Fabulous Fakes Art Auction
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[post_content] => For only four days, Art League of Hilton Head will host a much-loved and anticipated alternate artistic reality—one in which Monet’s famous water lilies host amphibian residents, a Van Gogh countryside features a very modern putting green, and Whistler’s Mother enjoys a cocktail.
Fabulous Fakes is a four-day exhibit that takes inspiration from the old masters. Some artworks are replicas of famous paintings with an often humorous or whimsical twist; others are inspired by the techniques of the masters but have an entirely different subject matter, medium, or color palette.
“This exhibit is a chance to have some fun,” says Kristen McIntosh, General Manager. “Artists don’t always have to take their work so seriously, although it is a challenge to duplicate the works of some of the masters. The skill required to create some of these replicas is astonishing.”
All artworks are for sale via a silent auction that can be viewed both in-person and online. A reception to announce the silent auction winners will take place on the last day of the exhibit.
Fabulous Fakes will be held June 28-July 1, 10am-4pm, at Art League Gallery. The silent auction will end at 6pm on July 1. A reception will be held Friday, July 1, 5-7pm, where the auction winners will be announced. The show and reception are free and open to the public.
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Beginning July 01 @ 10:00 am
For only four days, Art League of Hilton Head will host a much-loved and anticipated alternate artistic reality—one in which Monet’s famous water lilies host amphibian residents, a Van Gogh countryside features a very modern putting green, and Whistler’s Mother enjoys a cocktail.
Fabulous Fakes is a four-day exhibit that takes inspiration from the old masters. Some artworks are replicas of famous paintings with an often humorous or whimsical twist; others are inspired by the techniques of the masters but have an entirely different subject matter, medium, or color palette.
“This exhibit is a chance to have some fun,” says Kristen McIntosh, General Manager. “Artists don’t always have to take their work so seriously, although it is a challenge to duplicate the works of some of the masters. The skill required to create some of these replicas is astonishing.”
All artworks are for sale via a silent auction that can be viewed both in-person and online. A reception to announce the silent auction winners will take place on the last day of the exhibit.
Fabulous Fakes will be held June 28-July 1, 10am-4pm, at Art League Gallery. The silent auction will end at 6pm on July 1. A reception will be held Friday, July 1, 5-7pm, where the auction winners will be announced. The show and reception are free and open to the public.
Find Out More
Fabulous Fakes Art Auction Reception
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[post_content] => For only four days, Art League of Hilton Head will host a much-loved and anticipated alternate artistic reality—one in which Monet’s famous water lilies host amphibian residents, a Van Gogh countryside features a very modern putting green, and Whistler’s Mother enjoys a cocktail.
Fabulous Fakes is a four-day exhibit that takes inspiration from the old masters. Some artworks are replicas of famous paintings with an often humorous or whimsical twist; others are inspired by the techniques of the masters but have an entirely different subject matter, medium, or color palette.
“This exhibit is a chance to have some fun,” says Kristen McIntosh, General Manager. “Artists don’t always have to take their work so seriously, although it is a challenge to duplicate the works of some of the masters. The skill required to create some of these replicas is astonishing.”
All artworks are for sale via a silent auction that can be viewed both in-person and online. A reception to announce the silent auction winners will take place on the last day of the exhibit.
Fabulous Fakes will be held June 28-July 1, 10am-4pm, at Art League Gallery. The silent auction will end at 6pm on July 1. A reception will be held Friday, July 1, 5-7pm, where the auction winners will be announced. The show and reception are free and open to the public.
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Beginning July 01 @ 05:00 pm
For only four days, Art League of Hilton Head will host a much-loved and anticipated alternate artistic reality—one in which Monet’s famous water lilies host amphibian residents, a Van Gogh countryside features a very modern putting green, and Whistler’s Mother enjoys a cocktail.
Fabulous Fakes is a four-day exhibit that takes inspiration from the old masters. Some artworks are replicas of famous paintings with an often humorous or whimsical twist; others are inspired by the techniques of the masters but have an entirely different subject matter, medium, or color palette.
“This exhibit is a chance to have some fun,” says Kristen McIntosh, General Manager. “Artists don’t always have to take their work so seriously, although it is a challenge to duplicate the works of some of the masters. The skill required to create some of these replicas is astonishing.”
