An interesting and helpful piece of information about the exhibiting artist life is that exhibition calendars run 1-2 years ahead. Shows that are planned today may not actually take place for many, many months in the future. I work as a full time professor and I work as a full time artist. My life stays so busy that if I find myself just sitting still, I immediately begin to feel like I’m forgetting something.
Once scheduled, these art events exist in my head as very abstract objects. I register the dates and I can visualize what that will mean for me in terms of activity, but these are future activities. They’re not real. They are entered into my phone calendar, but more than a month away, they’re really just mysterious shadows of things to come.
There’s an upcoming solo exhibition that’s been abstractly existing in my phone and my mind for more than a year. I can see it vaguely sitting over in that corner of the calendar. More recently and in a less ordinary manner, another solo exhibition opportunity came knocking and I gladly accepted. I knew the dates were close, but May and June are definitely two different months so I knew that if there was any overlap in the installation and un-installation dates, I could work it out. That would be a problem for future me. I’m also fairly prolific and I have made a lot of new work in the last couple of years, so really, even if there was a conflict, I could work it out. Or, at least, future me could work it out. I did realize both were near the end of the very busy spring semester. That would be ok, right?
Oh, but what about that trip? I think I’m supposed to travel sometime during that time. And Blue will be graduating around that time. And you agreed to lead a sand sculpture workshop out of town. Wasn’t there a family vacation someone told you about? What about the MFA hooding and the Lander graduation? There’s definitely a couple of public sculpture installations during that same time. Surely it will be fine. Oh, and I'm officiating a wedding, right? Future me will work it out.
Future me is pissed.
No, not really. Future me, which is now, kinda, present me, is very happy to have all of the opportunities he has. If I'm honest, I'm glad to have reason to be so busy making and showing art and, equally as fun, showing up for my people. I haven't had an appropriate chance to process all of the recent activity in my sketchbook yet, so, as a means of not forgetting some important things, I'm going to recap some of them here.
As classes officially ended, I was working during every available moment at home curating artwork for the two overlapping solo exhibits. I was correct, May and June are two different months, but artwork delivery/installation and pickup/uninstallation for those months overlap quite a bit. This meant I had to make sure I had enough work for two solo shows. No big deal. The tougher deal was figuring out what work I wanted to go where. It took some time, during which, I realized that I had not attached proper backs and hanging hardware on several of the new works. I took care of that, got myself organized on the computer and turned in inventory lists. I packed my mural box, because this first exhibit was going to allow me the freedom to draw all over the gallery walls. Then, I turned my attention back to school.
My students were finishing some amazing sculptures, which I hope to share here soon. We had our final critiques on Thursday and Friday. I raced home Friday to have a professional photo taken, which is a whole different story for a different time. Then I drove to Fine Arts night to hear Violet sing.
I arrived back home around dinner time and I started loading up an entire solo show in my truck while dinner was cooking. 26 drawings and 12 steel sculptures, all heading out the next morning to Rock Hill. After I ate, I took a shower and sat on my butt for a while to rest. While my butt was relaxing, my mind was racing. All of the abstractions were become realities really fast. I like being at home, or at least having a home base of operations and I have daily habits and rituals that keep me balanced, even in crazy times. We were entering a time when all of those comforts were going to be up in the air.
At the end of Sunday, this is what it looked like. The giraffe was the first thing I drew. Devann let me stay until 8:00 pm or so before we headed out to get me moved in to my apartment for the week. Gale and Henry, a retired couple who are big supporters of the Arts Council, were kind enough to offer me their over the garage apartment in the neighborhood adjacent to Winthrop. This was the same neighborhood Stan and I used to run through to get to Winthrop Lake back in our 5 mile per day running days. We used to run through there in the spring and smell the honeysuckle and see the dogwood blooms and dream about living in those houses.
But the food. Oh my goodness the food. The breakfast biscuit sandwich was my daily meal but I also made a habit of eating their sweets on the gallery floor almost every day. I think this photo is actually from Tuesday, but everything I had there was delicious. No, they're not sponsoring me, it's just really good and I get excited about good coffee and good food, especially sweets. Anyway, back to the story...
Tuesday started just as early. My body knows when I have a lot to do and it makes sure I'm up in plenty of time to get started. That early morning run helps to burn off some of the energy and anxiety before I meet my day. The lake sunrises did not disappoint. I'll also say that "lake" is not my word. It's the official name. This is clearly a glorified pond, but it's enough to be a warm weather feature for students. We spent many afternoons here in the spring and probably most of a whole summer before our senior year of undergrad. You're not supposed to be in the water but we did get to participate in one of those "build your own recycled boat" situations back in the day and we sank our boat about halfway across.
Graduation was Wednesday morning in Greenwood. I got to sleep at home, run at home and have my own coffee before heading out to school. Kennedy also commuted to graduate.
Katherine became officially official and Emily was there to support as well. Emily was our 1st 3D MFA grad. Katherine was in the program with Emily.
MG was also there to support, so I grabbed a quick selfie with her before putting my holy garments away and hustling to my truck again.
My goal was to get almost all of the mural done by the end of the day on Wednesday. I was able to stay late again thanks to Melanie, the coolest director, and while I was very tired, I was also happy to basically meet my goal. With work like this, I could work on it for a month and keep touching things up and adding more things, but at some point you just have to stop and go home. I had set some work checkpoints in my head for the week and I did my best to stay on task. I knew that I still had one secret task to complete on Thursday.
I had remembered that I left this sculpture in the hallways of McLaurin when I graduated. I wondered if it was still there. I decided to hop in a visitor parking space and walk inside to see. Still there. My work has changed a good bit since grad school, I guess.
Then, on Saturday, it was time to officiate Emily's wedding. So many things checked off the to-do list this week. I am grateful that everything went according to plan or even better than planned. I am grateful for all the people who helped make my ridiculous plans work out. I'm also grateful that I didn't fall off that 12' ladder.
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