REVIEW - Workshop Theatre's HARVEY--A Classic American Comedy by Jane Peterson

At its heart, Harvey is a story about

acceptance, kindness, and the freedom to be yourself …

Harvey, currently running at Workshop Theatre, is a Pulitzer Prize-winning and classic comedy written by Mary Chase. It premiered in 1944 and ran on Broadway for four years. The play was adapted in 1950 into the classic film of the same name starring Jimmy Stewart.

Directed by Bakari Lebby, the story centers around Elwood P. Dowd (Marshall Spann), a gentle, mild-mannered man who claims to have a best friend—a six-foot-tall, invisible rabbit named Harvey whom he introduces to everyone he knows in town. Elwood’s eccentricity is a source of embarrassment for his sister Veta Louise (Katie Mixon), who is desperate to climb the social ladder and fears Elwood’s behavior will hold her back. When Veta’s patience reaches its limit, she attempts to have him committed to a sanitarium, only for the staff to start questioning who’s truly the "crazy" one. This leads to some entertaining, if not a bit absurd, twists and turns as Veta finds herself drawn into the strange world of Elwood’s imagination.

Marshall Spann shines as Elwood, embodying the character’s warmth and innocence with remarkable ease. His performance is the heart of the show, making Elwood’s outlandish belief in Harvey feel both natural and endearing. His interactions with the invisible rabbit are a joy to watch—there's something genuinely magical about how Spann connects with Harvey, even though we (the audience) can't see him.

Katie Mixon brings a lot of energy to her role as Veta, though at times her performance edges into the over-the-top territory. Her dedication to the role and comedic timing earned her plenty of laughs.

… there's something genuinely magical about how Spann connects with Harvey …

A standout in the ensemble is Emily Padgett, who impressively juggles two roles—Ethel Chauvenet, the quirky aunt, and Betty Chumley, the wife of the head psychologist at the sanitarium. Her facial expressions and impeccable timing elevate her performance, proving that sometimes less is more when it comes to comedy.

Some of the other performances, however, felt a bit forced, and there were moments where actors seemed to be going through the motions rather than fully embracing their characters. The characters were very lively and will keep the audience entertained.

Visually, the set was a bit of a mixed bag. While the barebones design worked in some instances, the frequent entrances and exits felt awkward and confusing. A more cohesive use of props and period-specific details could have helped ground the production more firmly in its 1940s setting. I would like to have seen everyone in period-specific costumes which I know can be a difficult task.

The play runs a little over two hours, with two intermissions, so be prepared for a longer evening. Despite its minor flaws, the production offers plenty of charm, humor, and thought-provoking moments. At its heart, Harvey is a story about acceptance, kindness, and the freedom to be yourself—lessons that feel just as relevant today as they did when the play first premiered.

Catch Harvey at Cottingham Theatre before it closes on February 2. It is a fun, quirky escape into a world where imagination and kindness rule the day. Tickets are available by phone and online. Don’t miss your chance to meet Elwood and his invisible friend Harvey!

Call for Literary Artists - Wine About It Anthology Series

The Wine About It Anthology Series is a collection of stories focused on resilience, identity, and community, highlighting diverse voices and experiences from across South Carolina. Each volume showcases the diverse culture of the state with local narratives, celebrating storytelling, culture, and social justice. Paired with unique wine selections that enhance the reading experience, the series offers an immersive, sensory connection between literature and wine.

This collaborative initiative brings together Lit Between the Wines, Liberation is Lit, and Uncut Gems Agency to curate a dynamic experience that fosters community engagement, education, and empowerment. Each business plays a crucial role in uplifting underrepresented voices while promoting social justice through storytelling. The series culminates in Wine & Vinyl: A Multidisciplinary Art Exhibit, where literature, wine, and visual art offer a celebratory experience that reflects the rich cultural landscape of South Carolina.

PHOTO ESSAY by Perry McLeod - Jeffrey Miller Opening/Patrick Davis Concert Harbison Theatre

All Photos Courtesy of Perry McLeod

left to right - Keith Tolen, Jeffrey Miller, Fred Townsend

At Jasper, we can’t stop singing the praises of our friends at Harbison Theatre. Not only does Kristin Cobb and her team place a priority on presenting the best of SC performing arts alongside outstanding touring artists, but they have also welcomed the Jasper Project into their lobby to create a gallery space for local art. Previous Jasper Project featured artists include David Yaghjian, Olga Yukhno, Lori Starnes, Nate Puza and more, and this year we’re currently featuring the silkscreens and woodblocks of visual artist Jeffrey Miller and we have the brilliant painter Rebecca Horne on deck for our fall exhibition.

We kicked off Miller’s exhibition Friday night with an opening reception prior to the presentation of a big night of music by another well-known SC talent, Patrick Davis, and friends. The talented photographer Perry McLeod was on hand to capture some of the special moments that always happen when artists and arts lovers come together to celebrate the unique exchange of energy that is up close and personal art appreciation. Thanks to Perry for sharing these shots below.

Featured artist Jeffrey Miller with copies of Jasper Magazine fall 2024 and Miller article

L-R Cindi Boiter, artist Fred Townsend, featured artist - Jeffrey Miller, Wade Sellers - Jasper board president, Jasper board member Keith Tolen, Jasper board member elect Stan Conine

Jasper Board Member Keith Tolen with board VP Kristin Cobb and Jasper ED Cindi Boiter

David Ryan Harris

L- R — Patrick Davis, Maggie Rose, David Ryan Harris, Gabe Dixon

Poetry of the People Featuring Peggy Logan

This week's Poet of the People is Peggy Logan aka Tabu Hazel. I have known Peggy Logan for close to 15 years. She is an award educator and spoken word poet and has featured at Mind Gravy and other Midlands venues many times. Often her poetry highlights the challenges faced by under-priviledged youth she encounters in the public education sector or facing challenges in yourself. Every child deserves a Peggy Logan in their corner lifting them up and mentoring them to become their best selves.

~Al Black

Dr. Peggy Logan, aka Tabu Hazel, is a dynamic spoken word artist, writer, and actor whose work resonates deeply with audiences. Known for her bold storytelling and unapologetic voice, she explores themes of self-worth, empowerment, and the complexities of human relationships. Under her poetic alter ego, Tabu Hazel, she crafts powerful narratives that challenge stereotypes, redefine identity, and inspire transformation.

A multi-talented creator, Peggy's artistic pursuits extend beyond poetry. She is the writer and visionary behind Digital Deception, an award-winning drama that dives into the complexities of love and betrayal in the digital age. Her work in the film world reflects her gift for capturing raw emotion and authentic storytelling. As an actor, Peggy has graced the stage and screen, bringing depth and intensity to every role she portrays.

With a career rooted in creativity and authenticity, Peggy Logan continues to inspire and empower others through her words, performances, and stories. Whether on the page, stage, or screen, her artistry leaves an indelible mark.

Broken Crown

He came to me like a whisper in the dark,
soft, deliberate, his words weaving a spell.
A kiss on my forehead,
his signature claim to reel me in,
as if that gentle touch
could rewrite the story of my scars.

"To be with me is growth," he said,
and I let his promises take root.
I believed him.
I believed the warmth of his hands,
the way his gifts spoke louder than my doubts.
Money slipped into my pocket like a secret,
gestures wrapped in silken lies.

I knew about her.
The ring, the vows, the life he shared.
But I thought I was the only other,
his chosen confidant,
a second truth in his divided world.

Until I wasn’t.

It started with her—
my friend, her laugh untouched by guilt.
She didn’t know about us,
but I found out about them.
The way his eyes lingered on her,
the way his words mirrored the ones
he used to draw me in.

And then there were others,
names I’ll never know,
faces blurred by the weight of discovery.
Each revelation broke me a little more.
What I thought was love
became a lesson in betrayal.

I told no one.
Not about her,
not about him,
not about the nights I spent
trying to piece together
how I let myself fall so far.

His love wasn’t love.
It was a mirror,
reflecting every fracture in my soul,
a hollow promise dressed in warmth.

He left me raw,
my heart in shreds,
my spirit crumbling under the weight
of what I thought we were.
But I didn’t stay there.
I couldn’t.

I gathered the broken pieces of myself,
the shards of my spirit he tried to scatter.
It wasn’t easy.
Pain has a way of sinking into the bones,
lingering in the silence,
whispering in the dark.

But I chose forgiveness.
Not for him.
For me.
Because to carry his shame was to let him win,
and I refused to live in the shadow
of a love that was never mine.

It still hurts.
The memory is a wound that aches,
a scar that reminds me of who I was,
and who I’ll never be again.

This crown I wear now,
it wasn’t his to give.
It’s mine.
Forged in fire,
shaped by survival,
polished by the light I found within myself.

I stand in that light now.
Whole.
Unbroken.
Free.

Love Out Loud

I never told my mother that I loved her enough when she was living.  

We weren’t raised to speak love out loud.

Love was something we showed—buried in Sunday dinners,

Folded into the way she passed the cornbread, warm and buttered,

In the way she mended wounds without a word. 

We weren’t built for affection with open arms, 

We carried secrets like weights, grudges like armor, 

And buried our silence in the same place we buried our pain.

 

I never told my mother that I loved her enough. 

We weren’t quite built for that— 

Too much pride, too much history in our bones. 

Our families hold secrets like heirlooms, 

We hold onto hate like it’s all we know, 

And we bury silence in the same ground as our roots.

