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Self-taught artists and
their fans mingle each
fall at Alabama's up
close and personal
Kentuck Festival
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By Brian Noyes
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Smithsonian
magazine,
October 2003
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Under the
towering pines
hard by
Alabama’s Black
Warrior River,
the talk at 8
a.m. on an
October Saturday
is of a forecast
of rain. When
the exhibited
work of 38 folk
artists is made
of mud,
cardboard,
sticks and
rags—and the
exhibit is
out-of-doors—wet
weather can
indeed mean a
washout.
But for now the
sun shines,
merciful news
for the 30,000
people expected
today and
tomorrow at the
Kentuck Festival
of the Arts,
held the third
weekend of every
October in the
woods near
downtown
Northport,
across the river
from Tuscaloosa.
Here is
America’s folk
art at its most
personal, a
unique event
where nationally
acclaimed
self-taught and
primitive
artists create,
show and sell
their work
themselves. To
see these “roots
artists”
otherwise would,
in many cases,
involve road
trips through
the backwoods
and hollows of
Alabama, Georgia
and the
Carolinas. Over
its 32-year
history, the
show has taken
on the homey
atmosphere of a
family reunion,
with many buyers
returning year
after year to
chat with the
artists and add
to their
collections. (I
am one of those
fans; over the
years, I’ve
collected work
by some of the
artists featured
on these pages.)
At the entrance
to the festival,
Sam McMillan, a
77-year-old
artist from
Winston-Salem,
North Carolina,
holds court,
resplendent in a
polka-dot daubed
suit that
matches the
painted
furniture, lamps
and birdhouses
for sale behind
him. “People
walk in and
catch a sight of
me and think,
‘Whoa now,
what’s happening
at this place
today?’” says
McMillan. “They
know they’re in
for something
different.’’
Kentuck is the
most intimate
event of its
kind in the
nation, says
Ginger Young, a
visitor and art
dealer in Chapel
Hill, North
Carolina. “For
many of us, art
encounters
consist of
hushed museum
exhibitions and
pretentious
gallery
openings,” she
says. “Kentuck
is unrivaled in
its ability to
blaze a direct
connection
between artists
and art fans.
What happens at
Kentuck is akin
to a good
old-fashioned
Southern
revival.”
Kentuck (it’s
named for an
early settlement
on the site of
the present-day
town; the origin
of the word is
unclear) began
in 1971 as an
offshoot of
Northport’s
centennial
celebration.
That first
festival, says
founding
director
Georgine Clarke,
featured only 20
artists; two
years later
there were 35.
“We quickly
outgrew the
downtown
location and had
our eyes on an
overgrown park a
little ways out
of town,” she
says.
“Postmaster
Ellis Teer and I
walked around it
to figure out
how much of it
we could
mow—Ellis
brought his lawn
mower along—and
that became the
area we’d set up
in. Each year we
mowed a little
bit more, and
the festival
grew that much.”
The exhibition
now covers half
of the 38.5-acre
park and
showcases more
than 200
traditional
craftspeople
quilting,
forging metal,
weaving baskets,
making furniture
and throwing
pottery. But the
big draw remains
the
extraordinary
collection of
authentic folk
artists, each
with stories to
tell about how
they started and
where they get
their
inspiration.
Many of the
artists now have
works in the
permanent
collections of
museums like the
Smithsonian
American Art
Museum,
Baltimore’s
AmericanVisionaryArt
Museum and the
New Orleans
Museum of Art.
But here at
Kentuck, the
artists can be
found leaning
against a rusty
Olds Delta 88,
playing a
harmonica or
picking a
guitar, ready to
chat.
Jimmie
Lee
Sudduth,
93, is
parked
in a
folding
chair
next to
his car
and is
engulfed
by a
crowd
that
eagerly
flips
through
his mud
paintings,
which
are
stacked
against
a tree.
Sudduth,
from
nearby
Fayette,
Alabama,
has been
finger
painting
with mud
since
1917.
His work
is in
the
collection
of New
York
City’s
American
Folk Art
Museum.
The
typically
taciturn
Sudduth
brightens
as he
recalls
his
breakthrough
moment
at age
7. “I
went
with
Daddy
and Mama
to their
jobs at
a syrup
mill
and,
with
nothing
better
to do,
smeared
mud and
honey on
an old
tree
stump to
make a
picture,”
he says.
When he
returned
days
later
after
several
rains,
the
painting
was
still
there;
his
mother,
Vizola,
saw it
as a
sign
that
he’d
make a
great
painter,
and
encouraged
her son.
“That’s
when I
found
out I
had
something
that
would
stick,”
says
Sudduth.
“I
counted
36 kinds
of mud
near my
house
and used
most of
them one
time or
another.”
Eventually,
Sudduth
experimented
with
color.
“I’d
grab a
handful
of grass
or
berries
and wipe
them on
the
painting,
and the
juice
comes
out and
makes my
color,”
he says.
In the
late
1980s, a
collector
who was
concerned
that
Sudduth’s
mudon-plywood
paintings
might
fall
apart
gave the
artist
some
house
paint
and
encouraged
him to
incorporate
it into
his
work.
(Art
dealer
Marcia
Weber,
who
exhibits
Sudduth’s
work in
her
Montgomery,
Alabama,
gallery,
isn’t
worried
about
how long
his
earliest
mud
works
will
last.
“How
permanent
are the
caves of
Lascaux
and
Altamira?”
she
asks.)
