Our current resident, Lindsay Mercer, is hard at work building their new show in the residency. They will be talking to Jess Speer of our beloved local radio station, 103.3 Asheville fm, about her work, on October 11 from 1 til 2 pm. Listen in to hear more about their upcoming show!

Lindsay Mercer sews, prints, and builds small quiet homes. Fabric safekept by friends and reclaimed from dumpsters and mud puddles becomes the walls and windowsills that frame delicate broken glass and greased paper windows. Glass is broken, but mended as well as needle and thread can manage. Paper is toughened by drenching it in grease until the opaque becomes a murky translucent glow. They build homes of empathy, both fragile and resilient.

Dedicated to the art of oral histories and home building, Lindsay is in the continual process of learning what it means to be a country queer in the world today.

 

Join us at 821 Haywood Road as artist-in-residence Katt Naz hosts open studio hours all week to share her latest works!

And as we celebrate the beginning of Hispanic Heritage Month, Arepas Venezolanas made by the artist’s mom Araceli (@aras_latinfood) will be sold throughout the week, first come first served! 

This show is about the journey of figuring out how to embody our truest form. Life tests us through good and horrible experiences that show us the truth about who we are and what we want. Being a human is one hell of a ride and when you embrace your truest self, that’s when the magic begins.

Society will continue to mold us into copies of each other but the question is, do you want to be like everyone else? Or do you want to be who you were meant to be and kick it up a notch? Life is much more fun when you make your own rules.

The show contains have a mixture of mediums: acrylic and mixed media paintings, wire sculptures, merch (and maybe a projection).

Join us at the opening reception as artist Katt Naz returns to share her latest works! Opening Reception will be Saturday September 23, 6:30-9:30; additional viewings 9/22-9/29 1pm-6pm. And as we celebrate the beginning of Hispanic Heritage Month, Arepas Venezolanas made by the artist’s mom Araceli (@aras_latinfood) will be sold throughout the week, first come first served! 

This show is about the journey of figuring out how to embody our truest form. Life tests us through good and horrible experiences that show us the truth about who we are and what we want. Being a human is one hell of a ride and when you embrace your truest self, that’s when the magic begins. 

Society will continue to mold us into copies of each other but the question is, do you want to be like everyone else? Or do you want to be who you were meant to be and kick it up a notch? Life is much more fun when you make your own rules.

The show contains have a mixture of mediums: acrylic and mixed media paintings, wire sculptures, merch (and maybe a projection). 

Opening Party: September 8, 5-9pm

Exhibit Hours: September 9 and 10, 11am-6pm

 

Join us at 821 Haywood Road as Brett Naucke releases Born Last Summer, a photography book and exhibit.  This is Naucke’s first published collection of photography, spanning 20 years of exploring the dichotomy of the hopeful and dreary sentiments of the summer season.

Join us at 821 Haywood Road on September 2, from 1 til 8 pm, for a Zine Release and Art Show! Our friends at Swanatopia, who brought us The Bug Mall last winter, are back!  In conjunction with Black Mountain College Museum, Swannatopia’s Madalyn Wofford is currently running a series of Saturday markets inspired by Bazaar Sabado, an avant garde market in Mexico that was run by Black Mountain College Museum Alum, Cynthia Sargent. This event will be in conjunction with the exhibition Black Mountain College and Mexico, on display at BMCM until September 9. Come check out this awesome show!

Swing by to check out Chris Hamilton’s Installation, Radio Infrequencies, at open studio hours, 821 Haywood Road!

Radio Infrequencies – Unfurling
Radio Infrequencies will be presented as an interactive sound work. Primary materials will consist of 100+ tabletop radios, 4 short-range radio broadcasting units, and ~60 outlet timers. Visitors will be able to engage with the radios and other sonic elements.
The radios will be used in sculptural and distributed forms to explore multi-channel audio presentation of noise, public radio broadcast content, and curated audio content broadcast on short-range radio transmitters. Modes of exploration will include rhythm and syncopation, drone, spatial shapes, and spatial motion through use of outlet timers. The installation will be modified over the course of the residency to explore a variety of sculptural and conceptual ideas.

Monday, August 7, time tbd.

Radio Infrequencies – Unfurling
Radio Infrequencies will be presented as an interactive sound work. Primary materials will consist of 100+ tabletop radios, 4 short-range radio broadcasting units, and ~60 outlet timers. Visitors will be able to engage with the radios and other sonic elements.
The radios will be used in sculptural and distributed forms to explore multi-channel audio presentation of noise, public radio broadcast content, and curated audio content broadcast on short-range radio transmitters. Modes of exploration will include rhythm and syncopation, drone, spatial shapes, and spatial motion through use of outlet timers. The installation will be modified over the course of the residency to explore a variety of sculptural and conceptual ideas.
Photo Credits: Peter Speer

Join us at 821 Haywood Road at 4 pm on July 29th, for a writing salon with Rachel Hanson, our artist in residence for July of 2023!