 

I grew up watching her hands do all the talking, 

Hands that braided me and my sister’s hair, that wiped our tears, 

Hands that worked long after the world told her to rest. 

She loved in ways that didn’t need words, 

And I loved her back the same. 

But I wonder—what would’ve happened if I had said it more? 

If I had spoken the words that sat heavy on my tongue, 

Before time turned them into regrets I now carry.

 

I want cookouts and Sunday dinners that fill more than plates. 

I want laughter that isn’t afraid to be loud, 

Conversations that don’t dodge the hard truths. 

I want to tell her that I see her now— 

Not just as my mother, but as the woman who carried the weight of the world 

And never let it break her spirit. 

I see the sacrifices, the sleepless nights, 

The silent tears she thought I didn’t notice.

 

We weren't raised to speak love out loud, 

But I feel it now, burning in my chest, 

And it’s too late to say it in the way I should have— 

Too late to fix the words I left unsaid. 

But if I could, I would tell her: 

I love you, not just for the things you did, 

But for the things you endured, 

For the battles you fought in silence, 

For the love you gave, even when the world gave you none.

 

We hold grudges like we hold breath— 

Tight, waiting for the release that never comes. 

We bury our pain in silence, let it fester like wounds unhealed. 

But I don’t want to do that anymore. 

I don’t want the silence, I want the truth— 

I want to tell you that I love you, even if we never said it enough. 

I want to cook and laugh and feel 

Everything that time took away from us.

 

I wish I’d known that love doesn’t wait, 

That it doesn’t have to be hidden, held back by tradition, 

That love could have filled the air, instead of just our plates. 

I never told my mother I loved her enough when she was living— 

But now, I’m trying to love her in ways she’d understand, 

Trying to break the cycle of silence, of holding on too tight to what doesn’t matter, 

And letting go of what does.

 

So, if I could have one more Sunday, 

One more dinner, one more day, 

I’d say it—I’d shout it, whisper it, let the words spill. 

Because love was always there, 

We just didn’t know how to say it.

 

But now I know, and I’m telling you— 

I love you, in ways that stretch beyond silence, 

In ways that live even after the words go unsaid.

 

 Thrones of Insecurity


Oh, they enter like the room owes them something

Two women cloaked in chaos, misery their king.

Every word a dagger, sharp but weak,

Every glance a judgment they’d never dare speak.

They don’t build—they tear.
No bridges, no bonds—just walls of despair.
Sisters in name, but strangers in spirit,
Screaming for validation, too afraid to hear it.

Their laughter echoes, but it’s hollow and forced,
Fueling their power with envy, their only recourse.
They find fault in others to avoid their own cracks,
Throwing stones from glass houses, hoping no one throws back.

They circled me once, baiting me to join,
Their game of gossip, their poison coin.
But I don’t dance in dirt, I don’t play that tune—
I rise with the sun while they howl at the moon.

Oh, they tried to pull me into their storm,
But I refused, my peace my norm.
They mocked my stillness, mistook it for fear,
Not realizing my silence was louder than their sneer.

They sit on thrones made of envy and spite,
Rulers of nothing, dimming their own light.
Believing their bitterness is some kind of crown,
But I’m no subject—I won’t bow down.

They whisper like wind, their lies take flight,
But truth doesn’t falter, not under their might.
I see their pain cloaked in venom and steel,
They cut with their words because they don’t want to feel.

While they stew in their chaos, I plant my peace,
Watering joy where their shadows crease.
Fighting my demons in silence and grace,
Finding light in the laughter youth leaves in its trace.

Because you can’t tear down what you didn’t create,
And I’m not your competitor, just your mirror of hate.
I walk my own path, no need for their games—
Their thrones crumble under the weight of their names.

And here’s the truth they’ll never admit:
They’re not queens—they’re prisoners in their own pit.
Bound by their anger, chained by their pride,
They can’t stand to see someone simply survive.

But while they unravel, I’ll continue to rise,
Their pettiness shrinking under wide-open skies.
Because real queens don’t destroy; they build and uplift,
They speak with love and give others the gift
Of strength, of grace, of something pure—
But that kind of power they’ll never endure.

So keep your crowns made of sorrow and stone,
I’ll wear resilience, my joy my own.
Because while you fester in what you lack,
I’ll rise—always—and never look back.

And one day, when their storm settles,
When they’re left with their silence and twisted medals,
They’ll realize they never conquered me—
I was too busy building my legacy.

 

 


REVIEW: The Revolutionists at Trustus Side Door Theatre - A Lesson (or Two) in History Reviewed by Jane Peterson

The Revolutionists, written by Lauren Gunderson at Trustus Theatre’s Side Door Theatre is a vibrant blend of humor, intensity, and bold historical imagination. Gunderson is known as one of the most produced playwrights today. Set during the tumultuous Reign of Terror in 1793 France, the play introduces us to four women—three of whom were real historical figures—who grapple with the injustices and struggles of their time. Their conversations, filled with passion, rebellion, and hope for a better world, feel surprisingly relevant given the political unrest in our country today.

The first of these women is Olympe de Gouges (Kathleen Arcovio Pennyway), a French playwright and activist who fought for women’s rights. As de Gouges declares, she is “happy that my plays piss off the right kind of people.” She is approached by Marianne Angelle (Courtney Sims), a fictional character who symbolizes the Haitian rebels and revolutionaries of the time. Angelle persuades de Gouges to write pamphlets supporting the abolition of slavery, particularly in Haiti, where the enslaved are fighting for their freedom. Alongside them is Charlotte Corday (Nicole Perez), the infamous assassin of revolutionary Jean-Paul Marat, who justifies her act of violence by accusing Marat of inciting mass murder. Poised for her execution, Corday seeks de Gouges’ help to craft a memorable last line before killing Marat in his bathtub. Finally, there is the deposed Marie Antoinette (Elane Werren), who wants de Gouges to rewrite her story in a way that will make the people love her again. She desperately seeks “better press” in the wake of her fall from grace.

Written by Laura Gunderson, the play is dialogue-heavy and, at times, could benefit from some tightening. However, the cast delivers the material with such verve and energy that it’s hard to look away. The actors frequently break the fourth wall, drawing the audience into the action, and this direct engagement never feels forced. Kudos to director Martha Hearn for expertly utilizing the intimate space of the Side Door Theatre, ensuring that every audience member feels like part of the action. Hearn's character direction is particularly strong, bringing out the best in each performer. Courtney Sims, as Marianne Angelle, is the standout performer of the evening. Her deeply emotional portrayal brings richness and depth to her character, making her both powerful and poignant. Elane Werren, as Marie Antoinette, follows closely behind, showcasing impressive comedic timing and playful expressions that add much-needed levity to an otherwise heavy narrative. Werren shines in her humorous moments, making Antoinette’s desperation both tragic and entertaining.

Although some of the set changes can be a little clumsy—an ongoing challenge in a small space—the overall design works well and does not distract from the performances. The minimalism of the set complements the play’s focus on character and dialogue. The Revolutionists not only serves as a fascinating history lesson but also acts as a timely meditation on the fight for justice, equality, and freedom. The language can be strong, so if you are sensitive to rough language, you may want to consider that.  I appreciated how the play encouraged me to revisit French history and the revolutionary women who shaped it. The show runs through February 1 at Trustus Theatre. With limited seating, be sure to grab your tickets soon at trustus.org!

Jasper Welcomes Victoria Rickards and Perry McLeod to thehallway: community art for February Exhibition HOW TO LOVE

Reception February 9th 3-5 pm

Graffiti Smile by Victoria Rickards

The Jasper Project welcomes Victoria Rickards and Perry McLeod to thehallway: communityart at 701 Whaley for a two-person exhibition titled How to Love, celebrating all the ways we show our love for the month of February. An opening reception is scheduled for Sunday, February 9th from 3-5 pm in the 701 Whaley Hallway - Community Art space.

Victoria Rickards was born in 1999 in Miami, Florida, and is currently based in Columbia, SC. A  multifaceted artist and lighting designer whose work challenges perceptions and explores themes of deception, fluidity, and surrealism, Rickards holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Theatre, Lighting Design, and Technology from the College of Charleston and is pursuing a graduate degree in Lighting Design at the University of South Carolina.

Rickard’s artistic journey has taken her to prestigious venues, including the Columbia Museum of Art and Art Basel Miami and allowed her to collaborate on digital projects, contributing to innovative NFT designs and more. Her work has garnered recognition from respected institutions and media outlets, including features in Forbes. A passionate advocate for innovation in art and design, Rickards continues to push boundaries and inspire others through her creative vision.

Rickards paints with the heart of a storyteller, crafting narratives from her history. Her artistic evolution unfolds in stages of abstraction, beginning with faces and progressing into distorted bodies and maps. Latent representations emerge beneath layers of color, quietly rebelling against societal norms surrounding body and self. Her maps symbolize a metaphorical journey through physical and emotional landscapes, representing internal terrains of thoughts and memories.

Perry McLeod

Perry McLeod is a Fullbright scholar, retired high school teacher, and a photographer and avid traveler. He shoots sports, concerts, events, “and just about anything else I can point a camera at,” he says. “I love photography! Every day is a new adventure and I just want to capture the moments that will make people stop and think. Make people want to make a change. Make people smile. Make people go -"Damn", or "nice" or "wow". Photography is the most perfect art - we all get moments that will never happen again. It's frozen in time forever - how cool is that?” 

