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Savannah GA

Weis Theatre 1982 – A Day in Savannah GA with Rick Baty

© Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

Albert Frederick Weis II recalled as ‘cultural visionary’
Posted: Thursday, October 09, 2003

Albert Frederick Weis II, came from a family of entertainers. When he retired in 1988, the third generation theatre-owner had left his mark on the entertainment industry in Savannah and a handful of Georgia communities.

Weis, 72, died at his home Wednesday evening after a year-long bout with cancer.

“He was a cultural visionary,” said his son, Albert Weis III. – Savannah Now [http://savannahnow.com/stories/100903/LOC_weisdies.shtml#.Vre0vd-rSRs]

Rick Baty was a cultural visionary in his own right. A native of Greenville, SC – Rick settled in Columbia where he met Nikki Musick and together had a daughter named Ariadne. Rick was an artist and was known in the Five Points section of Columbia for his fervent participation in the arts community both as an organizer and artist. Rick painted signs on store windows and designed T shirts for all kinds of events in the Columbia area.

I terribly miss Rick Baty. I met Rick in 1982 at the Faerie Gathering in Eagle Creek in 1982 where I also met Radical Faerie founder Harry Hay and his partner John Burnside. We became fast friends and soon spent tons of time with him in NYC on some of his extended visits to the Big Apple. In 1986 when I found out I was HIV+, Rick insisted I come down to Columbia South Carolina to be nurtured and mothered by him. Rick tried to get me to change my diet (macrobiotics) and stop eating meat. He was a hard sell. But alas, I couldn’t give up the diet on which I was raised. Meat and potatoes. Rick sent me back to NY with renewed confidence that if I took care of myself, I may survive this virus. Sadly, Rick contracted HIV on one of his trips to NYC and we lost him in 1992.

A week before his death, he had called me on the phone and with his Southern belle twang said, “I’m fixin’ to die by the end of the week, so if you want to see me in this life you had better get your ass down to Columbia in a jiffy.” I had called an airline, I think it was United, and got this really nice man on the phone and explained to him my friend was dying from AIDS and he booked me a discounted flight for family emergencies. When I had arrived, his mom answered the door and said she didn’t know why I was there. Rick was kinda “ornery” and really wasn’t accepting visitors. I guess Rick had heard me at the door and with a weak but determined voice yelled “Frank! Is that you?” So I came in and crept into his bedroom. It was dark except for a small lamp next to his bed. The room smelled like menthol and sandalwood and Rick’s breathing was labored and erratic. Claude Debussy’s Clair de Lune was playing from a small boom box and the lamplight lit Rick’s face in a way that made him look both like a beautiful young child and an old exhausted man. I kissed him and asked him what he needed. He said he was hungry and I immediately headed for the kitchen as Rick shouted orders about how to prepare his meal.

“There is some red miso in the fridge but don’t use the new container, use up the old one first. And there is some umeboshi plum paste and brown rice as well. And I don’t eat oil and I don’t eat sugar and….” I don’t know what came over me but I yelled back to him, “I didn’t come all the way from NYC to Columbia to be bossed around. I’m going shopping and will be back. Tonight you are having broiled salmon with butter and dill with asparagus and egg noodles and pesto.” There was a bit of a pregnant silence and then I heard him say, “OK. That sounds good.” His mother immediately ran into the kitchen and with joy on her face said, “Now I know why you are here.” I asked what her favorite cocktail was and she exclaimed she was a good Christian woman and didn’t touch alcohol. After another pregnant pause, she leaned closer to me and whispered in my ear that she did love a bit of Dubonnet on ice with lemon on occasion. I picked up the largest bottle I could find.

Later that evening, Ariadne came home and saw me drinking cocktails with her grandma and yelled with a bit of teenaged boredom mixed with a hint of glee, “Rick, Frank got grandma drunk.” Rick said softly but loud enough for all of us to hear, “God bless you.” After a week, Rick ate all I cooked for him and had seconds. His mom was concerned about the marijuana cookies he ate and I said he was dying and it was what gave him an appetite. She reluctantly acquiesced. By the weekend, Rick had gained about seven pounds. Rick didn’t have the energy to walk so I had to carry him into the bathroom when he had to go. He was skin and bones but still weighed enough with his large dancer’s frame that the added pounds were a pleasure to carry. Towards the end of my stay, his arrhythmias got more intense and he became breathless from the atrial fibrillations. I couldn’t stay any longer having to go back to NY to manage the dental practice of a college friend John Wolf DDS. When I left, he was still listening to Debussy which played constantly the week I was there. Rick died the moment I landed in La Guardia.

American Specialty & Import Co – General Electric Refrigerators Revisited – Savannah Waterfront, GA – Featured Fade, Mike Harris

© Mike Harris

FAB Spotlight on Street Art: Be Pleasant – Three Generations of Artists

By placing ourselves into the environment with the paintings, we create a layered effect that distorts reality and offers a kind of real time interaction with the environment which suggests that we are part of the art. – PLEASANT

Greetings, my name is Pleasant…. I  am a visual artist who is currently presenting a selection of my work in a project I have titled: Portable Expressions. In this series… I use static imagery and live interaction to convey a series of ideas. I was in Fort Greene recently performing this art [and] currently in the Nederlands bound for Paris in a few days where I shall appear in a documentary film piece about my new approach to street art and design.

