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ArtEast

The Art Show Strikes Back! at Octane Gallery

When I was a kid, I loved the Star Wars films. The crazy aliens, the big space battles, and most of all the interesting characters grabbed my attention like little else could. Seeing Return of the Jedi in the theater was the highlight of second grade. I got my picture taken with Yoda at the mall that year, and I spent many a quarter in video arcades during the early 1980s playing the original Star Wars arcade game. The intervening years have seen my love for the franchise fall off a bit as it’s been watered down by over-marketing and the dull prequel trilogy that George Lucas forced on us all, but I still hang on to those fond memories of Luke Skywalker, Han Solo, Chewbacca and the Millenium Falcon.

Jeff Bertrand's Darth Vader will be on display at Octane Gallery next month

It’s those childhood recollections (and my support for local artists) that will draw me out to Octane Gallery at Kustom Thrills Tattoo next month for The Art Show Strikes Back!, a two-man show featuring Star Wars-themed artwork by Jeff Bertrand and Charles Bennett. Solo pieces (pun intended) and a few collaborations between the two artists will be on display, illuminating the secret lives of major Star Wars characters and the bit-players who never got the full screen time they deserved.

“Priced to sell this artwork is,” says Bertrand from behind his classic 1980s Yoda mask. “So come prepared you must.”

The Art Show Strikes Back! opens on September 5th as part of ArtEast, and the show runs until October 17th. Octane Gallery is located inside Kustom Thrills Tattoo at 1000 Main Street, Suite 107.

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April ArtEast Preview

It’s the last weekend of the month, a time we all look forward to here at EastNashvilleBlog.com because we get to see new art at all the local galleries participating in ArtEast.

This month’s spotlight at Art and Invention Gallery is on Bell’s Bend: A Sense of Place, featuring work connected to “the landscapes, people, history and future of Bell’s Bend.” The show features the work of Anne R. Williams, Brenda Butka, Denise 
Hawkins, DiAnne Patrick, Don Evans, Jean Gauld-Jaeger, Jim Osborn, Joel 
Knapp, John Kuenneth, Lisa Rivas, Martha Berry, Mary Sue Kern, Nathalie Van 
Balen, Paul Schatckin, Sheila B., and Stacey Irvin.

Betty Badd's at Billups Art (say that five times fast!)

Over at Billups Art it’s all about Betty Malo, the artist behind Betty Badd Couture who was named MTV’s designer of the year. Greta Gaines will be the musical act at the monthly ArtEast after-party at Billups.

Translation is still running at Open Lot (though, sadly, Jozef van Willem and his Jimmy Page-style lute have disappeared into East Nashville history). And local artist Dustin Dirt’s show Hide and Go Freak, which opens this Thursday, will continue to run in the new Octane Gallery at Kustom Thrills Tattoo.

The work of Team Rhodes will be up at Humankind

Daniel Hawks‘ gallery Studio 83 and socially conscious thrift store Humankind, both located at the giant complex housed at 604 Gallatin Road, will each host the work of a number of artists. Studio 83 will be the night’s home for artists Robert Cortner and Cheryl Darnell, while Humankind will shine a light on Antwan Hamilton, Lloyd Bruce Tucker, and Josh and Sarah Rhodes, known together as Team Rhodes.

It's mystery night at Fanny's House of Music

Bongo Java features the artwork of the Meigs Magnet Middle School Eighth Grade Advanced Art Class. Wonders on Woodland, Back East, and Cloud 12, all located together at 1110 Woodland Street, are teaming up for  A Fun Art Show with the work of local artists Jerry Uselton, Lori Honig, Fernando Cadena and Debbie G. And Fanny’s House of Music has “a mystery stew of art and musical entertainment” booked for the night.

Looks like there will be a little something for everyone, as we’ve come to expect from ArtEast. All the participating galleries will stay open from 6pm-9pm on Saturday, April 24, with the after-party at Billups kicking off around 9:30pm.

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ArtEast Recap, March 2010

Visual art venues and events are on the rise in Nashville, and our side of the river is no exception. The once-monthly ArtEast festivities took place this past Saturday and we managed to make it to several openings.

Our first stop was Daniel Hawks’ Studio 83 in the recently refurbished building at 604 Gallatin Ave. Don’t let the lack of an adjacent parking lot deter you from visiting this gallery – there’s plenty of free parking in the lot across the street behind Rite Aid. Studio 83 is upstairs on the back side of the building.

Upon our approach to Studio 83, I noticed an unusual sight – right outside the gallery was Snow White in a mini-skirt, holding a beer in one hand and an apple in another, and there were about twelve people with sketchbooks drawing her. Anyone with a sketchbook and pencil was welcome to sit and join Dr. Sketchy’s Anti-Art School, which made the Studio 83 show interactive. What a cool idea!

Disney Characters as Garbage Pail Kids

Even cooler was the thematic group show inside Studio 83. Conceived by Jeff Bertrand, the show was based around playful themes reminiscent of childhood. Bertrand invited fifteen of his favorite artists, who run the gamut from tattoo artists to graphic designers, to each create several pieces of art to fit the themes, and the work was arranged in groups according to the themes.