A USC alumnus, McLeod taught Social Studies and Digital Media Production in both Richland District One and Richland District Two for 31 years. During his teaching career, he established a digital media production program at Richland Northeast High School, which fueled his love for photography and his fascination with video production. After retiring from education, Perry's passion for photography continued to grow, and he has worked for several local and national media outlets. In addition to photography, Perry has a deep love for travel. He says, "When I travel, my mind races with all the new things around me. I see a face, an old building, or an amazing vista, and I have to capture that moment." He believes that "a photograph is magic!"

 

Poetry of the People with Al Black Featuring Rian N. Jenkins

My first Poet of the People for 2025 is Rian N. Jenkins. 

Rian has been a fixture on the Midlands poetry scene for many years as both a poet, spoken word artist and mentor. She is a beacon of light who empowers and promotes others with her positivity and I'm proud to call her, Friend.

~Al Black

Rian N Jenkins has been in love with writing since sixth grade.  For over 30 years, she has inspired, entertained, and educated many through poetry, novellas, journalism, and performances.  In 2021, she added author to her resume.  She has published three poetry anthologies and looks forward to debuting her first children’s book, A Blessing for The World, and her first middle grades novel, Reverse.

A native of Sumter, SC, she  graduated from Ridge View in ‘98 in Columbia, SC and Winthrop University in ‘03. She has roots in Edisto Island, Hollywood and St Helena Island; she is the mother of a brilliant and talented young king and is a podcaster who speaks on topics that spread light. 

A former teacher (twenty years) and a spoken word artist, author, mentor and program director of CROWN HER, formerly known as the ROSES mentoring program, she is a LIT specialist who does book talks online while sponsoring All Black Author Book Drive and Giveaway in the Columbia area.  In her spare time, she loves to spend time with her family and friends, watch sports, especially football or a good show that entertains while causing her to push her pen, thrift, and eat at different restaurants.  

To learn more information about her or how to book her for a performance, author visit, writer’s workshop or find her on social media, visit her website, www.riannjenkins.com.

____

“Determined”

Determined.

He was fleeing.

With raindrops streaming down his face

     as in attempting to be an obstacle

     deterring him from the finish line.

Crying too many times almost eroded the lifeline.

Despite the sun not shining,

    he finally saw the light,

    his way out.

His breakthrough is attainable, worth the fight.

Determined

Marching down the busiest road.

Bumper to bumper traffic doesn’t stop him 

      from rolling two suitcases, one with a broken wheel, 

      along with the weight of the two more bags, 

      one on his back wasn’t enough defer his dream, 

      obtaining the reality of freedom. 

Pausing only to catch his breath.

He would not abort the mission.

Determined. 

Nothing was going to stop him.

The raindrops are falling, 

        creating what some would deem 

        a collision course with reckless drivers.

Rainy days evoke a clash of wills 

     provoking fatigue among the weak.

Intimidated out of the belief of worthiness.  

Determined, deserving of every promise. 

He refused to get tired 

He knows he is strong enough to walk through rain.

The pain of staying is enough to push anyone insane.

Determined.

He wouldn’t remain, waste away, abandoning hope.

This rain didn’t compare to the storm he faced for years.

He didn’t care how many breaks he had to take. 

He didn’t care about onlookers wondering where he is going.

Ignoring their annoyance echoing in the blaring of horns.

He knows his destination.

Endless cycles was no longer an option. 

Too legit to quit.  

Determined

Resilience is the cape that flies behind him,

      undergirding him to pull two suitcases, one with a broken wheel, 

      the weight of the two more bags, one on his back

       wasn’t enough defer his dream, 

       obtaining the reality of freedom 

       through a busy street 

       that would deem a borderline a highway

       scaring away any boldness.

Yet, he is careful to avoid traffic.

Nothing was going to stop him from this journey.   

