Showing posts with label The Ward Center for Contemporary Art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Ward Center for Contemporary Art. Show all posts

Monday, July 11, 2016

Visit The Ward Center for Contemporary Art for a Journey Through Time

With Noelle Ward and "Dunn's River Falls II"
When Petersburg Regional Art Center was purchased in 2013 and closed for renovations, I was saddened. After all, the historic old building with all its flaws and woes had been a part of my life for ten years. Before that, I spent a few years as a resident artist in Shockoe Bottom Arts Center in Richmond which was the predecessor to PRAC. When SBAC was forced to close and move, I decided to follow Rusty Davis and Deanna Thomas, the founders, to Petersburg, a community like my native Fredericksburg where memories of the Civil War still lingered.

It was a fascinating time. I watched Old Towne go down following a damaging tornado, then rise up again. I saw original artists disappear from their gallery spaces, and new ones come in to replace them. Soon after Rusty carried a large painting up to the third floor for me (since it was too long for the elevator), he vanished due to illness. His mother was gone soon after, leaving only his sister Donna to carry on. She worked with enthusiasm, but there was a severe sense of loss because hopes and dreams were left in the lurch.

"Monet's Pond" and "Budding Falls" in the Underground
Now the Ward Center for Contemporary Art has opened with a richness of bright, well-lit gallery walls and spaces. I was honored to have a one-person exhibition, "Passenger to Paradise" hanging on the walls of the Grand Gallery for the opening events last summer. The original wooden floors remain in the Grand Gallery as does the historic staircase. The Ward Center has begun its own journey through time with new art and massive possibilities. Hopes and dreams are alive once again. Perhaps the best is yet to come.
"Rose Hall Great House"

Monday, November 9, 2015

Art Open House at Prince George Gallery in Williamsburg

"Painting from a Still Life"
Last Saturday, I was one of about 10 gallery artists who participated in an Open House at Prince George Art and Frame in Williamsburg VA. Four of us, Bonnie Coyle, Edwin Green, Patricia Rapoport, and I, painted from a still life set up by gallery owner Fred Miller. Others, like Hank Mook, a papier mache artist, demonstrated how they create their work. It's not often I get to be with other artists with the opportunity to paint, so this was a fun event.

"Pumpkin and Flowers" ©Mary Montague Sikes
We each got to know more about the other artists who share space on the walls of Prince George Gallery, and we also had the opportunity to talk with those people who dropped in to visit and watch us at work. It would be fun to have more of these Open House events with artist demonstrations in other areas, including Petersburg, at The Ward Center for Contemporary Art. 

Although I don't usually work in pastels, I used them to create a painting on 300-pound Arches paper, 15 x 11. Before going to the gallery, I primed the paper with orange acrylic paint. I also did a small 5 x 7 still life on pastelbord, a surface I had never before used for soft pastels.

Saturday, October 31, 2015

Carol Anna Meese - Her Paintings Enhance the Walls of The Ward Center

The spacious Grand Gallery of the Ward Center for Contemporary Art is a treasure to visit. The paintings of Carol Anna Meese enhance its walls and make it ever more special. The vibrant waves crashing against the Atlantic Coast of our great continent can be felt as well as seen by the visitor who studies Meese's work and is entranced by the power.
Carol Anna Meese stands next to a piece of her vibrant art ©Mary Montague Sikes




Carol Anna Meese with a wall of "freed" work ©Mary Montague Sikes
 


Meese created the amazing work in the Ward show while studying the sea and the sky and the changing weather of the Outer Banks of North Carolina. She watched in awe of the birds flying south.

"I wished I too could join them soaring above the earth, sailing to a new land if only for a season," she says in her statement about the exhibition.

"Some beam flows through my body and I lose consciousness," she writes and I believe her.

The work of Meese develops from her senses and her moods. She does not plan it. Her gestural brushwork is evident in each painting and causes the viewer to linger.

This is a show not to miss. Visit the gallery, open Monday, Wednesday, Friday, and Sunday from 12 noon to 6 p.m.
The Ward Center for Contemporary Art Grand Gallery ©Mary Montague Sikes

Tuesday, October 13, 2015

Visiting Ward Center Brings Back Memories of Richmond


"Art in the Underground at The Ward" ©Mary Montague Sikes
After spending 10 years at Petersburg Regional Arts Center, touring the renovated Ward Center for Contemporary Art brings back many memories, especially in the Underground. In 2002, when I looked at floor plans for PRAC, I had difficulty deciding which gallery space I wanted in the facility that would replace Shockoe Bottom Arts Center in Richmond.

This was a turbulent time for everyone after the world turned dark and changed on 9/11, 2001. I had grown used to being in Shockoe Bottom for opening night each month and to attending other events there, including workshops by the late Roland Roycraft, a nationally-known watercolor artist at the time, and Carole Barnes, a popular acrylics instructor. Along with most of the other artists at Shockoe Bottom, I was at a loss for what to do--stay with a new group somewhere in Richmond or follow Rusty Davis and his mother Deanna Brizendine to Petersburg.

