses a technique in which paint is laid on wood panels, then selectively removed or manipulated.  As Greene describes it, “The layered and scraped surfaces form a kind of corpus, composed of sometimes translucent and other times opaque skins that sometimes hide and other times reveal.”For more, visit www.cumberlandgallery.com.

Polysemic Colossus (detail), 2015, Oil on linen with acrylic resin, plant resin, black pearls, 86” X 96”

Sam Dunson, The Search for Domestic Integrity: Momma, 2015, Mixed media on canvas, 27” x 44”

Bill Killebrew, Then she swept up and had a nap, 2015, Oil on linen, 30” x 54”

Warren Greene, Carpet, 2015, Oil on panel, 36” x 36”

Jim McGuire, Earl Scruggs—1924-2012, 2007, Studio portrait

WHY PAI MEDICAL?- A+ Highest rated hair transplant and

hair treatment practice- Serving Nashville for 20 years- Two board certified hair surgeons- Latest advances in hair transplants and

hair treatments

- Robotic Laser Therapy: Low level laser therapy for those in the early stages of hair loss- Platelet Rich Therapy (PRP): The newest non-surgical treatment for early stages of hair loss- Micro-pigmentation: Non-surgical option for men who enjoy the very short “buzzed” hair style- Multi-Unit Hair Grafting – Our exclusive advanced hair transplant procedure for those looking for the best value in hair transplantation- ARTAS: Robotic Hair Transplants Robotic hair restoration is the world’s most advanced, precise, and pain-free follicular unit hair transplant technology. This minimally invasive outpatient procedure requires no stitches.

PAI Medical Group | 9000 Church Street East - Building B Suite 201, Brentwood, TN. 37027

Call today and receive a free microscopic hair/scalp analysis.

Available exclusively at:WeGrowHair.com/PAI Medical Group in Brentwood, TN.

visit www.WeGrowHair.com615.376.6010615.376.6010800.496.7225800.496.7225800.496.7225 615.376.6010

– PAI Medical Group –

8/19/15 2:59 PMSept2015.indd 16 8/20/15 4:55 PM

Page 17: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

WHY PAI MEDICAL?- A+ Highest rated hair transplant and

hair treatment practice- Serving Nashville for 20 years- Two board certified hair surgeons- Latest advances in hair transplants and

hair treatments

- Robotic Laser Therapy: Low level laser therapy for those in the early stages of hair loss- Platelet Rich Therapy (PRP): The newest non-surgical treatment for early stages of hair loss- Micro-pigmentation: Non-surgical option for men who enjoy the very short “buzzed” hair style- Multi-Unit Hair Grafting – Our exclusive advanced hair transplant procedure for those looking for the best value in hair transplantation- ARTAS: Robotic Hair Transplants Robotic hair restoration is the world’s most advanced, precise, and pain-free follicular unit hair transplant technology. This minimally invasive outpatient procedure requires no stitches.

WeGrowHair.comWeGrowHair.comWeGrowHair.com

PAI Medical Group | 9000 Church Street East - Building B Suite 201, Brentwood, TN. 37027

Call today and receive a free microscopic hair/scalp analysis.

Available exclusively at:WeGrowHair.com/PAI Medical Group in Brentwood, TN.

visit www.WeGrowHair.com615.376.6010615.376.6010800.496.7225800.496.7225800.496.7225 615.376.6010

Our Hair Restoration Options:

– PAI Medical Group –

PAI Medical_0915FB.indd 1 8/19/15 2:59 PMSept2015.indd 17 8/20/15 4:55 PM

Page 18: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

18 | September 2015 NashvilleArts.com

SEPTEMBER CRAWL GUIDE

The Franklin Art Scene Friday, September 4, from 6 until 9 p.m.Gallery 202 is featuring realistic oil painter Melvin Toledo. Jack Yacoubian Fine Jewelry and Art Gallery is hosting concept photographer Penny Felts who will be showing works from a dream-based series of Polaroids shot over the last year. Hope Church Franklin is showing work by plein-air painter Jo Ellen Thatcher. Heylee B is exhibiting images by Joanna Marie Photographie. Historic Franklin Presbyterian Church is presenting works by students of the award-winning watercolorist Shelly Snow. Williamson County Visitors Center is hosting artist John Turner as he unveils new original paintings and drawings. The Registry is showcasing work by painter Ashlyn Joy Anderson.

First Saturday Art Crawl Downtown Saturday, September 5,

from 6 until 9 p.m.The Arts Company is presenting

Constructing Sculptural Forms in Clay by Susan DeMay and Edward Belbusti (see page 43). The Rymer Gallery is exhibiting Word of Mouth, new works by El izabeth W inne l . T i n n e y

Contemporar y is unveiling Obser vations , Integ rat ions ,

Pareidolia, and Polysemy, New Work by James Perrin (see page 16). The Browsing

Room Gallery at Downtown Presbyterian Church is showing

Ideas for Monuments, an exhibition of new work by Lipscomb University Associate Professor of Art Rocky Horton.In the historic Arcade, Corvidae Collective Gallery is featuring The Painterly Photo – the Art of Thomas Dodd, and Trust, a debut exhibition of Gwil Owen’s collage work (see page 60). WAG is exhibiting Always Never Now, collage paintings by Watkins Fine Art alumnus Matt Christy. Watkins College of Art, Design & Film’s new president, J. Kline, Ph.D., will be in attendance. Hannah Lane Gallery is showing new mixed-media works using cows as the subject. COOP Gallery is opening Linda Lopez: Tooth, Bark, and the Laws of Contact, an exhibition of the artist’s investigation into ways of considering the lives, histories, and emotions of the mundane objects we encounter daily. Blend Studio is unveiling The Dream Stage: Work by Sarah Kaufman.Visit Hatch Show Print’s Haley Gallery to view historic restrikes of original posters from the Hatch collection, as well as Master Printer Jim Sherraden’s monoprints, contemporary interpretations and celebrations of the classic wood blocks of Hatch Show Print.

Arts & Music @ Wedgewood/Houston Saturday, September 5, from 6 until 9 p.m.

Zeitgeist unveils Vesna Pavlović’s Lost Art, an exploration of a rch ives a s repos i tor ie s for persona l , soc ia l , and institutional memory. Julia Martin Galler y is featuring Lisa Weiss’s hap.pen.stance, which is about meditation through mark making and the balance between working with expressive forms while maintaining simplicity. CG2 Gallery i s showing Unsolvable Rubik’s Cube by Hydeon, and Recent Works by Peter Adamyan. Ground Floor Gallery is hosting Bricolage, a presentation of gallery artists, including Bobby Becker, Amanda Joy Brown, Zach Gray, Morgan Higby-Flowers, Desiré Hough, Shana Kohnstamm, Jovanni Luna, and Anna Merrill. 444 Humphreys Pop Up is presenting woodwork, metal work, and photography by James Green. Seed Space is exhibiting Voyager One by  David Bowen  and  Kristina Estell in which the artists use  custom software and LED lights to create a physical and sensory link between this incredibly remote object in space and the human experience.

Joanna Marie Photographie – Heylee B

Hannah Lane – Hannah Lane Gallery

Penny Felts – Jack Yacoubian Fine Jewelry and Art Gallery

Linda Lopez – COOP Gallery

K. Randall Wilcox – Refinery Nashville

Sept2015.indd 18 8/20/15 4:55 PM

Page 19: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

NashvilleArts.com September 2015 | 19

(see page 88). Refinery Nashville is showcasing Journeys – Photography by K. Randall Wilcox. See paintings by Megan Cosby in an exhibit hosted by Red Arrow Gallery at Atelier Upton Salon. Infinity Cat Recordings is featuring drawings by Mikie Poland. Fort Houston is exhibiting surrealistic mixed-media work by Leah Sawyer.

David Lusk Gallery is unveiling Instructions Included by Tad Lauritzen Wright, new paintings, sculptures, and drawings taking inspiration from environmental causes with a bit of humor added. Channel to Channel is showing Channels to Figuration, oil paintings by Michael Poindexter exploring the relationship of live figure painting to the progression of style. Sherrick & Paul is presenting G rays the Mounta in Sends , photography by Bryan Schutmaat

(opening September 10). The Packing Plant is opening a show of work by Scott Zieher and Mike Womack (Saturday, September 12).

East Side Art Stumble Saturday, September 12, from 6 until 9 p.m. At DADU Pop Up, COOP Gallery members are presenting a painting fundraiser to support of a series of exhibits for next year. Gallery Lupercal (formerly KT Wolf Gallery) is showcasing An Exercise in Patience by Jon Buko. Main Street Gallery is exhibiting Between Two Cities, work by Macon St. Hilaire. Red Arrow Gallery is hosting a closing reception for Alic Daniel’s Scribble. Sawtooth Print Shop, Main House, and Idea Hatchery are also participating.

HEADLES

S

HORSEMAN

BALLET

HEADLESSHORSEMANBALLET

FRANKBROWNSONG

WRITERSDay 5:y 5ay :a 5:Dayyyay 55ay 55DDaDDaaDaDDjam withwm w hwitmjajaam wj mj m wj wittj ij mm iwija w httitttithhfrank brownfrf bbrannk brfrf a or nkkk brafrr bnaf H

EADLES

S

HORSEMAN

BALLET wnwwnwnnnnnnnowowrorroroobrbroooww

NOV. 6TH

NOV. 17TH- THRU -

pensacola, florida

events ranging from opera & high art, to songwriter music jams and Big Green Egg® BBQ. there’s something for everyone. What will you do?

12 days oF art, culture and shenanigans

foofoofest.com

Tad Lauritzen Wright – David Lusk Gallery

Michael Poindexter – Channel to Channel

Jon Buko – Gallery Lupercal

Vesna Pavlovic – Zeitgeist

Sept2015.indd 19 8/20/15 4:55 PM

Page 20: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

20 | September 2015 NashvilleArts.com

Brunk Auctions, the Asheville, North Carolina-based, family-owned auction house has been conducting sales in the fast-paced, high-end art and antique auction market for over thirty years. Sarah Sperling, who grew up

in Nashville, has been named to run the newly established Nashville operation. Auctions are currently held live in Brunk’s salesroom but are attended, via phone and Internet, by bidders from around the world. Brunk’s intention is to begin holding live auctions in Nashville in the near future. Brunk Auctions has represented numerous individuals, museums, and galleries at auction and with private sales, including deaccessioned items from museum collections. Brunk has handled property of a number of prominent American families including the Dukes and

Rockefellers as well as Nashville locals Dr. and Mrs. Benjamin Caldwell and Dr. and Mrs. Laurence Grossman.

As the Director of Nashville Operations, Sperling assists individuals, estate executors, and museums in consigning their items (art, antiques, etc.) to Brunk Auctions. One of the things she enjoys most about her job is walking clients and potential clients through the process. She also helps collectors, buyers, and potential buyers navigate purchasing at auction.

With a degree in art history and a master’s in decorative arts history from Parsons School of Design, Sperling became drawn to the fast pace of the arts and antiques auction world. She worked at both Sotheby’s and Christie’s during her twelve years in New York.

Brunk Auctions Brings the Hammer Down in Nashville

by Linda Leaming

SOLD!William Edmondson, Carved BirdbathChilde Hassam, Dockside Gloucester, Massachusetts, Oil on canvas

Sept2015.indd 20 8/20/15 5:37 PM

Page 21: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

NashvilleArts.com September 2015 | 21

Over the years, she stayed in touch with her former Christie’s colleagues Andrew and Lauren Brunk. When she moved back to Nashville, their mutual visions to bring Brunk Auctions to Nashville, something they first discussed nearly ten years ago, became a reality.Sperling enjoys being back home in Nashville. “The city has really come of age since I left over twenty years ago,” she says. “I am enjoying old and new friends, as well as being involved with organizations like The Community Foundation, University School, and the Adventure Science Center.“Working in the auction world can be a lot of fun,” she says. “I love the relationships I develop with clients. It can be very personal and emotional to sell and buy items at auction. Each piece has a story. I strive for each item to be successful at auction and to find a new home where it will be appreciated.”  Sperling says that confidentiality is a big part of her job. Some buyers and sellers are public. Others prefer to remain anonymous. “We respect the privacy wishes of

Sarah Sperling

our clients and would never disclose the name of a buyer or consignor without consent,” she says.She admits the greatest excitement comes when a

piece is found to be far more special and valuable than the owner anticipated. It is what Ms. Sperling calls

“the thrill of discovering that lost treasure.” What is one of the most memorable items sold at auction?

Sperling says Brunk sold a beautiful Chinese jade table screen last November for $1.2 million to an Internet bidder. Although the salesroom was filled with bidders, and the auction house was inundated with phone bids, the winning bid came from the Internet. “To bid over $1 million online shows the buyer’s great confidence in Brunk Auctions,” Sperling says.  “It was very exciting. There was an incredible energy in the room.”

Brunk Auctions’ September 11–12 sale will consist of over six hundred lots in two sessions. American

and European paintings highlights include works by Childe Hassam, Félix Ziem, Renato Guttuso, and Clyde Aspevig.

For an online catalogue and full auction calendar, please visit Brunk Auctions at www.brunkauctions.com.

In the manner of John E. Ferneley, Sr. painting

(top) G.W. Stewart, Lexington, KY (working 1843-1852), Rare Coin Silver Ewer Horse Trophy

(above) Platinum and Diamond Double Flower Motif BroochA Group of Tiffany Items

CO

UR

TESY

OF

BRU

NK

AU

CTI

ON

S, N

.C.

Sept2015.indd 21 8/20/15 4:55 PM

Page 22: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

B R O K E R6 1 5 - 6 0 4 - 2 3 2 3 c 6 1 5 - 2 9 2 - 2 6 2 2 o

RICK FRENCH

FRENCHKING.COM

1 Still House Hollow Farms $8,999,000145 acres (additional acreage available)

2 4816 Post Road $3,995,0003 939 Tyne $3,969,0004 5004 Hill Place $2,999,9005 5539 Big East Fork $2,690,000

Historic home, numerous buildings, barn, 97 acres 6 4931 Franklin $2,595,000

1154 Travelers Ridge $2,249,0005173 Colleton Way $1,995,000308 Deerwood $1,950,000 Rick French 604-2323, Cathie Cato Renken 500-8740

13 1504 Cedar $1,790,00014 3821 West End Unit 202 $1,539,00015 100 Bellavista $1,250,000

Rick French 604-2323, Tim King 482-595316 4311 Sunnybrook $1,249,900

Rick French 604-2323, Tim King 482-595317 206 Leonard $1,249,000 18 3631 West End $1,249,000

19 710 Valhalla $1,150,000 20 1769 Hillmont $999,00021 4112 Baldwin Arbor $999,00022 4374 Chickering Lane $799,500

Rick French 604-2323, Tim King 482-595323 4415 Charleston Place $499,90024 4200 West End Unit 205 $429,000

1112

1

2 3

4 5

6 7

8 9

10 11

13

23

12

24

9 3823 Whitland $2,397,00010

14

18

7 110 Lynnwood $2,500,000 8 434 Grayson $2,495,000

Rick French 604-2323, Tim King 482-5953

17 19

21 22

20

15 16

NashvilleArts Ad 24.qxp_Layout 1 8/17/15 11:38 AM Page 1

Sept2015.indd 22 8/20/15 4:55 PM

Page 23: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

B R O K E R6 1 5 - 6 0 4 - 2 3 2 3 c 6 1 5 - 2 9 2 - 2 6 2 2 o

RICK FRENCH

FRENCHKING.COM

1 Still House Hollow Farms $8,999,000145 acres (additional acreage available)

2 4816 Post Road $3,995,0003 939 Tyne $3,969,0004 5004 Hill Place $2,999,9005 5539 Big East Fork $2,690,000

Historic home, numerous buildings, barn, 97 acres 6 4931 Franklin $2,595,000

1154 Travelers Ridge $2,249,0005173 Colleton Way $1,995,000308 Deerwood $1,950,000 Rick French 604-2323, Cathie Cato Renken 500-8740

13 1504 Cedar $1,790,00014 3821 West End Unit 202 $1,539,00015 100 Bellavista $1,250,000

Rick French 604-2323, Tim King 482-595316 4311 Sunnybrook $1,249,900

Rick French 604-2323, Tim King 482-595317 206 Leonard $1,249,000 18 3631 West End $1,249,000

19 710 Valhalla $1,150,000 20 1769 Hillmont $999,00021 4112 Baldwin Arbor $999,00022 4374 Chickering Lane $799,500

Rick French 604-2323, Tim King 482-595323 4415 Charleston Place $499,90024 4200 West End Unit 205 $429,000

1112

1

2 3

4 5

6 7

8 9

10 11

13

23

12

24

9 3823 Whitland $2,397,00010

14

18

7 110 Lynnwood $2,500,000 8 434 Grayson $2,495,000

Rick French 604-2323, Tim King 482-5953

17 19

21 22

20

15 16

NashvilleArts Ad 24.qxp_Layout 1 8/17/15 11:38 AM Page 1

Sept2015.indd 23 8/20/15 4:55 PM

Page 24: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

24 | September 2015 NashvilleArts.com

The 16th annual Americana Music Festival and Conference is around the corner, and there’s plenty to get excited about. With approximately 165 performances scheduled

over a five-day period, there are countless legends to see in action and even more new talent to discover. Joe Pug, Jim Lauderdale, and Lera Lynn are just a few of the names to look out for at Nashville’s best venues: Mercy Lounge, The Basement, City Winery, The Listening Room, and more. But handpicked, undiscovered talent is the true hero of the festival, so be sure to check out as many shows as you can. You won’t regret it. The event used to be exclusive for members, featuring fewer performances with the focus on the conference, but when Jed Hilly came on as the executive director, he opened the event to the public and made it into a festival. “What our fall event does is create a home and a community that didn’t exist before . . . and I guarantee you that any of the clubs playing music will have something that will knock your socks off,” Hilly said. Jim Lauderdale is one of the musicians who found the home early. He’s a veteran musician that had been putting out records decades before the Americana genre was even named, and he performed at the second-ever Americana Music Association (AMA) event. “When this started getting kicked off years ago, I was very pleased that there was a name and a home for these diverse artists to come

together and be recognized,” Lauderdale said. “I view this gathering and coming together of different people as a community that in the short and long run can potentially offer possibilities of positive advancements in artists’ careers.”What makes the festival special is the original intention of the gathering: the conference that goes on during the day. The conference is open to the public, with a discount to members, and is an invaluable way to network within the vast music industry. Hilly pointed out that AMA is here to galvanize the record labels and music industry and isn’t meant to replace it in any way. “We’re an advocacy group. I think we’re important because we can share a voice, and their voice,” Hilly said. If you want to hear five nights of incredible music, even by Nashville’s standards, then this festival is great. But if you are trying to get on your feet in the music industry, it’s even better. “I think the Nashville Arts Magazine readership appreciates the fine art of music, and I think Americana Fest week holds more music to their taste in that one week than the rest of the year,” Hilly said. The Americana Music Festival and Conference is September 15–20 in downtown Nashville and surrounding venues. For more information and to buy tickets, visit www.americanamusic.org.

Americana Music Festivalby Adam Wolnski

Downtown Nashville • September 15–20

ALL

PH

OTO

GR

APH

S B

Y E

RIK

A G

OLD

RIN

G

Buddy Miller and Jim Lauderdale; Band Leader and Host on stage at the Ryman Auditorium during the Americana Honors & Awards Sarah Jarosz

Sara Watkins and Jacob Dylan, presenting during the Americana Honors & Awards

Amos Lee (center stage)

Sept2015.indd 24 8/20/15 4:55 PM

Page 25: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

Sept2015.indd 25 8/20/15 4:55 PM

Page 26: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

thank you!Dear Friends,

It has been my pleasure to serve Middle Tennessee for the last 25 years while managing Lexus of Nashville. As of March 31, 2015, I am no longer associated with the Lexus brand in Tennessee.

I wish to take this opportunity to sincerely thank so many friends I’ve made over these 25 precious years. Thank you for trusting me and being loyal to my efforts both by purchasing cars from me and by supporting the arts and other organizations that I was fortunate to be a part of.

As I contemplated what new chapter in my life I wanted to write, I decided to return to the first sales experience I had as a young sales professional - real estate.

I am proud to announce to all my friends and former customers, I’m now associated with The Lipman Group Sotheby’s International Realty. In addition, I’m thrilled to join “The Roper Group” along with my wife, Joy, and son, Jameson.

It is my sincere intention to offer the same kind of care, integrity, and dedication to my real estate clients that many of you have witnessed from me over the past 25 years.

I truly look forward to hearing from all of my friends at [email protected] or by phone, 615 .347. 5711.

Sincerely,

J.R. RoperJ.R. Roper

Each Office is Independently Owned and Operated.

JR-Roper_0915.indd 1 8/20/15 10:26 AMSept2015.indd 26 8/20/15 4:55 PM

Page 27: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

NashvilleArts.com September 2015 | 27

Frist Center for the Visual Arts

From masterpieces by Francisco de Goya, Peter Paul Rubens, and

Fra Angelico, to early Soviet photography and sexy Italian cars, the Frist Center for the Visual Arts’ 2016 lineup of exhibitions offers a rich variety of artistic expression from antiquity to the twentieth century. The year begins with Treasures from the House of Alba: 500 Years of Art and Collecting. Drawn from one of the oldest private collections in Europe the exhibition brings together more than 130 works of art and features selections by Dürer, Goya, Murillo, Ribera, and Rubens. This is the first major exhibition outside Spain from the collection of the House of Alba, a prominent noble family with ties to the Spanish

monarchy since the fifteenth century. The Power of Pictures: Early Soviet Photography and Film explores how photography, film, and poster art were employed to disseminate Communist ideology and looks at how artists acted as engines of social change. Covering the period from the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution through the 1930s, the exhibit also demonstrates how Soviet photographers played a pivotal role in the history of modern photography.

In late spring, Bellissima! The Italian Automotive Renaissance, 1945–1975 showcases beautifully designed high-performance Italian coach-built cars, concept cars, and motorcycles. Automotive authority and guest curator Ken Gross, curator of the Frist’s 2013 exhibition Sensuous Steel: Art Deco Automobiles, has chosen 18 vehicles and 3 motorcycles by Alfa Romeo, Bizzarrini, Ducati, Ferrari, Lamborghini, Lancia, and Maserati. Women, Art, and Social Change: The Newcomb Pottery Enterprise features glazed ceramics, jewelry, metalwork, and textiles crafted by women artists at Newcomb College, Tulane University’s former women’s college, between 1890 and 1940. What began as an educational experiment flourished into a quasi-commercial venture that offered an opportunity for Southern women to support themselves. Samurai: The Way of the Warrior celebrates the exemplary artistry and craftsmanship of medieval and early modern Japanese artisans, and includes nine full suits of armor, twelve helmets (kabuto), numerous decorated swords (katana), along with beautiful standing screens and lacquer wares.

Rounding out the 2016 offerings are a hypnotic and playful video installation, The Visitors, by Icelandic video and performance artist Ragnar Kjartansson, absurdist films by Dutch ar t i s t G u i d o v a n d e r Wer ve, and paintings by New York artist Inka Essenhigh.

For more information about the 2016 season at the Frist Center for the Visual Arts, visit www.fristcenter.org.

Unveils 2016 Exhibition Lineup thank you!Dear Friends,

It has been my pleasure to serve Middle Tennessee for the last 25 years while managing Lexus of Nashville. As of March 31, 2015, I am no longer associated with the Lexus brand in Tennessee.

I wish to take this opportunity to sincerely thank so many friends I’ve made over these 25 precious years. Thank you for trusting me and being loyal to my efforts both by purchasing cars from me and by supporting the arts and other organizations that I was fortunate to be a part of.

As I contemplated what new chapter in my life I wanted to write, I decided to return to the first sales experience I had as a young sales professional - real estate.

I am proud to announce to all my friends and former customers, I’m now associated with The Lipman Group Sotheby’s International Realty. In addition, I’m thrilled to join “The Roper Group” along with my wife, Joy, and son, Jameson.

It is my sincere intention to offer the same kind of care, integrity, and dedication to my real estate clients that many of you have witnessed from me over the past 25 years.

I truly look forward to hearing from all of my friends at [email protected] or by phone, 615 .347. 5711.

Sincerely,

J.R. RoperJ.R. Roper

Each Office is Independently Owned and Operated.

JR-Roper_0915.indd 1 8/20/15 10:26 AM

1955 Chrysler Ghia Gilda, Collection of Scott Grundfor and Kathleen Redmond, Photograph © 2015 Michael Furman

Francisco de Goya y Lucientes, The Duchess of Alba in White, 1795

Varvara Stepanova, cover of Sovetskoe kino, no. 1, 1927, published in Moscow

Esther Huger Elliot, decorator; Joseph Meyer,

potter, Lamp, ca. 1902

Inka Essenhigh, Green Goddess II, 2009

Sept2015.indd 27 8/20/15 5:37 PM

Page 28: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

by Skip Anderson | Photography by Rory White

A middle-aged man with long dark hair pulled back in a ponytail sits alone at the near end of the sofa in his South Nashville home, figuring out how to make the world a better place. When asked, he says he is a writer by trade. But that’s not the entirety of the truth.

“I’m a writer who hired the cheapest illustrator he could find,” says Guy Gilchrist, who is perhaps best known as the cartoonist entrusted to write and illustrate the venerable comic strip “Nancy.”

Nancy, the orphaned 8-year-old title character, has been making mischief with her best pal, Sluggo, for 77 years now. And little has changed in her world since her creator, Ernie Bushmiller, introduced the precocious butterball in 1938.

