Tag Archives: Boyd Coons

Show #21: The Art of Education

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This month Sidewalk Radio presents both a radio show and an art show that journey along the path to discovery in Atlanta’s arts and culture realm.  The radio show delves into the world of education as told through an arts critic, an arts collector, and an architect who specializes in design for student life.  The art show, by way of The Sidewalk Art Project, is the end product of a creative partnership between Sidewalk Radio and SCAD Atlanta that exhibits student work about our history and culture.  What we learn through our exploration is that education is both in itself an art form and a producer of art, how it is constructed many times parallels the path of the student.

Thornton Dial (b. 1928). In the Roosevelt Time: Penned In. 2003. Pencil, acrylic, and watercolor on paper. 44 X 30 in. Photo credit: Tinwood Media.

Art collector and explorer, Bill Arnett, is Founder and Chief Curator at Tinwood Media.  While extremely accomplished, being perhaps the foremost collector and educator about the art of the southern black slave tradition, Arnett is himself “self-taught”.  Joining Gene in the studio this month to talk about his journey toward knowledge and the unorthodox route he took, Bill enlightens and educates about discovery in the arts and within the individual.  AM 1690 has extensive coverage about Arnett’s work, and can be further enjoyed by listening to an interview done by “The Voice of the Arts” own David Lewis in his interview.

Colorado State University Student Center. Rendering by Perkins+Will.

Jeff Stebar is an architect and student life expert with Perkins+Will.  Jeff joins Gene to talk about the future of education from both the built environment and from life outside the classroom.  Since the students for whom Stebar is now designing are only in the 6th and 7th grade presently, predicting how they will learn and where they will learn when they get to college makes the work he and his team embark upon interesting and a challenge.  What our discussion uncovers is that buildings are being designed not to predict the future, but to adapt to it.  The interests of the students and the advancements in technology are highly considered as is the new reality of having to recruit in higher education.

Guests of The Sidewalk Art Project Gallery Show enjoy art and The Atlanta Preservation Center’s charming appeal.

Cathy Fox is a long-writing Atlanta arts critic and founder of ArtsAtl.  While Cathy does not have a focus on arts education per se, she is certainly one of Atlanta’s top voices when it comes to covering the arts.  Her interview is in part to educate upcoming artists such as those who participated in The Sidewalk Art Project about how to and where to learn, and in another way meant to take a critical eye on education within the arts.

“Miss Winter (Juniper)” by Elizabeth Castaldo. 32 x 25 inches. Silkscreen.

“Knights Armor, Palisade, Lucky Penny” by Nate Kamp. 18 x 17 inches. Photogravure.

And, speaking of arts critique, we must take a moment to recognize our Juror Panel who helped select “Best In Show” for the art show portion of this month’s exploration.  Special thanks to Spalding Nix, Ronnie Land, Bruce McEvoy, and Stuart Horodner.  Each of these individuals are big in Atlanta arts, and dedicated their time and expertise not only to help the SCAD students learn more in the way of exposure to success in the arts, but also to learn themselves about the students and their work.

Congratulations to the two students selected “Best In Show”, Elizabeth Castaldo for “Miss Winter (Juniper)” and to Nate Kamp for “Kights Armor, Palisade, Lucky Penny”.  To see their work and read the artist’s statement visit us on Sidewalk Radio’s Facebook Page.


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Show #1: The infamous Clermont Hotel, baby.

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Atlanta has plenty of bragging rights (The Olympics, Coca-Cola, Chick-fil-a, the Fox Theatre etc.), but perhaps one of our most iconic treasures is a dive strip club, The Clermont Lounge.  Opening its doors in 1965, in the basement of the Clermont Hotel, The Clermont Lounge is the longest running strip club in Atlanta history.  In a city famous for its adult entertainment, “The Lounge” certainly reigns supreme when it comes to character.  It is much more than a seedy dive with elderly strippers.  It has architectural clout, cultural significance, a rich history, and for many, a visit to this haunt has become a right of passage.  But, with the hotel foreclosed upon and its rooms being shut-down by the Department of Health, the Lounge (which remains open) and the hotel’s future remain quite uncertain.

Sidewalk Radio’s very first show will answer the burning question: What’s so important about The Clermont Hotel & The Clermont Lounge, and why should they be saved?

Boyd Coons, Executive Director of The Atlanta Preservation Center, joins us to offer his expertise about Atlanta’s important properties and to share with us the context the hotel embodies from a preservationist’s perspective.

On the architectural side of things, we’re happy to have Mike Gamble, principal of Gamble & Gamble Architects, a tenured Professor of Architecture at Georgia Tech, and Grand Prize Winner of the Clermont Hotel Design Competition, sharing his vision about what The Clermont can become.

Long-time Clermont bouncer and de facto spokesperson, DJ, also stops by to share the good, the bad and the awesome about the iconic lounge.

And, for the real treat, Atlanta Icon and The Clermont Lounge’s legendary, beer-crushing, exotic dancer, Blondie, joins us in the studio for an arousing interview and a poetry reading of her own work.

You’re in for a wild ride.  Join us for a listen.

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