Monday, December 5, 2011

BOOK SIGNING Message From Home: The Art of Leo Twiggs





LEO TWIGGS
Book Signing

Wednesday, December 14, 2011
7:00 – 9:00 pm
@
if ART Gallery
1223 Lincoln Street
Columbia, SC 29205

for the recently published book

Messages From Home:
The Art of Leo Twiggs

320 pages; 160 color images; essays by Leo Twiggs, William Eiland, Frank Martin & Wim Roefs
Orangeburg, S.C.; Claflin University Press, 2011

Regular Price: $75
Special Book Signing Price: $65
+ 7% sales tax

To reserve copy/copies, please contact Wim Roefs
@ if ART Gallery, wroefs@sc.rr.com / (803) 238-2351


            At its location at 1223 Lincoln Street, Columbia, SC, if ART Gallery presents and book signing with batik artist Leo Twiggs for Messages From Home: The Art of Leo Twiggs, which was published recently by Claflin University Press in Orangeburg, S.C. The signing will take place on Wednesday, December 14, 7:00 – 9:00 p.m. The book will be for sale during the book signing for a discounted price of $65; the regular price is $75.
            The 230-page book contains 160 color plates of Twiggs' work of the past 45 years and essays by Twiggs, Georgia Museum of Art director William Eiland, South Carolina State University art historian Frank Martin and if ART Gallery owner Wim Roefs.
            In nine short essays, Orangeburg resident Twiggs discusses several series of his work and the personal experiences that were the impetus for the series. Eiland wrote the book’s foreword while Martin contributed an analysis of Twiggs’s work titled “The Art of Leo Twiggs as a Metaphor of Lived Experience.” Roefs essay, “Leo Twiggs: Batik Artist,” provides an overview of Twiggs’ career and working methods as well as a discussion of his work.
            Twiggs is one of the most prominent artists, art educators and art administrators in South Carolina of the past four decades. He is widely regarded as the foremost pioneer in the United States in developing batik as a modern art form. Twiggs was born in 1934 in St. Stephen, S.C.  He received his BA from Claflin University, studying with Arthur Rose. He studied at the Art Institute of Chicago and earned his MA from New York University, where he studied with the legendary African-American artist Hale Woodruff. Twiggs was the first African American to receive the doctorate in art education from the University of Georgia and the first visual artist to receive Elizabeth O’Neill Verner Award, South Carolina’s Governor’s Award for the Arts.
            Twiggs’ paintings are done in a unique batik process that he developed through an innovative manipulation of the traditional technique. He has won international recognition and numerous awards. Several works have been selected for U.S. Embassies in Rome, Sierra Leone and Senegal, among other places.  He has had some 70 solo exhibitions and has exhibited at the Studio Museum in New York and in shows at the American Crafts Museum, the Mint Museum in Charlotte and the Herbert F. Johnson Museum at Cornell University in Ithaca, NY. Twiggs work is in museum collections throughout the United States.

            In 2001, Twiggs was selected to design an ornament for the White House Christmas tree. In 2004, the Georgia Museum of Art organized a major retrospective of his work, which toured the southeast, including a stop at the S.C. State Museum in Columbia. A Claflin Homecoming, The Art of Leo Twiggs was organized by the Rose Museum at Claflin University in 2007.
            Twiggs’ most recent solo exhibition, his largest to date, is Civil/Uncivil: The Art of Leo Twiggs at Charleston’s City Gallery at Waterfront Park. The April – May 2011 exhibition, curated by if ART’s Roefs, addressed the legacy of the Civil War and Civil Rights in the U.S. South. The exhibition was organized by the City of Charleston in commemoration of the 150th anniversary of the beginning of the Civil War.
            Twiggs is Professor Emeritus at S.C. State University, where he was chair of the art department and director of the Stanback Museum.  He is Distinguished Artist-in Residence at Claflin University.