All artworks are for sale via a silent auction that can be viewed both in-person and online. A reception to announce the silent auction winners will take place on the last day of the exhibit.
Fabulous Fakes will be held June 28-July 1, 10am-4pm, at Art League Gallery. The silent auction will end at 6pm on July 1. A reception will be held Friday, July 1, 5-7pm, where the auction winners will be announced. The show and reception are free and open to the public.
Find Out More
How We Git Gullah by Saundra Renee Smith
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How We Git Gullah opens July 6 at Art League Gallery
Saundra Renee Smith, local Gullah artist, captures the essence of being an authentic Gullah/Geechee native of the Lowcountry in How We Git Gullah, an exhibit at Art League this July.
Smith's work is nostalgic, showing simplistic and innocent scenes of a symbiotic existence with the earth, guided by the wisdom of the ancients. Inspired by the beauty of her native St. Helena, Smith's paintings feature lush, green fields, moss-covered oaks, and rivers "carrying food, health, and Gullah folk tales on every tide." She uses colorful acrylic paints and mixed media on all manner of materials, including canvas, board, glass, vinyl and tin.
Gullah means "kinfolk." How We Git Gullah is a tribute to the notion of a cultural family with a homeland ranging down the East Coast from North Carolina to Florida in a swath known as the Gullah/Geechee Cultural Corridor. The exhibit will have short stories of Gullah life interspersed among the artworks. "My aim is to foster communication, connections, and a sense of cultural humility," says Smith.
How We Git Gullah will be on exhibit July 6-August 13, 2022 at Art League of Hilton Head. An opening reception, free and open to the public, will be held Wednesday, July 6, 5-7pm.
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Beginning July 06 @ 10:00 am
Teaching the Meaning of Family
How We Git Gullah opens July 6 at Art League Gallery
Saundra Renee Smith, local Gullah artist, captures the essence of being an authentic Gullah/Geechee native of the Lowcountry in How We Git Gullah, an exhibit at Art League this July.
Smith's work is nostalgic, showing simplistic and innocent scenes of a symbiotic existence with the earth, guided by the wisdom of the ancients. Inspired by the beauty of her native St. Helena, Smith's paintings feature lush, green fields, moss-covered oaks, and rivers "carrying food, health, and Gullah folk tales on every tide." She uses colorful acrylic paints and mixed media on all manner of materials, including canvas, board, glass, vinyl and tin.
Gullah means "kinfolk." How We Git Gullah is a tribute to the notion of a cultural family with a homeland ranging down the East Coast from North Carolina to Florida in a swath known as the Gullah/Geechee Cultural Corridor. The exhibit will have short stories of Gullah life interspersed among the artworks. "My aim is to foster communication, connections, and a sense of cultural humility," says Smith.
How We Git Gullah will be on exhibit July 6-August 13, 2022 at Art League of Hilton Head. An opening reception, free and open to the public, will be held Wednesday, July 6, 5-7pm.
Find Out More
How We Git Gullah by Saundra Renee Smith Reception
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How We Git Gullah opens July 6 at Art League Gallery
Saundra Renee Smith, local Gullah artist, captures the essence of being an authentic Gullah/Geechee native of the Lowcountry in How We Git Gullah, an exhibit at Art League this July.
Smith's work is nostalgic, showing simplistic and innocent scenes of a symbiotic existence with the earth, guided by the wisdom of the ancients. Inspired by the beauty of her native St. Helena, Smith's paintings feature lush, green fields, moss-covered oaks, and rivers "carrying food, health, and Gullah folk tales on every tide." She uses colorful acrylic paints and mixed media on all manner of materials, including canvas, board, glass, vinyl and tin.
Gullah means "kinfolk." How We Git Gullah is a tribute to the notion of a cultural family with a homeland ranging down the East Coast from North Carolina to Florida in a swath known as the Gullah/Geechee Cultural Corridor. The exhibit will have short stories of Gullah life interspersed among the artworks. "My aim is to foster communication, connections, and a sense of cultural humility," says Smith.