Weaving Lessons into the Art of Funny Pages

Guy Gilchrist

Sept2015.indd 28 8/20/15 4:55 PM

Page 29: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

NashvilleArts.com September 2015 | 29

“I’ve knocked a year or two off Aunt Fritzi,” Gilchrist says of how he draws Nancy’s curvaceous caretaker. “But not much else has changed.”

This September marks the 20th anniversary of when Gilchrist and his brother Brad Gilchrist became the strip’s caretakers in 1995. Eventually, Guy took over full responsibility for writing and drawing the syndicated comic strip. Since then, Gilchrist has written and illustrated more than 7,500 “Nancy” comic strips, which he says reach 57 million readers in 80 countries each day.

Gilchrist, who is also a singer/songwriter and a motivational speaker, got his start as a cartoonist in the 1970s for Weekly Reader, a private learning resource made available to schoolchildren. In the early 1980s, Gilchrist caught a career-changing break. He had heard from a friend and mentor, cartoonist Mort Walker, creator of “Beetle Bailey” and “Hi and Lois,” that Jim Henson was having difficulty finding an illustrator for a syndicated comic strip he planned to launch. As part of the evaluation process, Henson’s team for The Muppet Show asked the Gilchrist brothers to submit cartoon strips featuring the various characters from the half-hour variety show, such as the ringmaster Kermit the Frog, the vaudevillian Fozzie Bear, and, of course, the incomparable Miss Piggy.

“”

Then Henson did something that surprised Gilchrist. He raised his hand up and wiggled his fingertips toward the cartoonist’s face and spoke to

him as Kermit the Frog.

Sept2015.indd 29 8/20/15 4:55 PM

Page 30: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

30 | September 2015 NashvilleArts.com

“I went home and drew twenty-five cartoons with jokes in one night and sent them via courier to Manhattan—it cost me an arm and a leg,” he says. “They liked the idea that I wrote.” But the hiring process proved to be slow. “I kept sending stuff in for a year,” Gilchrist says. “I figured until somebody tells me they filled the position, I’d just keep sending stuff in. When they finally called me, I had had the job for a month and nobody had told me!” There was one caveat: Gilchrist still had to interview with the man himself—Jim Henson.

“They brought me to Manhattan, and I stayed at the Waldorf [Astoria Hotel] for a week,” he says. “Jim wasn’t there yet, but I got to see all the Muppets. They gave me a Betamax in 1981—nobody had those back then. And they gave me every Muppet Show on tape, and I could finally freeze-frame all those characters.”

At the end of the week, Henson flew in from London where he was filming The Great Muppet Caper to meet Gilchrist.

“Your drawings were wonderful, and they were really good. But they weren’t great,” Gilchrist says, doing a spot-on Henson impersonation. “And I want them to be great, and you want them to be great.”

Then Henson did something that surprised Gilchrist. He raised his hand up and wiggled his fingertips toward the cartoonist’s face and spoke to him as Kermit the Frog. “I talked with Kermit for a while, then Jim took out a piece of paper and drew his hand. Then he drew Kermit over the drawing

of his hand, and suddenly, I got it—we weren’t drawing black-and-white lines

on a piece of paper; we were drawing personalities and we had to embody all the life and silliness and color and movement that

was The Muppets.”O n e o f t h e m a n y l e s s o n s Gilchrist learned from Henson, whom he calls “an amazing CEO,” is to bring love and

balance to your work.“Jim was a light to the entire world,”

Gilchrist says. “Everything I’ve ever worked on has been with the goal of

making people smile. And there’s never been any hatred in any of the characters I’ve ever worked on—even Statler and Waldorf love Fozzie Bear, even though they heckle him. Every character I’ve ever done, in their own real way, they’re making the world a better place the way God told us to.” For more information about Guy Gilchrist, please visit www.nancyandsluggo.com/guy-gilchrist.

Sept2015.indd 30 8/20/15 4:55 PM

Page 31: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

MORE INFOCALL (615) 686-2867 OR ONLINE

TheNashvilleOktoberfest.com

3 DAYS OF FUNFOR THEWHOLE FAMILY

3 BEER GARDENS

2 VIP TENTSMUSIC STAGES

BATTLE OF THE BANDS

PUP PARADE & DOGTOBERFEST

ANNUAL 5K BIER RUN

KIDS ZONEFREE ADMISSION

OCTOBER 9, 10 & 11NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE

FOOD VENDORS, CRAFT VENDORS

& SO MUCH MORE!

Sept2015.indd 31 8/20/15 4:55 PM

Page 32: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

This month’s third annual Wizard World Comic Con Nashville brings dozens of amazing artists who animate superheroes and

fantasy characters in graphic novels. They inspire a multi-bil l ion-dol lar entertainment genre of films, video games, television shows, toys, etc. Wizard’s ever-expanding stable of exceptional artists includes Tommy Castillo, Greg Horn, and Ethan Van Sciver, profiled here last year. Horn returns, along with other top-notch writers, illustrators, inkers, and animators, to talk with fans, sell and sign their works, and do personalized sketches.T h i s ye a r ’s l i n e u p f e a t u re s i n k e r extraordinaire Jonathan Glapion, who began his comics career in 1998 at Image Comics, where he inked Curse of the Spawn, Sam and Twitch and Universe. At Marvel, he inked Elektra: The Hand, Gravity, and Ultimate X-Men, before moving to DC in 2007, where he has worked on a wide

variety of titles, including Teen Titans, Green Lantern, Legion of Super-Heroes, Final Crisis: Revelations, Batman and Robin, The New 52 Batman, Birds of Prey, Batgirl, Robin Rises: Alpha and Omega, Batman and Superman, and Green Arrow. His awards include the Inkwell Awards, the Props Award, and the Most-Adaptable Inker Award. Currently, Jonathan is working on Wonder Woman with penciller David Finch. “One of the best things about what I do is every page brings a new challenge, a new problem to solve,” says Jonathan, who now resides in Nashville. “Wizard World Nashville is special to me because I get to see fellow artists that are from this area and also get to bring my family. My kids love Wizard World Nashville.”Wizard World Comic Con Nashvil le r e t u r n s t o t h e M u s i c C i t y C e n t e r Friday through Sunday, September 25 through 27. Visit www.wizardworld.com for more information.

Wizard World Comic Con Nashville

Wonder Woman by inker Jonathan Glapion and penciller David Finch

Music City Center • September 25 to 27by Cass Teague

Sept2015.indd 32 8/20/15 4:56 PM

Page 33: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

Sept2015.indd 33 8/20/15 4:56 PM

Page 34: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

Ceramic artist Donna Rizzo continues the series of exhibits curated by Nashville Arts Magazine for Planter’s Bank Peg Harvill Gallery at the Customs House Museum. In her

first career, she was a professional dancer, choreographer, and dance teacher, and while she has completed that chapter, she is still dancing through life and making moves as an accomplished ceramic artist. “I used to teach dance and choreograph, but now I am dancing with clay, choreographing with clay. The Customs House is calling my show Donna Rizzo: Rhythm in Clay. I guess because I love for my pieces to move, have musical themes maybe, and reflect my background in dance.” When she wasn’t traveling or teaching for the Tennessee Dance Theatre, Donna took pottery classes with Lena Lucas at Centennial Art Center because she wanted to make dishes and bowls for her home. “So I did that for a while, and then all of a sudden I thought, I want to create in clay and squeeze and pinch and pull and make things I enjoy more than just making dishes. I still throw, but I always alter it. If I’m making a goddess I might just throw her skirt, and then I’ll add pieces to that,” she explained.

Customs House Museum • September 1–30

Donna Rizzo: Rhythm in Clay

In 2002, when the dance theatre folded, Donna started working with clay full time, and she feels that being able to focus completely on clay has enabled her to improve her craft. She uses both electric and raku kilns and lets each piece dictate how it will be fired and glazed. She likes to play around with surface textures and often adds embellishments such as ribbons, pieces of fabric, and twigs.Most of her pieces move or suggest movement, f rom rocking-horse teapots to children swinging, dolls hanging, and dresses evoking rhythms, to Southern churches illuminated by candlelight and carousels that she constructs on top of Lazy Susans. There’s no doubt, Donna is enjoying her second career. She wakes up every day and lets her creativity take the lead. “I just put all this energy and excitement when I’m doing it, and hopefully my creations reflect the love, joy, and playfulness I find in making them.” Donna Rizzo: Rhythm in Clay is on view at the Customs House Museum in Clarksville September 1–30. For more information, visit www.customshouse.org. See more of Donna’s work at www.donnarizzo.com.

Alice Goes Round and Round and Round, 2012, Raku clay, 14” x 10” x 10”

My Guitar Gently Weeps, 2012, Raku clay, 14” x 7” x 5”

Miss Hopscotch, 2014, Clay and ribbons, 16” x 6”

by Rebecca Pierce

34 | September 2015 NashvilleArts.com

KYLE ABRAHAM

ABRAHAM.IN.MOTION

WHEN THE WOLVES CAME IN

ozartsnashville.org

M | dOOrS AT 7pM

–LA Times

8/18/15 1:25 PM

Sept2015.indd 34 8/20/15 4:56 PM

Page 35: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

by Keeley Harper

If you haven’t already seen Monet and American Impressionism, time is of the essence. Monet’s role as a key figure in the Impressionist movement transformed French painting in the second half of the nineteenth century and inspired American painters to dutifully

pick up their own paintbrushes and create a distinct, American form of Impressionism. At the Hunter Museum of American Art, the works of the prolific Monet and the American Impressionists who followed in his footsteps join together in one harmonious exhibit.A collaboration between the Harn Museum of Art in Gainesville, the Telfair Museums in Savannah, and the Hunter Museum of American Art in Chattanooga, the exhibit will display roughly fifty paintings and twenty prints, dated between 1880 and 1920, by many of the noted figures in American Impressionism, such as Mary Cassatt, William Merritt Chase, Childe Hassam, Willard Metcalf, Theodore Robinson, John Henry Twachtman, and J. Alden Weir.Nandini Makrandi, Chief Curator at the Hunter Museum, remarks, “This exhibition will give visitors the once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to explore Monet’s work alongside that of many of the most notable American artists of all time. We will explore the influences of French Impressionism and see how it was translated from a uniquely American perspective.”Monet and American Impressionism will be on display at the Hunter Museum of American Art through September 20. For more information about the exhibit and Hunter Museum, visit www.huntermuseum.org.

Hunter Museum of American Art • Through September 20

Richard Emil Miller, La Toilette, c. 1914, Oil on canvas, 40” x 33”

KYLE ABRAHAM

ABRAHAM.IN.MOTION

WHEN THE WOLVES CAME IN

ozartsnashville.org

bold and... fearless

OCTObEr 8TH ANd 9TH AT 8pM | dOOrS AT 7pM

–LA Times

OZ_KyleAbraham_NashArts_HalfHoriz_REV.indd 1 8/18/15 1:25 PM

Sept2015.indd 35 8/20/15 5:37 PM

Page 36: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

36 | September 2015 NashvilleArts.com

Sept2015.indd 36 8/20/15 4:56 PM

Page 37: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

NashvilleArts.com September 2015 | 37

Q A&

When and where are you happiest?I really love putting the programs together for Intersection. Finding new composers and repertoire. 

Which living person do you most admire?Oprah! I love her. She said, “Stay somewhere as long as you’re continuing to grow.” I admire that sentiment. She created the life she wanted. 

Do you have a favorite song?Yes, “Somewhere over the Rainbow.” 

What talent would you really like to have?My dad was a cop; my mom was a strong business woman. I’m not sure how music entered my life but they taught me that if I work hard I can do anything I want. Except maybe figure skating. It might be a bit late for that. 

What characteristic about yourself do you like? I see the potential in things, the opportunity. I don’t get hung up on obstacles. 

What was the last good book you read?The life-changing magic of tidying up  by Marie Kondo. It speaks about being surrounded by items that make you joyful.

Are you a neat freak?No, my house is a series of piles, but I know what’s in each pile.

Who has most inspired you along the way?Leonard Slatkin. He was my main conducting teacher, a mentor, an advisor. He had a way of getting to the core of the music.

What’s a treasured possession?My journal. I have kept a journal since I was fourteen. It would be hard for me to let that go.

Why Nashville? My husband is a writer/musician, and I first came to be with him. Now, I cherish the many roots I have created here. There is a great sense of possibility here. A sense that anything could happen at any moment. 

How do you feel about the growth going on in the city?I try to live in the moment, not in the past or the future, but you have to inform that moment with the perspective of where you

are in that linear trajectory of life. The progress is exciting, but you have to remember and honor what got you here. 

What’s the best part of your work?Trying to understand the layers of music that go beyond the printed page. It’s like an investigative process. Every time you approach that music it’s different. 

Who are the really great singers right now?In the classical world, I always love Renée Fleming. I appreciate her technique, and she’s not afraid to try new things. 

What’s it like when you raise the baton and the music starts?I recently conducted the Indianapolis Chamber Orchestra, and I really felt like every little thing I did, every gesture, influenced the music in one way or another. That’s pretty magical. 

What has been the highlight in your career so far?Conducting the Cleveland Orchestra. Absolutely. And the two debut Intersection programs have definitely been a new chapter in my life. 

What’s your greatest extravagance?Chocolate. Dark chocolate.

What are you really bad at?Swimming. I can’t swim.

Are you a night owl or a morning person?Definitely mornings. I thrive in the mornings.  

What irritates you the most?People who live in negativity. “No” and “not going to happen” are not a part of my vocabulary.

What other profession would you consider?For the longest time I wanted to be a forensic scientist. 

What’s it like being you these days? Between the Nashville Symphony Chorus, Intersection, The Legend of Zelda, a touring show I’m working with, and my five-year-old daughter, my days are pretty full.

For more information about Kelly Corcoran, please visit www.kellycorcoran.net and www.intersectionmusic.org.

Interview by Paul Polycarpou � Photography by Juan Pont Lezica

When Kelly Corcoran walked into our offices we all had a collective flashback: Emma Peel in the hit TV series The Avengers. So we asked her if we could recreate Peel’s iconic photograph from the show and to our surprise this

musical dynamo agreed. Corcoran, who conducts the Nashville Symphony Chorus, has recently embarked on a new creative endeavor as the Artistic Director and Conductor for Intersection, a contemporary music ensemble.

What’s your motto?I choose happiness. Life will always be hard, so you can either give in or

choose to be happy. 

KELLY CORCORANDirector, Nashville Symphony Chorus

Artistic Director & Conductor, Intersection

Emma Peel

Sept2015.indd 37 8/20/15 4:56 PM

Page 38: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

38 | September 2015 NashvilleArts.com

Nashvil le Reper tor y T heatre opens its 2015–16 season with the Pulitzer Prize-nominated

contemporar y play  Rapture, Blister, Burn. Written by  Gina Gionfriddo  and guest directed by Lauren Shouse, the plot centers around the fiery reunion of old friends Catherine and Gwen. Catherine has had a very successful career as a professor and high-profile author while Gwen stayed behind to raise a family after marrying the man Catherine gave up to pursue her ambitions. As they catch up, the friends start to covet each other’s life and question their own.

T h e N e w Y o r k T i m e s s a i d : “ M s . Gionfriddo’s play does not really present Gwen and Catherine’s lives as two sides of the same tarnished, useless coin. What’s exciting about her writing here is the multiplicity of the ideas it engages. Heady with sharp-witted dialogue about the particularities of women’s experience (there’s a joke about pornography and Google maps—believe it or not—that’s worth the ticket price alone), ‘Rapture’ more largely illuminates how hard it can be to forge both a satisfying career and a fulfilling personal life in an era that seems to demand superhuman achievement from everyone.”

Nashville Rep’s Artistic Director, René Copeland, writes, “This play reminds me a little of Clybourne Park, not in content, but in its combination of bringing the funny while being intensely smart and thoroughly thought provoking. It has five roles, and four of them are really kick-ass female roles that we can cast brilliantly out of our talent pool.” Nashville Rep’s cast for Rapture, Blister, Burn includes Shannon Hoppe (Catherine), Cheryl White (Gwen), Amanda Card (Avery),  Ruth Cordell (Alice), and David Ian Lee (Don).

Rapture, Blister, Burn will be performed in TPAC’s Andrew Johnson Theater September 3 through 19. For scheduling and tickets, visit www.NashvilleRep.org.

Rapture, Blister, Burn Nashville RepeRtoRy theatRe

Tennessee Performing Arts Center • September 3–19

Cheryl White as Gwen, Amanda Card as Avery, Shannon Hoppe as Catherine

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

JUST

IN S

IEN

KIE

WIC

Z

Cory Willms, Principal Broker

209 10th Ave. S., Ste. 235 • Nashville, TN 37203O: 615-457-2643 • E: [email protected] • www.summitnashville.com

S U M M I TP r o p e r t y M a n a g e m e n t

2007 B Overhill Dr. MLS 1656183 – Lease $5,950/mo

ICON #1516 MLS 1658153 – Lease $1,695/mo

ICON #836 MLS 1652170 – Lease $3,050/mo

ICON #820 MLS 1645398 – Lease $3,050/mo

ADELICIA #801 MLS 1660454 – Lease $5,750/mo

ICON #726 MLS 1657957 – Lease $1,895/mo

ICON #912 MLS 1657703 – Lease $1,650/mo

ICON #632 MLS 1657674 – Lease $1,695/mo

ENCORE #1320 MLS 1655079 – Lease $2,995/mo

ENCORE #1813 MLS 1658783 – Lease $1,695/mo

ENCORE #1916 MLS 1652485 – Lease $2,750/mo

TERRAZZO #1110 MLS 1652146 – Lease $2,495/mo

Two price changes:

Change price on ICON 836 to $3050Change price on ICON 820 to $3050

Summit_0915.indd 1 8/14/15 9:04 AM

OCTOBER 20-25 TICKETS ARE ON SALE NOW!

TPAC.ORG/Cinderella • 615-782-4040 TPAC Box Office

GROUPS OF 10 OR MORE CALL 615-782-4060TPAC.ORG is the official online source for buying tickets to TPAC events.

Sept2015.indd 38 8/21/15 2:59 PM

Page 39: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

Cory Willms, Principal Broker

209 10th Ave. S., Ste. 235 • Nashville, TN 37203O: 615-457-2643 • E: [email protected] • www.summitnashville.com

S U M M I TP r o p e r t y M a n a g e m e n t

2007 B Overhill Dr. MLS 1656183 – Lease $5,950/mo

ICON #1516 MLS 1658153 – Lease $1,695/mo

ICON #836 MLS 1652170 – Lease $3,050/mo

ICON #820 MLS 1645398 – Lease $3,050/mo

ADELICIA #801 MLS 1660454 – Lease $5,750/mo

ICON #726 MLS 1657957 – Lease $1,895/mo

ICON #912 MLS 1657703 – Lease $1,650/mo

ICON #632 MLS 1657674 – Lease $1,695/mo

ENCORE #1320 MLS 1655079 – Lease $2,995/mo

ENCORE #1813 MLS 1658783 – Lease $1,695/mo

ENCORE #1916 MLS 1652485 – Lease $2,750/mo

TERRAZZO #1110 MLS 1652146 – Lease $2,495/mo

Two price changes:

Change price on ICON 836 to $3050Change price on ICON 820 to $3050

Summit_0915.indd 1 8/14/15 9:04 AM

Sept2015.indd 39 8/20/15 4:56 PM

Page 40: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

40 | September 2015 NashvilleArts.com

Gateway Chamber OrChestra’s 2015–16 seasOn

Franklin Theatre • Beginning September 21

A fter seven years of performing in different locations around Nashvil le and Midd le Tennessee, the Gateway Chamber Orchestra (GCO) opens their 2015–16 season in its new home, Franklin Theatre.

Conductor Gregory Wolynec and the orchestra are enthusiastic about the stunning new venue. “We’re delighted to be on this stage! The acoustics are terrific; the stage is the perfect size for our chamber orchestra, and it provides such a polished box-office experience and concert-going experience for the audience,” Wolynec states. The orchestra’s season begins on September 21 with Opening Night with Schubert and Haydn. It is an evening of music inspired by dance during which Nashville-based composer Cristina Spinei premieres her new chamber orchestra arrangement of Strut. Also on the program are Schubert’s graceful Symphony No. 3, and Haydn’s cheerful Symphony No. 88. Considered one of the leading new American ensembles, GCO specializes in presenting traditional masterworks, overlooked treasures, and contemporary American compositions. Audiences are drawn to the open and lively way the orchestra interacts with them and the way there is an obvious thread connecting the pieces performed in the program. About the 2015–2016 season, Wolynec enthuses, “One of the big things about this year is that we’re showcasing some really terrific Middle Tennessee talent—obviously in the form of our musicians, but also in terms of composers, most living, and then one Middle Tennessee native named Clarence Cameron White, an African American violinist and composer born at the end of the 19th century. His music has been played by the Boston Symphony and has won national awards, but it has never been played in Tennessee. So we’re looking forward to featuring a really overlooked treasure, Elegy, by White. Gateway Chamber Orchestra concert tickets and season subscriptions are available at www.franklintheatre.com. For more on GCO, visit www.GatewayChamberOrchestra.com.

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

ALL

ISO

N C

AM

PBEL

L

Music Director and Conductor Gregory Wolynec

Classic French Cuisine...Modern Approach

Tues. - Fri. 5 pm - 10 pm • Sat. - Sun. 10 am - 10 pm Brunch (Sat. - Sun.) 10 am - 5 pm • Tuesdays 1/2 Off Import Wines

Visit Us at East Nashville’s Farmer’s Market Taste Our Artisan Breads!

Reservations at ThePorterHouseBistro.com or (615) 679-9294 1115 Porter Rd., Nashville, TN 37206

Porterhouse.indd 1 5/19/15 3:42 PM

The finest gia certified excellent cut diamonds.

Personal service with integrity.

Exceptional value.

2200 21st Avenue South, Suite 106 615.292.1212

www.barkerdiamond.com

“ T h e O n e . ”

Barker_0915.indd 1 8/17/15 4:46 PM

Sept2015.indd 40 8/20/15 4:56 PM

Page 41: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

Some of the best cinematic gems are often left on the cutting room floor. That is the unfortunate reality of film production where budgets are slashed quicker than most directors can call “action.” Most cinema-goers never get to

hear the gory details and the constant wrangling for creative control. That is until now. OZ Arts Nashville is providing a forum starting September 10 for just that.

Director and film professor Robert Milazzo, founder of The Modern School of Film and its Film:Masters Series, is presenting a three-night showcase (September 10-12) of films coupled with A-list guests who will share their perspectives with curious film enthusiasts. September 10 will feature actress, comedienne, and “noble bard” Sandra Bernhard for her commentary on Prince’s vanity project Purple Rain. September 11 has absurdist comedy duo Tim Heidecker and Eric Wareheim (of Adult Swim’s Tim and Eric Awesome Show, Great Job!) examining Christopher Guest’s “mockumentary” Waiting for Guffman. September 12 will close the showcase with The Black Keys’ drummer Patrick Carney discussing the comedy classic Caddyshack.

OZ Arts Artistic Director Lauren Snelling spoke enthusiastically of the upcoming event stating, “Essentially, Rob started it with the understanding that a thoughtful discussion of film had disappeared, and he was interested in engaging a much more thoughtful conversation about film. He found that his students had wonderful questions if they were able to go to the source. He gets to witness this with students every day, but when he talks with guests and gets them to provide their firsthand experience—and go to the source—he says is really where you find out so much more.”

Milazzo’s urge for a traveling roadshow/master class that encourages those hungry for answers has yielded Film:Masters – The Modern School of Film. “These are in-depth conversations that look at not just the craft, but how we react to film and what our collective experience is when we see films together,” says Snelling.

Though the concept of a post-screening discussion is nothing new to Nashville, this event works on putting classic films in an updated light. Those devoted to movies will remember what feelings initiated their pledge in the first place.Film:Masters – The Modern School of Film will run September 10–12 at OZ Arts Nashville, with doors opening at 6 p.m. and t h e e v e n t s t a r t i n g a t 7 p . m . F o r t i c k e t s a n d f u l l i n f o r m a t i o n

regarding the event, visit www.ozartsnashville.org/filmmasters. For information about Robert Milazzo’s film efforts, please visit www.modernschooloffilm.com.

Justin Stokes is the founder of the MTSU Film Guild, a student organization which functions as a production company for student filmmakers. He is a filmmaker, screenwriter, and social media manager.PH

OTO

GRA

PH B

Y C

HRI

STY

SIM

MO

NS

by Justin Stokes

The Modern School of Film Comes to OZ Arts Nashville

Counterclockwise from top:

Actress and comedienne Sandra Bernhard

Patrick Carney (left) and Dan Auerbach (right) of The Black Keys

Comedy duo Tim & Eric

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

KEV

IN T

HO

MA

S G

ARC

IAPH

OTO

GRA

PH B

Y RI

CK

ETT

SON

ES

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

DA

NN

Y C

LIN

CH

FilmMasters

NashvilleArts.com September 2015 | 41

Sept2015.indd 41 8/21/15 2:59 PM

Page 42: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

5th Avenue Under the Lights

PH

OTO

GR

AP

H B

Y J

ERR

Y P

AR

K

by Anne Brown, The Arts Company

The First Saturday Art Crawl Downtown has turned out to be a good gauge of Nashville’s visual arts identity. In fact, art has become more visible through the increasing

cooperation of arts partners and businesses downtown.

The increase in activity has been typically judged by how many galleries are open in the one block between Church and Union, along what has become known as 5th Avenue of the Arts. Now, though, the creative collaboration is showcased on a broader landscape, with 5th Avenue North and South coming together during the Art Crawl with participants such as the Country Music Hall of Fame & Hatch Show Print, the Music City Center, and Art at the Music City Marketplace at the Arena, among others—collectively offering three new art stops to the event. With this added excitement, Gray Line has recently become a partner, offering the free Art Crawl Downtown Trolley.