To see work from the book available at if ART Gallery, CLICK HERE

Monday, February 2, 2009

Leo Twiggs: Targeted Man Essay



(click on image to enlarge)

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Laura Spong: Still Screaming & Leo Twiggs: Targeted Man, February 5-17, 2009

if ART Gallery
presents at

GALLERY 80808/VISTA STUDIOS
808 Lady St., Columbia, SC

LAURA SPONG: Still Screaming
&
LEO TWIGGS: Targeted Man

Reception: Friday, February 6, 5 – 9 p.m.
Opening Hours:
Weekdays, 11 a.m. – 7 p.m.
Saturday, 11 a.m. – 5 p.m.
Sunday, 1 – 5 p.m.
& by appointment

For more information, contact Wim Roefs at if ART:
(803) 255-0068/ (803) 238-2351 – if-art-gallery@sc.twcbc.com

For its February 2009 exhibition, if ART presents Gallery 80808/Vista Studios in Columbia, S.C., two solo exhibitions by some of South Carolina most prominent veteran artists, Columbia’s Laura Spong and Orangeburg’s Leo Twiggs.

Both artists will present new work. Spong will show her trademark Abstract Expressionist oil paintings. Twiggs will exhibit a new series of batik paintings around the theme of “targeted man,” featuring figures adorned with a bull’s eye or target.

Laura Spong (b. 1926) is among South Carolina’s most prominent non-objective painters. In the past three years, Spong has further increased her reputation with several solo exhibitions, including a retrospective at the University of South Carolina’s McMaster Gallery. For her 2006 exhibition, Laura Spong at 80, Columbia’s if ART published a 32-page catalogue. In addition to the S.C. State Art Collection, Spong’s work was purchased recently by the Greenville (S.C.) County Museum of Art and the S.C. State Museum. Three of her paintings also are in the Contemporary Carolina Collection, which was established in 2008 at the Medical University of South Carolina’s Ashley River Tower in Charleston. Spong maintains a studio at Vista Studios in Columbia.

Leo Twiggs (b. 1934) is a native of St. Stephen, S.C., who lives in Orangeburg, S.C., where he taught art at South Carolina State University from 1964 until 1998 and established a museum. Twiggs is widely seen as one of the most important South Carolina artists since the 1960s. His career retrospective, Myths and Metaphors: The Art Of Leo Twiggs, organized by the Georgia Museum of Art and accompanied by a catalogue, completed a two-year tour at the South Carolina State Museum in Columbia in April 2006. Twiggs has had dozens of solo exhibitions in museums and galleries in the Southeast and beyond, including the Studio Museum in Harlem. In 1964, he received a graduate degree in art from New York University and in 1970 was the first African American to receive an Ed.D. in art education from the University of Georgia. In 1981, he was the first to receive as an individual South Carolina’s highest art award, the Elizabeth O’Neil Verner Governor’s Award for the Arts.

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Preview of Leo Twiggs: Targeted Man: February 5-17, 2008





Leo Twiggs (American, b. 1934)
Targeted Man—Emerging, 2009
Batik on cotton
13 ½ x 10 ½ in.
$ 5,600













Leo Twiggs (American, b. 1934)
Targeted Man—That One, 2009
Batik on cotton
9 x 8 ½ in.
$ 3,500













Leo Twiggs (American, b. 1934)
Targeted Man—Hooded, 2009
Batik on cotton
15 x 8 in.
$ 5,600














Leo Twiggs (American, b. 1934)
Targeted Man—Standing, 2009
Batik on cotton
13 ½ x 10 ½ in.
$ 5,600













Leo Twiggs (American, b. 1934)
Targeted Man # 1, 2007
Batik on cotton
26 ½ x 26 ½ in.
$ 13,000













Leo Twiggs (American, b. 1934)
Targeted Man # 2, 2007
Batik on cotton
26 ½ x 26 ½ in.
$ 13,000












Leo Twiggs (American, b. 1934)
Targeted Man # 3, 2007
Batik on cotton
26 ½ x 26 ½ in. 
$ 13,000














Leo Twiggs (American, b. 1934)
Targeted Man # 4, 2007
Batik on cotton
26 ½ x 26 ½ in. 
$ 13,000