How We Git Gullah will be on exhibit July 6-August 13, 2022 at Art League of Hilton Head. An opening reception, free and open to the public, will be held Wednesday, July 6, 5-7pm.
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Beginning July 06 @ 05:00 pm
Teaching the Meaning of Family
How We Git Gullah opens July 6 at Art League Gallery
Saundra Renee Smith, local Gullah artist, captures the essence of being an authentic Gullah/Geechee native of the Lowcountry in How We Git Gullah, an exhibit at Art League this July.
Smith's work is nostalgic, showing simplistic and innocent scenes of a symbiotic existence with the earth, guided by the wisdom of the ancients. Inspired by the beauty of her native St. Helena, Smith's paintings feature lush, green fields, moss-covered oaks, and rivers "carrying food, health, and Gullah folk tales on every tide." She uses colorful acrylic paints and mixed media on all manner of materials, including canvas, board, glass, vinyl and tin.
Gullah means "kinfolk." How We Git Gullah is a tribute to the notion of a cultural family with a homeland ranging down the East Coast from North Carolina to Florida in a swath known as the Gullah/Geechee Cultural Corridor. The exhibit will have short stories of Gullah life interspersed among the artworks. "My aim is to foster communication, connections, and a sense of cultural humility," says Smith.
How We Git Gullah will be on exhibit July 6-August 13, 2022 at Art League of Hilton Head. An opening reception, free and open to the public, will be held Wednesday, July 6, 5-7pm.
Find Out More
How We Git Gullah by Saundra Renee Smith
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How We Git Gullah opens July 6 at Art League Gallery
Saundra Renee Smith, local Gullah artist, captures the essence of being an authentic Gullah/Geechee native of the Lowcountry in How We Git Gullah, an exhibit at Art League this July.
Smith's work is nostalgic, showing simplistic and innocent scenes of a symbiotic existence with the earth, guided by the wisdom of the ancients. Inspired by the beauty of her native St. Helena, Smith's paintings feature lush, green fields, moss-covered oaks, and rivers "carrying food, health, and Gullah folk tales on every tide." She uses colorful acrylic paints and mixed media on all manner of materials, including canvas, board, glass, vinyl and tin.
Gullah means "kinfolk." How We Git Gullah is a tribute to the notion of a cultural family with a homeland ranging down the East Coast from North Carolina to Florida in a swath known as the Gullah/Geechee Cultural Corridor. The exhibit will have short stories of Gullah life interspersed among the artworks. "My aim is to foster communication, connections, and a sense of cultural humility," says Smith.
How We Git Gullah will be on exhibit July 6-August 13, 2022 at Art League of Hilton Head. An opening reception, free and open to the public, will be held Wednesday, July 6, 5-7pm.
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Beginning July 07 @ 10:00 am
Teaching the Meaning of Family
How We Git Gullah opens July 6 at Art League Gallery
Saundra Renee Smith, local Gullah artist, captures the essence of being an authentic Gullah/Geechee native of the Lowcountry in How We Git Gullah, an exhibit at Art League this July.
Smith's work is nostalgic, showing simplistic and innocent scenes of a symbiotic existence with the earth, guided by the wisdom of the ancients. Inspired by the beauty of her native St. Helena, Smith's paintings feature lush, green fields, moss-covered oaks, and rivers "carrying food, health, and Gullah folk tales on every tide." She uses colorful acrylic paints and mixed media on all manner of materials, including canvas, board, glass, vinyl and tin.
Gullah means "kinfolk." How We Git Gullah is a tribute to the notion of a cultural family with a homeland ranging down the East Coast from North Carolina to Florida in a swath known as the Gullah/Geechee Cultural Corridor. The exhibit will have short stories of Gullah life interspersed among the artworks. "My aim is to foster communication, connections, and a sense of cultural humility," says Smith.
How We Git Gullah will be on exhibit July 6-August 13, 2022 at Art League of Hilton Head. An opening reception, free and open to the public, will be held Wednesday, July 6, 5-7pm.
Find Out More
How We Git Gullah by Saundra Renee Smith
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How We Git Gullah opens July 6 at Art League Gallery
Saundra Renee Smith, local Gullah artist, captures the essence of being an authentic Gullah/Geechee native of the Lowcountry in How We Git Gullah, an exhibit at Art League this July.
