Marion Mason and Ginny Merritt at Jasper's Sidewalk Gallery

The Jasper Project has been delighted to include the work of two former visual arts educators, Marion Mason and Ginny Merritt, as well as that of Lucy Bailey and Judy Sellers in out Sidewalk Gallery at the Meridian Building on Washington and Sumter Streets in Downtown Columbia this spring.

About his work, Marion Mason says, “I am a visual artist who taught high school Art for
forty-two years. I earned the Bachelor of Arts Degree in studio art (sculpture concentration) from the University of South Carolina, and the Master of Fine Arts Degree (in sculpture) from the University of Georgia. In addition, I earned the Master of Education
(adult & community education) from Carolina. I began my 42 year HS Art teaching career as the artist-in-residence, and on-site coordinator, at the former Richland District One Artistically Talented and Gifted (ARTAG) High School Program. Currently I teach various visual arts courses and serve as the Fine Arts Department Head at White Knoll High School.
Since retiring from teaching in January, 2019, I am now a full-time professional artist again, and exhibit and sell my sculpture, pendants and earrings. Over the years I have shown and won awards at many local, state, regional, and national competitive and invitational exhibits.”

 

 According to Ginny Merett, “My collage work shows the deconstruction of beauty and an escape from reality inspired by stylish women in my life and around the world. I am nostalgic about family gatherings, women’s fashion in the early 1900’s and by personalities I meet day to day. My focus is on taking parts and pieces from current-day media to create present moments, social commentary, and new personalities. My art has been shown in solo and group exhibits at 701 Whaley Hallway: community art gallery, Stormwater Studio, ArtFields, Koger Center for the Arts, the Jasper Project, USC’s McMaster Gallery, SC State Library and Fair, and other local venues like Sound Bites Eatery, Trustus Theater, She Festival, Cottontown Art Crawl and Melrose Art in the Yard. Her work is published in the Jasper Project’s Jasper Magazine Spring 2019 and Fall 2022 editions, and in Sheltered: SC Artists Respond During the 2020 Pandemic; and in Bullets and Band-Aids, Vol. 3.”

 

Art on the Pond features Bailey, Thornley, and Smoak - November 11th

Saturday, November 11; 10:00 am - 4:00 pm: Art on the Pond, Lucy Bailey Studio, 320 Wateree Creek Road, Irmo, SC 29063 / Rain or shine

Join us for our 3rd annual open studio and sale of artwork and artful gifts by Lucy Bailey, Rick Smoak, and K Wayne Thornley.

Paintings - Collage - Photography - Ceramics - Jewelry - Mixed Media - Assemblage - Sculpture

Come to shop, visit, talk art, and meet friends! Google Maps should get you here, but other navigation systems may not. You can only get here via Carrie Shealy Road so check your route. (Holladay Road will NOT get you here!) Drive slowly on these dirt roads and watch for other cars entering and exiting. We look forward to seeing you at the pond!

Lucy Bailey and K. Wayne Thornley Challenge the Boundaries of Form in LIFE.FORMS

Lucy Bailey and K. Wayne Thornley are no strangers to making and testing the limits of their art—separate and together—but their new exhibition is a deep dive into experimentation for both of them. LIFE.FORMS: Interpretations in Mixed Media is inspired by the “what if” conversations we all have about how our life ended up being, well, our life. 

“Last summer we [Wayne and Lucy] were having a conversation about the vast range and incredible impact of those variables [that affect life]: heredity, time in history, societal context, environment, family, geography, individual choices, etc.,” the pair share, “We both had separately been thinking about how these ideas might be expressed in our art and the conversation led us to explore it together. We signed on the line for this show before we had produced a single piece, which lit the motivational fire we needed.”  

As they began creating, some ideas and influences kept repeating, particularly nature versus nurture and the butterfly effect. Together they kept searching through the tension between these major life moments that permanently define us and the small, seemingly innocuous moments whose ripples we often have no idea alter us so intensely. The title itself came from Thornley, who sees forms as “both a noun and verb, reflecting biological forms of life and the dynamic process of forming a life. The show has remained pretty true to those initial thoughts.”  

Viewers of the exhibit can expect an inventive use of materials and techniques from the experimental duo who both “[took] a great deal of pleasure in the process of pushing materials into unintended uses.” Specifically, Thornley’s work is rooted in biological imagery or, “the essential building blocks of life forms as we know them,” whereas Bailey’s “focus is more rooted in narratives around environmental determinants.” 

Bailey is well-known for her clay sculptures but made an intentional effort to move away from clay while still working with malleable materials. Her main material in this show? Vintage children’s clothes—specifically the unisex baby and toddler gowns popular in the early 1900’s.