Leo Twiggs (American, b. 1934)
Targeted Man- Window Image, 2008
Batik on cotton
13 ½ x 10 ½ in. 
$ 5,600













Leo Twiggs (American, b. 1934)
Targeted Man- Window Image Moved, 2008
Batik on cotton
13 ½ x 10 ½ in. 
$ 5,600













Leo Twiggs (American, b. 1934)
Targeted Man- Meeting, 2008
Batik on cotton
11 x 9 ½ in.
$ 4,000












Leo Twiggs (American, b. 1934)
Legacy, 2007
Batik on cotton
16 ½ x 23 ½ in.
$ 8,000










Leo Twiggs (American, b. 1934)
Targeted Man, 2007 
Batik on cotton
51  x 27 in.
$ 18,000













Leo Twiggs (American, b. 1934)
Targeted Man- Black, 2008
Batik on cotton
13 ½ x 10 ½ in. 
$ 5,600













Leo Twiggs (American, b. 1934)
Targeted Man- White, 2008
Batik on cotton
13 ½ x 10 ½ in. 
$ 5,600










Leo Twiggs (American, b. 1934)
Seeking Sanctuary, 2006
Batik on cotton
11 x 18 in. 
$ 6,500







Leo Twiggs (American, b. 1934)
Moving Target Series, 2006
Batik on cotton
6 x 7 ¾ in. 
$ 2,200











Leo Twiggs (American, b. 1934)
Fallen, 2008
Batik on cotton
16 x 9 in. 
$ 5,600












Leo Twiggs (American, b. 1934)
Country Fair, 2008
Batik on cotton
18 ½ x 24 in.
$ 8,500

Sunday, November 30, 2008

if ARTwalk: Salon I & II: December 11- 24, 2008

For exhibition installation images, click here.


THE SALON I & II
Dec. 11 – 24, 2008
an exhibition at two Columbia, SC, locations:
Gallery 80808/Vista Studios
808 Lady Street
&
if ART Gallery
1223 Lincoln Street

Reception and ifART Walk: Thursday, Dec. 11, 5 – 10 p.m.
at and between both locations
Opening Hours:
Weekdays, 11 a.m. – 7 p.m.
Saturday, 11 a.m. – 5 p.m.
Sunday, 1 – 5 p.m.
& by appointment
Open Christmas Eve until 7 p.m.

For more information, contact Wim Roefs at if ART:
(803) 255-0068/ (803) 238-2351 – if-art-gallery@sc.twcbc.com

For its December 2008 exhibition, if ART Gallery presents The Salon I & II, an exhibition at two Columbia, SC, locations: if ART Gallery and Gallery 80808/Vista Studios. On Thursday, December 11, 2008, 5 – 10 p.m., if ART will hold opening receptions at both locations. The ifART Walk will be on Lady and Lincoln Streets, between both locations, which are around the corner from each other.

The exhibitions will present art by if ART Gallery artists, installed salon-style at both Gallery 80808 and if ART. Artists in the exhibitions include two new additions to if ART Gallery, Columbia ceramic artist Renee Rouillier and the prominent African-American collage and mixed-media artist Sam Middleton, an 81-year-old expatriate who has lived in the Netherlands since the early 1960s.

Other artists in the exhibition include Karel Appel, Aaron Baldwin, Jeri Burdick, Carl Blair, Lynn Chadwick, Steven Chapp, Stephen Chesley, Corneille, Jeff Donovan, Jacques Doucet, Phil Garrett, Herbert Gentry, Tonya Gregg, Jerry Harris, Bill Jackson, Sjaak Korsten, Peter Lenzo, Sam Middleton, Eric Miller, Dorothy Netherland, Marcelo Novo, Matt Overend, Anna Redwine, Paul Reed, Edward Rice, Silvia Rudolf, Kees Salentijn, Laura Spong, Tom Stanley, Christine Tedesco, Brown Thornton, Leo Twiggs, Bram van Velde, Katie Walker, Mike Williams, David Yaghjian, Paul Yanko and Don Zurlo.

