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East Nashville art galleries

Art galleries located in East Nashville.

“Hang-ups and Pin-downs” at Octane Gallery

Georgia photographer Jenn Alexander Fletcher , known for her work as Blondeshot Creative, travels to East Nashville this weekend for the opening of Hang-ups and Pin-downs, her latest solo show at East Nashville’s Octane Gallery. We got the chance to talk to Jenn about her love of Nashville, what makes Octane such a great place to show her work, and why her work isn’t your average pin-up photography.

East Nashville Blog: I noticed on your site that you’ve actually shown at Octane before, though it was in a group environment instead of as a solo show. What is it about Octane that made you want to come back and show again? On a related note, what’s appealing about showing your work in Nashville – and more specifically, in East Nashville?

Jenn Alexander Fletcher:The artists at Octane/ Kustom Thrills are friendly, inviting, creative, and just all around bad-ass artists and people. In addition to the people, I love the look and feel of the shop, and prefer to show my work in alternative spaces. My work, both in aesthetic qualities and subject matter, fits better with a place like Octane over a traditional art gallery.

Nashville is my favorite city in the world. I’ve been trying to make the move there for years, and one of these days (hopefully sooner than later) I’ll be able to call it home. After my book release party in the Atlanta area, I decided to have one show of the images from my book elsewhere. Nashville was an easy choice for me not because it’s the easiest place for me to draw a crowd or to even host the event, but because I figured why not have it in the place I’d like to be the most. East Nashville is a wonderful neighborhood that I’ve had the pleasure of spending time in on multiple trips to the city.

ENB: How did you select the models in the photos? And what inspired the particular settings for each individual model?

JAF: The models in this series are all every day women who played an important role in my life during the time of creation. They were friends; some of those including a co-worker, my sister, and myself. Each model was paired with a setting, props, and/or an overall idea that reveals something about the model, me, and our relationship to one another.

ENB: Your press release says your show “rebels against the pin-up craze.” Having done a show of contemporary pin-ups yourself in the past, what inspired you to rebel against the genre? And what do you think this new series of “pin-downs” shares in common with pin-ups, despite its rebellious spirit?

JAF: After presenting my pin-up series Alexander Girls in 2005, I acquired a reputation as a “pin-up photographer”. While yes, I was doing a lot of that type of work at the time, I was shooting plenty of other subjects as well and didn’t want to be pigeon-holed as that one type of photographer. Also around that time there was a huge boom in that genre of photography work, and although visually similar to what I was doing, very different in terms of vision. I was trying to “say things” with my pin-ups, and felt that the other pin-ups out there were just there to show pretty girls and trendy retro stylings. Thus, when pin-up photography (once again) became mainstream commonplace, I quickly lost interest and decided to move on.

There are a few similarities between the new series and the old which is why I say that it is “part continuation and part rebellion” against the first one. Some images in the new series share characteristics with traditional pin-ups more than other images. A few are quite cheeky, and a few are still pretty sexy. But in all the images, its’ still a young woman that’s on display and playing the part of a model.

ENB: The press release also notes that the photos are being specially installed rather than presented in the standard frames that people expect when they see a photography show. What can viewers expect in terms of the installation?

JAF: The photographs will be hanging, just not in frames or on the wall. I parody one of the main themes of the photography series into an installation that is much more lighthearted and plays on the exact words of the title, Hang ups…. think of it in terms of airing dirty laundry. That’s all I’m going to give away on that, you’ll have to come and check it out opening night!

Hang-ups and Pin-downs by Jenn Alexander Fletcher opens Saturday, February 5 at Octane Gallery in East Nashville. The reception runs from 7pm-9pm and features book signing, a giveaway, popcorn bar, and a special photo op for 30 minutes immediately following the reception where you can have your photo taken by the artist in a similar style to the ones on exhibit. Octane Gallery is located inside Kustom Thrills Tattoo at 1000 Main Street, Suite 107.

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Woodbine Community Organization Benefit at Billups Art

This weekend Billups Art features more art for a good cause

East Nashville has yet another chance to take in some art for a good cause this weekend with the Gifted Energy show at Billups Art.

Gifted Energy benefits Mimi’s Fund, a project of the Woodbine Community Organization. WCO has been in operation here in Nashville for 20 years, serving the community in various ways as their grant-based funds have changed over the years. Right now they offer a number of services, but their housing programs are the driving force behind the Gifted Energy benefit show.