Determined.  

 ~~~

“Unveiling”

Why do we carry the young into spaces 

to witness brilliance

they may not remember

may not cherish or relish

embrace like a desired toy?

Maybe we will awaken a space 

in their heart that is dormant.

Unknowing or cognizant of the potential

of what can grow if we expose young eyes and minds

to a future they didn’t know existed.  

Culture is what it is giving.

Experiences that can be

life changing.

Igniting a passion, a dream to be lived as reality.

Inspiring, empowering, impacting

Reverberating in the souls and spirits of many

a contagious energy elevating and illuminating this earth.  

Maybe we also understand 

we can never be content with saying he or she is the first 

with no one standing in line to carry the baton, the legacy.

We beam with pride as they roll their eyes

Because we carry them into spaces

to witness magnificence 

Permeating their psyche with images 

alternating destiny. 

Igniting a passion, a dream to be lived as reality.

Inspiring, empowering, impacting

Reverberating in the souls and spirits of many

a contagious energy elevating and illuminating this earth.  

Maybe we sense the gift God placed in their spirit

Cultivation and irrigation is needed for it to sprout

            So we ignore the pouts on their faces

When we  carry them into spaces

To witness eminence

Identifying the journey God has for them.

Igniting a passion, a dream to be lived as reality.

Inspiring, empowering, impacting

Reverberating in the souls and spirits of many

a contagious energy elevating and illuminating this earth


Jasper's Sidewalk Gallery at the Meridian Building Features Trio of Local Talent -- Christopher Lane, Emily Wright, and Marion Mason

By Christina Xan

The Meridian Sidewalk Gallery is Jasper Galleries’ most unique space. While patrons cannot enter the gallery, the sidewalks are accessible to all 24/7. Lining both Sumter and Washington Streets around the historic Meridian Building, the gallery prominently features two 2D artists and one 3D artist each quarter.  

For the first quarter of 2025, Jasper Galleries has paired the bright, dynamic paintings of Christopher Lane and Emily Wright with stunning wooden sculptures from Marion Mason. The differing shapes and forms wrap and snake around each other, each piece telling its own part of a grander story together. 

Patrons have until the end of March to stop by and view the works, all of which are purchasable via scanning a QR code at the end of each window or contacting jaspergalleries@gmail.com. Learn more about each artist below.

Christopher Lane - artist

Christopher Lane, born in Minnesota in 1968, drew inspiration from notable artists such as Thomas Hart Benton, Andy Warhol, Georgia O’Keeffe, and Roy Lichtenstein during his formative years.  His artistic development was further influenced by a period spent in Cairo, Egypt where the architecture, sculpture, symbolism, hieroglyphs and vibrant colors of Egyptian art left a significant mark on his work.  Diagnosed with dyslexia, he attended the GOW School in South Wales, New York, which provided him with educational support. Following this, Lane lived in Paris for a year, enriching his creative pursuits.  He pursued an art degree at Eastern New Mexico University but left to support his young family while serving in the United States Navy as a submariner.  Now residing in South Carolina, Lane focuses on creating visual stories that encourage viewers to reconsider divisive subjects through a gentler perspective. He is actively involved in various group exhibitions nationwide and recently showcased his work at ArtFields. 

Lane employs striking imagery to transform life experiences into visual narratives that center on individuals and their interpersonal relationships.  He is deeply committed to social justice and environmental protection, illustrating the interconnectedness of these themes in his work.  His paintings frequently include elements of nature and often convey historical, political, or spiritual stories, reflecting his enthusiasm for these topics.  As a modern surrealist and storyteller, Lane’s artworks can typically be analyzed in multiple scenes while maintaining a unified theme.  Using vibrant colors, rich symbolism, and layered imagery, he addresses complex issues, encouraging viewers to perceive them through a new, perhaps softer lens. 

Marion Mason - Artist

Marion Mason writes the following:

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.  

Prior to my teaching career I served as an officer in the U.S. Navy for 9 years (5 on active duty) and am a veteran of the Vietnam War.  

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. Many years ago, I was a member of the design and implementation team of the original Tri-District Arts Consortium (Tri-DAC), and I have taught sculpture there for 15 summers. Also, I had the privilege of teaching three summers in the three week Honors Program at the SC Governor's School for the Arts and Humanities. I have conducted many art workshops for school, district, community, and state-wide groups, from middle schoolers through adults. In 1982 I was awarded Teacher of the Year recognition at C. A. Johnson High School and was also honored as the Richland District One Teacher of the Year. 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.

Emily Wright - artist

e.lois wright, known by friends and family as Emily Wright, is a lover of Life with all of its small details and rich hues of color that spill into our every day.  Emily’s first love is the written language.  She began an early love affair with poetry, prose and the theater arts, earning a BA in English with honors at Lander University.  With a desire to express the vibrant facets of Self, she discovered her passion for creating visual art and started a journey toward understanding its cathartic impact on her holistic health.  Emily, first, was drawn to decoupage with art journaling and, later, engaged all of her free time in jewelry making.  A means of “balancing the distractions”, she found solace in piecing together unique and bold wearable art from discarded found objects, taking the broken and making them beautiful, again. 

In 1999, Emily began selling her original, up-cycled jewelry under the name “Balanced Distractions”, finding that her patrons connected with her pieces on a very personal, emotional, and, even, spiritual level, which stands true, today.  Over the last twenty-five years, hundreds of friends, family, and strangers have donated the fragmented and unwanted—glass, pottery, metal and jewelry—all to this shareable, artful healing. A pivotal point in Emily’s artistic journey appeared with the cresting of Columbia’s “Thousand-Year Flood” (2015).  Simple, surprising treasures were unearthed from surrounding Midland rivers, allowing Emily to feel, deeply, the flow of inspiration and creative potential, “taking the broken and making them beautiful, again”. 

Emily’s choices of medium and forms of expression continue to expand and unfold before her, as she is fully immersed in the art of authentic self-expression with a “fresh eyes” perception.  From tapping mantras into canvases to mindfully transforming watercolor blots into faces to molding faux flowers out of old water bottles and shotgun shells, she is present to create from the heart. Most favorite mediums include acrylic/oil/chalk/pastels on canvas/wood/metal, and her time is lovingly spent on making decor and yard art, up-cycled furniture, handmade paper journals from recyclable goods, photography, and learning more and more about costuming and stage make-up.  

Her love for all arts is echoed in her role as “Artist in Residence” (2019-Present) for “Swamp Sessions—‘Off the Grid’ Sustainable Energy Project” in Awendaw, SC, alongside South Carolina’s “Low-Country Hall of Fame” singer/songwriter, Danielle Howle.

Josef Berliner and Wilma King Collaborate for Jasper Galleries at Sound Bites

By Christina Xan

While there was no First Thursday this month, Jasper and Sound Bites still celebrated the start of another year with an Opening Reception last week for a double feature at the restaurant’s gallery space, showcasing the work of friends and artists Josef Berliner and Wilma King. 

Both artists have presented an array of works from intimate portraits of two girls hiding under covers to stunning highlights of prominent celebrities/figures. Berliner and King each have distinct styles they have honed for decades, yet their work effortlessly complements each other through vivid colors and the intersection of the natural world, particularly floral scenes. 

Berliner and King alike have pursued art since they were young and have roots in South Carolina, both having attended the University of South Carolina. Berliner has continued to work and create in the state, showing at the Columbia Museum of Art and participating in exhibits with Bullets and Band-Aids and the University of South Carolina Department of Dance Gala. Alongside this, he has pursued work as a deejay, an aural expression of his creativity that is often seen visually. Not just any deejay, Berliner’s work as an award-winning premier nightclub deejay led him to performing at many of the largest and best-known clubs in the Southeast. 

King’s horizons are constantly shifting, having lived across 11 states. She spent this time—over 30 years—working as an educator at a multitude of American schools, teaching courses in public relations, communication studies, advertising design, publication design, and photography. Returning to Columbia, she has shown in places and exhibits such as 701 Whaley, the Ernest J. Finney Cultural Center, and MIRCI’s 52 Windows. King has not only participated in numerous art shows but has collaborated on over 13 published papers in her field. 

As an artist, Berliner goes by the name “Jobey,” which is how he signs all his work. In his own words: “Jobey is the more outgoing and confident alter ego of Josef Berliner. Behind the mask is a thoughtful, somewhat shy, and introspective artist. Armed with the knowledge that I am not alone in this attribute, I seek…to go behind the surface facade of my subject matter and search for the deeper and often hidden and complex personae beneath.”  

King “endeavors to combine her experiences of living in 11 states (including Alaska) with her educational background into a visual storytelling collaboration through her painting. Her pursuit and passion go beyond a daily practice of technique and development. She believes that universality—seeking common ground—is what makes art purposeful.”   

Even if patrons missed the opening, they could still embark on this journey with Berliner and King until January 31st when the work comes down. Sound Bites Eatery, located at 1425 Sumter St, is open M-F 10-3 and weekends 11:30-2:30. Stop by to grab a delicious, freshly made bite to eat and see this unforgettable show.

Mary Ann Haven Features New Collection of Work for Jasper Galleries at Motor Supply Co. Bistro

by Christina Xan

The first quarter of 2025 will present patrons at Motor Supply Co. Bistro the opportunity to embark on a journey with artist Mary Ann Haven that follows the ebbs and flows of her own tumultuous experiences throughout 2024.  

With a BFA in Design from the University of North Texas, Haven has spent nearly 40 years as a working artist in the Midlands—first self-employed and focusing on “commissioned art, murals and tromp l'eoil custom layered finishes, including plasters, metal leaf gilding and hand painted signage” and, for the last decade, homing in on canvases and commissions. 

Haven has participated in a multitude of shows and juried competitions, including Open Studios, the SC Watermedia Society Digital Show, and Artfields. The 11 pieces in her show with Jasper Galleries—which opens this Friday, January 17th from 6:00pm—8:00pm at Motor Supply in the Vista—depict a journey of hope, loss, and letting go. 

Haven has penned the following retrospective on the collection, which will be up for view and available for purchase until the end of March. 

“There is for me a sense of before and after in this body of work. When Jasper gave me the opportunity to have a show in a location that would allow me to share my bigger paintings, I was excited. If nothing else, the goal of January 2025 would give me a whole year of something to work toward. I didn't know at the time how much I would need that to keep moving forward. 

The two 36" x 36" puzzle series pieces, “Adaptable” and “New Day New View” are a lighter, playful exploration of yin and yang, peace vs. chaos and the joy felt when attempting to balance a composition using form, value, and color. The three 20" x 20" pieces, “Reflections I & II” and “South by Southwest” also play with the same elements with collage added in. These five pieces represent the ‘before’ stage. 

The emotional landscape began to shift in April when I lost a close friend to cancer. Sometimes you can point to certain people and know that they have changed the direction of your life. He was one of those individuals for me. A month later I received a call notifying me that my very independent eldest sibling was in dire straits. I can acknowledge now that my parents raised three offspring that live lives independent of each other. Being the youngest, this was the first time I had been called into action to help one of them. I experienced a real mixmaster of emotions, which included surrendering to what one cannot control (other people's choices) and a new level of concern/anxiety over what it can mean when things go wrong while aging alone. I found that my normal desire to paint nonrepresentational work came to a full stop. To my surprise, an idea I had had for decades resurfaced as a way to go forward. 

At a dinner party in 1996 I was introduced to a fellow local artist Carolita Cantrell. While chatting about my marriage ending, she told me that I needed "shelter without walls". Her example of this was a partner who honored an artist's need to be an artist...and all that meant. In the last decade I have spent time at the coast where I regularly view fisherman's shelters at the end of piers which are basically…shelter without walls. These two things came together as a new series with a moody result. The first piece is “No Chumming for Sharks.” That label was actually a sign on an existing shelter before it was destroyed when washed away in a hurricane. Beyond the literal meaning, to me it meant ‘don't ask for trouble.’  The second painting, “Storm Front,” is a dreamscape that was painted on top of composite silver leaf. It depicts the hope moonlight brings in the darkness.   

I included a self-portrait that was painted when I was feeling emotionally raw. It's figuratively a medical prescription full of symbols, some more meaningful than others. “Open The Book” is a piece about life continuing to bring us new lessons. It helps if we stay open and are willing to learn. The last two finished were the 30” x 40” pieces in deep teal and blues. “Blue Wave with Spilled Milk” was named in mid-November. You can make that name what you wish. The last, “Forest Dreams” was painted in response to Hurricane Helene. It brought the possibility that I might have to put aside the dream I've had for years of living in the mountains. 

Overall, painting has become a mirror of my emotional response to my environment. By the way, the name of the self-portrait is “The Year of Letting Go.” 2024 was definitely that for me.”

Jasper Kicks Off Our First Tiny Gallery of 2025 with a Returning Favorite - Betsy Kaemmerlen

by Christina Xan

Jasper Galleries has been entering the new year with a bang, seeing openings and transitions at all six of its locations. The first show went up on the morn of the very first day of 2025: Betsy Kaemmerlen’s show on Jasper’s virtual space, Tiny Gallery. 

Above Kaemmerlen’s home studio is the phrase “We exist to revere the great spirit of life and enjoy all the beauty of its expression,” and her work truly encapsulates this. Working with clay since 1994, her pottery is a marriage of imagery from the natural world and her own invented organic patterns. 

Having studied gardens in Kyoto, Japan, for five months in the late 70s, Asian motifs proliferate her work—like the ginkgo leaves often seen on her pottery—alongside Celtic motifs pressed through hand-carved roller stamps. Much of this comes from her own experience as a landscape architect as well as pottery workshops taken with figures including Amy Sanders and Elaine Coleman

To create her rich textures and decorations, Kaemmerlen uses a variety of clay types but prefers porcelain, which she says beautifully shows the color of glazes like celadon. Much of her inspiration comes from the origins of pottery itself when clay was used to protect cooking baskets and the baskets’ weaving impression remained after being placed in the fire. This “gives a piece both tactile and visual interest” with “transparent glazes pooling in the depths.” 

This richness can be seen throughout this Tiny Gallery show, from wood-grain vases and wrapped clay appearing like cloth to crested bugs and bejeweled cups. Jewel-toned ceruleans, jades, and vermillion swirl across this collection of pieces. 

Kaemmerlen’s show will be online until the final day of January, and the works are available for local pickup at the artist’s Columbia home. Peruse the work via Tiny Gallery online.

 

Jasper Welcomes Jordan Sheridan to the Koger Center Nook Gallery

By Emily Moffitt

The Jasper Project is excited to kick off the 2025 season in The Nook at the Koger Center with an exhibit of work by Jordan Sheridan. The opening reception for the exhibit is scheduled for January 16, 2025, from 5:30 – 7 p.m. at the Koger Center. The reception is free and open to the public.

Jordan Sheridan was born in Northeastern Arkansas in 1989. She became a mother to her son, Samuel, in 2017 and began graduate school at the University of South Carolina shortly after. As a mother pursuing an MFA degree, Sheridan’s work organically shifted to include a personal examination of motherhood. This change in research pushed her from working primarily in 2-D painting to 3-D artmaking via large-scale textile installations. Sheridan’s studio practice unites painting, sculpture, and installation as she explores the visual dimensions of identity and motherhood. Since completing her MFA degree, Sheridan has continued exploring these textile landscapes and vibrant paintings, all evolving with her multifaceted experience of motherhood and an underlying query of interconnectedness. She is currently a full-time faculty instructor and discipline coordinator of painting at the University of South Carolina. She resides with her partner and young children in Columbia, South Carolina.

Jordan’s Artist Statement:

“My work documents and aestheticizes the multifaceted experience of motherhood, where boundaries dissolve and identities entangle. Each work serving as a visual narrative, capturing the paradoxical nature of this expansion—a tapestry woven with threads of care, connection, and infinite devotion, interspersed with moments of fragmentation, disorder, and flux. My installations offer a tactile exploration of motherhood's complexities, encouraging reflection on identity shaped by relationships and societal norms. My work explores existential questions, influenced by my curiosity in quantum physics and the concept of molecular oneness. It acknowledges the interconnectedness of existence on both micro and macro levels, including the profound bond between mother and child. It is an odyssey that embraces fluid identity and finds beauty in the spaces between roles and expectations, resonating universally.”

 

ESSAY: The Free Times 2024 Power List, A Response by Cindi Boiter

The yearly designation of the Midlands’ most powerful people, provided by our friends at the Post and Courier’s Free Times, always creates ambivalent feelings for me, as well as others, I’ve been told. This year, I was happy to play a small part of the nomination process and see recognition given to many of the folks I nominated. But, as always, I was perplexed by the concept of the project and what its purpose is.

The Free Times Power List 2024, published December 18th, seeks to recognize 30 of the Midlands’ most influential arts, food, and cultural leaders. The criteria for acknowledgement are growth, innovative programming, and bringing national attention to the area, like Lula Drake’s Tim Gardner whose rightful place on the list was established when he won Columbia’s first ever James Beard award and the Kiki and Tyrone Cyrus team at Kiki’s Chicken and Waffles, who also received acclaim in the James Beard competition. Robbie Robinson of City Limits Barbeque was recognized, as well.

Clearly, restaurant owners who frequently put their own financial livelihoods on the line are deserving of praise, especially those like Kristian Niemi who is committed not just to his patrons but also to the local farmers who provide the food for his restaurants. Restaurants are essentially small businesses but they can have a large impact on their communities by providing gathering spaces where we all feed both our appetites and our culture. The team at Transmission Arcade is a great example of a group seeing a city need and addressing it head-on with fun and innovative programming. But missing from this year’s list are the owners of coffee houses, like Greg Slattery and Sandra Moscato of Curiosity Coffee Bar, who provide places where patrons gather to scheme and collaborate on projects that make us better. Slattery and Moscato are absolute warriors for the health and care of their corner of Columbia. Jasper honors them.

Some of the most deserving recipients of this year’s honors were organization leaders like Nate Terracio (Koger Center for the Arts) and Kristin Cobb (Harbison Theatre) who have used their pivoting power to open their stages to local artists and arts organizations and they have done so without slapping their names on the logos of the organizations they represent. Of  late, we’ve seen free concerts and performances on Koger’s new stages and in their lobby. Harbison Theatre has welcomed many local artists and arts groups onto their stage. And both theatres are the homes to Jasper Gallery sites where we are privileged to present the work of exclusively Midlands area artists.

Kudos to Free Times for shining a light on the work and generous spirits of a nice handful of local artists like Ija Monet, Terrance Henderson, Michaela Pilar Brown, Sean Rayford, and the unofficial mayor of the Congaree Vista, Clark Ellefson. The list of powerful artists could have included dozens of names, but I am thankful for what we got and honor those recipients with pride and admiration.

It was also encouraging to read that Dr. Bobby Donaldson was included in this year’s list as perhaps the most deserving recipient of the honor. Donaldson’s accomplishments represent the best example of an individual working for the greater good without asking for anything in return. I’d love to see more folks like Donaldson recognized for their visions for a better Columbia and a better South Carolina.

But how does one separate and compare the work of rectifying history, like Donaldson does,  with that of making menus and making art? Food, arts, and culture, the three areas where Free Times looked for leaders, are overlapping zones in the Venn diagram of community life with food and art being among the most meaningful contributors to culture.

I have other questions.

Does a Power Person have to be well-paid or even paid at all for their work? Where does volunteerism come into play? I ask this because, and I’m only a little tongue-in-cheek here, I personally know an entire board of directors who work the equivalent of part-time jobs and more to support their organizations and the people they serve. I bet you do, too, and I bet you’re not even thinking of the same organization I am. (Yes, I’m unapologetically thinking of the Jasper Project team and how much I love to sing their praises for the tireless efforts they make to nurture the arts.)

Does the Power Person have to do the work themselves or does the work of the minions below them count as their contribution, too? I mean there’s a lot of dollar signs represented by some of this year’s power people. A lot of fur coats, fancy cars, and trips to Mexico, too. Can a Power Person do the exact same job year after year after year and still be recognized? Does it matter if the organization a Power Person represents is a frequent advertiser with the Post and Courier? I hope not, but I’ve heard that rumor, too. And while we’re at it, should a Power Person be recognized for essentially doing the job they are paid to do? How much money do some of these 501c3 Power People make anyway and how much of their salaries comes from the pockets of Soda Citizens?

Finally, what exactly is the point of the Power List? It harkens me back to school days when popularity was weirdly the goal for so many people. I know few people who didn’t suffer at least a little angst about whether they would be accepted or rejected by their peers. I’d like to think most of us have grown out of that by now. Singling out individuals who, if you followed the rules of the popularity pecking order, were even better than their peers via projects like “senior superlatives,” which I see as the seed of projects like the Power List, was an even more stark way of separating the bad from the good and the good from the better. That said, I married a “Most Likely to Succeed” high school senior superlative recipient and, what can I say? He was and is, so what do I know?

To those who deservingly found themselves on this ostensibly elite list of individuals, congratulations and keep it going. We are genuinely proud of and happy for you. To those who found themselves there whether they deserved to be or not, this means we’re watching you and what you do with your power even more. And to those who were completely overlooked, go forward with the knowledge that  your work matters if it matters to you. Arbitrary lists and accolades are less important than the people you affect with your talents, generosity of spirit, and good work.