“Combining textiles and mixed media invited exploration of new techniques, which was challenging, fun, and messy,” Bailey reveals, “I rust-dyed, embroidered, and burned the clothing. I transferred photographs onto fabric. I worked with silkworm cocoons and cicada wings. I learned some very basic slow stitching and couching techniques and I distressed fabric by pulling out individual threads.”

Bailey’s work is typically rife with personality as faces and figures pervade her work. However, these faceless pieces are no less emotional and full of life in her opinion: “Absent a face or figure, clothing is still highly personal, and it holds an echo or remembrance of the person who once inhabited it, so I feel like this work remains figurative in a sense.”

 

Thornley agrees that his process has been adaptive and constantly evolving, though in some ways it is almost a natural extension of the branching out into mixed media he has explored recently. Thornley has been painting 2D for decades, but in the past couple of years, he has begun creating more 3D works—specifically houses with miscellaneous objects.

 

“Some of the outcomes have been successful and inspiring; others have been disastrous. For me, those successes and failures become part of the evolution of my own creativity,” Thornley intimates, “As for my experiments with form, I definitely think our concept for this show served as a catalyst for me to merge my love of wire forms with mixed media.”

 

With this show, Thornley began with materials familiar to him before incorporating brand new ones—ones he plans to continue his relationship with: “I see many of these new objects as maquettes for much larger pieces. Just as cells divide and multiply, creating matter that can be microscopic or gargantuan, I think the ideas sparked while making these new works will give new life to future creations.”

Regardless of the materials used, both artists are exploring the edges of and pushing the boundaries of form, while crafting narrative around/with ideas and images of life itself. Each piece will present a unique experience for the viewer and no one person will have the same encounter with the show.

“Hopefully, contemplating what forms this ‘one wild and precious life’ (as Mary Oliver says in her poem ‘The Summer Day’) will prompt people to consider not only the influences shaping our own lives but how we effect the lives of those around us,” the duo details, “How people react to the work will actually reflect the LIFE.FORMS theme: each persons’ interpretation will be a result of their own experiences. We hope the art will kindle something unique in everyone.”

LIFE.FORMS will be featured at Stormwater Studios with an Opening Reception on May 11th from 5pm – 8pm. An Artist Talk will take place on Sunday the 21st of May at 2pm. Stormwater Studios is located at 413 Pendleton Street.

“In terms of what it means to be human, we are contemplating the tension between how simultaneously fragile and resilient we are in the face of everything that happens in our lives,” the artists emphasize, “What magic of genetics and epigenetics sets us in motion? How many potential courses might a life take based on what happens or fails to happen for us? How much of this are we aware of as it unfolds and how much is only visible from the vantage point of time?”

 

 

Jasper Talks with Tiny Gallery Artist Lucy Bailey on Her Molding of Nature and Whimsy

We’re in the final week of our Tiny Gallery show with Lucy Bailey, a collection of dreamscapes in both 2D and 3D. Learn more about Bailey and her process below!

 

JASPER: Tell me a bit about where you’re from and how you came to art.  

BAILEY: I grew up on Lake Murray in an idyllic setting, back when the lake was quiet and there were few residents. My parents weren’t artists, but both were creative craftsmen in their own right. As a teenager I spent every nickel at The Dutch Door craft supply store at Boozer Shopping Center and would decoupage Holly Hobbie wrapping paper and bits of wallpaper onto anything that couldn’t outrun me. 

 

JASPER: Did you ever go to school for art? 

BAILEY: My degrees are in theatre, clinical counseling, and school psychology. Anything I know about making art has been from a few master classes or through trial and error. I tend to learn what I need to know to do a particular thing. 

 

JASPER: I know you enjoy a few different mediums, particularly clay – how did you find it? 

BAILEY: Before beginning in clay, I was an admirer of all things ceramic and collected on a shoestring. In my mid-40’s I bought a bag of porcelain to try hand-building masks, unaware that porcelain was akin to marshmallow fluff. Someone at Southern Pottery set me up with a decent low-grog earthenware and building became much easier! 

JASPER: Why do you keep coming back to clay?

BAILEY: There’s something viscerally satisfying about working with clay and there are endless possibilities. Yet, there are significant limitations: it’s fragile and heavy and often big and bulky. Those limitations are exasperating and, simultaneously, challenging. In my next life I hope to fall in love with creating small plastic jewelry or satin bow ties: anything small, light, and easy to ship.