“We have a number of rental properties called living centers,” says Kim Bradshaw, a housing specialist at WCO who helped to organize the benefit. “These units are for individuals who are living off Social Security, or maybe a pension or disability. They’re very low-income individuals, and so we pay the utility costs on 13 of these living center houses. That way their rent stays fixed – it’s a very low price. Their rent includes the utility bills, because in a lot of places the energy costs just keep creeping up and a lot of people can’t afford their rent because they have to pay their utility bills. So we pay those costs in order to keep the rent consistent for them, because their checks aren’t going up. So the Gifted Energy fundraiser is to help cover these costs to keep these individuals safe and housed and keep them from becoming homeless.”

Bradshaw reached out to a number of local artists to participate in the art benefit and the response was overwhelmingly positive. The end result is this weekend’s show featuring the art of Olga Alexeeva, Jade Bradshaw, Laurie Poole, Jairo Prado, Molly Rich, Southern Stained Glass, Holly “Raventalker” Stokes, Turnbull Pottery and Belinda Yandell. The show runs from 1pm-6pm on Saturday, November 20, at Billups Art here in East Nashville. Cost is a $10 donation at the door, and a silent auction, which concludes at 5:30pm, will help to raise more money to keep Woodbine’s clients warm this winter.

In addition to its low-income housing initiatives, Woodbine Community Organization also offers a varied lineup of other programs, including mortgage counseling, first-time homebuyer classes, Spanish classes, English-as-a-second-language classes, and rental assistance programs. For more information on Woodbine, visit their website at www.woodbinecommunity.org.

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Fight Back/Move Forward Art Show to Benefit Cancer Charity

See the work of local artists and contribute to a great cause at Billups Art

Looking to check out some local art while contributing to a worthy cause? You’ll want to block off your calendar later this month for Fight Back/Move Forward, an art show benefiting the SAMFund for young adult cancer survivors.

Since 2003, the SAMFund has awarded $500,000 to more than 250 young adults all over the United States. Those recipients have used the money to pay for rent and utilities, car and health insurance premiums, graduate tuition, vocational training, student loan repayment, current and residual medical bills, fertility-related expenses, gym memberships and transportation costs. The SAMFund website describes why they do what they do:

Transitioning into your 20s and 30s is difficult; the job market is tough, real estate is expensive and the cost of tuition is at an all time high. Learning how to live on your own is difficult.

Now imagine that you have just finished cancer treatment. You have lost valuable time and savings. You feel like you are years behind everyone else in your age group. To top it off, you are suddenly faced with many expenses you didn’t have to think about during treatment. In addition, you are trying to pay off residual medical bills while acquiring new ones through follow-up tests and check-ups.

When all of these issues collide, how do you find a job, pay for rent and afford school?

While wonderful organizations exist for both cancer patients and survivors to provide support, none were solely to provide financial assistance for young adult survivors struggling with their transition into post-treatment life. Frustrated by the lack of support, we sought a way close the gap.

Fight Back/Move Forward goes down on October 22 from 6pm-10pm at Billups Art, located at 1008-C Woodland Street here in East Nashville. A donation of $5 gets you access to artwork from local artists Jeff Bertrand, Dustin Dirt, Brooke E, Janet Lee, Brandt Hardin, Erin Lord, Charles Bennett and many more, as well as music from John Salaway’s Acoustic Revolution. All proceeds from the door, as well as from any artwork sold at the show, will go directly to SAMFund.

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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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Reminder: Nashville Flood Relief Art Show on Saturday

Come help your neighbors - buy some art!

While you’re making your plans for this weekend, we hope you’ll make sure to incude a stop at Billups Art here in East Nashville on Saturday night to check out Art Flood, the Nashville Flood Relief Benefit Art Show. Your $5 donation at the door will benefit flood relief efforts at Hands On Nashville. A food drive to benefit Second Harvest Food Bank will also be held alongside the art show, so you can double up on helping the community by bringing along a few cans of non-perishable food. (Donations of pet food are also welcome!)

