Soaking Up The Local Color

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“Home Place” by Jonathan Green

Noted art critics and reviewers consider Jonathan Green one of the most important painters of the southern experience. He was raised by his grandparents in the Gullah culture of coastal South Carolina. Having received formal training at The Art Institute of Chicago, Green has made his living as an artist since the early 1980s. His limited edition prints now go for $4000+, so I guess I’ll content myself with his postcards, magnets and such. He also has a coffee table book available, Gullah Images: The Art of Jonathan Green, with an introduction by Pat Conroy, care of the University of South Carolina Press.

Last Friday night, we had the pleasure of seeing Green’s work come to life in three dimensions, as the Columbia City Ballet performed Off the Wall & Onto the Stage…Dancing the Art of Jonathan Green at the historic Lucas Theatre in downtown Savannah. I didn’t know I liked ballet– having been previously exposed only to The Nutcracker–but I can honestly say the graceful presentation of this show was stunning in its execution and originality.

For a great write up on Green and the event, see this Naples Daily News piece (registration required).

Brushed By Natural Beauty

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Palmetto Bluff Moonrise by West Fraser

Palmetto Bluff is a 22,000 acre luxury development on the May River on the outskirts of Bluffton. In 2001, the developers–Crescent Resources, a subsidiary of Duke Energy–commissioned Lowcountry artist, West Fraser, to capture the area on canvas. Several of his paintings can be viewed on the site.

The Bluff is also home to the first East Coast property from Auberge Resorts, the Mill Valley-based small hotel proprietor. The Inn at Palmetto Bluff features 50 riverfront cottages and “is the embodiment of all that is graceful, comforting and romantic about the South,” according to the Inn’s web site. Cottages start at $600 per night in season, putting it in a category well beyond exclusive. The Inn also features a fine dining restaurant, meeting space, a spa, and guests are welcome to play the new Jack Nicklaus-designed golf course (green fees are $175).

Lowcountry Voices

Darby and I are both reading autographed copies of books by Lowcountry authors.

I’m reading The Water Is Wide by Pat Conroy. It’s an autobiographical novel about Conroy’s year teaching on a remote coastal island he calls Yamacraw. In real life it’s Daufuskie Island, reachable only by boat to this day, but no longer the sleepy backwater Conroy depicts. Despite Conroy’s considerable fame as a writer, I’ve never read anything by him. After only two chapters, I must say I’m impressed.

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Darby’s reading Behind The Moss Curtain by Murray Mendel Silver, Jr., a fifth generation Savannahian. It’s a collection of Savannah stories that exposes the history and bevy of wayward characters native to this fascinating American city.

Making A Splash On Day One

Darby arrived in the Lowcountry Monday night. Yesterday morning while walking the beach, a photographer from the local paper captured her image. Today she’s on the front page of the paper.

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photo by Jay Karr of The Island Packet
Darby Strong, who just moved to the area from Chicago, explores a fog-shrouded beach on Hilton Head Island on Tuesday. “I like it,” she said, “it’s kind of surreal.” Today’s forecast calls for fog, with sunshine later in the day.

Berrywellden

I’m a new resident of South Carolina’s Lowcountry. In fact, I arrived just hours ago. There’s a lot to draw one to this place. For me, it was the chance to get back to work. But there’s also the weather, the beach, the slower pace and the relative affordability. The area is also dripping with history, as Indian wars were fought here, plus the War for Independence and the Civil War.

One fascinating aspect of the local history, and the various cultures born of that history is the Gullah community of native islanders, who happen to be celebrating their heritage this month. In fact, on “Super Bowl Sunday” I can opt out of the commercial extravaganza in favor of a literary festival, should I be so inclined.

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Celebration of African American Authors
Sunday, February 6th: 4:00 pm – 7:00 pm
Schultz Park-Bluffton
Goethe Road & Buckwalter Pkwy
843-689-9314
Admission: Free
Authors include: Pauline Brown, Lynn Bryant, Walter Dennis, Oscar Frazier, Susan Madison, Betty Miller, Johnnie Mitchell, Gloria Polk, Dot Law, Queen Quet and Sallie Robinson.

Authors will do readings and be available to sign purchased copies of their books.

An Independent State Of Mind

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Rosie greets visitors to BFG Communications

I recently had the opportunity to visit the Hilton Head Island area, also known as South Carolina’s Treasured Coast or Low Country. I flew in from Chicago to participate in a “working interview” with BFG Communications, a marketing services firm with spirits giant, Diageo, as an anchoring client.

BFG is located in Bluffton, SC just before the bridge to Hilton Head Island. This entire region is rich with history, and Bluffton is no exception.

According to Our Coast, Bluffton is “a state of mind,” as the town’s slogan goes, and has been since its inception. “It’s a community that really was started historically as a second-home community before the Civil War, where people would come in the summer to get away from the cities,” notes Roberts Vaux, a local attorney and entrepreneur. Because of the heat and bugs that accompanied the summer months, residents of the area saw Bluffton with its breezy bluffs as a perfect respite.

It’s also here, under what’s known as the Secession Oak, that the fires for the South to secede from the North got a little stoking. The tree may already have been two centuries old in 1844 when as many as 500 people met beneath its canopy. According to the Bluffton Historical Preservation Society, those people had come to hear their congressman, Robert Barnwell Rhett, “who had been so vociferously agitating since the 1820s for Secession.” And so began “The Bluffton Movement,” which led to South Carolina’s withdrawal from the Union on Dec. 20, 1860-the first state to secede. The oak is on the left-hand side of Verdier Cove Road at Highway 46, just outside the town limits on the Pritchardville side.