Currently, the exponential interest and growth in the downtown marketplace for art has triggered yet more changes. With art businesses, art venues, and institutions working together, the presence of visual art downtown has taken even more new turns. One of the most impressive forward movements has been the Music City Center and its participation in the Art Crawl. This $600-million venue offers previews of their $2 million permanent collection of mostly Tennessee contemporary art with a video documenting their “Unconventional Gallery” and invites guests to sign up for docent tours of the collection scheduled throughout the month.

Whoever thought there would be such a critical mass of visual art activity in Downtown Nashville? Think again. In addition to the Frist Center and the Tennessee State Museum, there are now art venues and enterprises everywhere—on First Saturdays and every day. Take advantage of it for yourself, your friends, and your guests.

Check the Nashvi l le Downtown Par tner sh ip websi te , www.DowntownNashville.com for a map showing parking and how to navigate the Art Crawl every month.

A Critical Mass of Visual Art Now Part of Music City Downtown

Invites You To View OurEstate Jewelry Collection

Timeless pieces from prominent Nashville clientswaiting to be cherished again

The Hill Center, Green Hills4017 Hillsboro Pk, Ste. 305

Across From Whole Foods Nashville(615) 385-1212 • www.ejsain.com

EJSain_0915.indd 1 8/19/15 4:29 PMSept2015.indd 42 8/21/15 2:59 PM

Page 43: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

Susan DeMay and Edward Belbusti will be showing their works in Nashville, Tennessee, at The Arts Company gallery, located in the Fifth Avenue of the Arts district of downtown. The fall exhibit (September 5 through

September 30) will feature individual abstract ceramic sculptures by the two artists and some collaborative works. A sampling of metal works will also be included.Susan DeMay has an extensive artistic and teaching career in ceramics. Her first studio in Smithville was established in the early 1980s, and she had been teaching at Vanderbilt University those early years as well. Edward Belbusti has come to sculpture after a long career in architecture. He works out of a studio that he built at his residence. He works not only in clay, steel, and wood on a relatively small scale, but he is also engaged in large, monumentally scaled, outdoor steel sculpture.

The exhibition will display abstract constructions that are primarily made from slabs whose cut-out

sections are meticulously joined. Various surface treatments enhance these forms, such as burnishing, etching, carving, hammering, and impressing. Additionally, staining, underglazing, and different kinds of glazing are used. The forms are influenced not only by architectural elements, but also natural and organic inspirations can be found in the works.While the two artists have much in common in their sculptures, they also have distinct approaches to the coloration of their works. DeMay uses a wide selection of glazes, which are often impacted by stains, while Belbusti prefers contrasting

black-and-white designs. He also likes to use stains on textures on

the raw clay.In DeMay’s large oval form (16.5” x 12” x 5”) a matte-gold

glaze covers a raked and stained texture. Appendages, appliquéd details, and other elements are glazed with bright greens, blues, purple, and deep browns. The largely primary color palette is tempered by proportioned areas of earth tones and is a favorite color scheme for this artist. Belbusti’s abstract pieces, while

referencing vessels, have a primarily sculptural intent. In the work entitled Tuxedo, smooth and hammered surfaces are enhanced by

contrasting black-and-white glazes. Desk Accessory is a complex construction from a variety

of sized slabs, joined to create sculptural form which has a function as a desktop holder.

A variety of compartments not only provides places for keys, phone, pens, and pencils, but also creates an interesting composition of textures, colors, and positive and negative spaces.

What Goes Where? is an ensemble of boxes, canister, and a vase form, similar in

concept but more ambiguous in function.Collaborative works usually involve Belbusti’s

form and DeMay’s surface. Unanchored Geometry has a boat- or canoe-shaped earthenware structure that has been painted and burnished with a lighter terra sigillata by Belbusti in contrast to the earthenware color. Multiple levels of sandblasting by DeMay reveal the layers of color and present asymmetrical triangle motifs that embellish the hard-edged yet curvilinear object.

Both artists like the exploration of forms created by clay slabs. While Belbusti uses paper models to explore ideas, DeMay will often use large clay scraps to develop new ideas. DeMay has also borrowed paper templates from Belbusti and has brought to these her own interpretations of Belbusti’s designs.

Constructing Sculptural Forms in Clay featuring the work of Susan DeMay and Edward Belbusti is on exhibit at The Arts Company September 5 through 30. For more information please visit www.theartscompany.com.

Constructing Sculptural FormsSusan DeMay and Edward Belbusti • The Arts Company • September 5–30

Edward Belbusti, Water Source, Steel, 10’ x 6’ x 8’

Susan DeMay, Open Castle, 8” x 9” x 9”

Susan DeMay, Desk Accessory 2, 7” x 14” x 16”

Edward Belbusti, Unanchored Geometry, Red clay, slab-constructed, sand-blasted. 7” x 22” x 9”

NashvilleArts.com September 2015 | 43

Sept2015.indd 43 8/20/15 4:56 PM

Page 44: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

44 | September 2015 NashvilleArts.com

It ’s an annual celebration of all things paper. Bringing together paper artisans from the Nashville

community for its sixth year, the annual festival Handmade & Bound offers Nashville a marketplace with all the items you would expect and hope to see at a festival of its kind: books, journals, magazines, a printing press. However, this unique gathering doesn’t just meet our expectations; it exceeds them by offering an eclectic range of commodities that may leave you wondering, why didn’t I think of that? With handmade creations like book jewelry, postcards, and book art, the festival’s unique and plucky wares fill the halls of Watkins College of Art, Design & Film, an art community of vendors and patrons alike.

In addition to the Handmade & Bound Marketplace, the festival also hosts many other events, such as hands-on workshops and paper art exhibits. This year’s exhibits include Zine-O-Rama and Bound Together. Zine-O-Rama is an exhibition featuring handmade zines, magazine covers created using a copy machine, often delivering a spunky social message. Bound Together is a gallery of community-produced works whose subject matters explore the bonds and the meaning of family in all of its many forms. There are a variety of ways to get involved with this unique and blossoming paper community. Submit your works for Zine-O-Rama or Bound Together until September 21. Shop the H&B Marketplace and attend hands-on workshops during the festival, and if you feel those creative juices flowing, become a Handmade & Bound vendor joining names like Thistle Farms and Hardwear Designs.Handmade & Bound will kick off Artober on October 2 at 5 p.m. with the opening of the Bound Together exhibit, on view

until October 12. The H&B Marketplace will open on October 3 from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., and workshops will take place

throughout the festival. To learn more about Handmade & Bound, please visit www.handmadeboundnashville.com.

Handmade & BoundWatkins College of Art, Design & Film • October 3

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

SAM

AN

GEL

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

SAM

AN

GEL

A L L T H E B E S T I N F I N E J E W E L R Y

5101 Harding Road Nashvi l le , Tennessee 37205 615.353.1823

CindiEarl_0915.indd 1 8/19/15 9:55 AM

Sept2015.indd 44 8/20/15 4:56 PM

Page 45: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

NashvilleArts.com September 2015 | 45

Nashville artists and celebrities have volunteered to design dog statues that will be auctioned off to benefit Old Friends Senior Dog Sanctuary. The LIVE AUCTION will be held at the Omni Nashville on October 16.

Tickets may be purchased at

www.dogartforoldfriends.orgOnline bidding will available through October 10.

All proceeds will benefit Old Friends Senior Dog Sanctuary in Mount Juliet, TN. The sanctuary is an all-volunteer run, 501(c)(3), non-profit organization dedicated to rescuing and caring for senior dogs in the Middle Tennessee area.

Old FriendsLIVE BENEFIT AUCTION | FRIDAY, OCT, 16 | THE OMNI NASHVILLE

Dog Art for 2nd

Annual

Artists include: Sheryl Crow, Mike Wolfe, Mel Ziegler, John Cannon, Susan Truex, James A. Willis, Elizabeth Brandon, The Nashville Predators and many more

DogArt_0915.indd 1 8/19/15 9:57 AM

Sept2015.indd 45 8/20/15 4:56 PM

Page 46: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

Jim HouseFollowing the Cowboy’s Trail

The cowboy is a uniquely American hero, a sort of cultural shorthand for our core values. Tough, independent,

and hardworking, he reflects our vision of our best selves back at us, and we bask in the nostalgia. Frederic Remington (1861–1909) and Charles M. Russell (1864–1926), were the two finest artists to chronicle Western frontier life depicting the cowboy lifestyle at home on the range. And in the tradition of Remington and Russell, Tennessean Jim House’s paintings, often illuminated by the glow of the moon

by Karen Parr-Moody

Sept2015.indd 46 8/20/15 4:56 PM

Page 47: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

or campfire, are informed by first-hand experience of the cowboy life. Like so many before him, he was lured to the West as a youth, landing first in Red Feather Lakes, Colorado, in his twenties. “I wanted some adventure in life,” House says.

“I didn’t just want to go work in a cubicle.”

Wiry and soft-spoken, House delivers his life’s history with a honeyed Southern accent. For six years he worked as logger, steelworker, ranch hand, and carpenter. At one point he labored at a Nevada gold mine, a place he describes as “seventy-two miles from the nearest Coke machine or pay phone and so cold that after

Down Wind, Watercolor, 19” x 25”

Sept2015.indd 47 8/20/15 4:56 PM

Page 48: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

48 | September 2015 NashvilleArts.com

Two Feathers, Watercolor, 10” x 14”

twelve- or fourteen-hour days we’d have to thaw out the water lines so someone could have a shower.” While House would go on to capture the lean and agile form of the cowboy in oils and watercolor, this would come much later. There was no money or energy to spare for painting after performing manual labor all day. The artist grew up in 1950s Tullahoma, Tennessee, home to the Arnold Engineering Development Center. Instead of ranch life, he was surrounded by engineers testing jet engines. As he played cowboy games and rode ponies, the images of the Old West ignited his imagination. The 1950s were the age of the cowboy, bookending the silent era of Western films, which began in 1903 with The Great Train Robbery, with films such as 1952’s High Noon. As he watched Westerns in his local theater, he nurtured a childlike faith in the Old West’s heroes of the saddle and was transported to a magical landscape of mountains and desert. “There was something intriguing to me about it, the genre,” he says. “I think it’s out of our normal life. It’s a connection to the past.”After graduating from high school, House studied at the Art Institute of Fort Lauderdale. There, the curriculum was focused on commercial art, while he wanted to study portrait painting. So he switched to the University of Tennessee and, in another quirk of timing, discovered that the focus there was on abstract art. This was the 1960s and 70s, and House was culturally out of step. He says, “You were somewhat ostracized if you wanted to paint realistically in college. You were looked at as slow or behind the curve.”Then fate intervened: a fire destroyed his art portfolio. He’d hit a wall. And that is when he headed west, where there were no walls, but only vast expanses of space. There House began working with people who transported horses and handled mules.Wyoming Cowboy (detail), Watercolor, 15” x 20”

Sept2015.indd 48 8/20/15 4:56 PM

Page 49: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

NashvilleArts.com September 2015 | 49

Ray and His Paint Horse, Watercolor, 17” x 12”

Sept2015.indd 49 8/20/15 4:57 PM

Page 50: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

50 | September 2015 NashvilleArts.com

He explains: “They were just these tough people. A mule dragged this friend of mine around the whole paddock in the Rockies. And he was just torn up. I said, ‘I don’t know why you didn’t let go.’ And he said, ‘If I had let go, that mule would have never learned.’” This first-hand observation gave House an understanding of that strong, silent type so often portrayed in Western films. “There’s a cowboy code,” he says. “They don’t put up with a lot of bull or people bragging.” During his years on ranches and at a gold mine, House may have been working alongside cowboys and laborers—at one point standing high on steel girders in rain and snow—but he held on to his dream of becoming an artist. “I couldn’t let it go,” he says. “I’d be watching things and thinking, God, I wish I could draw that.”He ultimately followed his internal artist, first moving back to Tennessee and working as a commercial illustrator. But today, after taking many workshops through Cowboy Artists of America, he has shifted to painting exclusively, the Old West’s nostalgia, which seeps out of his brush. House uses watercolors to alternately imbue his paintings with clear light and mysterious haze, and works such as The Cottonwood’s Top Hand take on the nuances of Andrew Wyeth’s paintings of laborers. When he works in oil, House is able to render the lonely, dark hours of ranch life. For his oil painting entitled Cold, Dark Morning at the Cottonwood he won the 2014 John Steven Jones Purchase Award.Beyond capturing the nuances of Western light, House captures gesture, explaining: “Fifty or one hundred years ago, with Remington and Russell, there was more gesture in their work. We rely more on

the camera now, and we don’t get the way a cowboy stands or the way a construction guy stands.” Rather than calling his work ‘romantic’, a word used to describe the art of Remington and Russell, House considers it ‘gritty’. He even goes so far as to compare the experience of painting to riding a mule. “You’ve got to hang on,” he says. Jim House is represented by Damico Frame and Art Gallery. Visit www.jimhouseart.com and www.damicogallery.com for more information.

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

AN

THO

NY

SCA

RLA

TI

Artist Jim House

Break Time, Watercolor, 7” x 11”

Sept2015.indd 50 8/20/15 4:57 PM

Page 51: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

Sept2015.indd 51 8/20/15 4:57 PM

Page 52: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

Y E A R S

Specialized furniture

901 2nd Ave. S. | Nashville, TN 37210615-878-6216

www.littlebranchfarm.com

from the forest floor

to your home.

Littlebranch_0914.indd 1 8/18/14 1:20 PM

Sept2015.indd 52 8/20/15 4:57 PM

Page 53: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

Y E A R S

Sept2015.indd 53 8/20/15 4:57 PM

Page 54: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

A P HO

TOG

RAPH

I C S E R I E S

Abstract Nashville

Words and photography by David Morel

When asked to shoot for the series “Abstract Nashville,” the first thing I wanted to do was to review my images that I would call “abstract photography.” What makes photography abstract? Well, there are more variations

of abstract photography than ways tourists pronounce Demonbreun. Generally, it is photography that does not represent the subject in a literal way, relying on form and tones to communicate with the viewer.

Sept2015.indd 54 8/21/15 2:59 PM

Page 55: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

NashvilleArts.com September 2015 | 55

Nashville City Hall, 100 Metro Courthouse

Bank of America, 414 Union Street

Sept2015.indd 55 8/20/15 4:57 PM

Page 56: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

In recent years, abstracts have become a larger percentage of the images I shoot. Some are classical abstractions, capturing a smaller part of the whole, while others were more manufactured via technique, both in camera and in post processing. Most of the images have a remnant of reality—enough to hint of their origins. The strongest ones had the power to whisper a different reality in a language known only to the viewer.I am definitely drawn to strong lines and patterns in my abstracts. They attract my eye and ask to be captured. This series, images from around our city, was no different. Sometimes the image would come easily, but often I had to work to find the right light, angle, or composition that fulfilled my vision. F o r m o r e i n f o r m a t i o n a b o u t D a v i d M o r e l , p l e a s e v i s i t www.davidmorelphoto.com.

56 | September 2015 NashvilleArts.com

St. Thomas Midtown – Parking Deck, 2000 Church Street

Adventure Science Center, 800 Fort Negley Boulevard

William R. Snodgrass Tennessee Tower, 312 Rosa L. Parks Avenue

Sept2015.indd 56 8/20/15 4:57 PM

Page 57: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

NashvilleArts.com September 2015 | 57

AT&T Building, 333 Commerce Street

Country Delight Farms, 1401 Church Street

Sept2015.indd 57 8/20/15 4:57 PM

Page 58: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

Silver LiningsThe Unpredictable Synergy of

Silver LiningsCheekwood’s Courtyard Gallery in the Frist Learning Center • Through October 25

Soo Sunny Park

Sept2015.indd 58 8/20/15 4:57 PM

Page 59: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

NashvilleArts.com September 2015 | 59

R epetition, multiplicity, and the unexpected synergy of light are ongoing themes in Soo Sunny Park’s installation art. Park uses the ethereal qualities of light pitted against industrial materials to create her deeply visceral interactive encounters.

“Light is really the surprise element for me in how it changes in the space,” Park says.

Park spent the month of July as the 2015 Martin Shallenberger Artist-in-Residence at Cheekwood Botanical Gardens & Museum of Art building this striking installation. Silver Linings consists of over one hundred fifteen panels of two-inch blocks of wire mesh measuring four feet by five feet.

Upon entering the gallery, the viewer is met with a basket-woven configuration of br ims and swel ls of tarpaper-black and blinding-silver Mylar formations, undulating up and over in an almost tornadic swirl. Bursts of light push through cracks, and puddles of bright-white illumination create shadows that dance on the gray walls. Even this element of the work is deliberately calculated: “Shadows are the completion of my work. I want the light and air to be recognized as being complete elements,” Park explains.

The result, as with all installation art, is that visitors respond to the work and feel as if they are walking among the clouds or submerged in deep, muddy waters depending on the point of entry and where one lingers to conjoin with the art. Visitors must duck to pass under the low-hanging curvatures, while strips of Mylar, like birthday crepe paper, flutter with the breeze created by the passing body or by the wind from the air-conditioning vent. The pungent smell of the tarpaper fills the long, tunnel-like space.

“This is where the conceptional ideal meets the physical,” Park says

It is these in-between spaces of reflection and absorption that push the boundaries of what is conceived as art. They are as much a material for sculpture, Park says, as the tangible material. It can be a bit disorienting to try to determine whether you are above or below—flying or drowning. “I don’t know what the work is going to be until I am installing it,” Park says. All of these elements: the space, the materials present and absent, including the visitor, become part of this unforgettable and poignant installation piece. Silver Linings will be on exhibit at Cheekwood’s Courtyard Gallery in the Frist Learning Center through October 25. For more information, visit www.cheekwood.org or www.soosunnypark.com.

by Catherine Randall | Photography by Dean Dixon

Silver Linings, 2015, Stainless steel wire mesh, tar paper, and Mylar, Dimensions vary

Sept2015.indd 59 8/20/15 4:57 PM

Page 60: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

60 | September 2015 NashvilleArts.com

Two Exhibits, Two Artists, One Giant Leap into the Surreal

T wo striking artists, Thomas Dodd and Gwil Owen, will be exhibiting their work at Corvidae Collective in the downtown Arcade from September 5 to October 1. The show is curated by the exceptional Nikki Gray, who has an eye for the uniquely surreal, and these

two artists are especially worth the visit.

Thomas Dodd has lived in Atlanta for thirty years and exhibited his work internationally. He is a photographer but uses his camera like a paintbrush, creating what he calls a “painterly photo montage.” After shooting for a few hours, he uses editing software

to craft elaborately layered pieces that fuse multiple images. This yields an organic and textured, yet entirely photographic, piece of art. He prints the finished product, mounts it on a wooden panel, and covers it with a layer of gel medium. 

Photographing almost exclusively women, Dodd is undoubtedly a feminist. His series All Bodies Are Beautiful is a celebration of the varied female form. He is consciously trying to depict different shapes and sizes in such a way that they are all Madonnas. “For whoever sits in front of my camera, my job is twofold—to get some sort of essence of that person, to get past their canned smile, and then to find their beauty and enhance it.” 

Corvidae Collective • September 5 through October 1

Thomas Dodd & Gwil OwenThomas Dodd, Force of Nature, 2012, Digital print on metallic paper, 16” x 20”

by Annie Stoppelbein

Sept2015.indd 60 8/20/15 4:57 PM

Page 61: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

NashvilleArts.com September 2015 | 61

Dodd’s work is comprised of mostly personal projects. He employs a wide array of models. Generally, he asks them to come with natural hair and make-up, and he prefers an archaic look in clothing. Dodd does not consider himself a fantasy artist, although viewing his work may induce the sensation of time travel. Each piece is assembled with a wink to the Old Masters and Pre-Raphaelites in their style and content. He lauds the original leading ladies, depicting figures from early Christianity and from Norse and classical Greek and Roman mythology. 

Thomas dabbled with photography in high school, but was swept away by the world of music after identifying with the blunt expression of punk rock. He eventually went in a different direction, deciding to explore his Irish ancestry and learn the Celtic harp. His group, Trio Nocturna, had a solid fan base and toured the world. He notes that the career trajectory of a musician is the same as an artist, and he continues to think like a musician. He is a self-proclaimed “improvisational conceptualist,” meaning much of what he does is instinctual. As an artist he can afford to reflect on each step of the process. He can have moments of doubt but has learned to trust intuition. Because art can often become so purely technical, Dodd believes there will always be a place for the raw and the passionate. 

Gwil Owen wears many hats, and recently decided to get fitted for the figurative artist’s beret. Just two years ago, he began experimenting with collage. For much of his life he has identified as a singer-songwriter. Despite his humility on the matter, Gwil is also a bona fide artist. In his spare time he is tiptoeing his way onto the scene and making art unlike anything else. Gwil

Thomas Dodd, Spellbound, 2014, Encaustic on wood panel, 20” x 30”

Gwil Owen, South Bend 54, 2015, Collage, 34” x 26”

Gwil OwenThomas Dodd

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

NIN

A C

OV

ING

TON

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

BRYD

GET

CA

RRIL

LO

Thomas Dodd, Head in the Clouds (detail), 2012, Photographic print on metallic paper, 20” x 16”

Sept2015.indd 61 8/20/15 4:58 PM

Page 62: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

62 | September 2015 NashvilleArts.com

is an anomaly as a collage artist. Collage is simply French for “to glue,” but Gwil’s creations sit many rungs higher than the often-sticky mess. His painstaking precision elevates these assemblages to something called art.

Gwil is always out buying books. He is the former owner of Howlin’ Books and remains in the business as an independent used-book seller. He also repurposes his finds as collage material. He begins by covering a piece of chipboard with pages torn from his vast collection. The older the better, as he likes the look of the browning or “foxing” of aged paper. He assembles the pages so that a border remains, and then covers them with a dark, lustrous color. From there he is ready to arrange the meticulously cut images. He is drawn to machinery, particularly old engravings of tools, gears, and chains from ragged industrial catalogs. 

Mostly his work develops without any conscious direction. There are several thematic recurrences, though he prefers not to validate any one interpretation. Recurring are juxtapositions of old and new, industrial growth and natural decay. “Even in the wreckage, a flower grows,” says Gwil. Though he paints over the text, a new narrative always emerges. They become otherworldly illustrations from a book that hasn’t been written.

Gwil Owen’s Trust and Thomas Dodd’s The Painterly Photo will be on exhibit at Corvidae Collective from September 5 to October 1. For more information about the exhibits and the artists, please visit www.corvidaecollective.net, www.thomasdodd.com, and www.gwilowen.com.

Gwil Owen, Lightning Does the Work, 2015, Collage, 23” x 34”

Gwil Owen, Hercules Battles the TVA, 2015, Collage, 27” x 22”

Sept2015.indd 62 8/20/15 5:38 PM

Page 63: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

Sept2015.indd 63 8/20/15 4:58 PM

Page 64: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

64 | September 2015 NashvilleArts.com

Bold and cataclysmic, vibrant patches of opposing colors and patterns move across the canvas, triggering questions along the way. Nashville artist Patrick Brien’s new works are as smart as they are engaging, as

thought-provoking as they are visually appealing.Brien’s premise for his art is simple, as he puts it, “to be an observer and recorder of the world around me.” And what Brien sees, he admits, is both mesmerizing and disturbing. Take the selfie phenomenon Brien offers as an example: “I wonder how our impulse to document an experience, such as going to an art museum, will dilute the experience itself.” Brien brings light and color to an inescapable effect. Social media, the Internet, Google, GPS—pervasive changes created by technological advance as a whole—are changing the human experience. “I am enthralled with the way I see visuality changing and wonder how this might affect how we all look at and experience works of art.”

Dynamic Perceptions in a Digital Age

by Gracie Pratt

Airfield_Black Mirror, 2015, Oil, acrylic, and spray paint on linen, 60” x 91”

Patrick Brien at Cumberland Gallery • Through September 28

Patrick Brien PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

SAEG

AN

MO

RAN

Sept2015.indd 64 8/20/15 4:58 PM

Page 65: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

NashvilleArts.com September 2015 | 65

Brien’s art is an enlightening voice in this conversation. His piece Airfield_Black Mirror explores changing perceptions of location, made especially evident by the widespread use of Google Earth to create realistic depictions on command. “The patch of grass in the foreground is blurred in a way that recalls the gridded armature of Google Earth when in street view.” Another panel reflects the blurred image that often occurs initially when a user desires to zoom in. What does it take to get closer? To see more clearly? Is there any loss of clarity? Of focus? Instruction Loop plays off of a similar navigational theme, showing three perspectives. The panels display, in crisp stagnant pieces, three different views of the same physical location: landscape,

aerial, and satellite. Some images are real and some are illustrated depictions, and toggling between them occurs almost instantly and indistinguishably. Brien calls these developments in technology “exhilarating” in the way they are “growing, stretching, and mutating our visual ability.” His paintings are expressions of his own curiosity about the way technology works and “supplements our everyday life and experiences.” Brien’s work is created using a variety of mediums, and his goal in the crafting process is to place as few limitations on his technique and materials as possible, especially during the earlier stages. As the piece develops, Brien explains that the process can be very physical as he aims to “get to know” the piece and familiarize himself with what it is becoming. He defines this initial stage as having an “athletic” quality, recalling a time that he used a squeegee to spread paint on a canvas, an action that took the full movement of his body to accomplish.

