Museums


Jan
31
Fri
2020
Art Museum: Visual Exploration of Southern Heritage
Jan 31 @ 10:00 am – 1:00 pm
Art Museum: Visual Exploration of Southern Heritage @ Art Museum of Myrtle Beach | Myrtle Beach | South Carolina | United States

COLLECTION CONNECTIONS | A VISUAL EXPLORATION OF SOUTHERN HERITAGE

September 10, 2019 – April 2020

Collection Connections | A Visual Exploration of Southern Heritage is an exhibition of approximately 40 works from the Art Museum’s rich permanent collections, including antique maps and historical prints, works on paper by Southern artists, including William H. Clarke, Cassandra Gillens and Jonathan Green, fabric quilts and photographs. Using Southern-history-themed works of art from our collections, the exhibition uses the visual arts to teach and explore the history and culture of South Carolina and our entire region and is designed for both school students and adults alike.

Joseph Hoffman | A Tribute to Andrew Wyeth
Jan 31 @ 10:00 am – 4:00 pm

JOSEPH HOFFMAN | A TRIBUTE TO ANDREW WYETH

January 23 – April 11, 2020

Self-taught artist Joseph Hoffman (b. Bristol, PA), of Murrells Inlet, SC, began drawing as a pastime and, over time, honed his skill. Winning ribbons and awards from juried art exhibits, festivals and craft shows encouraged him to continue on his artistic path. A retired Hoffman continues to draw at home, sketching and painting both famous and obscure compositions by his all-time favorite artists, namely Andrew Wyeth (1917 – 2009). Hoffman was first introduced to the work of Wyeth about 40 years ago when he visited the Brandywine River Museum in Chester County, PA. Over the course of many years, Hoffman has produced over 100 Wyeth scenes, some as many as seven or eight times. His graphite and ink renditions of Wyeth paintings are a welcome challenge to Hoffman, as well as a way to elevate his work from mere copies to homage to one of America’s most beloved artists.

the work:

Sara Golish | Birds of Paradise
Jan 31 @ 10:00 am – 4:00 pm

SARA GOLISH | BIRDS OF PARADISE

January 14 – April 11, 2020

Toronto-based artist Sara Golish questions the symbolism of conventional oil portraiture through a lens of eco-feminism by depicting traditionally oppressed bodies with dignity and grace in her  Birds of Paradise series. Golish breathes new life into the traditional canon of early modern portraiture, where affluent women were presented in ways that spoke more to men’s accumulation of wealth and status than to any representation of their own identities. If women of color appeared, they were rendered as servants and exotic curiosities to demonstrate the imperial reach of aristocratic power and wealth. Birds of Paradise is about liberating not just the subject from the patriarchal grasp, but also the form, techniques and materials from their historical usage and symbolism. Golish fills her portraits with ethnically diverse female subjects in bold colors, as well as exotic birds and plants that symbolize strength through adversity and fortitude of spirit.

the work:

The Power of She | Permanent Collection Exhibition
Jan 31 @ 10:00 am – 4:00 pm

THE POWER OF SHE | A PERMANENT COLLECTION EXHIBITION

January 30 – April 22, 2020

It’s the year 2020, and the Art Museum is celebrating women and all of their accomplishments, particularly in the arts. The Power of She is an exhibition of nearly 40 works of art from the Museum’s permanent collection featuring work created by, thematically representative of and/or commemorating women, femininity and girl power. Objects on display will include a drawing by the late locally renowned artist and humanitarian, Genevieve Willcox Chandler (1890 – 1980), as well as paintings and sculpture by contemporary artists Sigmund Abeles, Alice Ballard, Dixie Dugan, Cassandra Gillens, Jonathan Green, Betsy Havens, Elizabeth Keller, Jennifer Falck Linssen, Kate Hooray Osmond, Betty Anglin Smith and more. Both visually stunning and technically impressive, this body of work is a wonderful way to experience the beauty and power of the collective “SHE.”

the work:

artists represented:

Sigmund Abeles
Alice Ballard
Mary Lee Bendolph
Steven Bleicher
Genevieve Willcox Chandler
Dixie Dugan
Linda Fantuzzo
Cassandra Gillens
Jonathan Green
Betsy Havens
Elizabeth Keller
Jennifer Falck Linssen
Carolyn Magyar
Vera Manigault
Corrie Parker McCallum
Ellen Orseck
Kate Hooray Osmond
Scotty Peek
Alex Powers
Priscilla Sage
Ouida Salvo
Betty Anglin Smith
Martha Thomas
Sybil West
Herb Wiegand
Voice Lessons
Jan 31 @ 10:00 am – 4:00 pm

VOICE LESSONS | ELI CORBIN, FRAN GARDNER, LISA STROUD AND BEAU WILD

January 19 – April 11, 2020
opening reception Sunday, January 19, 2020 | 1 – 3 pm | free for members/$20 for non-members


Lisa Stroud, Fran Gardner, Beau Wild + Eli Corbin | photo by Shana Dry

Focusing on issues women have dealt with for centuries, Voice Lessons is a multi-media visual-arts narrative of women’s lives — the strength, tenacity and courage demonstrated by our mothers, sisters, daughters and friends. Shifting the dialogue toward empowerment, the art of four female artists, Eli Corbin (Asheville, NC), Fran Gardner (Heath Springs, SC), Lisa Stroud (Cary, NC) and Beau Wild (Port Orange, FL), illustrates the multi-dimensional reality of womanhood — as intelligent and sexual and as powerful and feminine, with emotional range. Voice Lessons encourages tolerance, empathy and compassion among women and men, as it draws together the struggle, strength, vulnerability, individuality and community of the female experience.


Eli Corbin incorporates pattern and symbolism to evoke the strength and power available to women through connection with community, nature, spirituality and belief in self.


Fran Gardner combines oil painting with stitchery, traditionally a female art form, to spotlight the voices of women in the slippery cultural and political landscape.


Lisa Stroud tells her stories of feminine empowerment on canvas, using “the little black dress” as her bantering, sometimes whimsical, narrator.


Beau Wild uses the concept of masking to explore the degree to which women reveal or obscure themselves as they navigate the world.

Feb
1
Sat
2020
Art Museum: Visual Exploration of Southern Heritage
Feb 1 @ 10:00 am – 1:00 pm
Art Museum: Visual Exploration of Southern Heritage @ Art Museum of Myrtle Beach | Myrtle Beach | South Carolina | United States

COLLECTION CONNECTIONS | A VISUAL EXPLORATION OF SOUTHERN HERITAGE

September 10, 2019 – April 2020

Collection Connections | A Visual Exploration of Southern Heritage is an exhibition of approximately 40 works from the Art Museum’s rich permanent collections, including antique maps and historical prints, works on paper by Southern artists, including William H. Clarke, Cassandra Gillens and Jonathan Green, fabric quilts and photographs. Using Southern-history-themed works of art from our collections, the exhibition uses the visual arts to teach and explore the history and culture of South Carolina and our entire region and is designed for both school students and adults alike.

Joseph Hoffman: A Tribute to Andrew Wyeth
Feb 1 @ 10:00 am – 1:00 pm

JOSEPH HOFFMAN | A TRIBUTE TO ANDREW WYETH

January 23 – April 11, 2020

Self-taught artist Joseph Hoffman (b. Bristol, PA), of Murrells Inlet, SC, began drawing as a pastime and, over time, honed his skill. Winning ribbons and awards from juried art exhibits, festivals and craft shows encouraged him to continue on his artistic path. A retired Hoffman continues to draw at home, sketching and painting both famous and obscure compositions by his all-time favorite artists, namely Andrew Wyeth (1917 – 2009). Hoffman was first introduced to the work of Wyeth about 40 years ago when he visited the Brandywine River Museum in Chester County, PA. Over the course of many years, Hoffman has produced over 100 Wyeth scenes, some as many as seven or eight times. His graphite and ink renditions of Wyeth paintings are a welcome challenge to Hoffman, as well as a way to elevate his work from mere copies to homage to one of America’s most beloved artists.

the work:

Sara Golish | Birds of Paradise
Feb 1 @ 10:00 am – 4:00 pm

SARA GOLISH | BIRDS OF PARADISE

January 14 – April 11, 2020

Toronto-based artist Sara Golish questions the symbolism of conventional oil portraiture through a lens of eco-feminism by depicting traditionally oppressed bodies with dignity and grace in her  Birds of Paradise series. Golish breathes new life into the traditional canon of early modern portraiture, where affluent women were presented in ways that spoke more to men’s accumulation of wealth and status than to any representation of their own identities. If women of color appeared, they were rendered as servants and exotic curiosities to demonstrate the imperial reach of aristocratic power and wealth. Birds of Paradise is about liberating not just the subject from the patriarchal grasp, but also the form, techniques and materials from their historical usage and symbolism. Golish fills her portraits with ethnically diverse female subjects in bold colors, as well as exotic birds and plants that symbolize strength through adversity and fortitude of spirit.

the work:

The Power of She | Permanent Collection Exhibition
Feb 1 @ 10:00 am – 4:00 pm

THE POWER OF SHE | A PERMANENT COLLECTION EXHIBITION

January 30 – April 22, 2020

It’s the year 2020, and the Art Museum is celebrating women and all of their accomplishments, particularly in the arts. The Power of She is an exhibition of nearly 40 works of art from the Museum’s permanent collection featuring work created by, thematically representative of and/or commemorating women, femininity and girl power. Objects on display will include a drawing by the late locally renowned artist and humanitarian, Genevieve Willcox Chandler (1890 – 1980), as well as paintings and sculpture by contemporary artists Sigmund Abeles, Alice Ballard, Dixie Dugan, Cassandra Gillens, Jonathan Green, Betsy Havens, Elizabeth Keller, Jennifer Falck Linssen, Kate Hooray Osmond, Betty Anglin Smith and more. Both visually stunning and technically impressive, this body of work is a wonderful way to experience the beauty and power of the collective “SHE.”

the work:

artists represented:

Sigmund Abeles
Alice Ballard
Mary Lee Bendolph
Steven Bleicher
Genevieve Willcox Chandler
Dixie Dugan
Linda Fantuzzo
Cassandra Gillens
Jonathan Green
Betsy Havens
Elizabeth Keller
Jennifer Falck Linssen
Carolyn Magyar
Vera Manigault
Corrie Parker McCallum
Ellen Orseck
Kate Hooray Osmond
Scotty Peek
Alex Powers
Priscilla Sage
Ouida Salvo
Betty Anglin Smith
Martha Thomas
Sybil West
Herb Wiegand
Voice Lessons
Feb 1 @ 10:00 am – 4:00 pm

VOICE LESSONS | ELI CORBIN, FRAN GARDNER, LISA STROUD AND BEAU WILD

January 19 – April 11, 2020
opening reception Sunday, January 19, 2020 | 1 – 3 pm | free for members/$20 for non-members


Lisa Stroud, Fran Gardner, Beau Wild + Eli Corbin | photo by Shana Dry

Focusing on issues women have dealt with for centuries, Voice Lessons is a multi-media visual-arts narrative of women’s lives — the strength, tenacity and courage demonstrated by our mothers, sisters, daughters and friends. Shifting the dialogue toward empowerment, the art of four female artists, Eli Corbin (Asheville, NC), Fran Gardner (Heath Springs, SC), Lisa Stroud (Cary, NC) and Beau Wild (Port Orange, FL), illustrates the multi-dimensional reality of womanhood — as intelligent and sexual and as powerful and feminine, with emotional range. Voice Lessons encourages tolerance, empathy and compassion among women and men, as it draws together the struggle, strength, vulnerability, individuality and community of the female experience.


Eli Corbin incorporates pattern and symbolism to evoke the strength and power available to women through connection with community, nature, spirituality and belief in self.


Fran Gardner combines oil painting with stitchery, traditionally a female art form, to spotlight the voices of women in the slippery cultural and political landscape.


Lisa Stroud tells her stories of feminine empowerment on canvas, using “the little black dress” as her bantering, sometimes whimsical, narrator.


Beau Wild uses the concept of masking to explore the degree to which women reveal or obscure themselves as they navigate the world.