Monday, September 29, 2008

Works of Art: Leo Twiggs

Works of art by Leo Twiggs are available at if ART Gallery, 1223 Lincoln Street, Columbia, SC.

Contact Wim Roefs at if-art-gallery@sc.twcbc.com or (803) 255-0068/(803) 238-2351.

Leo Twiggs, Targeted Man – That One, 2009, batik on

cotton, 9 x 8.5 in., $3,500/SOLD



Blue Night Crossing, 2012, batik on 

cotton, 10.5 x 8 in., $4,200



Remembering Mother Emanuel: 9, 2017, batik on cotton,

30 x 24 in., $18,500

Flag Crossing, 2016, batik on cotton,
16.5 x 10.5 in., $7,200

Old Flag Crossing, 2016, batik on cotton,

24 x 18 in., $11,000

Crossing With Two Cows, 2014, batik on cotton,
18 x 12 in., $8,500/SOLD
Black Interior, 2012, batik on cotton,
13 /12 x 10 1/4 in., $6,200
Blue Interior, 2012, batik on cotton,
13 1/2 x 10 1/4 in., $6,200


Reclining Fancy Dancer, 2012, batik on cotton,
21 x 24 in., $13,500

Targeted Man—Hooded, 2009
Batik on cotton
15 x 8 in., $7,200


Legacy, 2007
Batik on cotton, 16 ½ x 23 ½ in., $ 10,000/SOLD
Targeted Man- Meeting, 2008
Batik on cotton, 11 x 9 ½ in., $ 4,000/SOLD


County Fair, 2008, batik on cotton
18 ½ x 24 in., $ 11,000
Seeking Sanctuary #3, 2005
Batik on cotton, 25 x 24 1/2 in., $ 15,000
Targeted Man With Cow #1, 2011, mixed media on paper,
7 1/4 x 10 1/2 in., $850
Woman in a Blue Dress, 2014, batik on
cotton, 18 x 13 in., $8,750



Departure, 2012, batik on cotton,
9 1/2 x 7 1/2 in., $3,500
#2, 2012, batik on cotton, 17 1/2 x 13 in.,
$6,750 / SOLD
Anchored in the Spirit, 2014, batik on cotton, 
21 1/4 x 25 in., $14,000 


Targeted Man Watching, 2015,
batik on cotton, 6 1/2 x 4 1/2 in., $1,800



Sunday, September 28, 2008

Essay: Leo Twiggs

Leo Twiggs: American Original
By Wim Roefs

Not so long ago, painter Leo Twiggs took U.S. 178, then 378, from Orangeburg, S.C., to Athens, Ga. The back roads led through the small towns where, in the 1960s, the sight of rebel flags and Civil War monuments would trigger Twiggs’ exploration of the South’s Confederate legacy. As during those 1960s trips, Twiggs, perhaps the country’s best-known batik artist, was on his way to the University of Georgia. This time it was not to become that institution’s first African-American Ed.D. in art education, as he did in 1970. This time Twiggs went to see “Myths and Metaphors,” the first retrospective of his work, which opened in January 2004 at the Georgia Museum of Art on the UGA campus. 

The Confederacy features prominently in the exhibition, which in April 2006 completes its two-year tour at the South Carolina State Museum in Columbia. Images of ragged rebel flags, including a white one, are dominant in four paintings from 1970-71. They are part of Twiggs’ Commemoration series, in which he addressed the Confederate shadow over the South. During Civil War centennial celebrations in the early 1960s, with the Civil Rights Movement in full swing, South Carolina politicians had raised a rebel flag over the State Capitol in Columbia, claiming the state once again for its white population and its white population only. As South Carolinians in the 1990s again fought over the Confederate mark on their capitol, Twiggs revisited the theme. Through paintings of weathered rebel flags, also represented in the retrospective, he again denied whites a monopolistic hold on this icon of exclusiveness, simply by painting it.