These early stages are a conversation or dialogue between the artist and his work. “Even when I have a strong conceptual idea of how I envision the painting, I try to leave the conversation open for as long as possible in hopes of making a new discovery or being surprised in some way,” Brien explains. The end of the process is much more analytical, fine-tuning the details and evaluating what the interaction will be between the viewer and the piece itself. Patrick Brien’s visual representations of the experience of day-to-day twenty-first-century living invite viewers to the realm of different perspectives or, perhaps more important, of consciousness. Patrick Brien’s art is on display at Cumberland Gallery as part of their exhibit Summer Selections through September 28. For more information about the exhibit and the gallery, please visit www.cumberlandgallery.com.Cloud Tracking, 2014, Oil and acrylic on panel, 50” x 50”

Instruction Loop, 2015, Oil, acrylic, and spray paint on panel, 40” x 38”

Green Screen, 2014, Digital print and resin on paper mounted to panel, 28” x 20”

Sept2015.indd 65 8/20/15 4:58 PM

Page 66: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

202 2nd Ave. South, Franklin, TN 37064 • www.gallery202art.com • 615-472-1134

Artist Reception • September 4, 6-9 pm

HISTORY EMBR ACING ART

MELVIN TOLEDO

Camellias with Pear

Gallery202_0915.indd 1 8/21/15 2:11 PMSept2015.indd 66 8/21/15 2:59 PM

Page 67: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

NashvilleArts.com September 2015 | 67

As I See It

by Mark W. Scala

UNWEAVING RACE

Mark W. Scala Chief Curator Frist Center for the Visual Arts

PHO

TOG

RA

PH B

Y JE

RRY

ATN

IP

R ichmond, Virginia-based artist Sonya Clark creates immaculately crafted woven constructions that use the tactile associations of fibers and optical effects of colors

to reflect on socio-cultural constructions of identity, particularly in relation to race. Whether evoking the codes of African hair braiding or linking Modernist rationalism (as seen in Josef Albers’s formal color theories) and pseudo-scientific racial theories arising from color categorization, her works’ power lies in their suggestion of ritual or anthropological artifacts—purposeful, beautiful, and suggestive of some secret talismanic function. Clark reverses her usual labor-intensive constructive techniques in Unraveling, a work in which she methodically unweaves the Confederate battle flag. This is a metaphor for the need to pull apart the tightly interlocking social structures that continue to perpetuate patterns of racism throughout the U.S., in the de-facto segregation of many urban school systems, in the tragic deaths of African Americans at the hands of police officers in Ferguson, Baltimore, New York, and elsewhere, and in the invisibility to many whites of the poverty, unemployment, and crime that constitute inescapable cycles in many black communities.

While the deconstruction of this flag would seem to most people to be a positive negation that symbolizes the need to dismantle racial inequities that are deeply woven into American life, defenders of the stars and bars may feel that it is a desecration. They have argued that the flag is a sacred symbol of Southern history, of a general sense of rebelliousness against authority, and of the defense of states’ rights. Yet images of Charleston mass-murderer Dylann Roof draped with the same flag make it impossible to pretend that it is not also a galvanizing and virulent symbol of racism. The slowness of the dismantling mirrors the larger challenge of breaking apart the legacy of racism. The process encourages meditation on the time it takes to methodically change the ingrown habits of society. The work’s poetic power derives in part from its finitude; the flag will someday be completely dismantled. When

it is, the question of what meaning the viewer will draw from the consummation of the act is partly answered by an earlier work titled Unraveled, in which the flag has been completely taken apart and divided into balls of red, white, and blue thread. Perhaps this companion work conveys optimism regarding an evolution toward an America unified under these colors. But there is a subtle irony as well: the separation of the threads is a form of disintegration; that is, the opposite of integration. It is a reminder that the constituent colors of the Confederate flag connect it to the U.S. flag—dismembering the emblem of the Confederacy does not automatically lead to a dismantling of the de-facto segregation that still mars American civic life. In pitting the transformative potential of this deconstructive performance—which took place this past summer in New York’s Mixed Greens gallery with a participatory audience (fifty people working together undid less than one inch of the flag)—against the virulent endurance of a symbolic object that is widespread and may be replicated ten thousand times over, one might ask if this is simply a pebble in the wrong shoe (the question often asked of activist art that reaches sympathetic audiences in galleries or museums but may remain unseen by the people the artist most hopes to affect). Yet the online image of Unraveling, on Facebook and Artnet.com, to start, could extend virally and infinitely as the work progresses toward its happy demise. With this widening exposure, the image can become firmly planted in the mind’s eyes of a huge number of people, maybe even some apologists for the Lost Cause. After seeing it, who could look at the stars and bars without imagining its companion, this shredded ghost that Clark has so carefully unmade?

Sonya Clark and Progressive Disassembly

Unraveling in process, Mixed Greens gallery, New York

Unraveling and Unraveled, 2015, Installation view at Mixed Greens gallery, New York

202 2nd Ave. South, Franklin, TN 37064 • www.gallery202art.com • 615-472-1134

Artist Reception • September 4, 6-9 pm

HISTORY EMBR ACING ART

MELVIN TOLEDO

Camellias with Pear

Gallery202_0915.indd 1 8/12/15 4:32 PMSept2015.indd 67 8/20/15 4:58 PM

Page 68: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

68 | September 2015 NashvilleArts.com

In much the same way that Walker Evans and Dorothea Lang brought to light the human stories of the Great Depression, Baldwin Lee’s Photographs of Black Americans in the South provides a revelatory glimpse into the lives

of African Americans in the rural South during the early 1980s. This hauntingly beautiful body of work, encompassing portraits, landscapes, and interiors, is a deeply empathetic portrait of an unseen world and a poignant meditation on the dignity and resilience that is at the heart of the human condition. The project had its genesis during a road trip that took Lee—who had studied with both Walker Evans and Minor White—from Knoxville to New Orleans, documenting what he saw along the way.

“In the 1980s, as an Asian American male in my thirties carrying a large tripod-mounted camera on my shoulder, I was an uncommon sight in the communities in which I chose to photograph,” says Lee. Although he may have been an out-of-the-ordinary presence in these small towns, he had no trouble establishing a rapport with his subjects. “I would estimate that out of twenty people who were asked for their permission to participate in being

photographed, nineteen would accede.”Lee’s approach to the project and photography in general acknowledges the major role that chance and serendipity can play in capturing a great image. “I would approach people who I thought embodied some aspect of physical grace in their posture, gesture, or expression and ask for permission to photograph,” says Lee.

Baldwin LeeTennessee Arts Commission Gallery • Through September 18

Baldwin Lee

Barbershop, Vicksburg, MS, 1983 Woman with Hat, Lula, MS, 1984

Bayou Beagles Alan Interior, Vicksburg, MS, 1984

by Daniel Tidwell

Sept2015.indd 68 8/20/15 4:58 PM

Page 69: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

NashvilleArts.com September 2015 | 69

“Of course, as soon as my introduction was made, the attributes . . . would vanish. I would therefore . . . ask that what constituted the physical grace be re-enacted” with “no way to predict the outcome. “The great American photographer Diane Arbus said that she never took a photograph she intended; they turned out either better or worse. She was right, and there was nothing more satisfying and surprising when in the rare instance it turned out better. The photographs that are included in this exhibition were surprises to me that exceeded my expectations and intentions.” In retrospect, Lee considers Photographs of Black Americans in the South to be the finest work of his career. “The ambition to produce good work cannot be fulfilled through conscious intention. Only through the passage of time can it be determined if something done has merit. In reflecting on the trajectory of my career, it makes sense

to me that the work I did prior to my project in the South was . . . laying the necessary groundwork.” Lee’s approach to photography throughout his career has continued to insist upon the impossibility of preconceived outcomes in the creation of images. “To make a photograph that meets already established criteria for success is to demonstrate the path to boredom. If success can be defined . . . the possibility of a significant aesthetic experience is denied. It is essential that a work succeed in new ways so as to redefine an already known content,” says Lee. “A successful work enlarges the breadth of experience of its maker and audience.”

Photographer Baldwin Lee’s exhibit at the Tennessee Arts Commission Gallery, Photographs of Black Americans in the South, will be on view through September 18. For more information, visit www.tnartscommission.org.

Legendary Tennessee Photographer Captures Iconic Images of

Black Americans in the South

White Dresses, Tunica, MS, 1984

Man’s Back, Shreveport, LA, 1984

2 Groups of Children (Dusk), Columbia, LA, 1984

Big TV, Macon, GA, 1985

Sept2015.indd 69 8/20/15 4:58 PM

Page 70: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

70 | September 2015 NashvilleArts.com

SOO SUNNY PARK2015 Martin Shallenberger Artist-in-Residence

Be a part of the most recent installation

by our 2015 Martin Shallenberger Artist-in-Residence, Soo Sunny Park, on display now

in Cheekwood’s Courtyard Gallery in the

Frist Learning Center. Titled Silver Linings, this dramatic installation invites you to

walk among silver and black suspended

“clouds,” finding new paths and weaving

your way through the transformed space.

Don’t miss this unique opportunity to see

and experience this exciting exhibition!

Through October 25

cheekwood.org

inings

Silver Linings, 2015

silverl

Sept2015.indd 70 8/20/15 4:58 PM

Page 71: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

NashvilleArts.com September 2015 | 71

Buying art can be intimidating. Having worked in art galleries in both New York and Los Angeles, I remember clearly the tentative, almost fearful, faces of clients who had

never purchased fine art. Seasoned art buyers were bold and asked tough questions. They wanted to know about the artist’s personal life, and they asked for studio visits and discounts. Some didn’t know anything about the artists or what the art was about—they simply bought art to impress their friends and colleagues. But I particularly enjoyed working with new clients because they seemed to buy art for what I thought was the best reason—because they loved it and couldn’t imagine their lives without it. But how do you determine the value of art? There is no Kelley Blue Book to give you a clear idea of the value of an 18 x 24-inch oil landscape on Belgian linen. And let’s face it—the art world can be overwhelming. There are so many different types of art, artists, and price points. I remember walking into a gallery in Los Angeles where the paintings, priced at $150,000, were by an artist who had only just graduated from art school. And in the next gallery, a mid-career artist, who had been teaching and exhibiting for over twenty-five years, was fetching $10,000 for the same-sized work. How could that be? Was it the imagery? The style? Some of that has to do with the gallery itself. If an art dealer is highly respected and carries a stable of desirable, museum-quality artists, then the dealer and artist can put any price on the work that they deem fit. Whether it’s truly worth the cost is anyone’s guess. And a dealer or artist who tells you to buy art as an investment should be strongly questioned. There are never any guarantees. If the art you purchase goes up in value over time, consider it a bonus. I think art is like anything in this world—the value of a painting is what someone will pay for it.

So, how does the average person who wants to start buying art navigate the maze of choices from art fairs, artists’ studios, galleries, online stores, eBay, auctions, and more? Educate yourself. There are

experienced art consultants and designers who are knowledgeable about purchasing art especially in the community where they work. They can point out who they think are strong, legitimate artists on a healthy career path and dealers they enjoy working with, but you may not like their taste in art. It’s subjective. Attend monthly art openings, read art magazines, and research artists online. I suggest you keep a folder of any images you respond to—maybe it’s the color, the subject matter, the conceptual statement, the mood, the medium or texture. Whatever it is that attracts you, tear it out of a magazine or keep a digital file. Discover what YOU love. Then, if you respond to a particular artist’s work, ask to visit their studio or find out where their next show is so you can meet them. Maybe you can buy a sketch or small piece to begin with and build from there. Artists are usually happy to talk to new collectors and want to find a way to help them buy their work. Some artists sell from their studios but charge close to their gallery’s retail price so there’s no conflict with the dealer. If you love a piece but cannot pay for it all at once, ask for a payment plan. Some galleries and artists are open to that. I am still haunted to this day by a painting I fell in love with twenty years ago but was too afraid to ask for a creative purchasing plan. If a piece of art truly moves you, act on that. And remember, you don’t have to be wealthy to collect art. Two of the most celebrated collectors in the world were Herb and Dorothy Vogel from New York City. He was a postal clerk, and she was a librarian. They used her salary to live on and used his to buy art. They filled their rent-controlled, one-bedroom apartment with thousands of small works of art by what are now renowned minimalists, amassing the most important post-1960s art collection in the United States—over 4,782 works. When Dorothy was interviewed after the release of Megumi Sasaki’s second documentary film about the Vogels (see Herb and Dorothy), she summed up the essence of collecting with this: “I think people need to follow the heart. Don’t listen to a lot of people; if you do, you won’t be happy. Listen to yourself.” For more about the legacy of the Vogels’ collection, please visit www.vogel5050.org.

Rachael McCampbell is an artist, teacher, curator, and writer who resides in the small hamlet of Leiper’s Fork, Tennessee. For more about her, please visit www.rachaelmccampbell.com.PH

OTO

GRA

PH B

Y RO

N M

AN

VIL

LE

And So It Goes...

How to Buy Art? Follow Your Heartby Rachael McCampbell

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

NA

THA

NIE

L TI

LEST

ON

Dorothy and Herbert Vogel in 1975

Charles Clough, Untitled, 2008, Enamel on paper painting. Courtesy of the Birmingham Museum of Art. (Formerly part of the Vogel Collection)

SOO SUNNY PARK2015 Martin Shallenberger Artist-in-Residence

Be a part of the most recent installation

by our 2015 Martin Shallenberger Artist-in-Residence, Soo Sunny Park, on display now

in Cheekwood’s Courtyard Gallery in the

Frist Learning Center. Titled Silver Linings, this dramatic installation invites you to

walk among silver and black suspended

“clouds,” finding new paths and weaving

your way through the transformed space.

Don’t miss this unique opportunity to see

and experience this exciting exhibition!

Through October 25

cheekwood.org

inings

Silver Linings, 2015

silverl

Sept2015.indd 71 8/21/15 2:59 PM

Page 72: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

A n t i q u eC o p p e r

Ke t t l eCirca 1850

Galesburg, IL$680

A n t i q u e I r o n B a l c o n y C o n s o l e19th Cen tu r y, A rgen t i na

$3 ,900

TOP PICKS2015

S u m m e r i s u s h e r i n g i n n e w s t y l e s a n dt r e n d s . H e r e a r e a f e w o f Ke i t h ' sf a v o r i t e s & n e w a r r i v a l s , w h i c h I ' ms u r e w i l l e n d u p i n s o m e o f N a s h v i l l e ' sH O T T E S T H O M E S !

N A S H V I L L E . 6 1 5 . 3 5 0 . 6 6 5 5W W W . G A R D E N P A R K . C O M

1 9 t h C e n t u r y U r n39 1/2" h x 18 1/2" sq

$1 ,375

1941Greyhound

Bus Ta i lL ights$425 Pa i r

107 Harding Place • Tues-Sat 10-5 • 615.352.3316 • [email protected] www.yorkandfriends.com • Follow us on at York & Friends Fine Art

YORK & Friendsfine art

Nashville • Memphis

JAMES ERIC

RICHARDSON

Lavender Morning, Oil on canvas, 36” x 48”

ROBERT WILLIAMS

Realms of Glory, Mixed media on canvas, 36” x 48”

RonYork_0915.indd 1 8/18/15 9:27 AMSept2015.indd 72 8/20/15 4:58 PM

Page 73: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

107 Harding Place • Tues-Sat 10-5 • 615.352.3316 • [email protected] www.yorkandfriends.com • Follow us on at York & Friends Fine Art

YORK & Friendsfine art

Nashville • Memphis

JAMES ERIC

RICHARDSON

Lavender Morning, Oil on canvas, 36” x 48”

ROBERT WILLIAMS

Realms of Glory, Mixed media on canvas, 36” x 48”

RonYork_0915.indd 1 8/18/15 9:27 AMSept2015.indd 73 8/20/15 4:58 PM

Page 74: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

J o s e p h i n e

s c u l p t u r e

p a r k PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

AN

DRE

W M

ARS

H

a r t f u l

d a y t r i p

Sept2015.indd 74 8/20/15 4:58 PM

Page 75: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

NashvilleArts.com September 2015 | 75

by F. Douglass Schatz

Just a short drive from Nashville into central Kentucky lies Josephine Sculpture Park, a community-centric art park that encompasses sculpture, theatre, music, and other arts. Melanie VanHouten, likely the first person you will meet when visiting the park, is one of those people that instantly give off an

air of contagious energy and friendly excitement. She is the park’s founder and artistic director since the park opened in 2009 and has used her impressive energy to make the park the successful art hub that it is. VanHouten, who left a professorship of sculpture at the University of Minnesota to start the park, describes its mission to “provide community arts education and creative experiences while preserving the beauty of Kentucky’s native rural landscape.” The setting of the park is twenty-six acres of former farmland just outside of Frankfort that is used to display thirty-five artworks, including large-scale sculptures, murals, and other projects. Visitors are invited to walk through mowed paths or find their way through the fields to facilities such as the amphitheater or the artist-in-residence barn. The park offers a free venue for performing arts, arts education, art appreciation, and cultural enhancement.

Large-Scale Sculptures Transform this Frankfort,

Kentucky, Landscape into a Unique Art Experience

(left) Emma McClellan, Suspended in Water or Air, 2008, Fabricated steel, 20’ x 8’ x 8’

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

AN

DRE

W M

ARS

H

Scott Ross, Bower, 2010, Pressure treated pine, 17’ x 11’ x 11’

Kari Reardon, Barnacle, 2006, Steel and cement, 5’ x 4’ x 3’ Stacey Chinn, String Theory, 2013, Biodegradable flagging tape and tree

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

KEL

LY M

ORG

AN

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

KEL

LY M

ORG

AN

Sept2015.indd 75 8/20/15 4:58 PM

Page 76: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

76 | September 2015 NashvilleArts.com

Sculptures in the park are generally on loan (as opposed to a permanent collection) in order to achieve maximum exposure of the arts in the community. In addition to more traditional outdoor sculptures that adorn the landscape, artists are often invited to make site-specific or non-permanent artworks for the park. One example was a performance/installation by David Lobdell from New Mexico that burned binary code into the grass. Projects such as this make for a more experiential endeavor rather than a typical outdoor museum experience.

What is striking about the park is its lack of a corporate ‘feel’. There is really a grass-roots-type feeling at Josephine that is unique in this age of public arts venues that are proliferating around the country. It is definitely a place where one can go to see sculpture but, more important, a place where one could go to be with sculpture or even participate in the practice of art. This important difference makes the park stand out clearly among its contemporaries across the country. Preserving the Kentucky heritage is important at Josephine as evidenced by the natural paths and landscaping that keep the look and feel of the former farmland. VanHouten’s grandparents grew up on the farm (the park is named after her grandmother), and it keeps the beautiful rolling fields of central Kentucky intact. Of the park’s mission, VanHouten says, “It is important for the artwork and the land to fully co-exist aesthetically and naturally.” The heart of the park is with the community that inhabits the region. It is not unusual to see civic groups, at-risk youth, conservationists, and cultural groups using the park at any one time. During the summer,

the park hosts a theatre production called Shakespeare SummerStage, where actors use a commissioned sculpture as the set for a play. Also each year, the park hosts a Fall Arts Festival (September 13 this year) where the community is invited to participate in many artistic events, including a hot-metal pour, live music, community sculpture building, and other activities. This hands-on experience for the public is very unusual in art parks, but after talking to the director, it is clear that this type of experience is exactly what Josephine Sculpture Park was built for. In all, it is a vibrant place that is well worth the trip. Just keep in mind that although the park is a destination, it is also about the journey. Josephine Sculpture Park is located approximately three hours from Nashville in Frankfort, Kentucky. The museum is open daily 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. Plan your trip to the September 13 Fall Arts Festival. For more information, visit www.josephinesculpturepark.org.

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

AN

DRE

W M

ARS

H

Andrew Marsh is welding on his sculpture during a residency in the JSP barn studio building

Louisville artist Robert Cheever assists participants in blowing their own glass ornaments during the annual Fall Arts Festival

Josephine Sculpture Park is the vision of co-founders Melanie VanHouten and BJ Duvall

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

MIC

K J

EFFR

IES

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

KEL

LY M

ORG

AN

p h o t o g r a p h y c o m p e t i t i o n

2 · 0 · 1 · 5

Nashville Arts Magazine announces our sixth annual photography competition.

Last year, we saw a stunning array of talent from

local and international photographers both

amateur and professional. We can’t wait to see what 2015 brings!

Submissions due by: September 30, 2015 · Winners announced: November 2015

See www.nashvillearts.com for details.

$5 per submission: a maximum of 3 high resolution photographs. Send to [email protected].

First Place: $500 cash

Second Place: $300 Chromatics gift card

Third Place: $200 Chromatics gift card

Top entries will be featured in the November issue of

Nashville Arts Magazine and entrants may be given the

opportunity to shoot an assignmentPH

OTO

GRA

PH B

Y V

IKK

A S

CH

WEE

R

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

SARA

H F

AIT

H T

AYLO

R

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

MIK

E G

AN

NO

N

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

JULI

AN

DU

RAPH

OTO

GRA

PH B

Y SA

LLY

BEBA

WY

Photo_Competition2015.indd 1 8/13/15 10:47 AMSept2015.indd 76 8/20/15 4:58 PM

Page 77: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

p h o t o g r a p h y c o m p e t i t i o n

2 · 0 · 1 · 5

Nashville Arts Magazine announces our sixth annual photography competition.

Last year, we saw a stunning array of talent from

local and international photographers both

amateur and professional. We can’t wait to see what 2015 brings!

Submissions due by: September 30, 2015 · Winners announced: November 2015

See www.nashvillearts.com for details.

$5 per submission: a maximum of 3 high resolution photographs. Send to [email protected].

First Place: $500 cash

Second Place: $300 Chromatics gift card

Third Place: $200 Chromatics gift card

Top entries will be featured in the November issue of

Nashville Arts Magazine and entrants may be given the

opportunity to shoot an assignmentPH

OTO

GRA

PH B

Y V

IKK

A S

CH

WEE

R

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

SARA

H F

AIT

H T

AYLO

R

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

MIK

E G

AN

NO

N

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

JULI

AN

DU

RAPH

OTO

GRA

PH B

Y SA

LLY

BEBA

WY

Photo_Competition2015.indd 1 8/13/15 10:47 AMSept2015.indd 77 8/20/15 4:58 PM

Page 78: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

A nother school year is underway throughout Middle Tennessee, and for the Nashville Symphony, that means a new season of music education programs designed to engage, enrich, and inspire youth throughout the region.

With eighty-three world-class orchestra musicians and a 197,000-square-foot concert hall built to serve the entire community, the Symphony is uniquely positioned to provide music education services to the children of Middle Tennessee. Last school year, the Symphony’s education programs reached tens of thousands of K–12 students in public, private, and home schools. “The Nashville Symphony has an international reputation for artistic excellence,” says Director of Education and Community Engagement Walter Bitner. “But here at home, we’ve also built an important reputation as educators. It’s a role we take very seriously, and that’s evident in the programs we offer and the enthusiasm with which those programs are executed.”The Symphony’s education offerings include a wide range of programs, from concerts at the Schermerhorn to school and community events, al l presented in partnership with local school systems and fellow nonprofit organizations:Free Concerts & Rehearsals: Attended by more than 20,000 students each year, daytime Young People’s Concerts (YPC) are geared toward specific grade levels, accompanied by downloadable teaching curriculum. Curb Open Dress Rehearsals give K–12 and col lege students the opportunity to sit in on a Nashville Symphony rehearsal and see firsthand what goes into preparing for a concert. New for 2015/16,

One on a Part offers free chamber music performances, with programs designed to teach students about core musical and thematic concepts. Instrument Petting Zoos: Giving younger children the chance to play an array of brass, woodwind, percussion, and more, Instrument Petting Zoos are a staple of the family-friendly activities that precede all Saturday-morning Pied Piper Children’s concerts and can also be found at many community events throughout the year. After-School Programs: Working with the Nashville After Zone Alliance, the Symphony visits multiple sites each year to provide hands-on music experiences to middle-school students in the Metro Nashville Public Schools system.Teacher Resources: NashvilleSymphony.org is home to a variety of resources, including lesson plans and curricula, the educational “Let’s Go to the Symphony” video, and online tools from partner orchestras and music education groups.The Symphony’s education programming also includes a concerto competition for high-school musicians, musician-led sectional rehearsals and ensemble performances in local schools, and discounted

tickets to classical concerts for students of all ages. And with Nashville’s population steadily growing, Bitner sees opportunities to expand the Symphony’s role even further. “Everything we do here is designed to foster the foundation for a lifelong appreciation and love of music, regardless of age or background,” he says. “With so many local partners committed to that very same vision, the sky is truly the limit for music education in Music City.” Learn more and watch an informational video at www.nashvillesymphony.org/education.

Music Education: A Vital Role of the Nashville Symphony

by Dave Felipe

Symphony In Depth

ALL

PH

OTO

GRA

PHS

CO

UR

TESY

OF

NA

SHV

ILLE

SYM

PHO

NY

ORC

HES

TRA

78 | September 2015 NashvilleArts.com

Sept2015.indd 78 8/20/15 4:59 PM

Page 79: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

Sept2015.indd 79 8/20/15 4:59 PM

Page 80: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

80 | September 2015 NashvilleArts.com

A rtist team Haddad | Drugan, made up of Laura Haddad and Tom Drugan of Seattle,

Washington, bring the Cumberland River center stage with the newest addition to the public art collection, Light Meander. Standing 45 feet tall, the inspiration and shape of the sculpture is drawn from its significant location sitting atop a former tributary to the Cumberland. Artist Tom Drugan says about the sculpture, “The river once was the lifeblood of the city, but over time that connection diminished. With the sculpture, we hope to help reconnect the river to the Nashville community and the many downtown visitors.” The form of the sculpture is based on the meandering curves of the Cumberland River as it passes through Davidson County. Light Meander, like the river itself, invites interaction. The river-facing side has a highly polished steel surface, which reflects the park and visitors in unique and playful ways. The city-facing side of the sculpture features a curvilinear ipe-wood bench, a pattern of mirror stainless steel tubes, and color-changing LED strip lights that create a textured ribbon of electric light at night. The lighting draws from the changing colors and qualities of light bouncing across the river’s surface. Specially programmed lighting shows will change over time with the river and the city. On the underside of the bench and at the top of the river side are thousands of stainless steel guitar picks that subtly evoke the musical legacy of Nashville. The hanging picks create sound when activated by wind or hand, and the top picks cast reflections similar to the scintillating sun on the river. In town for a talk on August 13, the artists spoke about their work and how they got started in public art. Tom Drugan started out by saying, “I think you’re born an artist and then you find your path.” Haddad and Drugan, both formally trained in landscape architecture and architecture, are currently working on several large-scale projects around the country.

