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Entries in Aldwyth (2)

Monday
Jun012009

Ackland Shines Limelight on Reclusive Artist

I made a Saturday night stop – along with senior associate editor Andrea Griffith – to the Ackland invitation-only opening of artist Aldwyth’s exhibit. This is Aldwyth’s first major exhibition. The 73-year-old recluse from Hilton Head in South Carolina has quietly made her giant collages and three-dimensional boxes for years before she received recognition from the art world Saturday. I couldn’t resist asking her why she chose to make a giant collage out of eyes, one of her pieces that is displayed prominently at the museum. Without missing a beat, she answered, “I just wanted to make a piece of art where something was looking back at you.” Check out her work (it will be at the Ackland until Sept. 13) and check out these photos that Andrea and I snapped at the event:

Thursday
May282009

Ackland Debuts Work of 73-Year-Old Reclusive Artist

"Casablanca (Classic Version)" by Aldwyth (courtesy of the Ackland Art Musuem)A 73-year-old recluse from a South Carolina island will make her debut with her first major show at the Ackland Art Museum this weekend. The woman, who according to the Ackland's Nic Brown goes only by the name "Aldwyth," is being brought into the art world limelight by former Chapel Hill resident Mark Sloan, who is now director of the Halsey Institute of Contemporary Art at the College of Charleston. Brown claims that Sloan has "really been [Aldwyth's] champion," working to bring her work from the outskirts of the art world into the mainstream.

Aldwyth's art deals primarily with intricate mosaics. For one piece, Aldwyth cut every image from an entire encyclopedia and fit them onto a gigantic collage. Another collage is composed of hundreds of eyeballs. She does her work at her home on an island off the coast of South Carolina.

A picture of one her pieces I saw over e-mail looks like it is dripping with eyeballs – very unique. I’m not the only one excited to meet her and see her work this weekend (see back here Monday for pictures).

“There’s been a lot of excitement, a lot of curiosity,” Brown says. “The art work is totally mind blowing, the work of somebody who is a real sort of obsessive.”

Aldwyth will be in Chapel Hill Saturday evening for an invitation-only opening for museum members and special guests. The public opening, where the artist will be present, is Sunday at 1 p.m. at the Ackland.