~~~

Merry Christmas from all of us at the Jasper Project. We love what we do, and we’re trying to grow better without growing bigger so we can stay true to our mission to be public servants of the arts in the greater SC Midlands Community. Thank you for your support and thank you for reading Jasper Magazine and Jasper Online!

HAPPY HOLIDAYS!

(Full Disclosure: Kristin Cobb, executive director of Harbison Theatre at MTC is a board member of the Jasper Project Board of Directors. There is no financial exchange related to the profits made for artists or Jasper between any of Jasper’s Gallery sites and the businesses that host them. Also, this column was offered to Free Times as an installment in this writer’s regular column, Further Consideration, but was pleasantly and respectably passed on)

FINNEY CENTER Presents BE THE LIGHT Holiday Celebration Saturday Dec. 21st --FREE!

This Saturday, December 21 from noon to 4:00 PM, the Ernest A. Finney, Jr. Cultural Arts Center is hosting a FREE holiday celebration at 1510 Laurens Street for everyone with holiday treats, children’s books, and special guests. 

“Be the Light: A Celebration of Community for the Holidays” will also feature a giveaway of 20 smoked turkeys from Railroad BBQ

“On the 21st of December, we will celebrate the magical Winter Solstice and our beloved community with music, food, crafts, and free gifts,” said Nikky Finney, poet and director of the Ernest A. Finney, Jr. Cultural Arts Center. 

Event host and emcee, MASTER SPLNTA (formerly FatRat Da Czar) said, “As I get older, I love to attend and participate in events curated for the entire family, grandparents down to the little ones. Not only am I honored to host the event, I’m even more proud to be working with an organization whose leadership’s values align so closely with mine.”

“Everyone is welcome to join this celebration!," said event coordinator Janet Parenti. “Located right at the edge of Historic Waverly, The Finney Center honors the rich legacy of one of Columbia’s oldest and proudest neighborhoods. Much like Hip-Hop Family Day, this event aims to connect an intergenerational audience celebrating the light of elders, parents, children, and community members through a fun shared experience.”

Visit TheFinneyCenter.com for a full event schedule and to register for this free, ticketed event. 

ESSAY -- A Legacy of Greens: Cooking Memories with Birdie and Betty Jean, By Marcum Core

Special to Jasper Online

photo by Marcum Core

I can’t look at a bunch of greens without thinking about my grandmother, Birdie Shivers, and my aunt, Betty Jean Carlisle. Both were incredible cooks, the kind who could turn humble ingredients into meals that made you feel loved and full in every sense of the word. Spending time with them in the kitchen was a privilege—and a lesson in patience, humility, and flavor.

My grandmother, Birdie, was the queen of efficiency. She ruled her kitchen with precision, and if you weren’t actively helping, she wanted you out of the way. Watching her cook was like watching a master at work: her hands moved quickly, expertly rinsing, and seasoning greens with an ease that only comes from decades of experience. There was no measuring—just a pinch of this, a splash of that, and somehow, it always came out perfect. I had a dedicated spot in the breakfast nook that allowed me to see everything, soaking up her techniques like a sponge. My favorite was when she would mix turnip and mustard greens. Tender greens was the term she used for that combination.