They presented some of their earliest public art projects, which included a $6,000 temporary project in the median of Santa Monica Boulevard. They purchased a 1959 Pontiac Starchief and filled it with soil and plants, which grew out of the car over six months. The project addressed the car culture of that city and how it changes the landscape and our connection to nature. Laura mentioned, “The only real difference between a $6,000 project and a $6,000,000 project is scale.” Aspiring public artists in the audience at their talk asked, “What’s the best piece of advice you can give me for getting into the field? Networking?” Laura and Tom both said they didn’t think it was really about networking, but more about persistence, tenacity, and finding projects that speak to you and your work. “If you’re a mural painter, don’t apply for sculpture projects or vice versa. Your work needs to fit the scope of the project.” Tom added, “I think we applied for a hundred projects before we got our first one. Then once you have your first one, it’s much easier to get your second. . . . Thinking back to some of our earliest public art application slides, a lot of the work we showed was work we would go and create ourselves.” He advised artists, “Show work that’s not necessarily commissioned work, but just the range of work you’ve done on your own, and then go after temporary projects. There’s a lot more venues for that now. It’s kind of an exciting way to get into the public art world.”

You can f ind the sculpture at the intersection of Demonbreun and 1st Avenue in Riverfront Park. For more information on this and other public art projects, please visi t on your mobile device www.ExploreNashvilleArt.com or, from your desktop, publicart.nashville.gov. If you’re an artist and are interested in future public art workshops and trainings, please let us know at [email protected].

Laura Haddad and Tom Drugan, Light Meander, 2015, Stainless steel plate and tube, hardwood, color-changing LED strip lights, and acrylic rod, 45’ x 3’ x 1’

by Caroline Vincent, Director of Public Art | Photography by Stacey Irvin

LIGHT MEANDER Reaches to the Sky at the Riverside

INQUIRIES: [email protected] OR PHONE 615.430.8147 OR 615.312.7000. HAYNESGALLERIES.COM GALLERIES: ON THE MUSIC ROW ROUNDABOUT IN NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE AND SEASONALLY IN THOMASTON, MAINE

E X T E N D E D T H R O U G H S E P T E M B E R 2 6 , 2 0 1 5

JOHN GUIDER. B 1949. FLORIDA BAY, MARATHON KEY (DETAIL). ARCHIVAL DIGITAL PRINT. 32 X 48 INCHES

ART NASHVILLE H AY N E S G A L L E R I E S

P R E S E N T S

Sept2015.indd 80 8/20/15 4:59 PM

Page 81: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

INQUIRIES: [email protected] OR PHONE 615.430.8147 OR 615.312.7000. HAYNESGALLERIES.COM GALLERIES: ON THE MUSIC ROW ROUNDABOUT IN NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE AND SEASONALLY IN THOMASTON, MAINE

E X T E N D E D T H R O U G H S E P T E M B E R 2 6 , 2 0 1 5

JOHN GUIDER. B 1949. FLORIDA BAY, MARATHON KEY (DETAIL). ARCHIVAL DIGITAL PRINT. 32 X 48 INCHES

ART NASHVILLE H AY N E S G A L L E R I E S

P R E S E N T S

Sept2015.indd 81 8/20/15 4:59 PM

Page 82: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

by Stephanie Stewart Howard

W illiamson Medical Center’s new children’s wing not only has the advantage of being shiny and new, but while abundantly kid friendly, the soothing choices

made for the wing’s artwork make it welcoming to all ages. Instead of the plethora of generic Mickeys, Elmos, and commercialized cartoons, WMC chose to fill its halls and walls with artwork by local artists, representing the county’s recognizable landscape. The result is an environment that feels safe and magical to young children, but which does not alienate older kids and jar adults. Walking into the second floor entrance, you’re greeted by a gorgeous life-sized bronze by Clay Enoch of three children: two older boys examine a single butterfly that has landed, while a tiny girl points to the sky, where a series of bright-yellow butterflies flutter off along the ceiling. Go to the right and a glorious painting of Tennessee birds—owl, hummingbird, cardinal, and more—by David Arms rests next to the reception desk.Just outside, to the right, is a fenced, outdoor space for play and relaxation featuring a spongy blue “carpet” decorated with a life-like bronze heron, plus a huge tortoise and an otter, ready for kids to climb and play, by Lin Swensson and Andrea Lugar.“The concept started with the architect creating a river feature with the flooring material of the courtyard,” she says. “To support this concept, we thought river creatures, those local and familiar to all of us. My years of hiking, biking, canoeing and fishing allowed me to give a selection to the committee of those creatures local to

Local Artists Bring a Sense of Well-being to

Williamson Medical Center

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

KIE

RAN

REY

NO

LDS

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

NA

TE K

ARL

IN

Butler Steltemeier’s Natchez Trace Bridge in the children’s ER waiting room

Horse mural in the third floor patient unit

82 | September 2015 NashvilleArts.com

Sept2015.indd 82 8/20/15 4:59 PM

Page 83: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

Williamson County. All the tiles were hand made from clay and the glazes specifically formulated to resemble the natural color of the animals in the wild. The entire creation was hand sculpted from steel, concrete, and handmade clay tiles.”Swensson, along with Chief Operating Officer Julie Miller and Communications Manager Melonee Hurt, worked with a multi-disciplinary committee of eight to bring together a total vision.“It’s a labor of love. We truly all put our hearts into it,” says Miller.“The art is woven into the bones of this place,” says Hurt, as she shows off the second floor atrium, featuring a huge mural of hot air balloons over a lush Williamson landscape by Roger Dale Brown.Elements of outdoors are everywhere. The ward rooms are decorated as downtown Franklin spaces—the trolley, the toy store, Grays on Main. A long wall ahead of them is a stone-fenced pasture with grazing horses. A favorite piece in the ER by Butler Steltemeier showing the Natchez Trace Bridge, Gentry’s Farm, and other outdoor spaces gleefully inhabited by woodland creatures is also copied as wallpaper in the third-floor playroom space. There’s even a superhero collage done by country super-star and donor Brad Paisley.“Our goal was to incorporate the county and maintain a nurturing, healing feel. Art was part of our design vision from the beginning,” says Miller. “We hope when either kids or parents look at a piece, it can take them elsewhere for a second.” For more information, visit www.williamsonmedicalcenter.org.

Art was part of our design vision from the beginning. We hope when either kids or parents

look at a piece, it can take them elsewhere for a second.

“”

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

KIE

RAN

REY

NO

LDS

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

KIE

RAN

REY

NO

LDS

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

NA

TE K

ARL

IN

Roger Dale Brown’s Hot Air Balloons in the second floor atrium

Clay Enoch’s sculpture located in the atrium

Painting on a footwall

NashvilleArts.com September 2015 | 83

Sept2015.indd 83 8/20/15 4:59 PM

Page 84: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

84 | September 2015 NashvilleArts.com

Leaping Carp gaLLery

www.LeapingCarpgaLLery.ComOrder 18th & 19th century Japanese ukiyo-e

print replicas for display & inspiration

LeapingCarp_0915.indd 1 8/10/15 2:12 PM

Rebecca Ruegger & Tara Thompson

Boy

and

Dog

, Reb

ecca

Rue

gger

Seas

peak

, Tar

a Th

omps

on

OPENING RECEPTION: SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 3-5 PM • MARNIE SHERIDAN GALLERY AT THE HARPETH HALL SCHOOL

EXHIBITION: SEPTEMBER 8 – OCTOBER 23, 2015 • GALLERY OPEN MONDAY – FRIDAY 8:00 AM to 4:30 PM The Harpeth Hall School • 3801 Hobbs Road, Nashville • Gallery located in McMurry Center accessible at Esteswood Road entrance • www.harpethhall.org

DOWNTOWN NASHVILLE919 BROADWAY | FRISTCENTER.ORG

THE FRIST CENTER FOR THE VISUAL ARTS IS SUPPORTED IN PART BY

Moriz Jung (1885–1915). Viennese Café: The Man of Letters (detail), 1911. Wiener Werkstätte Postcard 532. Chromolithograph. Leonard A. Lauder Collection. Neue Galerie New York

SELECTIONS FROM THE LEONARD A. LAUDER COLLECTION

FC7766_Mab_NashvilleArts_9x11.15_VienneseCafe.indd 1 8/14/15 12:56 PM

MAREK KACKI, MD

AESTHETIC MEDICINE

physician and artist

WeʼreDifferentJust ask around

Sept2015.indd 84 8/20/15 4:59 PM

Page 85: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

DOWNTOWN NASHVILLE919 BROADWAY | FRISTCENTER.ORG

THE FRIST CENTER FOR THE VISUAL ARTS IS SUPPORTED IN PART BY

Moriz Jung (1885–1915). Viennese Café: The Man of Letters (detail), 1911. Wiener Werkstätte Postcard 532. Chromolithograph. Leonard A. Lauder Collection. Neue Galerie New York

SELECTIONS FROM THE LEONARD A. LAUDER COLLECTION

FC7766_Mab_NashvilleArts_9x11.15_VienneseCafe.indd 1 8/14/15 12:56 PMSept2015.indd 85 8/20/15 4:59 PM

Page 86: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

4th annual

5:30 – 9 pm Saturday, October 10

The Clay Lady’s CampusARTableARTable is an annual event that brings together

extraordinary artists and art enthusiasts for an evening of conversation about the process of creating art. Food will be provided by local restaurants. There will also be

a cash bar serving wine and seasonal fall brews.

Facebook “f ” Logo CMYK / .eps Facebook “f ” Logo CMYK / .eps

Judy Klich

Tammy Gentuso Bryce McCloud

Alice E. Shepherd

Purchase Tickets at www.leadershipdh.orgStephanie Pruitt

1416 Lebanon Pike, Nashville TN 37210

ArtTable.indd 1 8/17/15 4:41 PM

Public Art

Our Town Nashville: Together Heroic

by Van Gill Maravalli, Public Art Project Coordinator, Metro Nashville Arts Commission

Nashville-based printmaker Bryce McCloud has spent the last two years actively engaging Nashville in a conversation about community—a conversation he hopes

to continue this fall. The first phase of McCloud’s Our Town project visited fifty locations across town—homeless shelters, concert halls, police stations, coffee shops, and everywhere in between—inviting Nashvillians to join in a community-wide self-portrait-making activity. As McCloud prepares for the second phase of the project he explains, “We will take what we’ve learned from these experiences, images, and creative viewpoints and distill them into a unified visual conclusion that is a celebration of Nashville—a creative collaboration on a grand scale.”

Phase two of the project, which McCloud has titled Our Town Nashville: Together Heroic, will consist of two interdependent elements. The stamp portraits of phase one will be reimagined on a larger scale, and the bike cart will be replaced by a retrofitted bread truck serving as an interactive gallery space. The Our Town team will emulate the behaviors, techniques, and processes they observed during phase one while recreating the portrait-making project on a larger-than-life scale at a number of different locations this fall. At each location, viewers will be invited to step inside the bread truck turned interactive art gallery to see memorabilia from phase one, make their own self-portrait, or listen to audio recordings collected during phase one of the public art project. In many ways, Our Town is Bryce McCloud’s love letter to Nashville and those who call Music City home. McCloud explains, “We hope to honor all of the talented and generous people we have encountered these past few years. We want to remind people that together we can be heroic. Together we can make our city’s future brighter.” Our Town Nashville: Together Heroic can be experienced at the following locations this fall: Cumberland Park, September 18 and 19; Main Branch Public Library, October 16 and 17; and OZ Arts Nashville, December 7 through 10. For additional information, visit www.ourtownnashville.org/calendar or www.nashville.gov/Arts-Commission/Public-Art.aspx.

IMAGE BY BRYCE MCCLOUD

Sept2015.indd 86 8/20/15 4:59 PM

Page 87: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

4th annual

5:30 – 9 pm Saturday, October 10

The Clay Lady’s CampusARTableARTable is an annual event that brings together

extraordinary artists and art enthusiasts for an evening of conversation about the process of creating art. Food will be provided by local restaurants. There will also be

a cash bar serving wine and seasonal fall brews.

Facebook “f ” Logo CMYK / .eps Facebook “f ” Logo CMYK / .eps

Judy Klich

Tammy Gentuso Bryce McCloud

Alice E. Shepherd

Purchase Tickets at www.leadershipdh.orgStephanie Pruitt

1416 Lebanon Pike, Nashville TN 37210

ArtTable.indd 1 8/17/15 4:41 PMSept2015.indd 87 8/20/15 4:59 PM

Page 88: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

by Joe Nolan

Artists Kristina Estell and David Bowen have assigned red, blue, and green color values to the angles between the earth, the sun, and the Voyager 1, the space probe

launched by NASA in 1977. More than thirty-seven years later the craft continues its study of the outer solar system, communicating with the Deep Space Network, receiving commands, and returning data. The probe’s mission officially came to an end in 1980 after Voyager 1 provided detailed images of Jupiter and Saturn and their moons. In 2012, Voyager 1 was the first probe to enter interstellar space. As the probe continues its interstellar journey and the earth orbits the sun, these angles constantly change and so do their color values in the artists’ model which can be seen on their website, on display in the gallery. The little light at Seed Space is gradually shifting between various shades of purple. Although it’s imperceptible, the exhibition is in a state of constant transformation as our planet and the probe do their daily dance. One of the best recent shows at Seed Space was Rocky Horton’s All the Lights in My House. That installation featured a display of the lamps and chandeliers from the artist ’s home, leaving the gallery haunted by the second half of that exhibition—Horton and his family living without electric light for the run of the show. Seed Space’s new exhibition, Voyager One, has a lot in common with that installation: in place of a collection of lamps it features one tiny light in a gallery made nearly completely dark by blackout curtains. While Horton’s lights reminded viewers of his darkened house, this little beacon creates the felt presence of an object that’s literally no longer in our solar system. Art often puts us in touch with ourselves—our feelings, our bodies, our thoughts. It seldom offers us a palpable sense of that gargantuan “everything else” that makes up nearly all of this vast place we inhabit. Voyager One is a tiny display with big implications, and just like Horton’s show it reminds us that we—and everything else—are mostly just bumping around in the dark. Voyager One is on exhibit at Seed Space through September 14. For more information, visit www.seedspace.org.

Critical i

At Seed Space Voyager One Puts Viewers in Their Place

Kristina Estell and David Bowen, Voyager One, Custom software, computer monitor and LED lights

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

KRI

STIN

A E

STEL

LPH

OTO

GRA

PH B

Y K

RIST

INA

EST

ELL

Sept2015.indd 88 8/20/15 4:59 PM

Page 89: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

www.americanamusic.org

SEPTEMBER

15-20nashville, tenn.

2015

presented by

MIEL’S B A R N IS THE ULTIMATE PRIVATE VENUE

FOR BUSINESS LUNCHES & DINNERS, COCKTAIL RECEPTIONS OR

LIFE’S CELEBRATIONSTO RESERVE THE BARN EMAIL

[email protected]

53RD & CHARLOTTE

615.298.3663

MIELRESTAURANT.COM

ENJOY MIEL’S SEASONALLYINSPIRED MENU IN

OUR PRIVATE EVENTS VENUE

InternatIonal exhIbItIon of the

amerIcan Watercolor SocIety

The AWS Exhibition is one of the premier watercolor exhibits in the world. 40 paintings were selected from 1,200 artists

in 27 foreign countries and the United States. For Exhibit Hours and More Information Call (931) 455-1234 or Visit:

Tullahoma Fine Arts Center

through September 20

Linda Baker, His Keys

The 148th Annual

Mike Kowalski, Read All About It (detail)

www.tullahomafineartscenter.org

Tullahoma_0915.indd 1 8/19/15 2:37 PM

Sept2015.indd 89 8/20/15 4:59 PM

Page 90: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

FREE • ON MAIN STREET

September 12, 201510am to 4pm

Antique Appraisal Show presented by Goodlettsville Antique Mall

One appraisal: $15Two appraisals: $20Three appraisals: $30100% of appraisal fees go to charity

100 for 100 Art Show & Salepresented by Artists on Main Painting Society

25% of all sales go to charity

Goodlettsville Food Courtpresented by Goodlettsville Area Chamber of Commerce

by Chan Dillon

When Mr. Dylan wrote those lyrics we can presume he wasn’t concerned with the insurance he might need

when the masterpiece was complete, but, as with any small-business owner, securing appropriate

coverage is an important consideration for artists. Many people engage in artistic activities to nurture their creative side, but if an artist utilizes their talents to generate income, they are also in business. These artists need coverage to protect not only their property, but also to protect against the liability exposure if someone is injured or has property damaged while at the artist’s studio or showcase. Artists working out of their homes may not realize that a typical homeowner’s policy does not cover losses associated with business-related activities. This means the art-related property and (where applicable) the home studio itself may not be covered. Artists should discuss with their insurance agent whether coverage for their business activity and property is available and whether it is necessary. If appropriate coverage cannot be granted by the homeowner’s existing policy, if the artist has established an LLC, or if the creative space is in a commercial building, then a business owner policy is appropriate and can usually be acquired for a reasonable price. The artistic property and the liability exposure are both covered by business owner policies.The business property coverage on either a properly written homeowner’s policy or on a business owner policy is limited if that property is in transit, at another location, or is owned by someone else and in the artist’s care and custody. Accordingly, the policy needs to account for each scenario. The takeaway? Insurance is available to protect that masterpiece, or Bob Dylan’s famous Sunburst Stratocaster guitar, but artists must ensure that the policy covers all of the scenarios they encounter in their business.For additional information and resources, please visit www.StudioProtector.org.

Chan Dillon is president of WC Dillon Company, an independent insurance agency that serves the insurance needs of more than two hundred small- and medium-sized businesses predominantly in Middle Tennessee and serves on the Arts & Business Council ’s Board of Directors.

“Someday, everything is gonna be differentWhen I paint my masterpiece” — Bob Dylan

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

JESS

ICA

HER

BER

T

Sept2015.indd 90 8/20/15 4:59 PM

Page 91: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

NashvilleArts.com September 2015 | 91

4304 Charlotte Ave • Nashville, TN615-298-4611 • www.lequiregallery.com

Tennessee State Flag, Enamel on Copper, 20” x 24”

Ben Caldwell Enameled Wall Sculpture

LeQuire_0915.indd 1 8/12/15 1:07 PM

SARRATT ART STUDIOS

Non Credit Studio Art Classes begin September 14, 2015

Drawing, Clay, Metal, Jewelry, Fused Glass, Photography and more!

REGISTER ONLINEwww.vanderbilt.edu/sarrattart

Sarratt_0815.indd 1 7/15/15 11:17 AM

Susanna and the Elders, 2013, Wool, cotton and silk thread on tulle fabric, 48 in x 46 in

Portrait Paint ings

&Works on

Tul leVisit

meghanvaziri.com or call

(901) 246-4250 for portrait commissions

or other inquiries.Portrait of an Artist, 2013, Oil on canvas, 16 in x 12 in

Vaziri_0314.indd 1 2/11/14 1:56 PM

Sept2015.indd 91 8/20/15 4:59 PM

Page 92: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

92 | September 2015 NashvilleArts.com

by Tony Youngblood

S ean Par rott knows the exact moment he decided to get serious

about comedy. Eight years ago while telling jokes on stage at the Boro Bar and Grill in Murfreesboro, he heard a loud, “Boo!” But he couldn’t figure out where it came from. Then he noticed the club’s open windows and realized he was being booed from outside. “It’s tough to be heckled by someone standing on grass,” he says. “Since then, I’ve worked on improving my jokes. Mostly, I never perform while windows are open.”Sean is a ten-year veteran of the Nashville comedy scene and has performed on nearly every stage in the city. We asked him to provide a breakdown of the weekly comedy happenings with selected commentary:Mondays: Open Mic at Bobby’s Idle Hour. Sign up at 6:30, show at 7.Tuesdays: Ultimate Comedy open mic at The East Room. Sign up at 8, show at 8:30. “This is my favorite mic in town. My friend Brad Edwards hosts it, and there’s usually a great, supportive crowd.”Red Eye open mic at Wilburn Street Tavern. Sign up at 10, show at

Tony Youngblood is the founder of the Circuit Benders’ Ball, a biennial celebration of free culture, art, music, and the creative spirit. He created the open-source, multi-artist, scalable “art tunnel” concept called M.A.P.s (ModularArtPods.com) and runs the experimental improv music blog and podcast www.TheatreIntangible.com.

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

JOH

N S

CA

RPA

TI

Art in FormationStirrings from the Nashville Underground

10:30. “This show is very smoky and goes pretty late, so it’s usually strange but fun.”Wednesdays: (First and Third Wednesday) Dive Laughing open mic at The Springwater. Sign up at 9, show at 9:30. “I host this, and it’s usually OK.”(Second Wednesday) Kamikaze Kitten Comedy Show at Dino’s, 8:30.Thursdays: Throwback Thursdays at Throwbacks, 8:30.Fridays: (Third Friday) Luxury Prestige the Third scripted comedy show at The East Room, 7.(Third Friday) Perfect Timing comedy game show at the East Room, 9.Saturdays: (First Saturday) “Unscripted” improv show at Bongo After Hours Theatre, 9.(First Saturday) Jokers Abbey at Smokers Abbey, 7:30.Sundays: Spiffy Squirrel at The East Room, 6:30. “Chad Riden hosts. Recently they’ve had some really great people on it like Ryan Singer, Myq Kaplan, and Dave Stone.”

Check out www.NashvilleStandUp.com for upcoming shows and YouTube.com/SeanParrottComedy for Sean’s stand-up and music videos.

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

MIC

HA

EL H

AM

PTO

N

Hand pulled prints by Julie Sola1108 Woodland St. • East Nashville

Hours 12-5 Friday - Sunday or by appointment

Julie Solawww.fatcrowpress.etsy.com

www.fatcrowpress.com

proto pulp book show september 26

10 am to 6 pm

FatCrow_0915.indd 1 8/10/15 2:12 PM

516 HAGAN STREET, SUITE 100 NASHVILLE, TN 37203 T 615 256.4805

w w w. z e i t g e i s t - a r t . c o m

O P E N I N G R E C E P T I O N

SATURDAYSEPTEMBER 56-9PM

E X H I B I T I O N O N V I E W S E P T E M B E R 5 - O C T O B E R 3 1

LO S T A RT

VESNA PAVLOVIĆ

Call 615.383.0278 or visit www.nashvillearts.com

Subscribe to Nashville Arts Magazine for only

$45 per year.

LIKE WHAT YOU SEE?

One-EighthHouseAd_0915.indd 1 8/20/15 3:18 PM

Sept2015.indd 92 8/20/15 4:59 PM

Page 93: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

Hatch Show PrintShakespeare Broadsheet, 31” x 19 ”

HALEY GALLERY

Downtown Nashville • 615.577.7711

@HatchShowPrint

#HSPHaleyGallery

Visit HatchShowPrint.com for more information.

55897-15_HatchHaley-NashvilleArts-Sept.indd 1 8/17/15 5:00 PM

Justin Stokes is the founder of the MTSU Film Guild, a student organization which functions as a production company for student filmmakers. He is a filmmaker, screenwriter, and social media manager.PH

OTO

GRA

PH B

Y C

HRI

STY

SIM

MO

NS

Film Review

by Justin Stokes

“When I was a little Mexican, running around the deserts of Arizona, there was always this mystique about tall, white men with gray hair running

industry . . . running the military . . . running academies and colleges. And they deserved your respect. And in the military, that idea fell apart. People are screaming in my face, telling me what to do. And telling me things that I just don’t believe.”From On Two Fronts: Latinos & Vietnam, the quote is the prime chunk of the documentary’s theme. Through the glossed-over history of Chicanos struck by the Vietnam War, NPT viewers are shown that the deadliest war machine is war itself. Cherry-picked for armed service, the lower-income and under-educated populace were the preferred wearers of dog tags on the front line, and their immense patriotism made them proud at first. But as the body tolls rose, and the sanctuary of college deferments was offered only to white counterparts, the stories of the Morenci 9, POW Everett Alvarez Jr. and political activist Rozalio Munoz—whose draft date is Mexican Independence Day—helped launch an impeccably-timed protest against a war that could not be won.Mylène Moreno does a great job at keeping the film from being too depressing. Ignoring its own description, the story doesn’t actually have a human anchor, but keeps a stable of subjects to hold your interest. The mellowed music of Chicano Batman looks for the silver lining to history’s gray clouds. The camera work has shots worthy of a postcard, with locations ranging from Morenci, Arizona, to the foggy blankets over the Gulf of Tonkin. After hearing about the violent past, it is the absence of violence that really hits the viewer. A documentary about the civic pride of Hispanics during Hispanic Heritage month: What could be a better fit?On Two Fronts: Latinos & Vietnam will premiere September 22 at 9 p.m. on NPT. The documentary is being presented as part of both PBS Stories of Service programs and NPT’s Hispanic Heritage Month. For more information, visit www.npt.com.

