Thursday, April 23, 2026

Art Environments

 There are visionaries that live, and create, among us.
 Folks, 
men and women, 
who see and experience the world differently;
those who are driven by some instinctual impulse to create 
with whatever material they can find in their immediate environment
and then end up creating entirely original universes of their own making. 
 
I'm sure neighbors, family members 
and those most intimately connected with them
have had a myriad of reactions 
to the collecting, assembling and placement 
of the finished art they produced. 
It can't be easy -
for either the artist or those closest to them.
 
For a more exhaustive exploration of the worlds of these artists,
I would refer you to 
Sublime Spaces and Visionary Worlds:
Built Environments of Vernacular Artists
Leslie Umberger, editor.
 
Luckily, for those of us without the knowledge of these environments 
and/or the time and money to travel to the original sites,
many of these environments have been saved  
and preserved by the Kohler Foundation 
and now have a new home in the 
Kohler Art Preserve in Sheboygan, WI.
Of all the wonderful creations housed in this building,
3 artists stood out for me:
Dr Charles Smith
Nek Chand
and Emory Blagdon.
 
Their personal histories are rich with details that provide clues 
as to what drove their art
but no human can be reduced 
to something as complex as the interplay 
between personal, spiritual and historical factors.
 
Dr Charles Smith was a child of 14
when his father was killed by white people
in which local authorities termed "a ferry accident". 
His sculptures speak directly to the Black experience in America -
including his memories of attending Emmet Tills funeral,
his experiences in Vietnam,
his drug addiction ,
the fight for Civil Rights
and the larger impact of racial violence 
from the Middle Passage to the present. 






His home in Aurora, IL was the original site for his work,
although he has now moved to New Orleans and continues to create there. 
 ____
 
Nek Chand, 
a municipal worker by day and artist by night 
(in India) 
created a whole garden on unused municipal land 
near his home 
that was, at first his secret kingdom
which has gone on to become the most visited attractions in India,
second only to the Taj Mahal.








To see such large and varied bodies of art 
in one space
is breathtaking.
 
Have to admit though that my favorite is Emory Blagdon
and his Healing Machine.
 
 Emory was the oldest of 6 children, born to his parents on a farm in rural Nebraska;
in the Sandhills, specifically.
 
As many of you know, I've driven through the Sandhills every summer for 25+ years
while on my way to the Rosebud Reservation. 
It's an exceptionally beautiful, remote and desolate area of the country;
also known for its electrical storms and tornados;
so it's no surprise that Emory became fascinated 
by the power of nature and electric 'energy' to impact the physical body.
 
He watched both his parents die of cancers and, over time,
turned a two room 'shack' on his property
into a Healing Machine that he believed conducted electrical currents 
into the body which resulted in relief from arthritis and other ailments.
Kohler Foundation took apart and then reassembled his shack and the Healing Machine
in the Art Preserve.
 
Even in this setting, it's magical.
I would have loved to see it in situ.




Even though Emory died in 1986 
(of cancer that doctors speculated had been ravaging his body for a decade)
who's to say that the Healing Machine didn't heal something
deep inside him 
that had been broken.
Art can do that.
 
If you ever get the chance to see this treasure trove, take it!
 
The most beautiful experience we can have is the mysterious. 
It is the fundamental emotion which stands at the cradle of art and science.
 
Albert Einstein 

 

Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Small perfection


This small painting (by artist, Amanda Blake)
 is a perfect daily reminder
that with all the protests and actions AGAINST 
what's going on in our country
at this current time,
what we're really fighting FOR is LOVE.
 
Now hanging where I can see it everyday.  

 

Monday, April 20, 2026

Up North

    After celebrating a special 4th birthday,
I decided that a trip up north was called for;
I needed to see a large body of water, 
breathe cool damp air
and see both old people and new things!
 
This trip ticked all the boxes.
(It also involved my car battery dying and purchasing a new one,
but such is life, right?)
While it rained part of every day I was there,
when the sun did peek out,
it was glorious. 
So much fun to see spring all over again.
There were half-hearted attempts at retail therapy
but, since none of us need anything, it was totally

just looking.
 
The highlight of the visit -
besides time with loved ones,
was a trip to my favorite museum ,
one the specializes in folk art -
John Michael Kohler  Arts Center in Sheboygan, WI.
 
There is currently an exhibit on the Upper Midwest phenomena: "The Grotto." 
SO much work and so much preparation went into each piece
by seemingly untrained, 'normal' people...
we had lots of fun thinking about what their family members and neighbors must have thought
as these were being created.


Religiosity is so often a component of these pieces;
not sure whether that speaks to the divine inspiration that sparks their creation
 or the perseverance required to see them completed but it's a noticeable part
of the essential grotto. 
 


The time it must have taken to amass all the objects used -
and where they must have been stored in the meantime
is impossible for me to imagine. 
 
Thank goodness I don't have that 'pack rack' gene.
 
Even a more contemporary form of the grotto
must have been an amazing labor of love. 
The Kohler also had amazing contemporary pieces made out of medical equipment,
including crutches
and syringes
If you've never been to the museum,
I recommend it highly.
The Art Center features contemporary exhibits and selections from their permanent collections.
 
The new Art Preserve is where they house pieces of their permanent art environments -
and that will be featured in the next post.
It was unbelievable!
Stay tuned.