The rebel flag also features in many of Twiggs most recent paintings. In Flag, of 2005, a small whitish flag with an overly dark cross is swallowed, or perhaps peaks through, a much larger cloud-like field of grayish purple. While the flag’s visual dominance suggests a Confederate presence, the flag’s smallness surely doesn’t suggest a triumphant one, nor does its whiteness or the dark cross through it. In his new High Cotton series, Twiggs plays with notions of societal hierarchy, placing flags of different colors, with the familiar cross, on top of a cotton field near the top of the canvas, next to a plantation home or a palmetto tree.

“What I like to do is change the way people perceive things,” Twiggs says. “The X of the Confederate flag is the Cross of St. Andrew, but it’s also a really great graphic design. Does it have the same power if you change its colors? Is it still the same thing? No one sees the Cross of St. Andrew or the cross on the Episcopalian logo as Confederate, so if you change the color of flags, it might create a certain ambiguity. And if you change the way you look at something, the thing you look at will change.”

Throughout his career, Twiggs has reminded those who need reminding that African Americans, too, are a part of the Confederate and neo-Confederate South. In Veterans with Flag, from 1970-71, a white man and black child sit underneath a rebel flag. In the Silent Crossings series of a few years back, a Cross of St. Andrew is stripped of Confederate trappings and looks like a railroad crossing sign, a common image in the rural South. The series, Twiggs says, symbolizes race issues that people have to overcome silently, as they linger without being discussed. Silent Crossing #5 includes a figure marked by a target and became the point of departure for Twiggs’ recent Moving Targets series. 

“Early on, we were moving targets,” Twiggs says, “especially black people who were successful in business or otherwise moved out of ‘their place.’ Often they were accused of corruption, castigated for things others would get away with, destroyed. Then comes 9/11, and not just African Americans but all of us become moving targets. I am from a generation that always was aware of being a moving target. Now everyone is aware of that.”

Twiggs is “an American original,” art historian Frank Martin has argued. He makes “formal and aesthetic contributions unlike those of any other American painter.” Twiggs, Martin wrote in the retrospective’s catalogue, has “an uncanny ability to reconcile a multiplicity of cultural traditions with integrity, while simultaneously offering insightful commentary regarding aesthetic, ethical, and social issues that are translated, with understated power, through his unique experience.”

Twiggs began to experiment with batik in the mid-1960s and within years became closely associated with the medium. In several 1970s exhibitions, Twiggs shared the stage with a who’s who of African-American art, including Jacob Lawrence, Lois Mailou Jones, Romare Bearden, Selma Burke, Richmond Barthe, John Biggers, Charles Alston and Hale Woodruff. Woodruff had been his teacher at New York University in the early 1960s. During the 1970s, Twiggs was included in books on African-American art by J. Edgar Atkinson, Samella Lewis and Elton Fax. He had solo museum exhibitions at North Carolina’s Asheville Museum, New York state’s Schenectady Museum, and the Studio Museum in Harlem.

Although Twiggs studied in Chicago and New York in the 1960s, he stayed put in his native South Carolina, in Orangeburg, far away from metropolitan art centers and major universities where reputations often are built and maintained. He focused on developing his art, his art department at South Carolina State University, his university’s museum and his home state’s art infrastructure. 

At S.C. State, where Twiggs taught from 1964 to 1998, the art program he led built a cadre of African-American art teachers for K-12, a first for South Carolina. He spearheaded the establishment of the university’s I. P. Stanback Museum and Planetarium and the university’s new fine arts building. Twiggs hopped on boards here and commissions there, making decisions about, say, his state’s arts commission, its art collection, its State Museum, the Guild of South Carolina Artists, and the Governor’s School for the Arts. Often as the token black fellow, he put black South Carolinians on the radar as artists, art administrators and audiences. In 1981, he was the first to receive as an individual South Carolina’s highest art award, the Elizabeth O’Neil Verner Governor’s Award for the Arts.