Sudduth
now uses
both
paints
and mud
to
render
the
houses
of
Fayette,
trains,
and his
dog,
Toto.
For the
past 13
years,
Woodie
Long,
61, and
his
wife,
Dot, 46,
have
made the
drive up
from
Andalusia,
Alabama,
or,
since
1996,
the
Florida
panhandle,
to show
his
work:
rhythmic
and
undulating
figures
that
dance
across
paper,
wood,
metal
and
glass in
bright
acrylics.
Long,
who had
been a
house
painter
for 25
years,
started
making
art 15
years
ago. His
paintings,
based on
childhood
memories,
have
names
such as
Jumping
on
Grandma’s
Bed and
Around
the
Mulberry
Bush.
“People
look at
my art
and see
themselves—it’s
their
memories
too,” he
says.
“They
just
feel a
part of
it.
Every
day
there
are new
people
that see
my work,
and the
response
just
blows me
away.”
Sandra Sprayberry, 46, has introduced new people to Long’s work for about ten years. Sprayberry, an English professor at Birmingham-SouthernCollege, befriended Long when she took a group of students to meet him during a tour to visit Alabama folk artists. “I wanted the students to experience the stories these artists tell both orally and in their artwork,” she says. Sprayberry says that primitive folk art grabs her emotionally more than technically proficient art, and it was Long’s fluid lines that first caught her eye. “When other folk artists attempt to portray movement, it appears almost intentionally comical—which I often love,” she says. “But he paints it in a lyrical way in especially bright and vibrant colors. I love his perpetually childlike enthusiasm. And Woodie truly likes his paintings. Every time I pick one up, he says ‘I really love that one!’ He’s the real deal.”
Folk art is often referred to as visionary, self-taught or outsider art; experts don’t agree on a single descriptive term or even on what is, or isn’t, included in the category. They do agree, however, that unlike craftspeople who often train many years to attain extraordinary skill with materials, folk artists are largely untutored. Theirs is an often passionate, free-flowing vision unencumbered by rules and regulations of what makes “good” art.
“These are artists who are pursuing creativity because of some personal experience that provides a source of inspiration that has nothing to do with having gone to art school,” says Lynda Roscoe Hartigan, former chief curator of the SmithsonianAmericanArt Museum and now chief curator of the PeabodyEssexMuseum in Salem, Massachusetts. While some contemporary folk artists have physical or mental disabilities or difficult personal circumstances, Hartigan says there is an unfortunate tendency to assume that all such artists are divorced from everyday life. “Their inspiration is not different from fine artists. They are commenting on the world around them,” she says. “Perhaps some are expressing anxieties or beliefs through art. Others find inspiration in spiritual beliefs.”
Parked under a canopy of oaks is Chris Hubbard’s Heaven and Hell Car, influenced, he says, by his Catholic upbringing and a longtime interest in Latin American religious folk art. It’s a 1990 Honda Civic encrusted with found objects such as toys, and tin-and-wood figures he’s made of saints, angels and devils. “I wanted to bring art to the streets,” says Hubbard, 45, of Athens, Georgia, who six years ago left a 20-year career in environmental consulting and microbiology to become an artist. “I knew I had to make an art car after seeing a parade of 200 of them in Texas in 1996,” he says. The car has nearly 250,000 miles on it; he drives it 25,000 miles a year to as many as 16 art and car shows. To satisfy requests from admirers and collectors, he began selling “off the car” art—figures like the ones glued to the vehicle. Hubbard’s next art car will be Redención, a 1988 Nissan pickup truck with 130,000 miles on it. “It’s gonna be this gypsy wagon covered with rusty metal, tools and buckets and boxes,” he announces.
Across a grassy ditch, a riot of color blazes from the booth of “Miz Thang,” 47-year-old Debbie Garner from Hawkinsville, Georgia. Her foot-high cutouts of rock ’n’ roll and blues artists, ranging from B.B. King to such lesser-known musicians as Johnny Shines and Hound Dog Taylor, dangle from wire screens. Garner, a special-education teacher, is here for her third show; she finds inspiration for her blues guys in the music she loves. “I’d like to be doing this full time, but can’t while I’m putting two kids through college,” she says matter-of-factly. “Making this stuff just floats my boat and shakes my soul.” Garner’s inventory is moving too; by the end of the weekend, she’s sold most of the two hundred or so pieces she brought with her.
Trying to make a successful first showing, Tom Haney, 41, from Atlanta, displays his animated, articulated wooden figures in a carefully ordered booth. Intricately carved and painted, the figures move—they jump, dance and gyrate with arms flying and hats tipping, powered by a hand-cranked Victrola motor or triggered by piano-type keys. Haney says he puts in 100 or so hours on a small piece and up to 300 on the more complex figures. Which may explain his prices: while folk art at nearby booths sells for $10 to $500, Haney’s work is priced from $3,200 to $8,000. “Kentuck is the ideal place to show,” he says. “My work needs to be demonstrated face to face.” This weekend, however, he will not make a single sale; he plans to return to the festival for another try.
sunday morning the rain arrives, and tents and tarps go up over the artwork as the weekend’s music performers take their place onstage. Each year’s festival ends with a concert; this one features bluegrass legend Ralph Stanley and the Clinch Mountain Boys, rediscovered by a new generation thanks to the 2000 movie O Brother, Where Art Thou? “Kentuck really is a big ol’ party of Southern hospitality,” says artist Woodie Long. “These people drive all this way to see some good art and make friends; the least we can do is thank ’em with some good old-timey music—and hope they’ll forget about the rain.”
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