 

JASPER: Well, I know you do some 2D work as well and recently started experimenting with scratchboards, right? 

BAILEY: While clay is my go-to, drawing and making scratchboards has been a productive detour for me. My drawings are small scale and done with colored pencils and ink. The scratchboards are a thin layer of white clay covered by black ink. Compared to ceramics, which requires building time, drying time, multiple firings, etc., drawing and scratchboards are more immediately satisfying, and I can pivot to them while ceramic pieces are in one of those various stages.

 

 

JASPER: In 2 and 3D you make a lot of fun, expressive faces. Have you always been drawn to faces?  

BAILEY: We are hard-wired visually to seek out and identify faces. Figurative work is definitely what I’m most drawn to, with a focus on busts and faces/masks. In terms of sculpting, faces are fickle. Early on a face will have a particular look and later in the process it has adopted a different quality. 

 

JASPER: Do you find that some images repeat themselves? 

BAILEY: There are certain ideas or imagery I’ll play with for a while then move on to another, and usually circle back to an earlier idea again later. A small skull stamp is commonly found lurking somewhere in my work as a memento mori. There’s a series of what I think of as coins from doodles back in college used in many pieces. Lately I’ve been in a moon phase (pun intended) crossing over from mixed-media-plus-ceramic wall pieces to pendants. For me it’s not about striving to conceive of an image because the images are finding me.

 

JASPER: How long does it usually take you to feel “finished” with a piece? 

BAILEY: Mary Ann Haven recently told me that older work should just be considered raw material and I love this conceptualization. With ceramics there’s only so much you can do once a piece is fired, but there are still many post-firing possibilities. I have a couple of larger (for me) pieces from a show at Stormwater Studios with K. Wayne Thornley last May and those will be reworked soon by adding wire and photographs.

 

JASPER: Tell me about this show specifically. What kind of pieces have you decided to show, and why? 

BAILEY: The Tiny Gallery grouping is all connected to clay, even the scratchboards. It felt important to have a couple options for small-scale figures, so I made the three moon cap figures and the three pieces with glaze bands around the base. While glazes don’t feature heavily in my work, this color is really perfect for the sea tides motif.  I wanted to include wall-mounted figurative works, so I created several new masks and included two older ones as well. The (imagined) Lover’s Eye pendants (which are graphite drawings on earthenware) and scratchboards are included to pull 2D into the mix.

  

JASPER: What’s in the future for you? 

BAILEY: A big change for me is coming up at the end of June when I retire from my day job! I have just started working on a series combining vintage (think late 1800s-mid 1900s) children’s clothing with photographs and other mixed medium—no ceramics involved. There’s also a nascent project integrating larger pieces of wood into the design. And I want to return to some very early ideas and explore them in more depth. 

Some of the new work will be ready this November when K. Wayne Thornley and I host our second annual Art on the Pond open studio, so we hope everyone will come see us then. 


 

JASPER: Finally, where can we find your work? 

BAILEY: Newer work is on Instagram and Facebook (both @lucybaileyclay). At this point my website (http://www.lucybaileyclay.com) is an archive but it may get revived soon. My business name is officially Lucy Bailey Studio.

 

To see Bailey’s effervescent scratchboards dancing with figures and faces and her delicate yet striking sculptures each with their own expressive quirks, go to Jasper’s virtual gallery: https://the-jasper-project.square.site/tiny-gallery

The Jasper Project Welcomes Lucy Bailey to the Tiny Gallery

Jasper is excited to welcome artist Lucy Bailey to the Jasper Project Tiny Gallery!

Lucy Bailey’s ceramic sculpture centers around the figure, with liberal use of layered textures and mixed media elements. Additional work explores combinations of ceramics and wood or wire, and earthenware altar boxes that create narratives through assemblages of found objects.

In 2021 one of her sculptures was exhibited at ArtFields in Lake City, SC. Her work was awarded the Best in Show distinction in exhibitions by the Annual Artist’s Guild of Spartanburg (SC) Juried Show and the Arts Council of York County (SC) Annual Juried Competition. Bailey’s work has twice been selected for the 701 Center for Contemporary Art’s South Carolina Biennial show. Her work was published in Lark Books’ 500 Figures in Clay-2.

With work ranging from $32 to $130 there is something for everyone to be found in this month’s Tiny Gallery. Check out a few items below and then venture of to Jasper’s Tiny Gallery to see the entire exhibition!

 

And while we have you, please consider supporting the Jasper Project tomorrow during Midlands Gives. Here’s a list of what Jasper has accomplished over the past twelve months!

You can find our Midlands Gives Donation Page right here! Thanks!