Georgia’s Own Treasure:
Folk Artists
I once heard about a factory worker who
retired after 30 years of service. On his first day of
his retirement, he started a garden in his backyard.
With the first strike of the hoe to the soil, he hit a
rock. As he went to remove the rock from the garden, he
noticed that it was shiny. Brushing away the dirt, he
had just discovered the single largest nugget of gold in
North Georgia’s history. He was an instant millionaire.
And of course, the moral of this story is he had
actually been rich his entire life. All he ever needed
to do was scratch the surface in his own backyard. In
1992, as a traveling sales rep. I found my treasure in
Georgia’s backyard.
About 11 years ago, I was traveling the
back roads of the South selling books when I decided to
stop in an old soda shop in the small town of Cleveland,
Georgia. It was the kind of soda shop that still sold
coke floats in dixie paper cups and packs of cinnamon
toothpicks. Every summer during my high school and
college days, I had worked at a summer camp, not more
than a rock throw from this very soda shop. In fact, on
days off, I occasionally visited this very same soda
shop. But it was on this particular visit, that I
noticed, for the first time, the face jugs starring back
at me from the soda shop counter. At first glance, I
thought these were the ugliest things I had ever seen.
But the more I looked, the more I grew to love them.
Although I had many more accounts to visit that day, I
couldn’t help but take the time to speak to the owner
about these unusual faces I had come across. He told me
quite simply, that these ugly jugs were made by a local
man, Lanier Meaders, and that he lived right down the
road. My accounts would have to wait. I was off on an
adventure to find this potter.
After a five minute ride, I was at Lanier Meaders’
house. I knocked on the door and Betty Jean, Lanier’s
wife, answered and let me in. Lanier was sitting back in
his lazyboy chair. I was 27 and Lanier had already
retired from potting five years earlier. He had just
started his second treatment of chemotherapy for cancer.
Although it looked to me that he was in great pain, he
still took the time to speak with me. We talked for
about 20-30 minutes, until Lanier dozed off from the
medication he was taking. Betty Jean walked me out. I
thanked her for letting me come by and letting me visit
with Lanier. It was at that point, that I realized that
I had spent so many hours looking for the great southern
culture, including all the best BBQ places, Blue Grass
Barns, Biscuits and Gravy, Swimming Holes, Home Cooking,
hiking trails. And all this time, what I was really
looking for, was right here in my summer backyard.
Lanier Meaders’ pottery captured the
visual culture I had been searching for. It was this
taste of the the real American South which drove me
towards an insatiable desire to find more of this
overlooked Southern Culture. After my visit with Lanier,
I truly understood that this was a dying culture. I knew
that I now wanted to learn, visit and inhale as much of
this culture as I could, before it was too late.
In the years since my first visit with
Lanier, I have learned much about the world of folk art
and visited with many incredible and colorful artists. I
would like to take this opportunity to share with you
some of Georgia’s greatest treasures and introduce you
to some Southern culture.
The nations’ most famous and interesting folk artist,
was Georgia’s own, the late Rev. Howard Finster of
Summerville. A major attraction for visitors is Howard’s
personal creation, Paradise Garden. In this
environmental masterpiece, Howard took refuse of all
shapes and sizes, from old coke bottles, to small
appliances, to kitchen utensils and made a land of
beauty and intrigue. At age 83, Howard is still
meticulously painting, and loves to tell people about
his visions and how the Lord instructed him to make
sacred art.
Another must-see environment was created
by Eddie Owens Martin, otherwise known as St. EOM. St.
EOM was a self-proclaimed mystic and psychic, a
fortune-teller, as well as, an artist. The area
surrounding his farm is highly decorated structures made
from cement, punched tin, and wood, decorated with
brightly colored painted walls, sculpted shapes, male
and female figures, faces and snakes and odd geometric
patterns. Although St. EOM passed away in 1986, his
Marion County environment is still standing and I
personally guarantee this one trip you won’t want to
miss.