On TwO FrOnTs:LaTinOs & VieTnam

Tony Santiago and soldiers

CO

UR

TESY

OF

PBS

Sept2015.indd 93 8/20/15 4:59 PM

Page 94: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

Theatre

Jim Reyland’s play STAND is a true story about the late John Robert (“JJ”) Ellis, a Nashville

s t r e e t p e r s o n w h o b a t t l e d addict ion f or years, and the Good Samaritan/Everyman who tried to help him. The author—a Music Row audio producer turned playwright as well as Nashville Arts Magazine’s monthly Theatre Correspondent—has developed some wide-ranging scripts in his career, but STAND holds special meaning, since it offers reflection on Reyland’s more than twenty-five years working as a volunteer assisting the homeless. The sub j ec t o f a l o t o f l oc a l press in 2012, STAND touched thousands, mainly through Reyland’s c o l l a b o r a t i o n w i t h M u s i c City’s theatre community, which supported the project through a sharing initiative that allowed the  play to complete thirty-six performances at fourteen venues across Middle Tennessee, assisted by the marketing efforts of twenty-six participating arts and social services organizations.Praised by critics for its stark eloquence and extraordinary compassion, STAND was a remarkable chapter in local theatre. Now the play will touch thousands more, as Reyland’s affecting drama returns with a September 25–26 engagement (three shows) at TPAC’S Andrew Johnson Theater. Even more exciting, the small STAND cast and crew will afterward hit the road on a month-long cross-country tour that includes stops in St.

Louis, Kansas City, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, and San Jose.  “Our goal is to raise money to fight homelessness and addiction, not only in Nashville, but across the country,” says Reyland. “Room in the Inn, the Nashville Rescue Mission, and the Salvation Army will receive 100% of the proceeds from tickets sold in Nashville. The same thing will happen in the other cities we are visiting.”The original 2012 run of STAND, as well as the new production and national tour, were made possible through the support of HCA TriStar Health.  STAND was initially also a part of HCA’s Cultural Inclusion Series, an internal program designed for corporate employees, offering innovative educational interaction with artistic presentations. According to Sherri Neal, HCA Vice President, Cultural Development and Inclusion, “The series was designed to articulate the value that inclusion brings to our company, with goals and objectives of personal development and growth.” The award-winning series, founded in 2007, provides training and learning

experiences, with focus on diversity education and multicultural perspectives. Previous working partners have included the National Museum for African American Music, Global Education Center, Magdalene/Thistle Farms, and Nashville Public Television.

The remounted version of the play  remains under the direction of David Compton, a fine local actor in his own right. Recreating

take a seat and take a

STANDby Martin Brady

September 25 & 26 • TPAC’s Johnson Theater

I worked with Johnny Ellis for ten years on the streets of

Nashville. After he died I wrote this play because I wanted

people to understand his plight and his real-life challenges.

– Jim Reyland

Jim Reyland’s Poignant Play STAND Focuses on One Nashvillian’s Journey Through the Cycle of Poverty, Addiction, and Homelessness

John Robert (“JJ”) Ellis and playwright Jim Reyland

94 | September 2015 NashvilleArts.com

Sept2015.indd 94 8/20/15 4:59 PM

Page 95: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

the role of JJ is Barry Scott, one of Nashville’s leading actors for many years, as well as a writer, producer, director, motivational speaker, and in-demand voiceover artist. Returning in the role of Mark, the successful businessman who engages with JJ, befriends him, and invests his time and treasure in his well-being, is Chip Arnold, yet another one of Nashville’s finest thespians, noted most recently for his portrayal of Willy Loman in Nashville Repertory Theatre’s acclaimed production of Death of a Salesman.  “I worked with Johnny Ellis for ten years on the streets of Nashville,” says Reyland. “After he died I wrote this play because I wanted people to understand his plight and his real-life challenges. Now, this tribute to his struggle will travel the country so that many more people will come to know him—and also consider the world of the homeless and addicted.”The Nashville performances of STAND are Friday, September 25, 7:30 p.m., and Saturday, September 26, 2:00 and 7:30 p.m. at TPAC’s Johnson Theater. There will also be four student shows as part of TPAC Education’s 2015 HOT season (Humanities Outreach Tennessee). All general admission tickets are $24 and available at the TPAC box office or visit www.tpac.org. For information on the national tour’s dates and venues, please visit www.writersstage.com.

Chip Arnold and Barry Scott as Mark and JJ in STAND

NashvilleArts.com September 2015 | 95

CO

UR

TESY

OF

NA

SHV

ILLE

SC

ENE

CO

UR

TESY

OF

WA

RREN

WES

TCO

TT

CO

UR

TESY

OF

NA

SHV

ILLE

SC

ENE

CO

UR

TESY

OF

NA

SHV

ILLE

SC

ENE

CO

UR

TESY

OF

NA

SHV

ILLE

SC

ENE

Sept2015.indd 95 8/20/15 4:59 PM

Page 96: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

The Bookmark

For more information about these books, visit www.parnassusbooks.net.

A Monthly Look at Hot Books and Cool Reads

Purity: A Novel JONATHAN FRANZEN Jonathan Franzen returns with a highly anticipated new novel that promises to be a bit of a departure from his previous bestsellers, The Corrections and Freedom. At the center of the story is a young woman called Pip (real name Purity) who’s dealing with all the usual troubles of her generation (a hefty student loan bill, for example) as well as some unusual ones (no clue who her father is or why her mother seems to be hiding something). Enter a colorful cast of characters from directions as diverse as California

and East Germany, and throw in Internet intrigue, curious journalists, and murder. Meet Franzen on September  23, when he appears in Nashville as part of the Salon@615 author series.

Sweet Caress: The Many Lives of Amory Clay             WILLIAM BOYD In this novel written like a memoir, William Boyd follows the 20th century’s biggest events through the camera lens of adventurous world-traveler Amory Clay. Born in England in 1908, she receives her first little camera when she is a child, and she stops at nothing in her goal to document the world around her and the people, places, and events others might not otherwise see. From her early days as a society photographer (a job that ends in scandal—oops) to her work documenting wartime, Amory’s personal life becomes as richly shaded and tangled as the history that unfolds around her.

Fates and Furies                                                                           LAUREN GROFF We’ve been talking about  Fates and Furies  (because it’s awesome), and it turns out everyone else is talking about it, too. From the starred review in Publisher’s Weekly: “In a swirling miasma of language, plot, and Greek mythology, Groff weaves a fierce and gripping tale of true love gone asunder.” Kirkus gave it a starred review as well: “An intricate plot, perfect title, and a harrowing look at the tie that binds.” Meg Wolitzer, author of The Interestings, called it, “A book to submit to, and be knocked out by, as I certainly was.” Jess

Walter, author of  Beautiful Ruins, said: “At once intimate and sweeping, this is the story of a marriage as parallel myths—flaring with passion and betrayal, with redemption and retribution, with the sort of heart-breaking, head-slapping secrets that make you want to seek out someone else who’s read it.” See? So read it, and then come talk to author Lauren Groff about it on October 9, when she visits for the Southern Festival of Books. 

Furiously Happy: A Funny Book about Horrible Things JENNY LAWSON If you follow Jenny Lawson (aka “The Bloggess”) online, you don’t even need this announcement. You already know her next book is due out soon, and you’re planning to come to Lawson’s book-signing event on September 30 as part of Salon@615. You probably also know what’s in the book: a mix of greatest-hits blog posts and new writing, all in Lawson’s signature style and mostly centered around her struggles with mental illness. You know you’ll laugh out loud at her candor, her imagination, and her deliciously bizarre run-on sentences. You know you’ll hold the book out to whomever’s sitting next to you to make them read your favorite passages. You know all this because you did the same things with Lawson’s first book, the #1 New York Times bestselling Let’s Pretend This Never Happened. And if you don’t know all this, then by golly, let us introduce you.

From Ornate to Ordinary…Decorate Your Way!

GASLAMP ANTIQUES & GASLAMP TOO

100 Powell Pl Suite 200 & 128 Powell Pl, 37204 Open M-Sat 10-6 & Sun 12-6 : 615-297-2224 / 615-292-2250 : GasLampAntiques.com

 

©  Susan  W.  N.  Ruach  

                     

       

Book and lyrics by Karen ZacariasMusic by Deborah Wicks La Puma

A mind-blowing, hilarious musical comedy tour de force for the whole family!

September 17 - October 4Tickets: NashvilleCT.org

615-252-4675

Nashville Children’s Theatrepresents

Additional support for this program provided by:

Sept2015.indd 96 8/20/15 4:59 PM

Page 97: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

NashvilleArts.com September 2015 | 97

During rehearsal for the 2003 revival of GYPSY in Broadway’s Shubert Theatre, Bernadette

Peters was practicing the final number, “Rose’s Turn,” with Director Sam Mendes when a choreographed toss of her sweater required someone to stand off stage and catch it. Fate and union rules chose Matt Logan, a newcomer to New York who had just started his first Broadway job.Now, after six seasons as founding Artistic Director of Studio Tenn Theatre Company, Logan still looks back on that menial task as “one of the most thrilling experiences” of his career—for the Peters-Mendes exchange he witnessed from the wings yielded a performance that the Times declared “the surprise coup of many a Broadway season” and “the most complex and compelling portrait of [Peters’] long career.”This fall, Logan will direct Studio Tenn’s own GYPSY, starring celebrated Nashville actress Nan Gurley as the indomitable Mama Rose. The show opens September 17 in The Factory at Franklin’s Jamison Hall.Created by Broadway legends Arthur Laurents (book), Jule Styne (music), and Stephen Sondheim (lyrics), GYPSY is based on the memoirs of real-life burlesque star Gypsy Rose Lee, whose brash, narcissistic stage mother, Rose, aims to make her daughters stars on Vaudeville’s Orpheum Circuit.

“Mama Rose” has lured many seasoned actresses, from Ethel Merman in the 1959 Broadway debut to Angela Lansbury, Tyne Daly, and Patti LuPone in revivals.“When that caliber of talent wants to sink their teeth into [the role], you know it ’s a huge opportunity and a huge feat,” Gurley said.Owing to GYPSY’s brilliant but famously difficult music, the lead part is as demanding of its actress as Mama Rose is of her daughters. Even between songs, there’s hardly a moment’s pause. “Rose never stops talking,” Gurley said. “She’s a fast talker, a fast thinker, and she always knows what she wants. She’s a freight train.”“This is an Olympic marathon of a role in terms of the stamina it requires,” said

Logan. “But Nan Gurley has definitely got the chops.”A pillar of Tennessee’s theatre community, Gurley has performed prolifically with Nashville Rep (formerly Tennessee Rep), the Nashville Shakespeare Festival, and others. Her Studio Tenn appearances span from the inaugural 2009 production of Our Town through 2014’s Fiddler on the Roof and Steel Magnolias.For GYPSY, Gurley has spent her summer memorizing lines, training vocally, and studying up on the real Rose Hovick to get a deeper understanding of the woman and her time. She’s also gleaning insights from her personal life. As one of her two daughters prepares to leave for college this fall, “I’m in the middle of ‘letting go’ myself,” Gurley said, “so I can tap into that feeling of loss of control”—which Rose takes to a pathological extreme. A thorough command of GYPSY ’s script plus life experience and historical research are the raw materials Gurley will bring into Logan’s rehearsal room. Logan’s collaborative directorial approach encourages actors to “take the kinds of risks that lead to discoveries,” Gurley said. “He brings a kindness and patience into the process that makes [actors] feel safe.”A fruitful rehearsal requires mutual trust, respect, and a shared goal: to reach the best possible performance–however circuitous the path may be.“As a director, it’s a luxury to be able to say, ‘I want you to try everything,’” said Logan. “I can do that with Nan.”“Matt knows I’ll try whatever he asks,” Gurley said. “He likes to challenge me. And we both always know when we’ve ‘found it.’”For GYPSY, that “aha!” moment could signify a Studio Tenn dream coming full circle: this time with Logan directing, Gurley shining bright in the role of a lifetime, and the rest of us, watching, awestruck—hardly believing our luck.

See Studio Tenn’s production of GYPSY live on stage in Jamison Hall at The Factory at Franklin September 17 through October 4. For tickets and additional information visit www.studiotenn.com.

Cultivating a Prize RoseStudio Tenn’s Director and Star Actress Prepare for the Mother Role in GYPSY

Backstage With Studio Tenn

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

AN

THO

NY

MA

TULA

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

AN

THO

NY

MA

TULA

Nan Gurley prepares for her role as “Mama Rose”

Artistic Director Matt Logan with Nan Gurley

Sept2015.indd 97 8/20/15 4:59 PM

Page 98: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

98 | September 2015 NashvilleArts.com

ARTSMARTA MONTHLY GUIDE TO

ART EDUCATION

STATE OF THE ARTSby Jennifer Cole, Executive Director, Metro Nashville Arts Commission

PHO

TOG

RA

PH:

JER

RY

ATN

IP A few weeks ago marked the one-year anniversary of Michael Brown’s tragic death in Ferguson, Missouri. The

interceding months have followed with more incidents in communities large and small that knit a profound story about the lack of agency people of color experienced in the most basic elements of public life. It would be easy to chalk

up #blacklivesmatter and other social justice movements that have emerged focused on race and class injustice as disconnected from the Nashville arts ecosystem. This would be a mistake. The arts have always reflected the social and political reality of our communities. Nashville, like many Southern cities, is a rapidly changing urban area. By 2040, our community will have no clear racial majority. Our neighborhoods, schools, and cultural rituals are shaped by the deepening diversity of our population. In other words, our city sits at a critical juncture in how we confront institutional race and class inequities in all places in our community, including the arts.

In our strategic plan “Crafting a Creative City,” Metro Arts identified the need to drive “equity, inclusion, and access in the arts” as one of the

four strategic imperatives of our work over the next five years.

We believe that cultural organizations must be front and center in the equity discussions in communities and must also address these issues within their own artistic work and organizational structures. Why? Because the community where we create is diverse and beautiful and fundamentally changing—to survive, cultural organizations must adapt and seek to be of the community not just exist within it. Nationally, many arts funders, including the collective Grant Makers in the Arts, have resolved that arts and culture can and should be reflective of race, cultural heritage, and class. (See www.giarts.org/racial-equity-arts-philanthropy-statement-purpose.) Other leaders like the Ford and Kresge foundations are shining a light on the need to make sure all people access the arts and all people are equally viewed as creators. Our work over the next few years will support this vision of cultural pluralism and equity through conversations, training, and investments.

Our first step is to understand the reality of our own ecosystem. We have hired graduate researcher Jyoti Gupta, from Vanderbilt, to conduct a study of race and diversity in our largest cultural organizations, and we will release the report later this fall. At the same time, we launched REAL (Race Equity in Arts Leadership), a learning cohort and research partnership with the Vanderbilt Curb Center for Art, Enterprise & Public Policy. REAL will connect twenty arts leaders to a structured space for them to examine research and practice around cultural equity over the next nine months. REAL is a first step, focused on meaningful dialogue that we hope sparks insight and action within the arts community. Equity and pluralism are hard topics to confront and address. We believe artists and creators with their natural innovation should model change. This is hard work, work that starts with conversation and acknowledging our fears and our privilege. We hope it results in a more plural and dynamic arts community and Nashville. We hope you’ll join us. For more information about REAL or to apply, please visit www.bit.ly/1MA6D4M.

Sam Dunson, Like Shooting Dreams in a Bucket, 2014, Mixed media, 8” x 8”

Sam Dunson’s Like Shooting Dreams in a Bucket is part of his show Meet the Fergusons opening at Vanderbilt Divinity School this month. The exhibition title refers to the events that transpired in Ferguson, Missouri, last year. (For more on Sam’s show, see page 16.)

Sept2015.indd 98 8/21/15 2:59 PM

Page 99: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

NashvilleArts.com September 2015 | 99

FAMILY DAYS AT THE FRIST CENTER

The upcoming Free Family Day at the Frist Center for the Visual Arts on Sunday, October 18, from 1–5:30 p.m. will highlight the art and culture of the Islamic world. Family Day is a regularly offered program

for families and all visitors that explores an exhibition through a variety of interdisciplinary approaches, hands-on art-making, and engaging learning experiences. The program is designed to provide children new ways to see their world through the artworks in the exhibition by offering in-gallery discussions about works of art with docents and participating in hands-on art-making activities in the studios or Martin ArtQuest that are enriched with storytelling and musical performances. All activities in October will focus on the current exhibition, Ink, Silk, and Gold: Islamic Art from the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Through illuminated manuscripts, brocaded velvets, gilded glass, luster-painted ceramics, monumental carpets, silver inlaid metalwork, and more, Ink, Silk, and Gold takes the visitor on an enchanting journey through the history of Islamic art from the eighth century to today. The works range geographically from Spain and Morocco in the west to India and Indonesia in the east. The exhibition provides an introduction to the dazzling beauty and diversity of Islamic art and its rich traditions of arabesque forms, calligraphy, and geometric patterns. There is a special focus on the physical aspects of the objects: color, materials, shape, and technique.Frist Center Curator Trinita Kennedy shared that this exhibition offers the Frist Center “an exciting opportunity to open doors for visitors unfamiliar with the splendor of Islamic artistic traditions, and I hope that our local Muslim community will take pride in seeing these extraordinary works on display in our galleries.”

Islamic traditions and ideas continue to inspire the creativity of artists today. “It is quite rare to see historical and contemporary Islamic art together in the same exhibition, and the fact that Ink, Silk, and Gold brings the story up to the present day is one of its many strengths,” notes Kennedy.Special Ink, Silk, and Gold Family Day studio activities cover the geographical diversity of the Islamic world and offer an exploration of various media. Families may be inspired to create small vessels in modeling clay that reference the ceramic works imprinted with calligraphic and geometric designs. The intricate designs of carpets and textiles from the exhibition will inspire young artists to create their own fabric work of art. Inspired by the calligraphy and decoration of manuscripts, folios, and albums, visitors may decorate their own albums. Music from the Islamic culture will be performed during the day, and there will be the presentation of an Artful Tale story, “The Garden of Roses.” This story is inspired by an enchanting Persian tale about love and sacrifice, where a woman must marry a stranger and live in a place very different from her home. But she then discovers that something wonderful and mysterious happens to her new home at nightfall. In addition, Martin ArtQuest Gallery will highlight connections to the exhibition through some special activities and the incorporation of new materials. Children 18 years of age and younger are always free at the Frist Center, but Family Days are free for the whole family! Come and join us!Family Day is sponsored by Lynn and Ken Melkus, Pinnacle Financial, AmSurg, and Nashville Parent. Free Family Day takes place at the Frist Center for the Visual Arts on Sunday, October 18, from 1–5:30 p.m. For more information, visit www.fristcenter.org.

by Anne Henderson, Director of Education and Outreach

CO

UR

TESY

STE

PHA

NIE

BRA

UER

PH

OTO

GRA

PHY

CO

UR

TESY

STE

PHA

NIE

BRA

UER

PH

OTO

GRA

PHY

CO

UR

TESY

OF

THE

FRIS

T C

ENTE

R FO

R TH

E V

ISU

AL

AR

TS

CO

UR

TESY

OF

THE

FRIS

T C

ENTE

R FO

R TH

E V

ISU

AL

AR

TSC

OU

RTE

SY O

F TH

E FR

IST

CEN

TER

FOR

THE

VIS

UA

L A

RTS

CO

UR

TESY

OF

THE

FRIS

T C

ENTE

R FO

R TH

E V

ISU

AL

AR

TS

Sept2015.indd 99 8/20/15 5:00 PM

Page 100: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

100 | September 2015 NashvilleArts.com

SUMMER CAMP FOR TEACHERSP

HO

TOG

RA

PH

BY

JU

AN

PO

NT

LEZI

CA by Cassie Stephens,

Art Teacher Johnson Elementary

W hen you ask anyone about their favorite

memories of summer, I’m willing to bet they will mention some sort of summer camp. A time free of rules, responsibilities, and routines; a chance to make new friends we’d otherwise never meet, the opportunity to learn new skills, a place where the pace is slow enough to allow time for exploration and reflection while fast enough to keep us entertained, educated, and on our flip-flopped toes. I always remember going home from camp completely exhausted but thoroughly inspired by my adventures. I suppose now is the time in this article when I should lament about how it’s a total bummer that as adults, we no longer have this kind of opportunity. And I would do that if I weren’t privy to the very best summer experience that’s as close to a summer camp (okay, it’s better) as can be: Tennessee Arts Academy (TAA). In non-summer-camp terms, Tennessee Arts Academy is a weeklong professional development opportunity, held annually in July for educators with a strong focus on the importance of the arts, held on the campus of Belmont University. Back in summer-camp chat , i t ’s days of friend-making, skill-learning, self-reflecting, and rejuvenation. The best way for me to give you the total picture is to tell you exactly what a typical day entails.There are a handful of tracks one can take at TAA: fine arts, music, drama, or

arts leadership. After breakfast, the day begins with two hours in your chosen track. In the fine arts, that meant we were learning from the very best art educators in the country: Laura Lohmann, blogger and award-winning art teacher f rom Ohio; Jim McNeill, illustrator of several art education children’s books; Laurie Gatlin, an art teacher with an incredible approach to teaching through journaling; and Debbie Engbring, a ceramic teacher with a unique approach to teaching her craft. The crème de la crème of artists and educators. From our studio time, we experience a performance, which might include a dance troupe from Memphis or a world-renowned marimba player. After lunch we attend a TED Talk-esque chat lead by innovators in the arts. My personal favorite was Mr. Richard Sherman, famed half of the Sherman Brothers, who wrote the score for Mary Poppins along with many other Disney productions. And just when we think we can’t take any more, we return to our studios for more exploration.Can you think of a better way for an educator to spend a week of their summer? I’ve attended Tennessee Arts Academy every summer for the last ten years of my teaching career and hope to go many, many more years. Established almost thirty years ago, it’s the only professional development opportunity of its kind in our nation. If you are an educator, I can’t encourage you enough to attend. Trust me, it will leave you as excited and exhilarated as any summer camp! For registration details and information about Tennessee Arts Academy 2016, visit www.tennesseeartsacademy.org.

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

SCO

TT S

CH

REC

KER

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

CA

SSIE

STE

PHEN

SPH

OTO

GRA

PH B

Y C

ASS

IE S

TEPH

ENS

Sept2015.indd 100 8/20/15 5:00 PM

Page 101: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

NashvilleArts.com September 2015 | 101

NASHVILLE OPERA

by DeeGee Lester Photography by Reed Hummell

Watching the faces of children in their first experience with opera is, at once, magical

and inspiring. Wiggles and giggles turn to wide-eyed wonder and nearly audible gasps upon hearing the pure notes of a lyric soprano; little faces scowl at mirror images of fierce baritone villains. From soaring arias and thundering orchestrations to a delicate note held in perfect pitch or haunting voices arising from the grave, opera, once encountered, embraces the heart.

Introducing this magic into the lives of children and sharing what she sees as “this uniquely accessible art form” with audiences of all ages, is the role of Anna Young, Nashville Opera’s new Director of Education and Outreach.

A successful singer and teacher, Young appreciates both the impact of Nashville Opera’s educational programming (serving over 600,000 children since 1996) and the crucial role of arts integration to the development of the whole child. “We know that an education rich in the arts helps students achieve higher grade point averages and higher SAT scores than those without an arts education,” she says. “Studies even suggest this kind of well-rounded education ensures that students are twice as likely to graduate from college.”

Beginning with the youngest audiences, Nashville Opera will continue the tradition of its beloved touring show for elementary schools. “This year’s show, Goldie B. Locks and the Three Singing Bears teaches kids the importance of honesty and the true meaning of friendship with the beloved music of Mozart,” Young says. In addition, popular outreach programs will continue to bring Opera Out Loud! and Opera 101 to locations throughout the community.

Utilizing collaborations throughout the city, including partnerships with organizations such as the Treatment and Research Institute for Autism Spectrum Disorder (TRIAD) at Vanderbilt University, and

Antioch High School’s Academy of Hospitality & Marketing, Nashville Opera also plans to expand opportunities for middle and high school students.

Educational ideas range from working with local choral classes and connecting opera to famous works of literature to “explaining the anatomy of the voice and how opera singers are able to possess ‘superhuman’ qualities by singing over an entire orchestra without amplification.”

Nashville Opera’s 2015–16 fare includes Puccini’s Turandot, the contemporary opera

Hydrogen Jukebox by Philip Glass, Mozart’s Così fan tutte, and Strauss’s Die Fledermaus.

“We are fortunate to be in a growing and diverse city and one that loves music and art,” Young says. “The sky is the limit, and we have a vision to relate to as many people in our community as possible, enriching lives by sharing this uniquely accessible art form that we at Nashville Opera love so dearly.”

For more information about programming and tickets, visit www.nashvilleopera.org.

From Wiggles and Giggles to A(aaaah)rias

Mozart’s The Magic Flute

The Wizard of Oz Enjoying the show

Sept2015.indd 101 8/20/15 5:00 PM

Page 102: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

102 | September 2015 NashvilleArts.com

SCHOLASTIC ART COMPETITION

I was officially introduced to the Scholastic Art Competition in April 2010 when I began working at Cheekwood. On paper, it seemed very similar to other art competitions I had managed over the years. However, as I began preparing for

my first ‘Scholastic’, I realized that the moving parts involved in this program were extensive!As the Middle Tennessee affiliate for this national program, Cheekwood expected around 950 pieces to be submitted to the competition. Students and teachers would log in to a very impressive Online Registration System (ORS is designed and managed by the

Alliance for Young Artists and Writers in New York City) , then enter their information and print their registration forms. In 2010, every single work was matted to a particular dimension and hand delivered to Cheekwood. As you can imagine, the participating art teachers would expend an enormous amount of time, energy, and money to help their students compete. After all the works were delivered, the pieces were numbered and sorted by category to p repa re f o r j udg ing .