A full roster of local artists including Meg Winston MacfadyenDustin DirtDeez DecksJessica HillJeff BertrandRachel Hall KirkBrooke E.Garrett FosterAthena WorkmanAbigale HorneHeather Walker CecilJodi ReevesCharles ClaryMichael BielaczycAsh SivilsJanet LeeAnjeanette IllustrationsLA PhotographieBradley SpitzerRobert CortnerClaudia M. OverstreetAaron & Michelle Grayum and others have donated works of art, with at least 50 percent of the proceeds of each piece, and in some cases 75 or 100 percent, going to Hands On Nashville.

In addition to all the art, there will be music all night from John Salaway of Acoustic Revolution and Mystery Trip. The show kicks off at Billups Art (1008-C Woodland St. here in East Nashville) at 6pm on Saturday, May 15th, and runs until 10pm.

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Nashville Flood Relief Art Show Next Weekend

Billups Art hosts the Nashville Flood Relief Art Show

The local art community is coming together this weekend to raise funds for the Nashville Red Cross and Hands On Nashville.

East Nashville art gallery Billups Art will play host to the Nashville Flood Relief Art Show next Saturday, May 15th, 2010. The opening will begin that night at 6pm and run until 10pm at Billups Art, which is located at 1008-C Woodland Street in the Five Points area of East Nashville.

Among the local artists who will be participating in the show are Meg Winston Macfadyen, Dustin Dirt, Deez Decks, Jessica Hill, Jeff Bertrand, Brooke E., Garrett Foster, Athena Workman, Abigale Horne, Heather Walker Cecil, Jodi Reeves, Charles Clary, Michael Bielaczyc, Ash Sivils, Janet Lee, AJ Illustrations and EastNashvilleBlog.com’s own Rachel Hall Kirk.

Come out and support your local artists' efforts to help our neighbors in need!

All of these generous artists’ work will be sold or auctioned off to benefit the charities working to bring relief to all our neighbors affected by this weekend’s flood. There will also be a food drive, so make sure to bring along any non-perishable canned goods that you can spare. Many of our neighbors who are either temporarily or permanently homeless also have pets, so the food drive at this weekend’s art show will accept non-perishable pet food as well.

If you can’t make it out this weekend to the Nashville Flood Relief Art Show, please consider sending a cash donation to the beneficiary organizations. For the Red Cross, you can donate online at www.nashvilleredcross.org, or by phone at 615-250-4300, or you can send $10 by texting ‘REDCROSS’ to 90999. For Hands On Nashville, click here to make an online donation or go to hon.org for more info on HON’s flood relief efforts.

UPDATE: The date of the show has been changed from the original night of May 8th. The show at Billups Art is now scheduled for next Saturday, May 15th, at 6pm.

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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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East Nashville’s Open Lot Hosts Art and Music Tonight

Interested in catching some art, hearing some music outside of your ordinary routine, or perhaps even both? East Nashville art space Open Lot has you covered with a pair of shows tonight.

Curated by Meagan Rust and Richard HarperTranslation aims to highlight the process of interpretation from the visual medium to text and vice versa by having a number of writers and visual artists interpret one another’s work. The opening reception for Translation runs from 6pm-9pm tonight, and the show continues Saturday, April 17th, from 12pm-5pm. It’s free, it’s all-ages, and there will be beer and wine available with ID.

More details from the horse’s mouth:

The curators of Translation have selected two poems, a sculpture, and a painting that are included in the show.  Visual artists were asked to create a response or interpretation to one of the written pieces, and writers are asked to create a response or interpretation to one of the visual pieces.  Translation features artwork and performance by James Perrin, Lauren Youngling, Charlie Rauh + Megan Harrold (Cultural Reflex Dance), James Ford, Jonathan Lisenby, Matt Jernigan, Sara Figel, Angelica Paige Ridley, Todd Hogue, and Meagan Rust, with prose and poetry by Jeff Hardin, Richard Harper, Claudia Overstreet, Declan Gould, Drew Maynard, Laura Elizabeth Faison, and Scott Metzger.

Once the art show winds down, Open Lot will welcome Dutch composer and lutist Jozef van Wissem to its space.

Jozef van Wizzem rocks the lute (Photo: Stuart Green)

Hailed by Rolling Stone for his “tender, minimalist picking and gold-spray overdubs” (and really, how many lutists ever get reviewed by Rolling Stone?), van Wissem will reinvent the lute before your ears and eyes from 9pm-11pm. Che Chen and Robbie Lee open. Price is $10 at the door, or $15 with an open bar. Mmmmmmm, open bar.

Open Lot is located at 1307 Jewell Street here in East Nashville.

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