I have always appreciated the regional and familial nuances in soul food cooking. Birdie, hailing from Detroit, MI by way of Sardis, MS was from the school of stem removal and would talk about people left “All dem stems” in their collard greens. Perhaps that’s why she enjoyed mixing mustards and turnips because the stems weren’t so robust and the whole leaf could be used. 

I always looked forward to being Aunt Betty Jean’s little helper in the kitchen. I was much younger when she looked after me, but old enough to help her shell peas and mix the cornbread batter. She’d hum a song while she was preparing the meal which typically (while I was in town visiting at least) included collards. The most rememberable thing about my Aunt Betty’s greens were how fine they were chopped. They were chopped before cooking and chopped even more after they were done cooking and not served with pot liquor versus my grandmother who left all of the liquid in the pot. Come to find the technique my Aunt Betty used is common in Eastern North Carolina, Goldsboro. I grew up eating their greens. Both are very different styles but with similarities. They both believed in removing the stems and cooking intentionally with love. 

The smell of simmering collard greens was like an embrace. It filled the house and signaled that something good was coming. By the time dinner was ready, the greens were tender and infused with a depth of flavor that only slow cooking can create. They were served alongside cornbread, black-eyed peas, and whatever else was on the menu, but for me, the greens were always the star.

Now, every time I make greens, I think of Birdie and Betty Jean. 

Their lessons weren’t just about cooking. They were about life: finding joy in the process, taking time to do things right, and sharing what you create with the people you love. Every pot of greens I make is a tribute to them, to their wisdom, and to the countless meals that brought our family together.

So, when I look at a bunch of greens, I see more than just a vegetable. I see my heritage, my family, and the women who showed me that food is love. And no matter how many times I make them, greens will always taste better when seasoned with their memories.

 

MIDIMarc, also known as MIDIMarcum, is a music producer and recording engineer from Hopkins, SC, with over 20 years of influence in South Carolina’s hip-hop scene. Renowned for his mastery of sampling, he has remixed albums by icons like Nas and Jay-Z, created tribute projects honoring Michael Jackson, The Notorious B.I.G., and Pimp C, and earned accolades such as Jasper Magazine’s 2018 Artist of the Year. A 5x Beat Battle Champion and creator of the instrumental series Prolific, he has collaborated with key South Carolina artists like Master Splnta and DJ Cannon Banyon, cementing his legacy as a pioneer and inspiration in the state’s hip-hop culture.

The Jasper Project Announces the 2025 Galleries Season by Christina Xan

Christina Xan is wrapping up her time as Galleries Manager with the Jasper Project as she pursues her academic career. We thank her for her dedicated efforts to exhibit and make available for purchase art by hundreds of South Carolina artists via the Jasper Project Galleries Series and wish her great happiness and success in her coming endeavors.

~Cb

Down Home by Christopher Lane

The Jasper Project is delighted that, for another year, we have the privilege to show the work of 50+ artists via the Jasper Galleries Series. Starting in 2018 with the Tiny Gallery, Jasper Galleries has now grown to a 6-location series across the Midlands, including our original fully online space. 

Mark your calendars for a full slate of talented local artists, who Jasper will share more info about as their individual shows draw closer. Make sure to follow Jasper’s social media and newsletter (Sundays with Jasper) for all updates!

 

Tortoise Tears by Rebecca Horne

Harbison Theatre

 

Running alongside Harbison’s programming, Jasper features two artists in the theatre’s lobby in 2025: a Spring and a Fall artist. While the Fall opening will be announced along with the theatre’s 2025-2026 season, the Spring opening is January 24th at 6:30pm, before Patrick Davis performs at 7:30.

 

SPRING (January–May): Jeffrey Miller

FALL (September–December): Rebecca Horne

 

Jordan Sheridan with her installation The Mother

Koger Center for the Arts

 

The gallery at Koger Center for the Arts, fondly named “The Nook,” is located external to the upstairs gallery, on the wall across from the main staircase. New art opens every Third Thursday (except most Decembers) with a reception from 5:30pm-7:00pm.

 

January: Jordan Sheridan

February: Toni Elkins

March: Thomas Washington

April: Richard Lund

May: Chris Lane

June: Jakeem DaDream

July: Virginia Russo

August: Lori Isom

September: Jeff Amberg

October: Colleen Cannon-Karlos

November: Sean Madden

Lauren Tillar - Compton Sun

 

Meridian Sidewalk Gallery

 

These windows proudly feature along Sumter and Washington Streets, at the base of the Meridian Building, with art rotating quarterly. Each quarter, Jasper shows a pair of 2D artists alongside one 3D artist.

 

January–March

       Emily Wright

    Christopher Lane

        Marion Mason

April–June

         Mark Dreher

         Vanessa DeVore

         Sharon Licata

July–September

         Camille Johnson

         Lauren Tillar

         Renee Rouillier

October–December

         Beth Morgan

        Robert Sargent

 

Laurie McIntosh - Low Country Boil

Motor Supply Company Bistro

 

Jasper’s second quarterly space is a solo show at the Motor Supply Co. Bistro, where opening receptions typically take place on the second Friday of the opening month from 6:00pm—8:00pm.

 

January–March: Mary Ann Haven

April–June: Rodgers Boykin

July–September: Steven White

October–December: Laurie McIntosh

Judy Bolton Jarrett of Art Can Studio, Chapin

 Sound Bites Eatery 

First Thursday fun is had monthly at Sound Bites Eatery at 1425 Sumter Street, with (mostly) solo shows happening from 5:30-8:00 on each respective Thursday. In August, Sound Bites throws their own party for their birthday month!  

Important note: January 205 Opening Reception will be held on January 9th! 

January: Josef Berliner and Wilma King

February: Sharon Funderburk

March: Lucy Spence

April: Kelley Pettibone

May: Devon Jeremy

June: Pat Gillam

July: Judy Jarrett

September: Candace Catoe

October: Renea Eshleman

November: Judy Maples

December: Holiday Show – Artists TBA!

 

Tiny Gallery

 

Last, but certainly not least, the show that started it all. Moved online during the pandemic and kept online due to its success, the Tiny Gallery provides a 24/7 haven of art, rotating artists out every month.

 

January: Betsy Kaemmerlen

February: Lindsay Radford

March: Mia Estrada

April: Linda Cannup

May: Colton Giles

June: Lisa Alberghini

July: Jean Capalbo

August: Abby Short

September: K. Wayne Thornley

October: Devon Corley

November: Yyusri

December: Ornament Show – Artists TBA!

 

Keep up to date with Jasper for any opening reception changes, artist details, and updates on holidays shows and one-off gallery events!

Al Black's Poetry of the People featuring Bo Petersen

My last Poet of the People for 2024 is Bo Petersen.  I have known Bo Petersen for several years, but had never engaged him as a poet until a couple years ago.

Bo is a kind, gentle and quirky (in all the ways quirky can be good) poet who has the gift of making his readers smile and want to become his friend. Hearing Bo read his work is to sit in his living room with a cup of hot chocolate, a plate of Oreos, and sharing the fragile beauty of being alive.

~Al Black

Bo Petersen is aimlessly good on his feet. Published since he was a child, relieving him of having to grow up. (Or if you have to: Wrote the non-fiction Washing Our Hands In The Clouds, Kachi, a book of verse and photography, Fezziwig Press, 2023. Also, Soldiers Stories - a book of vignettes about World War II veterans, published by the Gaston Gazette. Short stories and verse in nearly four dozen journals.)

                                       Aurum 

 

    “Know who you are. Know the mystery you celebrate”

      

                                                      burnishing,

burnishing,

                   burnishing           

                                     tongues

   

               ice rill fingers puckered numb, the steel sieve      

                                 sun

 

                                “he’s his own worst enemy”

 

                                                       a crude pan in a cold hand

                                                                     burnishing

                              new blaze

                                                         *                                              

                                       who has sinned so he is blind? neither

                                                   is he blind or do we see

  

                                             all it takes is spit

                                                             a little humility

 

                       “well, theoretically it’s a good scenario

                           but there’s a practical impediment”

 

                                                     so i glean 

                                                                          fool’s gold

                                           flecked  

                                                        insensibility

                                                    

     civilization demands emancipation, demands

                      or all is intrigue 

                                the grave weight of this given earth                                                   frees                                                         

                                                                into Whose hand we

                                                      sieve, despite what we believe                           spirit agleam a particle stream  

                                                       shook of space, dust

shining

              spirit                 

                                       is beauty, beauty is

                                                                            spirit

 all we know of earth

                                                           imperfect

                                          cultivate

                                                           create           

                   love 

                                                                     perfects

                                                                                               or all is just creed

 

                                                      *

 

                                    o i’d like to be Learn’d, i guess

                                  adeptly key in a daunting Op-ed

             screed a piece out of Poetry to bleed their heads

                                    o i’d learn’d to be like, i guess

 

                                                   *

 

                                all i yearn is beauty,

                                      simply,

                                                   beauty

                            suffices 

                                            go on, ask

                                         what it is i dream 

                               in chanting streams, in ulule tongues, ulule

                                             reeds, 

                                       i am stealing wings.       