Adjudication took four days and consisted of works being presented to a panel of jurors for review before pieces were given the Gold or Silver Key awards.In 2011, the Scholastic Competition went digital! Teachers were thrilled because they could upload images into ORS instead of preparing and matting every piece that they wanted to submit. Many of the teachers were already taking images of the students’ work for their portfolios, so it really helped to cut down on the workload.

Fast-forward four years, and I am happy to say that the change to digital adjudication has been a game-changer for this competition. This past year the ORS went through dramatic updates to make the system even more user friendly for students, encouraging them to feel ownership of the entries instead of relying on their art teachers to walk them through the submission process. In addition, we now give a third award, Honorable Mention, which encourages students whose work displays creative potential.All of these changes have allowed for an increase in participation both nationally and regionally, as the submissions at Cheekwood this year were close to 1,400, from 38 participating schools. While I recently stepped away from managing this program, it will always hold a place close to my heart, as I have seen so many deserving students benefit from the recognition and confidence that this competition bestows. Submissions for the 2016 Scholastic Art Competition are due Tuesday, December 15, 2015. For complete guidelines, please visit www.cheekwood.org.

Karen Kwarciak is an art teacher at Harding Academy. She was previously the School and Outreach Manager at Cheekwood where she ran the Middle Tennessee Scholastic Art Competition for five years.

The Digital Shakeup Dramatically Improves Accessibilityby Karen Kwarciak

PH

OTO

GRA

PHS

CO

UR

TESY

OF

CH

EEK

WO

OD

2015 American Vision Nominee Lisa Qu, Brentwood High School, next to her mixed-media headdress Pride

Attendees at the 2015 Scholastic Competition Awards

Sept2015.indd 102 8/20/15 5:00 PM

Page 103: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

NashvilleArts.com September 2015 | 103

better prepared for life … like this lawyer.

Support music education for all metro students.

GET INVOLVED!musicmakesus.org

Syndey Gaspard,Hillwood High School

Leon Berrios, Lawyer

geNTlemaN

aTHleTe

SCHolar

Montgomery Bell Academy does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, national or ethnic origin, disability, sex, or age in its employment practices or in administration of its educational policies, admission policies, scholarship and financial aid programs, athletic programs, or other school-administered programs.

• 17 National merit Semifinalists, 13 aP National Scholars in 2014

• 100 boys per year participate in school-funded international exchanges and programs on six continents

• 15 varsity sports competing at the highest level

• 4 national championships in debate, including Novice and middle School Champs in 2015

• Nationally-recognized art, music, and eater programs

• 7:1 student-teacher ratio

• 22% of students receive more than $2 million in need-based financial aid

• 100% of graduates are college-bound

• 27 advanced Placement Courses offered

Montgomery Bell Academy

Admission Preview Day Sunday, November 1 @ 2 p.m.

4001 HardiNg road • NaSHville, TN 37205www.moNTgomerybell.edu

NashvilleArts15.qxp_Layout 1 8/14/15 2:31 PM Page 1

Sept2015.indd 103 8/20/15 5:00 PM

Page 104: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

104 | September 2015 NashvilleArts.com

Art SeeArt SeeSee

PRIN

CIP

AL

PHO

TOG

RA

PHY

BY

JO

HN

JA

CK

SON

Mollye Brown with Debra and Nealy Williams at The Arts Company, Collectors Art Night

Anne Brown, LaVon Williams and Linda Hummel at The Arts Company, Collectors Art Night

Lyle Carbajal at CG2

Jerry Atnip and David Farmerie at The Arts Company, Collectors Art Night

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

MA

DG

E FR

AN

KLI

N

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

MA

DG

E FR

AN

KLI

N

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

MA

DG

E FR

AN

KLI

N

Williamson County Medical Center Children’s Wing Grand Opening

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

DEB

BIE

SMA

RTT

Greg and Annie Cicotte, Jonathan Pierce, Tracy Frist, Senator Bill Frist at Cuban Summer

Sara and Andrew Burd at Cuban Summer Ann Clawson at Julia Martin Gallery

Kate Wingate, Kimberly Clo, Laura Donhue, Camilla Spadafino Tomato Art Fest Daniel Berry at The Rymer Gallery

Suzanne Kessler and Robinson Regen at Frist Center Art Deco Affair

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

TIFF

AN

I BIN

G

Sept2015.indd 104 8/20/15 5:00 PM

Page 105: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

NashvilleArts.com September 2015 | 105

Art SeeArt SeeSeeSharon Stewart at Zeitgeist RoseMarie at The Rymer Gallery

Christine Olomo, Dr.Gina Walton, Marlon Wright, Marnique and Garrett Strickland at Frist Center Art Deco Affair

Nathan Blond with Oliver, Michelle and Marek “Bohemus” Kacki at The Arts Company

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

MA

DG

E FR

AN

KLI

N

Opera Paint Along event at the Noah Liff Opera Center

James Threalkill, Susan DeMay at The Arts Company At Tinney Contemporary

Isabel Behr, Ajani Bakari, Safiyah Bakari, Sylvie Stephenson at The Arts Company

EJ Holmes, Amy Richmond at Corvidae CollectiveYenny Walker Zarama, Nancy Miles at Tinney Contemporary

Opera Paint Along event at the Noah Liff Opera Center

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

REED

HU

MM

ELL

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

REED

HU

MM

ELL

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

TIFF

AN

I BIN

G

Sept2015.indd 105 8/20/15 5:00 PM

Page 106: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

106 | September 2015 NashvilleArts.com

Not so artfully applied

tattoo?remove it at skiNmd with piCosure

4515 hardiNg pike,

suite 310, Belle meade 37205

(615) 279-5656 dr. elleN JaCoBsoN

fiNd out aBout moNthly disCouNt offers at

www.skinmdpllc.com

SkinMD_0515.indd 1 4/13/15 1:53 PM

www.vanderbilt.edu/sarrattart

DENISE SANABRIA ELLEN WIENER LB THOMPSON

September 1–October 2, 2015

DRAWING CLOSER

INK & WOOD

LOCATED ON THE MAIN FLOOR OF SARRATT STUDENT CENTER AT 2301

VANDERBILT PLACE, NASHVILLE TN 37235

Visit us 7 days a week from 9 a.m–9 p.m. during the academic year.

Summer and holiday schedule hours are Monday–Friday 9 a.m.–4 p.m.

Sarratt_0815.indd 1 7/8/15 10:18 AM

Sept2015.indd 106 8/20/15 5:01 PM

Page 107: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

NashvilleArts.com September 2015 | 107

Located at Fifth Avenue & Deaderick Street Downtown Nashville tnmuseum.org 615•741•2692

Open Daily (Closed Mondays)

Tennessee State MuseumOn View Through October 4, 2015

Free Admission

85 Years of the Tennessee Highway Patrol

Also on View

(615) 646-2422 • WWW.NATCHEZSTONE.COM

NatchezStone_0715.indd 1 6/17/15 9:43 AM

Sept2015.indd 107 8/20/15 5:01 PM

Page 108: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

108 | September 2015 NashvilleArts.com

This month we’re highlighting two major forces in 20th-century culture. At 8 p.m. Monday and Tuesday, September 14 and 15, the two-part Walt Disney: American

Experience examines the full arc of Disney’s career from animation pioneer to theme park developer, while also discussing the conflicting sides of his personality. Muppet creator Jim Henson was inspired by Disney; learn about his life and work on In Their Own Words: Jim Henson, airing Tuesday, September 15, at 7 p.m.

ART AND ARCHITECTUREFrank Lloyd Wright ’s buildings are full of straight lines (the Guggenheim is one notable exception), quirky angles, repeated patterns, and contrasting textures that move the eye about the spaces. These elements are beautifully captured in the photographs of Pedro Guerrero, the subject of an American Masters documentary premiering Friday, September 18, at 8 p.m. Pedro E. Guerrero: A Photographer’s Journey is not only a biography of the photographer, but also an overview of the towering figures with whom he developed close professional relationships.

Told almost exclusively through interviews with Guerrero—with input from architecture historians and critics, photographers and artists—the film includes footage of Wright and sculptors Alexander Calder and Louise Nevelson at work. There are also examples of Guerrero’s magazine assignments (lots of mid-century interiors). Most spectacular, however, are Guerrero’s photographs of Taliesin West, Wright’s complex in the Arizona desert.Tune in to Building England II on Globe Trekker Saturday, September 5, at 11 p.m. for a cross-country architectural tour of English history with stops in Bath, Bristol, and several sites in London.

FAKING IT, MAKING ITSculptor James Grashow’s materials are what others might use for under-the-surface armatures: chicken wire, cardboard, papier mâché. Several years ago, Grashow came across a deteriorating piece of his early work and decided to embrace its impermanence. The Cardboard Bernini, airing Friday, September 18, at 9 p.m., traces the creation

Arts Worth WatchingSeptember on NPT is a bonanza of arts and culture programs showcasing

painting, photography, and architecture.

of a Grashow composition inspired by baroque sculptor Gian Lorenzo Bernini ’s stunning marble fountains.Art forger Mark Landis lives a largely solitary life in Mississippi, occasionally traveling around the country to deliver philanthropic donations of art to museums and other ins t i tu t ions . Unfortunately for those organizat ions , Landis ’s donations are in fact his own clever forgeries made with surprisingly ordinary art supplies. There’s no menace in his actions, which is partly why it’s easy to root for him as he is pursued—hunted almost—by a disgruntled museum registrar in Art and Craft, airing Friday, September 25, at 9 p.m. on the POV series. It’s a winking look at the art world with a surprising and pleasant turn of events.

WONDER WOMENCutie and the Boxer, airing Friday, September 18, at 10 p.m. on POV, is an unflinching portrait of the lives of Ushio and Noriko Shinohara. Theirs is a classic May-December art romance wherein the younger artist’s ambitions get pushed aside in service to the elder artist ’s “greater” career. Ushio’s “boxing paintings” (he punches h i s c a nv a s e s w h i l e wearing boxing gloves wrapped in paint-soaked cloths) were admired by critics but never sold well. Noriko, meanwhile, has begun a series of whimsical, sensual black-and-white drawings recounting their difficult forty-year marriage. Tellingly, she calls the series Cutie and Bullie.Timothy Greenfield-Sanders’ latest documentary project is Women’s List, airing Friday, September 25, at 8 p.m. on American Masters. The show features interviews with fifteen women who’ve influenced various aspects of contemporary American culture, among them artist Laurie Anderson, fashion designer Betsey Johnson, and singer-songwriter Alicia Keyes. Other interviewees are drawn from such diverse fields as law, television, business, and aviation.

If you enjoy arts programming on NPT, please show your support by going to our website, www.wnpt.org, and clicking the donate button. To watch encore presentations of many of our programs, tune in to NPT2, our secondary channel.

Taliesin West by Pedro E. Guerrero. Taliesin West was architect Frank Lloyd Wright’s home

CO

UR

TESY

OF

PED

RO E

. GU

ERRE

RO A

RCH

IVES

Mark Landis at home, showing off recent works

CO

UR

TESY

OF

SAM

CU

LLM

AN

Ushio and Noriko ShinoharaC

OU

RTE

SY O

F RA

DIU

S-TW

C

Arthur and George on MasterpieceMartin Clunes (Doc Martin) stars as Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. Sundays beginning, September 67:00pm

Walt Disney: American ExperienceA two-part look at the innovative cartoonist, filmmaker and “imagineer.”Monday & TuesdaySeptember 14 & 158:00pm

Weekend Schedule Saturday 5:00 am Martha Speaks 5:30 Angelina Ballerina 6:00 Curious George 6:30 Curious George 7:00 Daniel Tiger’s Neighborhood 7:30 Daniel Tiger’s Neighborhood 8:00 Sesame Street 8:30 Dinosaur Train 9:00 Sewing with Nancy 9:30 Sew It All 10:00 Garden Smart 10:30 BBQ with Franklin 11:00 Simply Ming 11:30 Cook’s Country 12:00 noon America’s Test Kitchen 12:30 pm Joanne Weir Gets Fresh 1:00 Movable Feast with Fine Cooking 1:30 Martha Stewart’s Cooking School 2:00 Fons & Porter’s Love of Quilting 2:30 Best of Joy of Painting 3:00 Painting the Town with Eric Dowdle 3:30 American Woodshop 4:00 Woodwright’s Shop 4:30 This Old House 5:00 Ask This Old House 5:30 Hometime 6:00 PBS NewsHour Weekend 6:30 pm Tennessee’s Wild Side

Sunday 5:00 am Sid the Science Kid 5:30 Peg + Cat 6:00 Curious George 6:30 Curious George 7:00 Daniel Tiger’s Neighborhood 7:30 Daniel Tiger’s Neighborhood 8:00 Sesame Street 8:30 Dinosaur Train 9:00 Tennessee’s Wild Side 9:30 Volunteer Gardener 10:00 Tennessee Crossroads 10:30 Nature 11:30 Washington Week with Gwen Ifill 12:00 noon To the Contrary 12:30 pm The McLaughlin Group 1:00 Joseph Rosendo’s Travelscope 1:30 Family Travel 2:00 Globe Trekker 3:00 California’s Gold 3:30 In the Americas with David Yetman 4:00 America’s Heartland 4:30 Rick Steves’ Europe 5:00 Antiques Roadshow 6:00 PBS NewsHour Weekend 6:30 pm Charlie Rose: The Week

Daytime Schedule 5:00 am Classical Stretch 5:30 Body Electric 6:00 Odd Squad 6:30 Wild Kratts 7:00 Curious George 7:30 Curious George 8:00 Daniel Tiger’s Neighborhood 8:30 Daniel Tiger’s Neighborhood 9:00 Sesame Street 10:00 Dinosaur Train 10:30 Super Why! 11:00 Peg + Cat 11:30 Sid the Science Kid 12:00 noon Caillou 12:30 pm Thomas & Friends 1:00 Sesame Street Shorts 1:30 The Cat in the Hat 2:00 Curious George 2:30 Curious George 3:00 Arthur 3:30 Arthur 4:00 Wild Kratts 4:30 Odd Squad 5:00 Martha Speaks 5:30 WordGirl 6:00 pm PBS NewsHour

Nashville Public Television wnpt.org

September 2015

Nashville Public Television

THIS MONTH

A remastered, high-definition version of the epic documentary on its 25th anniversary.

Monday – Friday, September 7 – 118:00 pm

Sept2015.indd 108 8/20/15 5:01 PM

Page 109: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

Arthur and George on MasterpieceMartin Clunes (Doc Martin) stars as Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. Sundays beginning, September 67:00pm

Walt Disney: American ExperienceA two-part look at the innovative cartoonist, filmmaker and “imagineer.”Monday & TuesdaySeptember 14 & 158:00pm

Weekend Schedule Saturday 5:00 am Martha Speaks 5:30 Angelina Ballerina 6:00 Curious George 6:30 Curious George 7:00 Daniel Tiger’s Neighborhood 7:30 Daniel Tiger’s Neighborhood 8:00 Sesame Street 8:30 Dinosaur Train 9:00 Sewing with Nancy 9:30 Sew It All 10:00 Garden Smart 10:30 BBQ with Franklin 11:00 Simply Ming 11:30 Cook’s Country 12:00 noon America’s Test Kitchen 12:30 pm Joanne Weir Gets Fresh 1:00 Movable Feast with Fine Cooking 1:30 Martha Stewart’s Cooking School 2:00 Fons & Porter’s Love of Quilting 2:30 Best of Joy of Painting 3:00 Painting the Town with Eric Dowdle 3:30 American Woodshop 4:00 Woodwright’s Shop 4:30 This Old House 5:00 Ask This Old House 5:30 Hometime 6:00 PBS NewsHour Weekend 6:30 pm Tennessee’s Wild Side

Sunday 5:00 am Sid the Science Kid 5:30 Peg + Cat 6:00 Curious George 6:30 Curious George 7:00 Daniel Tiger’s Neighborhood 7:30 Daniel Tiger’s Neighborhood 8:00 Sesame Street 8:30 Dinosaur Train 9:00 Tennessee’s Wild Side 9:30 Volunteer Gardener 10:00 Tennessee Crossroads 10:30 Nature 11:30 Washington Week with Gwen Ifill 12:00 noon To the Contrary 12:30 pm The McLaughlin Group 1:00 Joseph Rosendo’s Travelscope 1:30 Family Travel 2:00 Globe Trekker 3:00 California’s Gold 3:30 In the Americas with David Yetman 4:00 America’s Heartland 4:30 Rick Steves’ Europe 5:00 Antiques Roadshow 6:00 PBS NewsHour Weekend 6:30 pm Charlie Rose: The Week

Daytime Schedule 5:00 am Classical Stretch 5:30 Body Electric 6:00 Odd Squad 6:30 Wild Kratts 7:00 Curious George 7:30 Curious George 8:00 Daniel Tiger’s Neighborhood 8:30 Daniel Tiger’s Neighborhood 9:00 Sesame Street 10:00 Dinosaur Train 10:30 Super Why! 11:00 Peg + Cat 11:30 Sid the Science Kid 12:00 noon Caillou 12:30 pm Thomas & Friends 1:00 Sesame Street Shorts 1:30 The Cat in the Hat 2:00 Curious George 2:30 Curious George 3:00 Arthur 3:30 Arthur 4:00 Wild Kratts 4:30 Odd Squad 5:00 Martha Speaks 5:30 WordGirl 6:00 pm PBS NewsHour

Nashville Public Television wnpt.org

September 2015

Nashville Public Television

THIS MONTH

A remastered, high-definition version of the epic documentary on its 25th anniversary.

Monday – Friday, September 7 – 118:00 pm

Sept2015.indd 109 8/20/15 5:01 PM

Page 110: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

13

14

15

16

17

18

19

6

7

8 9

10

11

12

1

2 3

4 5

Su

nd

ay

Mo

nd

ay

Tue

sda

y W

ed

ne

sda

y T

hu

rsd

ay

Fri

da

y S

atu

rda

yN

ashv

ille

Pub

lic T

elev

isio

n

wn

pt.

org

Prim

etim

e Ev

enin

g S

ched

ule

Sep

tem

ber

201

5

7:0

0 A

rthu

r &

Geo

rge

o

n M

aste

rpie

ce

Par

t 1.

M

artin

C

lune

s (D

oc M

artin

) as

Arth

ur

Con

an D

oyle

. 8

:00

Mas

terp

iece

Mys

tery

!

She

rloc

k

Ser

ies

III:

The

Empt

y H

ears

e.

9:3

0 V

icio

us

Bal

lroom

. 10

:00

Blu

egra

ss

U

nder

grou

nd

Lef

tove

r Sal

mon

. 10

:30

Life

on

the

Line

P

atie

nts

fight

to s

urvi

ve.

11:0

0 Ta

vis

Sm

iley

11:3

0 S

cully

/The

Wor

ld S

how

7:0

0 A

ntiq

ues

Roa

dsho

w

Myr

tle

Bea

ch,

Hou

r Th

ree.

8:0

0 C

ivil

War

T

he C

ause

– 1

861.

The

w

ar’s

key

figur

es

and

cent

ral i

ssue

s. 10

:00

BB

C W

orld

New

s 10

:30

Las

t of S

umm

er W

ine

W

ho’s

That

Lo

okin

g Si

dew

ays

at N

elly

? 11

:00

Ken

Kes

ey

The

aut

hor o

f acc

laim

ed

nove

ls O

ne F

lew

Ove

r th

e C

ucko

o’s

Nes

t (1

962)

and

Som

etim

es

a G

reat

Not

ion

(196

4).

7:0

0 In

The

ir O

wn

Wor

ds

Muh

amm

ad

Ali.

A

li’s

path

fro

m

Loui

svill

e gy

m to

box

ing

succ

ess,

co

ntro

vers

y an

d in

spira

-tio

nal r

e-em

erge

nce.

8:0

0 C

ivil

War

A

Ve

ry

Blo

ody

Affa

ir –

1862

/For

ever

Fre

e –

1862

. The

birt

h of

mod

-er

n w

arfa

re, t

he B

attle

of

Shilo

h an

d th

e Em

anci

-pa

tion

Proc

lam

atio

n. 10

:30

Las

t of S

umm

er W

ine

W

ill R

ando

lph

Mak

e a

Goo

d Im

pres

sion

? 11

:00

BB

C W

orld

New

s 11

:30

Rea

dyTe

nnes

see

7:0

0 N

atur

e

Wol

verin

e: C

hasi

ng t

he

Phan

tom

. Th

e la

rges

t an

d le

ast-k

now

n m

em-

ber o

f the

wea

sel f

amily

. 8

:00

Civ

il W

ar

Sim

ply

Mur

der

– 18

63/

The

Uni

vers

e of

Bat

tle

– 18

63.

The

battl

es o

f Fr

eder

icks

burg

, Vi

cks-

burg

an

d G

etty

sbur

g.

The

first

bl

ack

troop

s;

Get

tysb

urg

Add

ress

. 11

:00

BB

C W

orld

New

s 11

:30

Aus

tin C

ity L

imits

T

he B

lack

Key

s/J.

Rod

-dy

Wal

ston

& T

he B

usi-

ness

.

7:0

0 Te

nnes

see

Cro

ssro

ads

7:3

0 Vo

lunt

eer

Gar

dene

r 8

:00

Civ

il W

ar

Val

ley

of th

e Sh

adow

of

Dea

th –

186

4/M

ost H

al-

low

ed G

roun

d –

1864

. G

rant

an

d Le

e;

Sher

-m

an’s

Atla

nta

cam

paig

n.

The

1864

pr

esid

etia

l ca

mpa

ign;

A

rling

ton

Nat

iona

l Cem

eter

y. 10

:30

Las

t of S

umm

er W

ine

11:0

0 B

BC

Wor

ld N

ews

11:3

0 S

hilo

h:

T

he D

evil’

s O

wn

Day

A

n N

PT C

ivil

War

150

do

cum

enta

ry.

7:0

0 N

atur

e’s

M

irac

le B

abie

s

Am

ur l

eopa

rds,

Afri

can

elep

hant

s an

d a

Bar

-ba

ry li

on.

8:0

0 C

ivil

War

W

ar I

s A

ll H

ell

– 18

65/

The

Bet

ter

Ang

els

of

Our

Nat

ure

– 18

65. S

her-

man

’s M

arch

to th

e Se

a;

Lee’

s su

rrend

er.

Lin-

coln

’s as

sass

inat

ion.

10:3

0 L

ast o

f Sum

mer

Win

e

Hap

py C

ampi

ng.

11:0

0 B

BC

Wor

ld N

ews

11:3

0 In

finity

Hal

l Liv

e

Am

eric

a.

7:0

0 L

awre

nce

Wel

k S

how

O

ccup

atio

ns.

8:0

0 K

eepi

ng A

ppea

ranc

es 8

:30

Gre

at B

ritis

h B

akin

g

Sho

w

Cak

es. A

bak

er’s

doze

n of

con

test

ants

kic

k of

f Se

ason

2.

9:3

0 Th

e Fo

rsyt

e S

aga

E

piso

de

1.

Soam

es

Fors

yte

(Dam

ian

Lew

is)

mee

ts

beau

tiful

Ire

ne

Her

on (G

ina

McK

ee).

10:3

0 Fi

lm S

choo

l Sho

rts

It

’s in

the

Blo

od.

11:0

0 G

lobe

Tre

kker

C

entra

l Jap

an.

7:0

0 A

rthu

r &

Geo

rge

o

n M

aste

rpie

ce

Par

t 2.

Sir

Arth

ur a

nd

Alfr

ed W

ood

get

a su

r-pr

ise.

8:0

0 M

aste

rpie

ce M

yste

ry!

S

herl

ock

S

erie

s III

: Th

e Si

gn o

f Th

ree.

9

:30

Vic

ious

S

tag

Do.

10

:00

Blu

egra

ss

U

nder

grou

nd

Ear

ls o

f Lei

cest

er.

10:3

0 Li

fe o

n th

e Li

ne

Las

t Cha

nce.

11

:00

Tavi

s S

mile

y 11

:30

Scu

lly/T

he W

orld

Sho

w

7:0

0 A

ntiq

ues

Roa

dsho

w

Sur

vivo

rs.

Item

s th

at

have

end

ured

war

s, n

at-

ural

dis

aste

rs a

nd m

ore.

8:0

0 W

alt D

isne

y:

A

mer

ican

Exp

erie

nce

P

art

1. T

he i

coni

c fil

m-

mak

er’s

sign

atur

e ch

ar-

acte

r and

firs

t ful

l-len

gth

anim

ated

mov

ie.

10:0

0 B

BC

Wor

ld N

ews

10:3

0 L

ast o

f Sum

mer

Win

e 11

:00

Und

isco

vere

d H

aiti

w

ith J

osé

And

rés

C

hef

And

rés

expl

ores

th

e is

land

an

d m

eets

w

ith

Bill

C

linto

n an

d C

hef M

ario

Bat

ali.

7:0

0 In

The

ir O

wn

Wor

ds

Jim

H

enso

n.

Hen

son’

s ca

reer

fro

m e

arly

com

-m

erci

als

and

TV s

how

s to

fant

asy

film

s. 8

:00

Wal

t Dis

ney:

Am

eric

an E

xper

ienc

e

Par

t 2. D

isne

y co

ntin

ues

to a

maz

e w

ith C

inde

r-el

la,

Mar

y Po

ppin

s an

d D

isne

ylan

d. 10

:00

BB

C W

orld

New

s 10

:30

Las

t of S

umm

er W

ine

11:0

0 H

ava

Nag

ila

(T

he M

ovie

)

The

cro

ssov

er a

ppea

l of

the

infe

ctio

us s

ong.

7:0

0 N

atur

e

The

Sa

gebr

ush

Sea.