Writing Salon with Rachel Hanson: The Stories We Want to Tell and How to Begin
For some writers, starting with the ending is the only way to begin, for others it varies with the different stories they wish to tell and the genre in which they hope to tell it, and some writers struggle with getting that first line on the page no matter the form or genre. This is a generative workshop, complete with creative writing prompts, aimed at helping writers take their ideas and get them down on the page.
Saturday July 22nd, 4:00 p.m.
821 Haywood Road
What to bring: notebook, pen or pencil, and a story idea!
Photo credits: Peter Speer

We are a troupe of artists working on a storytelling project that we want to share with you. We will be creating a series of “crankies,” which are boxes that hold a scroll of drawings or paintings that move across the “screen” to help tell our story. The production will include visual art, original stories, song, dance, poetry, and music. Save the date for the weekend of March 4 to come and experience our show!

Swannatopia Presents: Bug Mall, A Light and Sound Extravaganza

DECEMBER 11 2022, 11AM-7PM

ADDITIONAL VIEWINGS BY APPOINTMENT

Swannatopia’s Bug Mall explores the ways we relate to our built environment, each other, and ourselves through the lens of contemplative socioentomology.  Bug Mall is a brainchild of Glowspace Arts and Katrina Ohstrom (aka Terrestrial Projecting). Drawing inspiration from utopian experiments both attempted and imagined, cooperative and adaptive behaviors observed across life forms, holiday light shows and the shopping mall itself, the multimedia installation will include a parking lot, butterfly experience, monorail, movie theater, fountain, escalator, elevator, funeral parlor, vending machine, arcade, high school art show, seed bank, volcano, claw machine, Zig Zag’s Roller Disco, Swannatopia Department Store, Wormhole!, a wormhole, chapel, food court, claw machine, carousel, and more. Check out Swannatopia’s work on their instagram page!

The ground-level, wheelchair-accessible exhibition begins with an opening reception on Sunday, December 11 at from 11-7, which will peak at 5:17pm with a “Sunset Surprise” feast for the senses.  Bug Mall will be viewable by appointment through December 30.

The window displays will be on view from the sidewalk through December 30.

Wear a mask indoors!

Bug Costumes Encouraged!


Swannatopia Presents: Bug Mall- A Light And Sound Extravaganza is the experimental art collective’s largest and most immersive installation to date. Both a physical studio and an interdisciplinary collaboration, Swannatopia members make use of light, sound, water, glass, porcelain, terra cotta, live plants, projections, reflections, textiles, movement, video, screenprinting, performance, etc to create experiential habitats and far out happenings as well as facilitate the free exchange of knowledge, experience,  tools and materials.

To this end, Swannatopia Experimental Art Club was launched in May of this year.  My Terra Squirma invited members to build their own living sculpture out of terracotta, found materials, stained glass and live plants. This 8-week-long session culminated in a group art show, with a “Plantwave” device on site to assist in translating the plants biorhythms and relationships into a sonic form,  sherbet floats at sunset and live music. The second installment,  Light Into Cloud And Still Talking was centered around the concept of illuminated sculptures, and culminated in a group lamp show called Museum of Chandelier, which included many bright, beautiful and edible lamps. Several works from Swannatopia Experimental Art Club participants are featured in the Bug Mall installation.

Enrollment for the next session of the Swannatopia Experimental Art Club is now open and our popular informational brochures will be available at the Bug Mall.

A visitor review of “The Swannatopia Dolphin Experience”, Marigold Daze. June 2021

“When I arrived in Swannatopia, I was not sure from which direction I came. Unheralded, I was unsure if the sun was rising or setting. I was harried and hounded by the quotidian beasts; grist ground down for profit by the Mean Machine.

At first, I was surprised to find the Dolphins spoke my language. But their invitation calmed my mind and soon I joined them, swimming as they shared with me their wisdom. They hipped me to the manifold ways in which the universe’s beings and matter express agency and evolve towards their dearest intellectual, biological, and existential imperatives. Consciousness was unhomogenized, and funky for all, equally in our own wild ways.

Spangled in penumbral light refracting through the timeless ocean between the terrestrial and sidereal, plant and animal were one, good dog and hot dog danced together in joy, tides of sound ebbed and flowed over all moods, and Freedom was the thing as our Dolphin guides sang to us from beyond the reef. We floated weightlessly and swam, leashless, towards our fondest wishes bathed in the warm, jazzy welcome of fellowship that vined among branches of the evolutionary tree. All of us changing, bathed in light, baptized in sound, and dressed in shimmering hues, are reborn, limber and hale, from the benevolent womb of Swannatopia.

As I departed these delights to return to the world beyond, our Dolphin hosts shared their blessings and goodbyes. I now swim on land and through time knowing I can return to Swannatopia if I should choose. Until then, I will plant its seeds and tend to them in the world outside as I drift near and far. I – an Evangelist – am ready to share the fruits of wild community and dazzled senses as they ripen on this planet and beyond.

We are invited, welcome, and secure in Swannatopia: forever a zone of tender abundance, psychic rest, and brand new colors and tones, visible to all beings and audible to all minds.”