The two of them founded Shockoe Bottom Arts Center in 1994, modeling it somewhat after the Torpedo Factory in Alexandria and giving artists the chance to have affordable studio space in Richmond. The old tobacco warehouse building featured the prominent Lucky Strike water tower landmark rising above it. At one point, Rusty promoted an art contest to paint that tower.

Davis always wanted to keep the Art Center in Richmond. However, because of disputes with the owner of the Shockoe Bottom building, he incurred legal fees that he said made it impossible to afford property in the city. Going to Petersburg was the "best deal", especially when those city officials "courted him" because of their hope the new Art Center would help revitalize the downtown.

Out of loyalty, I made the decision to follow Rusty and his artist mother to Petersburg. Studying their plans, I went back and forth for several months between a large studio space on the third floor or a smaller space with a closet and two inset areas located across from the elevator in the basement. In the end, I chose the lower floor and was soon glad that I did because the large elevator failed and, because of the expenses involved, was never put back into operation. The small elevator that was left was unreliable, so I used the stairs whenever possible.

My Studio PRAC 2012 ©Mary Montague Sikes
That spring and summer, everybody worked together to develop the studio spaces in the old Butterworth Furniture Store building. After the dry walls went up in my studio, my husband and I painted them white and the wooden inset area, black. It made a striking display space for my paintings. Everything came together for an opening in July 2003. Rusty and Deanna had great plans for PRAC. He mentioned that he intended to put up a billboard along I-95, advertising PRAC. However, that and other plans never came to fruition. Both Rusty and his mother developed disabling illnesses.

Running the Art Center fell on his sister, Donna Jacobs, who brought enthusiasm to a difficult situation. She managed juried shows each month that were popular and gave artists the opportunity to compete for a total of $600 in prize money for 11 open house events each year. But, gradually, most of the original artists left for spaces in Richmond and other locations. I stayed until PRAC closed in July 2013 and was sad to see it go.
 
Terry Ammons sculpture in The Underground ©MMSikes
The configuration of the Underground at the Ward Center for Contemporary Art is nice. The ample hallway spaces provide opportunity for the display of sculpture as well as paintings. The placement of the Terry Ammons sculpture is thought-provoking.

At long last, Petersburg appears to be breaking out. The shackles and the cries of dying soldiers on the Civil War battlefields are disappearing and growing ever quieter. They will never be forgotten, but new art galleries, more restaurants, a new brewery, and The Ward Center for Contemporary Art are brightening the look and the mood of Old Towne Petersburg. I like the feel.










Monday, September 28, 2015



"Old Towne Petersburg" ©Mary Montague Sikes

Last summer, my husband and I visited the construction site of the Ward Center for Contemporary Art in Petersburg VA. We were there the same day the filming of "Ithaca" began nearby in Old Towne. False store fronts were installed to create the set of the movie that is based on the novel, The Human Comedy, published in 1943 by William Saroyan. Meg Ryan directed the film, scheduled for release in 2016. It was Ryan's performance in the movie "Sleepless in Seattle" that inspired me to write my novel Daddy's Christmas Angel.

Old Towne Petersburg is now a popular setting for movies. During the filming of "Lincoln," Steven Spielberg, the director, was often seen in the downtown just as Ryan was last summer. The film-making is bringing a revival to the area.
All the production activity in the historic district of the old city, reminds me of why I liked Petersburg so much when the Petersburg Regional Art Center first opened 12 years ago in 2003. I had a studio gallery in the basement of PRAC for all of the 10 years it was open. That space in The Ward Center for Contemporary Art is now the center of the beautiful new configuration of studios. 
The day we first visited, dust was flying as dry walls were hammered in place. The same old pressed metal ceilings remained overhead, and I wondered if the new paint would flake from them as it did almost daily when my studio was there. I loved the space that we painted white with black walls in the back. I chose a glass door that gave a more open look to the display. The new studios located in the area now have glass doors and a look that makes them special.
Mary Montague Sikes' Basement Studio at PRAC

Performance at PRAC during a Friday for the Arts Open House in about 2010

 
Grand Gallery at The Ward Center for Contemporary Art on Opening Night 2015
Over the years, I discovered that visitors seldom made their way down to the basement. Now new signage and offices in the front of the big open main gallery should encourage traffic flow to the lower level in the Ward Center.

For many years, the Butterworth building, constructed in 1848 or possibly a little later in the 1800s, was home to a large furniture business. Furniture and other remnants from the former store remained long after the building reopened as PRAC in 2003. 


The original wooden floor now has been beautifully refinished as part of the renovation of the large Grand Gallery space. New lights hang from the ceiling and more studio spaces flank the back of the first floor. In all, there will be 57 artist studios. Above it all, the Butterworth Flats provide one and two-bedroom modern living spaces. 

It's an exciting time for Old Towne Petersburg. Although I sometimes still hear the sounds of soldiers marching in the streets and still sense the sadness that long loomed over the town, I believe there is hope with the fulfillment of creativity in the air. I believe that art can bring new joy to the city.