A

n ec

osys

tem

st

retc

h-in

g ac

ross

11

Wes

tern

st

ates

. 8

:00

NO

VA

Daw

n of

H

uman

ity.

A

NO

VA/N

atio

nal G

eogr

a-ph

ic lo

ok a

t a fo

ssil

dis-

cove

ry th

at c

hang

es h

u-m

an o

rigin

s th

eorie

s. 10

:00

BB

C W

orld

New

s 10

:30

Las

t of S

umm

er W

ine

11:0

0 A

ustin

City

Lim

its

Sam

Sm

ith/F

utur

e Is

-la

nds.

7:0

0 Te

nnes

see

Cro

ssro

ads

7:3

0 Vo

lunt

eer

Gar

dene

r 8

:00

Doc

tor

Bla

ke

M

yste

ries

G

ame

of

Cha

mpi

ons.

A

qui

z sh

ow c

onte

stan

t fa

ces

a gr

isly

elim

ina-

tion.

9:0

0 P

ione

ers

of T

elev

isio

n

Loc

al K

ids

TV S

how

s. 10

:00

BB

C W

orld

New

s 10

:30

Las

t of S

umm

er W

ine

11:0

0 18

Voi

ces

Sin

g

Kol

Nid

re

The

mos

t sac

red

pray

er

in J

udai

sm b

egin

s Yo

m

Kip

pur,

the

holie

st d

ay.

7:0

0 N

atur

e’s

M

irac

le B

abie

s

Tas

man

ian

Dev

ils,

koa-

las.

8:0

0 A

mer

ican

Mas

ters

P

edro

E.

G

uerre

ro:

A

Phot

ogra

pher

’s Jo

urne

y.

The

Mex

ican

-Am

eric

an

phot

ogra

pher

w

orke

d w

ith F

rank

Llo

yd W

right

an

d ar

tists

. 9

:00

The

Car

dboa

rd B

erni

ni 10

:00

PO

V

C

utie

and

the

Box

er.

11:3

0 In

finity

Hal

l Liv

e

Sad

ie

and

the

Hot

-he

ads.

7:0

0 L

awre

nce

Wel

k S

how

S

choo

l Day

s. 8

:00

Kee

ping

App

eara

nces

8:3

0 G

reat

Bri

tish

Bak

ing

S

how

B

read

. En

glis

h m

uffin

s an

d un

usua

l loa

ves.

9:3

0 Th

e Fo

rsyt

e S

aga

E

piso

de

2.

Soam

es

hire

s an

arc

hite

ct w

ith

a co

nnec

tion

to th

e Fo

r-sy

tes;

Old

Jol

yon

con-

tact

s hi

s es

trang

ed s

on.

10:3

0 Fi

lm S

choo

l Sho

rts

E

xpre

ss Y

ours

elf.

11:0

0 G

lobe

Tre

kker

G

lobe

Tr

ekke

r Fo

od

Hou

r: Si

cily.

7:0

0 B

ig B

lue

Live

A

liv

e co

-pro

duct

ion

with

the

BB

C i

nclu

des

inte

rvie

ws

with

sc

ien-

tists

and

vie

ws

of m

a-rin

e lif

e. 8

:00

In T

heir

Ow

n W

ords

Q

ueen

Eliz

abet

h II.

9:0

0 Fr

ontli

ne

Put

in’s

Way

. 10

:00

Big

Blu

e Li

ve

A li

ve lo

ok a

t m

igra

ting

mar

ine

life

cont

inue

s. 11

:00

BB

C W

orld

New

s 11

:30

Mou

nt W

ashi

ngto

n

Cog

Rai

lway

:

Clim

bing

to th

e C

loud

s

Cre

atin

g th

e ra

ilway

.

7:0

0 B

ig B

lue

Live

T

he

final

ni

ght

of

live

broa

dcas

ts

from

M

on-

tere

y B

ay, C

alif.

8:0

0 N

OVA

B

igge

r Th

an T

. re

x. A

N

OVA

/Nat

iona

l G

eo-

grap

hic

spec

ial

abou

t Sp

inos

auru

s, a

53-

foot

-lo

ng d

inos

aur.

9:0

0 E

arth

A N

ew W

ild

Oce

ans.

10

:00

Big

Blu

e Li

ve

The

fina

l liv

e se

gmen

t. 11

:00

BB

C W

orld

New

s 11

:30

Aus

tin C

ity L

imits

T

he A

vett

Bro

ther

s/N

ick-

el C

reek

.

7:0

0 Te

nnes

see

Cro

ssro

ads

7:3

0 Vo

lunt

eer

Gar

dene

r 8

:00

Doc

tor

Bla

ke

M

yste

ries

B

edla

m.

Did

a p

atie

nt

mur

der a

nur

se in

a p

sy-

chia

tric

hosp

ital?

9:0

0 P

ione

ers

of T

elev

isio

n

Crim

e D

ram

as.

The

star

s of

D

ragn

et,

Co-

lum

bo,

Polic

e W

oman

an

d m

ore.

10:0

0 B

BC

Wor

ld N

ews

10:3

0 L

ast o

f Sum

mer

Win

e 11

:00

Fran

k K

earn

s:

A

mer

ican

Cor

resp

onde

nt

Col

d W

ar in

trigu

e.

7:0

0 N

atur

e’s

M

irac

le B

abie

s

A z

oolo

gist

mee

ts g

iant

pa

ndas

. 8

:00

Am

eric

an M

aste

rs

Alth

ea.

Two-

time

Wim

-bl

edon

and

U.S

. O

pen

cham

pion

A

lthea

G

ib-

son,

th

e fir

st

Afri

can

Am

eric

an

to

play

in

th

ose

tour

nam

ents

. 9

:30

Rea

dyTe

nnes

see

T

EMA’

s Em

erge

ncy

Pre-

pare

dnes

s tip

s. 10

:00

BB

C W

orld

New

s 10

:30

Las

t of S

umm

er W

ine

11:0

0 Fr

ont a

nd C

ente

r

War

ren

Hay

nes.

7:0

0 L

awre

nce

Wel

k S

how

H

awai

i. 8

:00

Kee

ping

App

eara

nces

8:3

0 E

d S

ulliv

an’s

Roc

k

and

Rol

l Cla

ssic

s

Per

form

ance

s fro

m 1

963

to

1968

, in

clud

ing

the

Rol

ling

Ston

es,

the

Bea

tles’

A

mer

ican

TV

de

but,

Sly

and

the

Fam

-ily

Sto

ne a

nd th

e D

oors

. 10

:30

Film

Sch

ool S

hort

s

Res

pons

ible

Par

ties.

11:0

0 G

lobe

Tre

kker

B

uild

ing

Engl

and

II.

An

arch

itect

ural

tou

r of

En

glis

h hi

stor

y.

Alt

he

a:

Am

eri

ca

n M

ast

ers

Frid

ay, S

epte

mbe

r 4

8:

00pm

Sept2015.indd 110 8/20/15 5:01 PM

Page 111: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

Vis

it w

np

t.o

rg fo

r co

mpl

ete

24-h

our

sche

dule

s fo

r N

PT

and

NP

T2

Nas

hvill

e P

ublic

Tel

evis

ion

7:0

0 A

rthu

r &

Geo

rge

o

n M

aste

rpie

ce

Par

t 3. C

oncl

usio

n. 8

:00

Mas

terp

iece

Mys

tery

!

She

rloc

k

Ser

ies

III: H

is L

ast V

ow.

Mas

ter

blac

kmai

ler

Cha

rles

Aug

ustu

s M

ag-

nuss

en.

9:3

0 V

icio

us

Fla

tmat

es.

10:0

0 B

lueg

rass

Und

ergr

ound

A

mos

Lee

. 10

:30

Life

on

the

Line

T

he A

fterm

ath.

11

:00

Tavi

s S

mile

y 11

:30

Scu

lly/T

he W

orld

Sho

w

7:0

0 A

ntiq

ues

Roa

dsho

w

Rap

id C

ity, H

our O

ne.

8:0

0 A

ntiq

ues

Roa

dsho

w

Rap

id C

ity, H

our T

wo.

9:0

0 P

OV

D

on’t

Tell

Any

one.

Ang

y R

iver

a,

the

coun

try’s

only

ad

vice

co

lum

nist

fo

r un

docu

men

ted

yout

h, s

hare

s he

r sto

ry.

10:3

0 L

ast o

f Sum

mer

Win

e 11

:00

BB

C W

orld

New

s 11

:30

Nex

t Doo

r N

eigh

bors

:

Hab

lam

os E

spañ

ol

An

NPT

orig

inal

doc

u-m

enta

ry

abou

t N

ash-

ville

’s H

ispa

nic

com

mu-

nity

.

7:0

0 G

oron

gosa

Par

k –

R

ebir

th o

f Par

adis

e

Lio

n M

yste

ry/E

leph

ant

Whi

sper

er.

Why

th

e pa

rk’s

lions

are

n’t s

urvi

v-in

g; e

leph

ant b

ehav

ior.

9:0

0 O

n Tw

o Fr

onts

:

Lat

inos

& V

ietn

am

Tw

o si

blin

gs o

n op

po-

site

sid

es o

f the

Vie

tnam

W

ar:

one

a PO

W;

the

othe

r a p

rote

stor

. 10

:30

Las

t of S

umm

er W

ine

11:0

0 B

BC

Wor

ld N

ews

11:3

0 R

apto

rs!

K

ings

of t

he S

ky

The

int

erse

ctio

n of

hu-

man

s an

d ra

ptor

s.

7:0

0 N

atur

e

Nat

ure’

s M

iracl

e O

r-ph

ans:

Sec

ond

Cha

nc-

es.

Koa

las,

w

alla

bies

an

d sl

oths

. 8

:00

NO

VA

Arc

tic G

host

Shi

p. 9

:00

Ret

urn

to th

e W

ild

The

C

hris

M

cCan

d-le

ss

Stor

y.

The

youn

g hi

ker

who

se m

yste

rious

de

ath

in A

lask

a w

as th

e su

bjec

t of

a b

ook

and

mov

ie.

10:0

0 B

BC

Wor

ld N

ews

10:3

0 L

ast o

f Sum

mer

Win

e 11

:00

Aus

tin C

ity L

imits

F

oo F

ight

ers.

7:0

0 Te

nnes

see

Cro

ssro

ads

7:3

0 Vo

lunt

eer

Gar

dene

r 8

:00

Doc

tor

Bla

ke

M

yste

ries

A

ll Th

at G

litte

rs. A

pro

s-pe

ctor

is

fo

und

dead

af

ter s

triki

ng g

old.

9:0

0 P

ione

ers

of T

elev

isio

n

Fun

ny

Ladi

es.

Luci

lle

Bal

l, C

arol

Bur

nett

and

othe

r com

edy

lege

nds.

10

:00

BB

C W

orld

New

s 10

:30

Las

t of S

umm

er W

ine

11:0

0 In

depe

nden

t Len

s

Lov

e Fr

ee o

r D

ie.

New

H

amps

hire

’s G

ene

Rob

-in

son,

th

e fir

st

open

ly

gay

bish

op.

7:0

0 N

atur

e’s

M

irac

le B

abie

s

A

rare

pa

rrot,

wal

laby

an

d le

mur

. 8

:00

Wom

en’s

Lis

t:

Am

eric

an M

aste

rs

Fift

een

wom

en

who

de

fine

cont

empo

rary

A

mer

ican

cul

ture

. 9

:00

PO

V

Art

and

Cra

ft. A

rt fo

rger

M

ark

Land

is

dona

tes

his

expe

rt co

pies

to m

u-se

ums.

10:3

0 L

ast o

f Sum

mer

Win

e 11

:00

BB

C W

orld

New

s 11

:30

Infin

ity H

all L

ive

W

omen

of S

ong.

7:0

0 L

awre

nce

Wel

k S

how

B

ig C

ity, U

.S.A

. 8

:00

Kee

ping

App

eara

nces

8:3

0 G

reat

Bri

tish

Bak

ing

S

how

D

esse

rts. A

bak

ing

bur-

glar

y. 9

:30

The

Fors

yte

Sag

a

Epi

sode

3.

Ire

ne

falls

in

lo

ve

with

ar

chite

ct

Bos

inne

y; S

oam

es s

ues

over

cos

t ove

rrun

s. 10

:30

In th

e A

mer

icas

w

ith D

avid

Yet

man

R

eefs

, Rui

ns a

nd R

eviv

-al

s: B

eliz

e’s

Mel

ting

Pot.

11:0

0 G

lobe

Tre

kker

E

aste

rn C

anad

a.

7:0

0 S

ecre

ts o

f

Wes

tmin

ster

8:0

0 In

dian

Sum

mer

s

on

Mas

terp

iece

P

art 1

. The

Brit

ish

arriv

e in

nor

ther

n In

dia

in 1

932

for a

sea

son

of ro

man

ce

and

intri

gue.

9:3

0 V

icio

us

Wed

ding

. An

unex

pect

-ed

gue

st.

10:0

0 B

lueg

rass

Und

ergr

ound

L

ee A

nn W

omac

k. 10

:30

Life

on

the

Line

T

he M

atch

. 11

:00

Tavi

s S

mile

y 11

:30

Scu

lly/T

he W

orld

Sho

w

7:0

0 A

ntiq

ues

Roa

dsho

w

Rap

id C

ity, H

our T

hree

. 8

:00

Ant

ique

s R

oads

how

A

lbuq

uerq

ue,

Hou

r O

ne.

9:0

0 I’l

l Hav

e W

hat P

hil’s

H

avin

g

Tok

yo. E

very

body

Lov

es

Ray

mon

d cr

eato

r Pr

o-du

cer

Phil

Ros

enth

al

enjo

ys ra

men

and

sus

hi.

10:0

0 B

BC

Wor

ld N

ews

10:3

0 L

ast o

f Sum

mer

Win

e 11

:00

Gre

at M

useu

ms

S

ound

Tra

cks:

The

Roc

k &

Rol

l H

all

of F

ame

&

Mus

eum

. Th

e I.M

. Pe

i-de

sign

ed m

useu

m.

7:0

0 G

oron

gosa

Par

k –

R

ebir

th o

f Par

adis

e

New

B

lood

/Hid

den

Wor

lds.

R

eint

rodu

cing

ze

bra

and

elan

d to

the

pa

rk;

a la

rge

croc

odile

po

pula

tion.

9:0

0 Fr

ontli

ne

My

Bro

ther

’s B

ombe

r, Pa

rt 1.

A

fil

mm

aker

lo

oks

for t

he b

ombe

rs o

f Pa

n A

m 1

03.

10:0

0 B

BC

Wor

ld N

ews

10:3

0 L

ast o

f Sum

mer

Win

e 11

:00

Med

ia C

over

age

a

nd F

emal

e A

thle

tes

T

rend

s an

d bi

ases

in

sp

orts

repo

rting

.

7:0

0 N

atur

e

Nat

ure’

s M

iracl

e O

r-ph

ans:

Wild

Les

sons

. A

slot

h,

youn

g ka

ngar

oo

and

baby

frui

t bat

. 8

:00

E.O

. Wils

on –

of A

nts

and

Men

T

he

foun

der

of

soci

o-bi

olog

y, w

orld

aut

horit

y on

ins

ects

and

Pul

itzer

Pr

ize-

win

ning

writ

er o

n hu

man

nat

ure.

10:0

0 B

BC

Wor

ld N

ews

10:3

0 L

ast o

f Sum

mer

Win

e

The

Bla

ck W

idow

. 11

:00

Aus

tin C

ity L

imits

V

ampi

re W

eeke

nd/G

riz-

zly

Bea

r.

7:0

0 Te

nnes

see

Cro

ssro

ads

7:3

0 Vo

lunt

eer

Gar

dene

r 8

:00

Doc

tor

Bla

ke

M

yste

ries

S

omeo

ne’s

Son,

Som

e-on

e’s

Dau

ghte

r. A

hos

-pi

tal’s

onl

y fe

mal

e do

c-to

r is

foun

d ha

nged

. 9

:00

Pio

neer

s of

Tel

evis

ion

P

rimet

ime

Soap

s.

Fa-

vorit

es D

alla

s, D

ynas

ty

and

Peyt

on P

lace

. 10

:00

BB

C W

orld

New

s 10

:30

Las

t of S

umm

er W

ine

11:0

0 O

n H

ome

Gro

und:

Life

Afte

r S

ervi

ce

Vet

eran

s of

Iraq

and

Af-

ghan

ista

n.

7:0

0 To

Be

Ann

ounc

ed 9

:00

PO

V

Ai

Wei

wei

: Th

e Fa

ke

Cas

e. T

he C

hine

se a

rt-is

t ha

s be

com

e a

voic

e fo

r fre

e sp

eech

and

hu-

man

righ

ts.

10:0

0 B

BC

Wor

ld N

ews

10:3

0 L

ast o

f Sum

mer

Win

e

Sto

p th

at B

ath.

11:0

0 In

finity

Hal

l Liv

e

Toa

d th

e W

et S

proc

ket.

7:0

0 L

awre

nce

Wel

k S

how

F

ashi

ons

and

Hits

Th

roug

h Th

e Ye

ars.

8:0

0 K

eepi

ng A

ppea

ranc

es 8

:30

Gre

at B

ritis

h B

akin

g

Sho

w

Pie

s an

d Ta

rts.

9:3

0 Th

e Fo

rsyt

e S

aga

E

piso

de 4

. So

ames

at-

tack

s Ire

ne;

Old

Jol

yon

reun

ites

his

fam

ily.

10:3

0 In

the

Am

eric

as

with

Dav

id Y

etm

an

Yak

ima:

The

Que

st f

or

Hop

s. C

raft

beer

bre

w-

ing.

11:0

0 G

lobe

Tre

kker

W

est T

exas

.

7:0

0 H

ome

Fire

s

on

Mas

terp

iece

E

piso

de 1

. Th

e w

omen

of

an

Engl

ish

villa

ge i

n W

WII.

8:0

0 In

dian

Sum

mer

s

on

Mas

terp

iece

P

art 2

. Aaf

rin s

trugg

les.

9:0

0 Th

e W

idow

er

Par

t 1.

10:0

0 B

lueg

rass

Und

ergr

ound

B

ela

Flec

k &

A

biga

il W

ashb

urn.

10:3

0 Li

fe o

n th

e Li

ne 11

:00

Tavi

s S

mile

y 11

:30

Scu

lly/T

he W

orld

Sho

w

7:0

0 A

ntiq

ues

Roa

dsho

w

Sea

ttle,

Hou

r One

. 8

:00

Ant

ique

s R

oads

how

A

lbuq

uerq

ue, H

our T

wo.

9:0

0 I’l

l Hav

e W

hat P

hil’s

H

avin

g

Ital

y.

A

hom

e-co

oked

m

eal a

t Che

f Nan

cy S

il-ve

rton’

s U

mbr

ian

hom

e. 10

:00

BB

C W

orld

New

s 10

:30

Las

t of S

umm

er W

ine

11:0

0 R

esto

ratio

n N

eon

N

eon

sign

s fro

m

thei

r fir

st u

sage

in 1

920s

Las

Ve

gas

to

the

pres

ent

day.

2

0

21

2

2

23

2

4

25

2

6

2

7

28

2

9

30

O

CT

OB

ER1

2

3

4

5

Ind

ian

Su

mm

ers

Sun

days

beg

inni

ngS

epte

mbe

r 27

8:00

pm

Go

ron

go

sa P

ark

Tues

days

beg

inni

ng

Sep

tem

ber

227:

00pm

In T

he

ir O

wn

Wo

rds

Mu

ha

mm

ad

Ali

Tues

day,

Sep

tem

ber

87:

00pm

Sept2015.indd 111 8/20/15 5:01 PM

Page 112: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

112 | September 2015 NashvilleArts.com

Merrick Printing Company Richard Barnett, Sr. VP – Sales

Cell (502) 296-8650 • Office (502) 584-6258 [email protected]

Merrick Makes It Happen.

Stochastic printing with Merrick . . . Easy pickin' when you need the best in printing!

Merrick_0915.indd 1 8/13/15 10:01 AM

Home Consignment••

ENGLISH & COMPANY

118 Powell Place • Nashville, TN 37204Mon. - Sat. • 10:00 - 5:00 • (615) 315-5589

[email protected] us on Facebook

EnglishAndCo_0915.indd 1 8/6/15 3:01 PM

Change Your Vents into Works of artHand-crafted of ornamental

iron in TennesseeUnique custom designs

Available in a variety of finishes

615.776.3023 • www.fancyvents.com

NOW YOU HAVE A CHOICE!!

Replace the “institutional” look with a “Touch of Art”

Call Fancy Vents™!615.776.3023

www.fancyvents.com

Friend us on Facebook for a chance to win a free Fancy Vent™

Fancy Vents™ offers a beautiful alternative to the standard vent covers.

Hand-Crafted of Ornamental Iron • Available in a Variety of FinishesUnique Custom Designs • Wall and Ceiling Mounted Covers

FancyVents_0915.indd 1 8/20/15 4:00 PM

Sept2015.indd 112 8/20/15 5:01 PM

Page 113: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

NashvilleArts.com September 2015 | 113

Sponsored By:

www.FranklinArtScene.com

There’s no cost to attend.

Facebook.com/FranklinArtScene

Historic Downtown

Franklin, TN& The Factory

A variety of venues and working studios throughout a 15-block

area—join us for original art, live music, refreshments and more!

Friday, September 4, 6-9 p.m.

Learn where to start your evening and check out the map:

FranklinArtScene_0915.indd 1 8/18/15 1:57 PM

The night time is the right time . . .

PHO

TOG

RA

PH B

Y A

NTH

ON

Y SC

AR

LATI

Beyond Words by Marshall Chapman

You’ve heard the expression “the right tool for the right job,” right? Well, something happened the other night that not only brought that expression to mind but inspired an addendum—the right tool for the right job at the right time.

Here’s what happened.I was standing in my basement ready to change the filter in my home water-purifying system. But I had the wrong filter. So I ventured out into the heat, humidity, and rush-hour traffic in search of the right one. After three stops at three different hardware stores in three different zip codes —success! Once back home, I was ready to have this little project behind me. First, I had to turn the water off on either side of the filter container, thus rerouting the water so I wouldn’t get hosed when the container got loosened. As a precaution, I placed a bucket on the floor to catch any water that might gurgle out when I engaged the pressure-valve button. (Releasing this button facilitates the loosening of the container.) Next, I grabbed the cylinder-shaped filter container with both hands, but when I tried twisting it open, it wouldn’t budge. No matter how much I leaned into it, grunted, and cursed, there was no movement. So I called my older sister on my cell.“Try wearing yellow rubber gloves,” she suggested. But even that didn’t help. At this point, I’m thinking I need a big wrench, but the biggest wrench I had was a plumber’s wrench, and that wasn’t big enough. Then I thought, I need Danny! Danny is the unofficial mayor of my neighborhood. He and his wife, Kathy, have lived across the street from me for over eighteen years. Danny’s basement is like one big toolbox. Actually, it is one big toolbox. It was getting late when I decided to walk across the street to see if, by chance, Danny was still up. As I stepped off the curb into darkness, an amazing thing happened. I literally ran right smack dab into Danny and Kathy who were returning home from a party. When I explained my predicament, Danny didn’t hesitate. “I’ll be right back,” he said. Next thing I know, he’s showing me this thingamagidget I later learned was an automotive multi-purpose strap wrench. “I’ve had this thing for years,” he said. “I knew it’d come in handy one day.”When Danny applied the automotive multi-purpose strap wrench to my water-filter container, the results were immediate and impressive. And in that moment, I came to a great realization: Better than sex . . . better than religion . . . better than drugs and rock & roll . . . is having the right tool for the right job at the right time. www.tallgirl.com

Sept2015.indd 113 8/20/15 5:01 PM

Page 114: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine

114 | September 2015 NashvilleArts.com

My Favorite Painting

Tom CollinsMusic Publisher/Record Producer

As a self-taught artist, York has found success with his colorful, whimsical acrylic works on canvas and board. His art can be found in the collections of Pinnacle Bank, the Nashville City Club, Belmont University, First Baptist Church (Nashville), Avenue Bank, Volunteer Bank, Tom Collins Productions, Le Bonheur Children’s Hospital (Memphis), celebrities Kelly Clarkson, Vince Gill, and Keb’ Mo’ to name a few, plus other private collections here and abroad. Although a fervent painter, York has also owned and directed galleries since 1990. His York & Friends Fine Art currently represents forty-five local and regional artists. The main gallery is in the Belle Meade area of Nashville with an additional art venue at Market Central in Memphis. www.yorkandfriends.com

ARTIST BIO: RON YORKHaving collected art for many years, I have found that most

paintings I buy are based on colors and their relationship to one another. Being in the recording studio over time, I began to see certain colors in relation to the notes of the music; this is called synesthesia.  Although colors are not present every time I hear sounds, they have appeared many times when I was producing a record. Colors have always lifted me and made my world happier. With a song you like what you hear and you feel it, and with a painting it’s like what you see and also feel.

Collecting over the years, I have bought many Ron York paintings based primarily on my reaction to the colors.

Ron York, Blue Trees, Acrylic on Masonite, 16” x 20”

PHO

TOG

RAPH

BY

NIN

A C

OV

ING

TON 601 8th Ave South

Nashville, TN 37203615-736-5200ilexforflowersnashville@gmail.comwww.ilexforflowers.com

F L O W E R S F O R E V E R Y O C C A S I O N

Name: Liatris Botanical Name: Liatris spicataPhotography by Brett Warren, shot in the Ilex studio

Ilex_0915.indd 1 8/18/15 2:01 PMSept2015.indd 114 8/20/15 5:01 PM

Page 115: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine
Page 116: September 2015, Nashville Arts Magazine