AS AN arts writer in Savannah, it has been my privilege to interview and get to know many of the city’s artists over the last three years. I’ve never had […]
Kayla Goggin
Telfair Art Fair fills the square with beauty
“The Art Fair is a celebration of creativity and community”
The Roving Listeners are coming!
HOW DO you improve your community? Does it start with a complaint? Do you post fliers and corral your neighbors together for a meeting? Do you sit in silent discomfort […]
‘Complex Uncertainties’ exhibit signals changing tide at Jepson
TELFAIR Museums’ Jepson Center for the Arts is about to open one of its most important contemporary art exhibitions ever this month. Complex Uncertainties: Artists in Postwar America, an exhibition […]
Pain, passion, joy, struggle
THIS WEEK, the Smithsonian Institution will open its nineteenth museum: The National Museum of African American History and Culture. Inside, artwork from one of Savannah’s most important local artists is […]
College Student Guide: Getting involved in the local art scene
Discovering Savannah’s art offerings online is great, but you owe it to yourself to see them in person too
Saltwater Gestalt
ON THE edge of the North Garden at the Ships of the Sea Maritime Museum sits a 75-foot long wooden husk of a ship. Like an artifact from a dream, […]
Savannah Artist Collective: Expanding access
SAVANNAH ARTISTS looking for a space to commune, talk, critique and show work have a new home at the Savannah Artist Collective. Located at 13 E. 39th St. across from […]
‘Life: Rooted’ makes roadkill beautiful
In this case, the unexpected pairing has allowed for an interesting dynamic: one in which both artists have chosen to allow their large bodies of work to breathe separately
Robert Morris’s tidal vision
THERE ARE few people in this city who know the river better than Robert Morris, who have dreamed of it more often, or have communed with it so deeply. In […]
Trading paintbrush for paper
Though vastly different in their respective styles, the three artists represent a shift in Location Gallery’s typical fare from traditional paintings to non-traditional works.
Lisa D. Watson: Spanning The Gap
Savannah has no need to continue to memorialize Eugene Talmadge’s thoroughly disgusting, unapologetic legacy of hatred, social injustice and racism