Smith's work is nostalgic, showing simplistic and innocent scenes of a symbiotic existence with the earth, guided by the wisdom of the ancients. Inspired by the beauty of her native St. Helena, Smith's paintings feature lush, green fields, moss-covered oaks, and rivers "carrying food, health, and Gullah folk tales on every tide." She uses colorful acrylic paints and mixed media on all manner of materials, including canvas, board, glass, vinyl and tin.
Gullah means "kinfolk." How We Git Gullah is a tribute to the notion of a cultural family with a homeland ranging down the East Coast from North Carolina to Florida in a swath known as the Gullah/Geechee Cultural Corridor. The exhibit will have short stories of Gullah life interspersed among the artworks. "My aim is to foster communication, connections, and a sense of cultural humility," says Smith.
How We Git Gullah will be on exhibit July 6-August 13, 2022 at Art League of Hilton Head. An opening reception, free and open to the public, will be held Wednesday, July 6, 5-7pm.
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Beginning July 08 @ 10:00 am
Teaching the Meaning of Family
How We Git Gullah opens July 6 at Art League Gallery
Saundra Renee Smith, local Gullah artist, captures the essence of being an authentic Gullah/Geechee native of the Lowcountry in How We Git Gullah, an exhibit at Art League this July.
Smith's work is nostalgic, showing simplistic and innocent scenes of a symbiotic existence with the earth, guided by the wisdom of the ancients. Inspired by the beauty of her native St. Helena, Smith's paintings feature lush, green fields, moss-covered oaks, and rivers "carrying food, health, and Gullah folk tales on every tide." She uses colorful acrylic paints and mixed media on all manner of materials, including canvas, board, glass, vinyl and tin.
Gullah means "kinfolk." How We Git Gullah is a tribute to the notion of a cultural family with a homeland ranging down the East Coast from North Carolina to Florida in a swath known as the Gullah/Geechee Cultural Corridor. The exhibit will have short stories of Gullah life interspersed among the artworks. "My aim is to foster communication, connections, and a sense of cultural humility," says Smith.
How We Git Gullah will be on exhibit July 6-August 13, 2022 at Art League of Hilton Head. An opening reception, free and open to the public, will be held Wednesday, July 6, 5-7pm.
Find Out More
How We Git Gullah by Saundra Renee Smith
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How We Git Gullah opens July 6 at Art League Gallery
Saundra Renee Smith, local Gullah artist, captures the essence of being an authentic Gullah/Geechee native of the Lowcountry in How We Git Gullah, an exhibit at Art League this July.
Smith's work is nostalgic, showing simplistic and innocent scenes of a symbiotic existence with the earth, guided by the wisdom of the ancients. Inspired by the beauty of her native St. Helena, Smith's paintings feature lush, green fields, moss-covered oaks, and rivers "carrying food, health, and Gullah folk tales on every tide." She uses colorful acrylic paints and mixed media on all manner of materials, including canvas, board, glass, vinyl and tin.
Gullah means "kinfolk." How We Git Gullah is a tribute to the notion of a cultural family with a homeland ranging down the East Coast from North Carolina to Florida in a swath known as the Gullah/Geechee Cultural Corridor. The exhibit will have short stories of Gullah life interspersed among the artworks. "My aim is to foster communication, connections, and a sense of cultural humility," says Smith.
How We Git Gullah will be on exhibit July 6-August 13, 2022 at Art League of Hilton Head. An opening reception, free and open to the public, will be held Wednesday, July 6, 5-7pm.
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Beginning July 09 @ 10:00 am
Teaching the Meaning of Family
How We Git Gullah opens July 6 at Art League Gallery
Saundra Renee Smith, local Gullah artist, captures the essence of being an authentic Gullah/Geechee native of the Lowcountry in How We Git Gullah, an exhibit at Art League this July.
Smith's work is nostalgic, showing simplistic and innocent scenes of a symbiotic existence with the earth, guided by the wisdom of the ancients. Inspired by the beauty of her native St. Helena, Smith's paintings feature lush, green fields, moss-covered oaks, and rivers "carrying food, health, and Gullah folk tales on every tide." She uses colorful acrylic paints and mixed media on all manner of materials, including canvas, board, glass, vinyl and tin.