In the section entitled Previous Jobs of Former Childhood Icons, Captain Kangaroo and Mister Rogers appeared several times in various occupations (butcher, Evel Knievel-style stunt school teacher), alongside a breakdancing Alf. Fittingly, the Disney Characters as Garbage Pail Kids section gave us multiple vomiting scenes such as Charles Bennett’s “Projectile Puknocchio” and Dustin Dirt’s “Upchuck Donald Duck”. The Other Characters Dorothy Could Have Met While on the Yellow Brick Road section included Colonel Sanders (why not? I bet Dorothy liked fried chicken) and a sinister-looking hillbilly version of My Little Pony.

Artist Erin Lord's "My Little Phony-Hillbilly D*luxe"

Colorful, whimsical, humorous, grotesque, and creative – the show managed to pull off the perfect combination of childish fun and professional craftsmanship while spotlighting the personalities of the artists involved. “I thought each individual artist could complement the others and do really strong work,” Bertrand said of the show. It’s safe to say that his choices were right on the mark.

Next we headed to Five Points and Billups Art, a music and art venue tucked quietly away behind Drifters BBQ with a stage, small cocktail tables, and a series of small studio rooms around the periphery that housed art from different artists.

Billups Art at night

The band Art Four Sale, self-described as “entertaining background music”, set the relaxed tone for the evening at Billups Art. On display was a wide variety of subject matter, styles, and media, including safari-esque animal photography, moody portraits of country music legends, large portraits with a hip-hop vibe, smaller portraits with a jazzy vibe, beach scenes with palm trees, and detailed charcoal drawings of tightly cropped rural imagery by proprietor Anthony Billups. Regardless of your taste, there was something for everyone here.

From there we walked to Art and Invention Gallery, which you might know as “the Tomato Art Show gallery.” As usual for an ArtEast evening, Art and Invention was packed shoulder-to-shoulder. That’s because owner Meg MacFadyen runs a classy fine arts and crafts establishment with ever-changing inventory. “Oooh – I like that!” was my mantra – every time I turned in a different direction or wandered into another of the small rooms I would find something that caught my eye. I think I could go back 20 more times and not see everything in there.

Art and Invention Gallery

An overwhelming display of colors and textures took over my senses in this gallery. It’s a visual wonderland, filled to the brim with handmade pottery, one-of-a-kind jewelry, small paintings and drawings, and an array of colorful high-end trinkets and baubles. I was particularly drawn to the jewelry of Jill Block – rings with layers of what looked like colored glass or ceramic tiles with metal spirals. The collection of whimsical storybook paintings by Janet Lee, in which the characters of Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland illustrate the alphabet, also got my attention. Lee’s artist statement describes the process of creating these paintings for an ABC book for children, a venture that is still a work in progress.

Janet Lee's Queen of Hearts

Unfortunately our ArtEast evening came to an end before we were able to make it to Open Lot for the REform show. It will be our mission to cover Open Lot’s show in next month’s ArtEast post here at EastNashvilleBlog.com. Until then, be sure to check out the First Saturday Art Crawl downtown next weekend.

Most of the shows from the March 2010 version of ArtEast will be open for the next month. Check with individual galleries for more information.

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ArtEast Debuts This Weekend in East Nashville

This weekend is the last Saturday of the month, and that means it’s once again time for the East Nashville Art Stroll – or as it’s now known, ArtEast.

The Art Stroll started up last September and has opened the community’s eyes to the wealth of artistic talent hiding out on our side of the river. This month’s version bears the new name ArtEast and will shine the spotlight on more than 80 artists.

Art and Invention Gallery will feature some 50 artists this weekend, with the spotlight being on the work of Elizabeth Foster.

Billups Art has art and a party this weekend

Billups Art is showing off its recently finished artist studios, featuring the works of Antwan Hamilton of Artificer, Bill BuffettEther Workshop, Terra WilsonDean Tomasek and Anthony Billups.

Brazilian-born artist Marcelo Halmenschlanger‘s home for the night will be Bongo Java East, while Fanny’s House of Music will celebrate its first birthday with the works of Beth Inglish.

Open Lot wants to help you REform

Open Lot, whose theme for the night is REform (“Through fashion, art, and design we will explore the many ways in which one can reform an existing item to have a new meaning and purpose in the 21st century”), will feature Randy L. Purcell, Jacqueline Meeks, Laura Cavaliere,  Molly Brooks, Kelly Bonadies, Raymo Ventura, Jon Chilsom and Ryan Hogan.

And last but not least, Studio 83 East‘s show this month is “5 Themes, 15 Artists.” Local artist Jeff Bertrand curates the show and participates along with fellow locals Michelle Duckworth, Heather Crook, Anjeanette Illustration, Brandt HardinAimee Davidson, Charles V. Bennett, Rachel Napier, Jonny Lashley, Dustin Dirt, Brenan Sharp, Erin Lord, Brooke E., Randy McQuien, Jr., and Abilgail Horne.

This month’s ArtEast will run from 6 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. Once you’ve got your fill of visual art, head back down to Billups Art at 1008-C Woodland St. for the ArtEast after party featuring the music of Matt Powell, Isaac Hayden and Art Four Sale.

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