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May Issue 2008

SC State Museum in Columbia, SC, Offers Statewide Juried Art Show

Contemporary South Carolina art from painting to pottery and much more will be on full display at the South Carolina State Museum in Columbia, SC, as it presents its first exclusive juried show the State Museum 20th Anniversary Juried Art Exhibition, on view in the Lipscomb Gallery through Sept. 7, 2008. As its title expresses, the show is part of the year-long celebration of the museum's 20th anniversary, which will include a number of other activities as well. But it's also to celebrate the latest contemporary art from across the Palmetto State, according to Curator of Art Paul Matheny.

Susan Watson
Peter Lenzo

"This show will provide a unique opportunity for a large number of artists from across the state to exhibit their work and expose the public to some of the state's most creative artists," said Matheny.

The show will contain approximately 122 works of art selected by two distinguished jurors.

Lia Newman is currently the director of programs and exhibitions at Artspace in Raleigh, NC. An artist herself, Newman maintains her own studio at Litmus Studio and Gallery in Raleigh. South Carolina art enthusiasts will be familiar with Brian Rutenberg from an excellent exhibition of his work, Brimming Tides, held at the State Museum in 2006. The Myrtle Beach, SC, native found success in New York City, where he now resides, and where his paintings are exhibited regularly.

The jurors selected art for the show the second week of April from entries from across the state. "We were surprised by the number of entries,' said Matheny. "We anticipated between 250 and 300 artists, but instead we had 500 enter two pieces each, so instead of 500 works of art we had 1,000.

"We were also very pleased at the diversity and range of subjects, media, and of the geographic distribution of the artists. What's not a surprise, however, is the high quality of this art."

The curator's thoughts were echoed by Rutenberg. "When I was asked to serve as a juror for this exhibition I accepted enthusiastically because I am aware of the richness and breadth of visual art in South Carolina. I was not disappointed," said the artist.

"The overwhelming number of artists who submitted speaks not only to the vitality of contemporary art in South Carolina but also to the way the South Carolina State Museum is perceived, as a welcome forum for all artists from every background, a range which weaves through self-taught, visionary paintings to more polished, conceptual images and everything in between. The level of quality was high and my job was not easy."

Paul Martyka

Works in all media are included in this exhibit, said Matheny, adding "we wanted to include a very broad range of South Carolina artists in the celebration of our 20th anniversary, so we made this exhibit available as a conduit to exhibit their work to a public that may not be as familiar with their work." Many established as well as emerging and little-known artists are featured in this unique show, said the curator. All of the art was created within the past three years.

Works in the show include: the 2006 collage Where Were You when the Moon was Full? by Aldwyth of Hilton Head; a copper and wire piece, Vessel No. 60 (2006) was done by Lee Sipe of Columbia; the 2008 wood carving Scream by Roosevelt Wells III of Columbia; Yemassee resident James St. Clair's 2007 acrylic on canvas painting The Function at the Junction and Guy Allison of Charleston's 2007 painting Big Blue.

The show's artists come from all across South Carolina, including Aiken, Newberry, Greenville, Columbia, Charleston, Spartanburg, Myrtle Beach, Hartsville, Orangeburg, Seneca, Barnwell, Santee, Clover, Greenwood, Camden, Winnsboro and Conway, among other places.

The State Museum each year makes an effort to open a new exhibit in conjunction with the annual Artista Vista spring art celebration, and the 20th Anniversary Juried Art Exhibition will continue that tradition.

"I hope this show will help people recognize the diversity of artists that live in our state and we think the public will be excited by the work by these fine, folk and self-taught artists and the variety of experiences and ideas they represent," said Matheny.

For further info check our SC Institutional Gallery listings, call the Museum at 803/898-4921 or visit (www.museum.state.sc.us).

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