Gullah means "kinfolk." How We Git Gullah is a tribute to the notion of a cultural family with a homeland ranging down the East Coast from North Carolina to Florida in a swath known as the Gullah/Geechee Cultural Corridor. The exhibit will have short stories of Gullah life interspersed among the artworks. "My aim is to foster communication, connections, and a sense of cultural humility," says Smith.
How We Git Gullah will be on exhibit July 6-August 13, 2022 at Art League of Hilton Head. An opening reception, free and open to the public, will be held Wednesday, July 6, 5-7pm.
Find Out More
How We Git Gullah by Saundra Renee Smith
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How We Git Gullah opens July 6 at Art League Gallery
Saundra Renee Smith, local Gullah artist, captures the essence of being an authentic Gullah/Geechee native of the Lowcountry in How We Git Gullah, an exhibit at Art League this July.
Smith's work is nostalgic, showing simplistic and innocent scenes of a symbiotic existence with the earth, guided by the wisdom of the ancients. Inspired by the beauty of her native St. Helena, Smith's paintings feature lush, green fields, moss-covered oaks, and rivers "carrying food, health, and Gullah folk tales on every tide." She uses colorful acrylic paints and mixed media on all manner of materials, including canvas, board, glass, vinyl and tin.
Gullah means "kinfolk." How We Git Gullah is a tribute to the notion of a cultural family with a homeland ranging down the East Coast from North Carolina to Florida in a swath known as the Gullah/Geechee Cultural Corridor. The exhibit will have short stories of Gullah life interspersed among the artworks. "My aim is to foster communication, connections, and a sense of cultural humility," says Smith.
How We Git Gullah will be on exhibit July 6-August 13, 2022 at Art League of Hilton Head. An opening reception, free and open to the public, will be held Wednesday, July 6, 5-7pm.
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Beginning July 10 @ 12:00 pm
Teaching the Meaning of Family
How We Git Gullah opens July 6 at Art League Gallery
Saundra Renee Smith, local Gullah artist, captures the essence of being an authentic Gullah/Geechee native of the Lowcountry in How We Git Gullah, an exhibit at Art League this July.
Smith's work is nostalgic, showing simplistic and innocent scenes of a symbiotic existence with the earth, guided by the wisdom of the ancients. Inspired by the beauty of her native St. Helena, Smith's paintings feature lush, green fields, moss-covered oaks, and rivers "carrying food, health, and Gullah folk tales on every tide." She uses colorful acrylic paints and mixed media on all manner of materials, including canvas, board, glass, vinyl and tin.
Gullah means "kinfolk." How We Git Gullah is a tribute to the notion of a cultural family with a homeland ranging down the East Coast from North Carolina to Florida in a swath known as the Gullah/Geechee Cultural Corridor. The exhibit will have short stories of Gullah life interspersed among the artworks. "My aim is to foster communication, connections, and a sense of cultural humility," says Smith.
How We Git Gullah will be on exhibit July 6-August 13, 2022 at Art League of Hilton Head. An opening reception, free and open to the public, will be held Wednesday, July 6, 5-7pm.
Find Out More
How We Git Gullah by Saundra Renee Smith
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[post_content] => Teaching the Meaning of Family
How We Git Gullah opens July 6 at Art League Gallery
Saundra Renee Smith, local Gullah artist, captures the essence of being an authentic Gullah/Geechee native of the Lowcountry in How We Git Gullah, an exhibit at Art League this July.
Smith's work is nostalgic, showing simplistic and innocent scenes of a symbiotic existence with the earth, guided by the wisdom of the ancients. Inspired by the beauty of her native St. Helena, Smith's paintings feature lush, green fields, moss-covered oaks, and rivers "carrying food, health, and Gullah folk tales on every tide." She uses colorful acrylic paints and mixed media on all manner of materials, including canvas, board, glass, vinyl and tin.
Gullah means "kinfolk." How We Git Gullah is a tribute to the notion of a cultural family with a homeland ranging down the East Coast from North Carolina to Florida in a swath known as the Gullah/Geechee Cultural Corridor. The exhibit will have short stories of Gullah life interspersed among the artworks. "My aim is to foster communication, connections, and a sense of cultural humility," says Smith.