                               as dismissive as these

                                  radiate coals in the cold 

                                                                              i leave 

                      flights of white ibis flashing dawn

                          egret in pairs lifting in shine

                                                                    from a shook pan in mist freeze

 

                    (who died waiting sale)

 

               gone, gone, no mournful white

                            joy

 

                               8,000

                            souls unslaved

 

                             off Gadsden’s pitch dock

                         to the salt harbor

 

                                       splayed

                 blanched bones scraping hissing sands

 

                                      with no grave

  

                                                   - for the IAAM, Charleston

 

 

                                         Nativity

                                       

                        ignorant would it be to whisper

 Lord

                               we’ve blasted past

 

                      the purpled robes, the mock angelic

                         thinlit candle in the cold sepulchre

 

                                           of our souls

                               light years

 

                   we are weaned

                                      past pretense

 

                                               past dwarf planets

                          swelled of gravid moons

 

                                      out the far womb of what we now know 

              pulses

 

                              I tell you

                                                   yet

 

                                          push

  

                          not in the patinas you don’t see

 

                                the blood, the spew

                                         bowels

 

              the dread in the eye of the man who had been told

                         there is nothing like this    

 

                                        to be

 

                   the strangely agape sheepherders

                           the magical jangles

            

                 of robed wanderers of stars

 

              nothing, he must have thought, nothing

                                     like this

 

                           you could conceive

                  

  

                                             (the point)                       

  

                                                      poetry,

 

                                                 the point is,

                                                     where

 

                                    metaphor becomes parable

 

                                             song,

                                                       sense.

           

Poetry of the People featuring Elizabeth Leverton

This week's Poet of the People is Elizabeth Leverton. I first met Elizabeth several years prior to COVID where she was a frequent attendee at music venues I also frequented. As COVID restrictions were lessening we met again and she was in the process of having her first book of poetry published. She can now be found at poetry venues and readings in Columbia and around the state of South Carolina. 

Elizabeth is a multi-talented creative and is an insightful poet.

~Al Black 

 

Elizabeth Leverton is a poet, an acrylics painter, an amateur musician, and a sewist of functional art. An academic writer and editor, she earned a BA in English Lit and an MA in English: Writing and Editing at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. Elizabeth has been writing poetry for 35 years. Her first book of poetry, Peace, Rhododendron (2023), was published by Mind Harvest Press in Columbia, SC. A more recent, home-printed chapbook regarding the complexities of love and grief, called A Mad Dash to Tell You, circulated in 2024. Elizabeth lives in Columbia with two part-Siamese sister cats, Silo and Weaver, who are patiently welcoming their new sister, a five-year-old Shepherd mix named Crush, into the family. 

Generations, Words of Love, and a Turtle Called Myrtle

 

1. A two-storey, five-bedroom ranch house, at the top of a driveway.

Two women sit in the dimly lit dining room.

    One of them is blind.

The other reads aloud the love letters of the blind woman’s World War II romance.

 

2. The pen-pals, Shorty and Rose, will marry and raise six children.

Years prior to retirement from 5K-teaching, Rose will take a fish aquarium, formerly housing one    

    male Betta fish (deceased),

& deck it out with rocks and a lamp, dirt, green plants, and muddy water.

 

No bigger at first than a handful of nickels clutched in a child’s hand—   

A baby turtle called Myrtle will sunbathe there, and swim; dig at the sand; and eat leafy greens,   

    earthworms, feeder fish, & snails.

Myrtle and Rose will age together toward retirement: both dreaming of bigger worlds.

 

One June day, Rose will drive away from school for the last time, breathe in the summer air,

lurch up the driveway in her paneled station wagon, park, and carry Myrtle in a cozy box to a

    nearby pond.

“Whelp,” Rose will say, surprised by tears: “goodbye, my sweet old friend.”

 

3. Ten years later, Shorty and Rose’s youngest son, Dale, meets a Sadie Hawkins who asks him out to

    see a jazz band.

Mississippi born Rose finds Sadie forward, lacking dignity,

but slowly warms to their friendship.

 

Within a year, Sadie will sit with Rose in the dining room… and read Shorty’s letters to

   her.

Sadie will observe the couples’ proper greetings, colloquialisms, tendernesses.

She will think of Shorty’s mission overseas, and about Rose, with her head tucked in Chemistry books,

   working in a laboratory, waiting.

 

Sadie will think of Dale, Little smiling boy—Little towheaded boy,

growing up with his folks’ love letters

tucked away somewhere in a drawer.

 

4. At night by firelight Dale tells Sadie stories about Shorty and Rose.

Sadie listens half-distracted with Dale’s deep-set eyes, inscribing one takeaway in her imagination:

Rose, left without children at holidays, sinking to the floor, breaking bones in protest.

One time, a femur. Her left wrist. New knees. And now her hip.

Her new wheelchair creates two needs: Dale builds a ramp to the door, and Sadie becomes Rose’s  

    caregiver.

 

The bed where Sadie sleeps at Rose’s house is in a warm, wood-paneled room

with a brick-stacked fourth wall, in the basement of this ‘ranch house on a ranch house,’

as Dale describes it. The home is Rose’s Dream House.

Shorty was the dream who made sure it happened.

 

5. One morning Sadie wakes to scratching at the windowsill, ground level above her head.

When she investigates, she finds a turtle rustling in the leaves and grass, digging in the sandy

   soil.

“Oh, haven’t I told you?” Rose asks,

“That’s Myrtle, come to lay her eggs. She always comes home.”

 

6. Another year, some snow, & Rose is now dreaming visions of choirs singing to her from the yard in the

    freezing night; while

Alzheimer’s sinks into her mind, a slow-setting sun. Rose begins, gently at first, to walk back through

    memories,

with soon-urgent concern that the gate to her childhood farm has been left open,

and Bessie the Cow is roaming the streets again. This, while Rose is out of feed, and the  

    chickens are ruffled.

 

Months later, Rose will stop remembering conversations and start truncating the names of favorite

    things…

She will laugh at, not with; and insist on wheelchair adventures into the yard in search of

    Bessie and the chickens.

 

Rose will forget things, but Myrtle will remember,

traveling through half-awakened blades of winter grass that beautifully light the morning with dew.

Myrtle will make her way deliberately, from the small, muddy pond, lurching back up the hill

    to the sandy flower bed.

 

“Didn’t I ever tell you?” Rose will ask again.

“Yes, it’s Myrtle,” Sadie will repeat quietly.

“She returns every year,” adds Rose.

 

7. The Alzheimer’s Days tick heavily on, while

Rose eats less, and moves less, finally succumbing to time and her illness.

 

There is always Memory, though,

now yours:

of Bessie the Cow, the open gate, the hens that need feeding—

and the great returns:

of Myrtle the Turtle.

 

 ___________________________________________

 


Stars Fall, Sand Falls: A Shout-Out to God  

 

1. A reader who appreciates slowness,

nature, and starry nights.

Cool temperatures, sunshine,

and animals.

 

Always a seeker, more interested in observing,

in becoming, in growth—that inner work,

more urgent than a need.

Not trying to sway the opinions or dreams of others.

 

A survivor of aggression, sternness, and criticism—

carefree reactions will irritate Judges.

Carefree reactions might cause or be caused by tuning out,

an absentmindedness.

 

Still,

a love for equality—a basic, buck-stopping humanity, an arrogant compassionis carved into

    that blank slate.

 

2. Darkness appears before the turning of the hourglass,

then light in that darkness: falling bits, sand,

shadows of memory pass like ghosts across attic floors.

Philosophies are different hats, new clothes, loved-to-bits mantras.

 

No scaffolding of beliefs around the mind-house: but a seat at the buffet of wisdom. 

 

& Mindful, when possible.

 

Physically far away from the past. There is more freedom to make decisions;

and less aggression to contrast them against, too.

“I’m never going to be…” must stretch; must grow; must become.

 

3. Years later, even a lunch menu becomes heavy when one is frantic for an answer.

But there is visual art, and it feels breezy

to love Van Gogh’s “Starry Night,” or Picasso’s “Paul in a Clown Suit”—with pencil-mark

    leftovers— feeding generations delight.

Every brushstroke is exemplar play. Carl Jung proved it to heal trauma.

 

4. Philosophy, an arrogant parent, through winters of confusion,

questions intentions, demands accountability, and posits preferences.

 

What church trusts intentions?—Nature.

Gather

 

where green is… same, browns and blues…

Clouds drift and neighbor each other in shapes of dog, rabbit, heart, tree.

The answers are the answer:

 

5. “Love,”

comfort, Love—

freeing, Love.

 

Love is humanity’s shout-out to God.

 

 _________________________________________

 


Lone Girl versus the Darkness

 

1. I have stood terrified for a lifetime

of you.

 

I have worst-case scenario’d

my way through books and books

without light;

 

have hidden my heart from you;

 

have sat on that fence with cowgirl legs so you would think

I do not take sides.

 

Now I see you face to face—

& there is comfort in knowing

how small you really are.

 

You

are finite,

for hearts of darkness

never grow.

 

2. I have patched the holes in these jeans

worn threadbare on

barbed wire—

 

& I am riding now aside

into the sunrise in my mind

 

that you cannot draw from,

 

that you cannot dim,

that you cannot envelope

with sinister clouds,

 

& I do not care

anymore

of the fancy tricks   

that you will try, because

 

being terrified is

behind me now.

 

 

 ___________________________________________

 

Car Radio, Fourth Amendment

 

Chronologically before the terror-

filled memories I cannot repeat are

filed the inside jokes from the Holy Spirit.