To do all Twiggs has done and keep his art as fresh as he has is almost impossible, says artist Benny Andrews, a Georgia native living in New York City. Fax called it “a near miracle” in 1978. “Someone of his stature,” says Andrews, who retired from Queens College at the City University of New York, “could have very easily gone to a white university as a chair of a department or a very solid professorship. They really were raiding those [smaller] schools, even Harvard and Yale and City University and all those kind of places. They were looking for people like him.” But Twiggs stayed at S.C. State, which had art courses but no department when he arrived. “I couldn’t wait,” he says, “to start an art department.” 

Twiggs was born in 1934 and raised in rural St. Stephen, north of Charleston and not far from Orangeburg. St. Stephen, Orangeburg, South Carolina, the South and especially the black community remained Twiggs’ home and inspiration. His art is about subjects, topics, issues and people from or close to his Southern upbringing and countryside home. But through familiar specifics, Twiggs addresses broader themes, be it black culture, including the blues, the relationship between generations, religion and spirituality, or his region’s lingering Confederate mindset.

“In a single work,” Martin wrote in the retrospective’s catalogue, “Twiggs may present Southern regional themes, allude to a realm of intuition, magic, and traditional African religious elements, offer autobiographical information, and evoke, without effort, an aesthetic linkage to the most advanced aspects of Abstract Expressionism.” Martin is the former curator of exhibitions and collections at S. C. State’s Stanback Museum and intimately familiar with Twiggs and his work. 

While Twiggs’ paintings are always of something, his images often don’t dominate as images but as shapes, lines and fields of color. As such, the paintings seldom are straightforward snapshots but abstracted tableaus that are at once symbolic and narrative, allowing for interpretation on different levels. 

Twiggs’ imagery, symbols and cast of characters include old and young folks, whom he deliberately links, as in 1984’s Extended Family Portrait, which, at 52 by 38 inches, is his largest painting. The figures, clustered just off-center, are simply colored-in contours, without facial features, whose ages are, in typical Twiggs fashion, suggested only by the size, shape and heaviness or lightness of their forms. 

South Carolina’s native Palmetto tree, a beach, and shacks appear in 1999’s Blues at the Beach, which seems to mock the sanitation of the blues, as in the House of Blues chain, for instance in nearby Myrtle Beach. In Blues at the Beach #5 of 2003, briefs-and-bikini-clad pinkish people lay around leisurely but starkly cut off from their darker surroundings, populated with distant, introverted and clothed figures looking away or in from out of bounds. The pinkish people lay under a dark cloud, literally and in their state of segregated bliss. 

Twiggs’ use of regional and cultural specifics to communicate universal concerns echoes Hale Woodruff’s approach. Black art, Woodruff argued, had to begin with a black image, but that image could be anything, from an environment, a problem, or the look on someone’s face. Despite this necessary departure, Woodruff argued, “if it’s worth its while, it’s also got to be universal in its broader impact and its presence.”

Twiggs’ Hurricane Hugo series isn’t only about bad weather but about the theme of man versus nature and the resilience of African Americans in the face of adversity. The series We Have Known Rivers, with an assist from poet Langston Hughes, refers to Twiggs’ great-grandmother being sold as a slave to a plantation “over the river,” as Twiggs’ mom would put it. It’s also about the Mississippi River of his father’s youth and the Ashley and Cooper rivers in Charleston, for many Africans the pathways from Charleston’s harbor to inland slavery. The series further symbolizes the African rivers where slaves learned to grow the rice they and their descendents then grew in Lowcountry South Carolina. “In a still larger sense,” Twiggs says, “the series is a tribute to human beings who began their journey to civilization along the rivers of the world.”

Twiggs’ recent Sanctuary series came about after his retrospective. “People kept asking me how I had managed over the years to keep the work so consistent despite my teaching job, being on boards, etcetera. I had no answer for that – you just do it. I had never seen all the work together, though, but when I did in the retrospective I realized that my work was my sanctuary. That’s where I could go into myself, work on a piece, walk away from it to let it dry, do what I had to do elsewhere, then come back to it later and pick up where I left off. That prevented inconsistency.”