Past Exhibitions
Click on title
for more
images and information.
Lord I Wish I had A Prayin' Church Tonight:
Photographs by Stanley Lanzano
May 30 through September 12, 1999 |
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Recent Works and Collaborations/James M. Steven
September 26 through December 5,
1999 |
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Myth Memory and Imagination: Universal
Themes in the Life and Culture of the South, Selections
from the Collection of Julia J. Norrell
October 3 through February 20, 2000 |
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Brothers on a Journey: Paintings by Eldridge Bagley
and William Clarke
August 15, 2004 - January 8, 2005
Eldridge Bagley and
William Clarke grew up in neighboring rural counties
in south-central Virginia. In middle age
they discovered each other and their shared membership
in an artistic brotherhood that exists beyond
race, blood kinship, and time. They have
journeyed beyond youth and through much of midlife
on a common creative venture. Deeply rooted to
the land and the communities of their parents
and grandparents, Bagley and Clarke continue to
live in the places where they were born.
Only in the 1990s did their parallel paths cross,
when they encountered each other’s art through
a shared friendship with collector Julia J. Norrell.
Brothers on a Journey includes ten of twelve
Bagley paintings and one Clarke donated to McKissick
Museum by Ms. Norrell, and thirteen Bagleys donated
by Mr. Ralph E. Martin. The Museum is deeply indebted
to these wonderful patrons and friends.
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William Clarke,
Baseball Game ,
collection of Julia J. Norrel
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Eldridge
Bagley, Revival, collection of
McKissick Museum, gift of Ralph Martin.
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Off the Stage & Onto the Wall: The Evolution
of a Ballet
January
29, 2005 - March 19, 2005
A play on the title
of the ballet Off the Wall & Onto the Stage
, this exhibition explores the unique merger of
traditional visual arts with dance and music by
tracing the evolution of the ballet, created by
William Starrett of the Columbia City Ballet.
The ballet is centered around twenty-two works
of art by Jonathan Green, the celebrated Gullah
artist from Beaufort, South Carolina.
The exhibition highlights the unique printmaking collaboration
between Green and the Department of Art at the University
of South Carolina. Green worked with the printmaking
students and faculty of the Studio Arts division of
the Department of Art to create a series of limited
edition serigraphs (silkscreens) based on the four
original paintings produced by Green in 2004.
Educational hands-on opportunities to learn about
serigraphy and other forms of printmaking will be
held on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 11:00 a.m. to
1:00 p.m. during the month of February and through
March 19, 2005. These activities will be held in the
gallery, and are free to all age groups.
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Yellow
Swing, Jonathan Green, 2001
oil on canvas |

Love of
Harvest
Jonathan Green, 2000
oil on canvas |
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Courage: The Carolina Story that Changed
America
September 4, 2004 - February 26, 2005
Few Americans
know that the landmark case Brown v. Board
of Education has its roots in rural Clarendon
County, South Carolina. This exhibition, organized
by the Levine Museum of the New South in Charlotte,
NC, explores the origins of the historic case,
and sheds light on South Carolina's connection
with the notion of equal education in classrooms
throughout America. It will tell the story
of Reverend Joseph A. De Laine, who led the fight
against segregated schools in Clarendon County.
His efforts in the 1950s spearheaded the first
legal case to be filed, Briggs v. Elliot .
The Institute for Southern Studies and the African
American Studies Program here at USC will be presenting
a series of programs in conjunction with the exhibition
as part of a year-long commemoration of the 50th anniversary
of Brown v. the Board of Education on the USC campus.
McKissick Museum will be the only venue in South Carolina
to host this exhibition, made possible through funding
from the Humanities Council of SC.
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Summerton
graded school (white elementary school)
Summerton, SC Photograph, 1940s
Courtesy of South Carolina State Archives
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The Southeast Printmaking Invitational
through January 29, 2006
The Southeast Printmaking Invitational was organized
in collaboration with the University of South Carolina's
student printmaking organization, "Ink and
Paper" and showcases some of the finest art
students from the southeastern United States.
Students from the University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill, the University of Georgia at Athens,
the University of Tennessee at Knoxville and Clemson
University join with USC's students to create this
traveling exhibition.
On display are 50 prints, each illustrating how today's
artists are using both traditional and experimental
techniques and media. A public preview of the exhibit
will be held on November 4, from 5 to 7 p.m., on the
second floor lobby of McKissick Museum. |
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Ophelia,
Lauren Gregory, color lithograph
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Kampf, Steven Walker, color lithograph |
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