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November Issue 2009

Toe River Studio Tour Takes Place in Western North Carolina - Dec. 4-6, 2009

The mountains of Mitchell and Yancey Counties of Western North Carolina are home to some of the top artists and craftspeople in America. Whether you want contemporary or traditional, two-or three-dimensional, to look at or to use, you'll find a wide selection to choose from as, map in hand, you follow the crafts trail set out for the Toe River Studio Tour on Dec. 4, 5, and 6, 2009.

This annual event, sponsored by the Toe River Arts Council (TRAC), is held twice a year: on the second weekend in June and the first weekend in December. This year TRAC has expanded studio times for both tours. The new times for the December studio visits are Friday, Dec. 4, 2009, from noon to 4pm with the TRAC Center Gallery reception still being held at the usual Friday time of 5-8pm. On both Saturday and Sunday the studio visiting hours in December are 10am to 5pm on Dec. 5 and 6, 2009. These self-guided free tours offer the visitor an opportunity to search out the professional artists and craftspeople working in the coves and hollows of the two rural mountain counties. Many stops on the map will showcase more than one artist.

Art lovers create their own tours, travel at their own pace, and stop for lunch on their own schedule. A TRAC map shows the locations of the studios and galleries on the tour and lists a few local lodging places and restaurants that provide feasts or fast meals. The map, along with the red, arrowed Tour signs aid travelers in finding their destinations. 

Over 120 artisans open their studio doors and welcome the public to see their workplaces. It is a rare opportunity to visit many of these studios. From world-class to emerging . . . glass blowers, potters of every description, wood turners, basket makers, printers, painters, fiber artists, photographers, sculptors, jewelers, metal workers, and more can be found.

You will find blown glass that comes in all colors, sizes, hues ­ from functional vases, bowls and goblets to unique, one-of-a-kind sculptures. Many studios will be demonstrating and offering an opportunity to see how items are made. Stained glass is represented as well ­ from large-scale commission type pieces, sun catchers and unique sculptural pieces.

The potters may offer their wares from orderly racks or from homemade rustic benches and tables, but they have much to choose from: trays, jugs, mugs, tiles, baking pans, fountains, bird houses, sculptured forms, ceremonial pieces, sets of dishes, even bathroom sinks. They come in stoneware, raku, wood-fired, earthenware, Majolica, or porcelain.

Look for functional and sculptural work from basketmakers who work in traditional gathered materials or in the modern Asian reeds. If wood makes your nerve ends tingle, then you can select from carvings, furniture, turned wood combined with blown glass, or art made with materials gathered from the woods. People who look for 2-D art can chose from photographs, watercolors, oil, acrylics, silkscreen, and paintings on handmade paper. Textiles are well represented with handspun yarns, hand-woven flat goods, art quilts, knitwear, and garments pieced, painted, and quilted. Look for ironwork, handmade books, jewelry, soap and scents, stationery, and ornaments. If the studios don't have what you're looking for, step into any of numerous galleries on the tour, where you'll find a wide range of handcrafted articles. 

The TRAC Center Gallery at 269 Oak Avenue in Spruce Pine, NC, will be open during the tour and will have maps, additional directions and information, and an exhibition of participants' work that is displayed in a geographical fashion. The staff and volunteers there are eager to help visitors decide where to go or to find their way. The exhibition of participants' work is on display at the TRAC Center Gallery from Nov. 21 through Dec. 31, 2009. Regular hours are Tuesdays through Saturdays from 10am to 5pm. The Burnsville TRAC Gallery at 102 West Main Street also will have maps, samples of Tour participants, and additional information on the Tour. It is open generally Mondays through Saturdays from 10am to 5pm, and expanded hours for the Tour weekend.

A "FREE" Tour map can be viewed at (www.toeriverarts.org) or picked up at any of the participating studios, galleries, and local businesses.

For further information check our NC Institutional Gallery listings, contact the Toe River Arts Council at 828/682-7215 or visit (www.toeriverarts.org).


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Carolina Arts is published monthly by Shoestring Publishing Company, a subsidiary of PSMG, Inc. Copyright© 2009 by PSMG, Inc., which published Charleston Arts from July 1987 - Dec. 1994 and South Carolina Arts from Jan. 1995 - Dec. 1996. It also publishes Carolina Arts Online, Copyright© 2009 by PSMG, Inc. All rights reserved by PSMG, Inc. or by the authors of articles. Reproduction or use without written permission is strictly prohibited. Carolina Arts is available throughout North & South Carolina.