 

I have sat across from wide-eyed friends on cat-torn sofas, tapping cigarette ashes into ashtrays, telling unbelievable tales. My 30s was a dark decade, to mid 40s, dark years; much hidden, much unable to be revealed. (It would break both of our hearts.)

 

    Up to the Grande diagnosis of 1990, I have not much recall, until wrecked thin by frustration,

I began to conquer Memory Failure via Mathematics.

The beautiful Geometry: Of music. Of art (and lack of art).

 

At five years old, I received a clock radio for Christmas, and looking back, I date memories according to songs I waited up for on the radio—at six, Barry Manilow’s “Copacabana (At the Copa).” By 1979, I stayed up watching the slightly glowing numbers flip on the clock

until the radio edit of Pink Floyd’s “Another Brick in the Wall” played, a song that validated my boredom as a “mediocre” learner. 

 

In fact I have longed to be mediocre,

somewhere in the middle,

Not at one extreme, the other:

I stayed inside for teachers’ coffee breaks, not for coffee;

and got into fights (however, tho,

I never meant for my friend Ursey to knock her chin on a rock when we were roughing each other up:

 

I was really a bumbling peacemaker

in the wrong place at the wrong time.) Still today,

I write mental apologies to Ursey, & bless her chin;

and to the

boy whose deltoid muscle I administered a sharp-pencil shot to in second-grade math class

    after he called me stupid.

 

Otherwise nonviolent, my school antics and questionable midterm evaluations were for the most

due to being overly chatty with friends (something I have come to call my enthusiasm—for stories must

    stretch).

 

Aside from Ursey’s bumps, and a potentially lingering grey polka-dot

on the math genius’s arm, I escaped trouble throughout my school years due 100%

to a very

awkward

shyness

in public.

 

& so,

I desired,

 

to be never mentioned in my ninth-grade English teacher’s spontaneous roll calls

that

he might direct at anyone; asking the loud, the late, and the unlucky

from the front of a room filled with laughter…

 

“Do you have something you would like to share with everyone, Poopsie?”

 

His thick rims, thick glasses. His gray curly hair. The softness of his humor.

 

Holiday Movie Recs from Columbia’s Arts Scene by Liz Stalker

Looking for your next holiday watch? Look no further than these fantastic recommendations from some of Columbia’s local artists and supporters!

Kwasi Brown, musician and founder of Black Nerd Mafia, says that his favorite holiday movie is Bob Clark’s A Christmas Story (1983). “I’ve watched A Christmas Story every year since I was a kid, it’s the best Christmas movie of all time and it’s not even close. I could quote it all day.” His favorite quotable moment is when the narrator, Jean Shepherd, describes Randy Parker hiding from some bullies, delivering the iconic lines, “Randy laid there like a slug. It was his only defense.”

"You'll shoot your eye out, kid."

"I triple-dog-dare ya!"

"Some men are Baptists, others Catholics; my father was an Oldsmobile man."

Tayler Simon, founder of Liberation is Lit, a popup bookstore that seeks to uplift indie authors and serve the Columbia community, says, “My favorite holiday movie is an absolute classic: The Preacher’s Wife [(Marshall, 1996)]. Whitney Houston’s soundtrack and Denzel Washington as an angel deserves more hype than it gets! For the last few years, I’ve loved sharing this movie with friends who haven’t seen it (and trying to keep my singing to a minimum, and then watching it again to sing to my heart’s desire). This used to be one of my mom’s favorite movies we would watch throughout the year! I love when we get to watch together.”

Actress Bella Coletti, currently playing the part of Pickles in Trustus Theater’s production of The Great American Trailer Park Christmas Musical, says The Santa Clause movie trilogy is her favorite holiday watch, though she admits they run in the background of her festivities. “I love The Santa Clause movies,” she says. “They bring back so many fun memories of decorating the Christmas tree with my family and making chocolate crinkle cookies with my mom.”

Painter and photographer Quincy Pugh says, “I’m likely one of the few people who does not have a favorite holiday movie. I enjoy watching, This Christmas, primarily because of the strong matriarch played by Loretta Devine. She reminds me of the strong mother figures in my life. The music is pretty good as well.” Though he loves This Christmas (Whitmore, 2007), Pugh also notes, “Since I live with someone who most definitely has a favorite holiday film, I have to say that my seasonal rewatch, It’s a Wonderful Life [(Capra, 1946], is heavily influenced by their viewing tradition and love for this film. I enjoy it as well.”

Lori Starnes, a visual artist whose “HomeGrown” collection is currently being shown at 701 Whaley, has an unconventional holiday rewatch tradition–Victor Fleming’s The Wizard of Oz (1939). “My favorite holiday movie, hands down, is The Wizard of Oz,” she says. “I realize that it isn't about Christmas or any other holiday, however, it has been the one that I've watched each and every Christmas season for as long as I can remember.”

Last but certainly not least, Jasper’s own editor in chief, Cindi Boiter, says her favorite holiday movie is Frank Capra’s It’s A Wonderful Life (1946), adding, “My favorite quote is spoken by George Bailey, played by Jimmy Stewart, to his mother during Harry Bailey’s welcome home party. His mother nudges him to visit Mary Hatch, his future wife played by Donna Reed. George responds, ‘Here’s your hat, what’s your hurry?’ The film has so many special moments: Bert and Ernie serenading the newlyweds in the rain, George embracing the broken finial on the newel post he was cursing the evening before, George forgiving and consoling Mr. Gower, the pharmacist. I find something new to love about the movie every year.”

"Youth is wasted on the wrong people."

"Every time a bell rings, an angel gets his wings."

As we approach the holidays, we hope you’ll join Jasper as we continue to celebrate the people who make up Columbia’s incredibly vibrant local arts scene.

Poetry of the People with featuring Richard Garcia

This week's Poet of the People is Richard Garcia. Richard Garcia is one of the stalwarts of poetry in the low country of South Carolina. I knew of him long before I knew him. He is a wonderful advocate and mentor for other poets as well as a wonderful award winning poet in his own right.. I encourage you to buy his books and attend any of his readings in your area - he will not disappoint.

~Al Black

Richard Garcia's poetry books include The Other Odyssey, Dream Horse Press, 2014, The Chair, BOA 2015, and Porridge, Press 53, 2016. He has received a Pushcart Prize, and been in Best American Poetry.

Then 

A knock on the front door,

but no one is knocking. 

My mother is upstairs again

threatening to jump out the window.

 

And there is my best friend Tito.

The swish-swish of metal roller-skates.

Father Harris from All Saints Episcopal Church 

crosses the street holding my book

 

with two hands as if it were heavy.

He wants an inscription, something clever,

for his future granddaughter—should I tell him

that my book has not been written yet,

 

that he is dead now, and I am dead now,

that my mother's house

and All Saints Episcopal Church have taken wing

like two swans made of smoke,

 

swans that I might have imagined?

But that was now and this is then.

Tito says, Let's go back to Buena Vista Park,

let's go cardboard-sliding down the musical sand dunes.

 

 American Gothic  

My grandfather was the captain of a tall ship that sailed around the horn bearing rum and whiskey and always, just for me, a barrel of rock hard candy from the isle of Madagascar. My grandfather told me stories that made me dream of pirates, nice pirates that never hurt anyone. My grandfather waved goodbye to my grandmother as his ship sailed away with the tide. My grandmother and I waited for the sails of Grandfather's ship to reappear on the horizon. Tell me again, Grandma, What was the name of Grandpa's ship. It was called, she reminded me, The Constellation of Falsehoods. OK, I lied. I never knew my grandfather or my grandmother but I recall their picture on the wall. They appeared to be sad farmers. He was holding a pitchfork. She looked like she had just swallowed a large sour ball.


 

Message from Garcia 

 My brother was the rain.

He was also the sun.

My brother was a sun shower.

We used to sleep in the flames

of the gas fireplace when it was turned on.

but, since my brother was the rain,

the fire never harmed us.

My brother sang to make the moon come out.

He read to me from the pages of sand dunes.

Sad stories, always, sad stories.

Back in the olden days, television    

was not invented yet.

We would cut a hole in a box and stare at it.

My brother was the first Mexican-American

 basketball star. San Francisco

News Call-Bulletin—Headline:

message from Garcia:

He breaks the record for points in a game.

Next game, double, triple guards on Garcia.

Me, I was an expert at dying.

I would clutch my chest and slowly spin

to the sidewalk. I would lie there

for a long time, twitching spasmodically.

The players from the other teams

complained about my brother.

That Mexican, they said,

he slips through us like rain.

  

 

Freedom  

You are sitting up in bed reading a detective novel. Your eyes are open but you are asleep thinking you are awake. In this novel you are at Roosevelt Middle School with your girlfriend at your first sock hop.  You have never been to a sock hop, and don't know how to do the bop, the dance the white kids are doing.  So you do the steps taught to you by your Black friend, Felton, although at that time he was a Negro. The dance he taught you was called the Texas Hop. Soon all the white kids in the gym are dancing the Texas Hop. But your mind is flowing backwards. It's the case you are working on: The Case of the Missing Tar Baby and the Pillsbury Doughboy. Where they stolen, lynched, or did they run away together? The Tar Baby and the Pillsbury Doughboy have escaped from a chain gang. They have built a raft and are drifting down the Mississippi river toward freedom.

 

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