One of the richest resources of Georgia
is the African-American self-taught artist. My personal
favorite, is the work of J.B. Murry, the only folk
artist known to create solely in the abstract. His
abstract figures represent the human spirit. Murry was
an illiterate share cropper who never learned to read or
write. But this did not stop him from inventing his own
written language which looks much like scribbles and is
referred to as automatic writing. To read his own
writing, Murry would gaze at the lines through a bottle
of holy well water. If you were unable to read the
writing, Murry claimed that you were not "saved" because
the words came directly from God.
Ulysses Davis was another of Georgia’s
treasures. He was quite possibly, the nation’s best
self-taught woodcarver. Davis was a Savannah Barber who
carved free standing wood sculptures, presidential
portraits, crucifixes and other biblical creatures and
characters. Even the door frame to his barbershop was
intricately carved with roses and his shop was filled
with his wooden creations. Davis once said that a
gentlemen from Atlanta offered him "a lot of money" for
all his carvings in his shop. He replied, "I am a man of
very little money, but if I were to sell you all of my
carvings, then I would be a poor man." His carvings
remained in his shop until his death, at which point,
the entire collection was moved to a local Savannah
museum.
Other very important African-American
folk artists from Georgia include; the recently deceased
Leroy Almon, Sr. from Tallapoosa, who’s intricate and
colorful wood-relief carvings often depict the evil
temptations of modern society, Moultrie’s O.L. Samuels,
who’s personality is as colorful as the fantasy
creatures he creates, Atlanta native, Archie Byron, who
produces beautiful and powerful works from sawdust and
glue, Bessie Harvey and Ralph Griffin, both from rural
Georgia, who produced unusual root sculptures, and
Lorenzo Scott and Nellie Mae Rowe, two of Atlanta’s best
known and popular folk artists.
Another form of folk art that is also very popular is
memory painting. These artists paint primitive scenes of
a more innocent time, often remembered from childhood,
in meticulous detail. Mattie Lou O’Kelley, from Decatur,
is often referred to as "The Grandma Moses of the
South." Her intricate, yet naive, paintings are a vivid
and colorful glimpse of the rural life she remembered.
Sadly, Mattie Lou recently passed away. Many of her
works can now be found in The High Museum’s permanent
collection.
Many wonderful memory painters such as,
Mary Greene, Linda Anderson, and Annie Wellborn (North
Georgia area), Wesley Carter (Alma) are still living and
producing a living history of yesteryear; a time many of
us never had the pleasure of knowing.
In your quest to discover to Georgia’s
hidden treasures, you won’t want to miss visiting R.A.
Miller’s whirligig garden (Rabbit Town), and the next
generation of folk potters, Michael Crocker (Lula).
There are so many more folk artists in Georgia that are
worth visiting and learning from. I would suggest that
your first stop be your local library or bookstore to
search for The Museum of American Folk Art Encyclopedia
of Twentieth Century Folk Art and Artists by Chuck and
Jan Rosenak. Next, you should visit local galleries such
as Knoke Galleries of Atlanta on Roswell Rd., Modern
Primitive Gallery in Virginia Highlands and Main Street
Gallery in Clayton. Finally, get a map and hit the road.
With the urbanization and homogenizing
of the South, I am afraid to say that we may be seeing
the last generation of true folk artists. In less than a
year’s time, we have lost such Georgia Greats as Mattie
Lou O’Kelley, Leroy Almon, and the man who started me on
this whole journey, from one face jug in a soda shop in
North Georgia, Lanier Meaders. There is a sense of
urgency to collect and protect these homegrown
treasures. I encourage everyone to be my guest at this
year’s Folk Fest 2004, the largest gathering of folk and
self-taught art and artists from around the country
(August 20-22, at the North Atlanta Trade Center). For
more information about Folk Art and Folk Art events,
feel free to contact me personally.
Steve Slotin
Producer of Folk Fest and Slotin Folk Art Auctions
Source:
http://www.slotinfolkart.com/folk_art/article1.html