How We Git Gullah will be on exhibit July 6-August 13, 2022 at Art League of Hilton Head. An opening reception, free and open to the public, will be held Wednesday, July 6, 5-7pm.
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Beginning July 11 @ 10:00 am
Teaching the Meaning of Family
How We Git Gullah opens July 6 at Art League Gallery
Saundra Renee Smith, local Gullah artist, captures the essence of being an authentic Gullah/Geechee native of the Lowcountry in How We Git Gullah, an exhibit at Art League this July.
Smith's work is nostalgic, showing simplistic and innocent scenes of a symbiotic existence with the earth, guided by the wisdom of the ancients. Inspired by the beauty of her native St. Helena, Smith's paintings feature lush, green fields, moss-covered oaks, and rivers "carrying food, health, and Gullah folk tales on every tide." She uses colorful acrylic paints and mixed media on all manner of materials, including canvas, board, glass, vinyl and tin.
Gullah means "kinfolk." How We Git Gullah is a tribute to the notion of a cultural family with a homeland ranging down the East Coast from North Carolina to Florida in a swath known as the Gullah/Geechee Cultural Corridor. The exhibit will have short stories of Gullah life interspersed among the artworks. "My aim is to foster communication, connections, and a sense of cultural humility," says Smith.
How We Git Gullah will be on exhibit July 6-August 13, 2022 at Art League of Hilton Head. An opening reception, free and open to the public, will be held Wednesday, July 6, 5-7pm.
Find Out More
How We Git Gullah by Saundra Renee Smith
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How We Git Gullah opens July 6 at Art League Gallery
Saundra Renee Smith, local Gullah artist, captures the essence of being an authentic Gullah/Geechee native of the Lowcountry in How We Git Gullah, an exhibit at Art League this July.
Smith's work is nostalgic, showing simplistic and innocent scenes of a symbiotic existence with the earth, guided by the wisdom of the ancients. Inspired by the beauty of her native St. Helena, Smith's paintings feature lush, green fields, moss-covered oaks, and rivers "carrying food, health, and Gullah folk tales on every tide." She uses colorful acrylic paints and mixed media on all manner of materials, including canvas, board, glass, vinyl and tin.
Gullah means "kinfolk." How We Git Gullah is a tribute to the notion of a cultural family with a homeland ranging down the East Coast from North Carolina to Florida in a swath known as the Gullah/Geechee Cultural Corridor. The exhibit will have short stories of Gullah life interspersed among the artworks. "My aim is to foster communication, connections, and a sense of cultural humility," says Smith.
How We Git Gullah will be on exhibit July 6-August 13, 2022 at Art League of Hilton Head. An opening reception, free and open to the public, will be held Wednesday, July 6, 5-7pm.
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Beginning July 12 @ 10:00 am
Teaching the Meaning of Family
How We Git Gullah opens July 6 at Art League Gallery
Saundra Renee Smith, local Gullah artist, captures the essence of being an authentic Gullah/Geechee native of the Lowcountry in How We Git Gullah, an exhibit at Art League this July.
Smith's work is nostalgic, showing simplistic and innocent scenes of a symbiotic existence with the earth, guided by the wisdom of the ancients. Inspired by the beauty of her native St. Helena, Smith's paintings feature lush, green fields, moss-covered oaks, and rivers "carrying food, health, and Gullah folk tales on every tide." She uses colorful acrylic paints and mixed media on all manner of materials, including canvas, board, glass, vinyl and tin.
Gullah means "kinfolk." How We Git Gullah is a tribute to the notion of a cultural family with a homeland ranging down the East Coast from North Carolina to Florida in a swath known as the Gullah/Geechee Cultural Corridor. The exhibit will have short stories of Gullah life interspersed among the artworks. "My aim is to foster communication, connections, and a sense of cultural humility," says Smith.
How We Git Gullah will be on exhibit July 6-August 13, 2022 at Art League of Hilton Head. An opening reception, free and open to the public, will be held Wednesday, July 6, 5-7pm.
Find Out More