Portable Expressions

These newest images come from Leiden with Pleasant’s Artist assistant, Farah participating in collaboration.

I very much believe in diversity and providing layers of creative content. An alumnus of the New York School of Visual Arts, I also make indirect commentary related to men’s issues and gay rights… in addition to socio-political commentary. Sadly this fact has isolated me in the USA at times. As most recently the so called ‘diverse’ Brooklyn Street Art association refused to cover my work. Their communication with me would be considered hostile at best. Perhaps a little racist too? maybe, I felt it. However despite this kind of treatment and blatant exclusion I continue forward in my work.

Pleasant Promo Shot

Both my father and grandfather were artists and both contributed to the city of Savannah significantly. I have produced a book of the collected murals, paintings and signage of my family titled, ‘PLEASANT Signs’. You can see some of my Dad’s work via his website.  I also present a lecture series titled, Three Generations of Pleasant Art. The book Pleasant Signs has found it’s way to the Collegiate school, School of Visual Arts and Bank Street College’s libraries. My Dad documented life in his art in the south during the civil rights movement from a local perspective. My Dad was a Bahai’ and an advocate for integration and the rights of all people including homosexuals, women and others. He took much abuse during his lifetime as a mixed race Black American artist. To this very day the local (tax-supported) art museum, the Telfair Museum of Art in Savannah refuses to support or acknowledge my father’s art contributions. His collection of paintings are unique and vast and his murals and signage dominate Savannah’s environment, appearing on many of Savannah’s, media promoted, famed historical tourist destinations. Despite this fact, there is little to no mention of my father’s art contributions… I continue as the third generation of Pleasant Artists continuing my family’s art legacy.

Pleasant Signs book produced in collaboration by Designer, Jalal Pleasant and Author, David Pleasant.

My Dad (Willam Pleasant, Jr.) was a Bahai’ and an advocate for integration and the rights of all people including homosexuals, women and others.

The shy Duck who inspired the World to smile – © PLEASANT

Overview of ‘Portable Expressions’

Portable Expressions is an evolution of my Suspended Thoughts installation art series. It continues my work in the development of establishing a static interactive experience for observers of this art. I have presented several versions of this series around the world. Similarly, Portable Expressions will take place (someplace) in New York City, Amsterdam and Paris. February-March 2013. Documentation of this project, including location details as to where observers may publicly see Pleasant art graphics shall be published via my website  and FACEBOOK.

This outdoor art installation consisting of several pieces sometimes suspended by wire, offers viewers an opportunity to become participants. Through multiple modes of interaction, you can independently touch elements and rearrange them in any given pattern. This installation is constructed in a method that integrates with and compliments its host space. Sometimes my ‘suspended’ style artworks have been referred to as “portable graffiti”. This is a result of the stylized art’s ability to enhance a setting without permanently altering it’s environment via creating a layered affect.

This installation uses a mix of fine art painting, graphic and conceptual design and sculptural elements. The host outdoor space serves as a foundation for the canvas. I often begin by planting a pre-rendered graphic design image of my Pleasant Spaceman graphic to represent the optimism of the future and go from there. Other elements include natural and inorganic imagery.

My mission is to engage all, and specifically young people in critical thinking; to question the order and structure of their environment and to consider how they may actualize their own personal understanding of creative expression and their role in defining the environment in which they live.  – Troy Davis, Warming, Corporate Bullshit, dreams and the loss of the old New York. …Dude Where’s my Bodega?   This Sucka ain’t dead yet.  In contrast it isn’t Pleasant art.  …Is it edgy?

bio:

b. 19 . 12 . 1974  (Georgia, USA) native Pleasant attended Pratt Institute and is an alumnus of the New York School of Visual Arts. Pleasant is a full-time Fine artist, Installation Artist, Curator, Lecturer and Designer. Pleasant received formal art instruction under the tutelage’s of NYC abstract painter Michael Goldberg, Kenny Scharf and fashion art Illustrator, Jack Potter. And is currently gallery represented along with Artists, Shepard Fairey, BustArt, Inkie, London Police among others. In addition Pleasant is an active published Apple® Developer/Designer. Select collections include, Estate of American Comedian Richard Pryor, Batoto Yetu and the University of Haifa. Pleasant has published appearances with the Nation Magazine, BlackBook Magazine, Nickelodeon Television/MTV Viacom, Het Parool, DeVolkskrant, Woodstock Times (NY)  and The New York Press / Chelsea Clinton News, New York, New York among many others. Pleasant is currently working on publishing his second art book slated for release in late 2013.

Fish Drainpipe – Savannah, GA

© Frank H. Jump

So ends a month-long love affair with Savannah. I hope you enjoyed it as much as we did. On to the next State. Hmm. But which?

White Hardware Co. – Mill Supplies & Heavy Hardware – Savannah, GA

Mill Supplies & Heavy Hardware © Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

Other Internet postings:

Bemco – Savannah, GA

© Frank H. Jump

McCrory – Green – Savannah, GA

© Frank H. Jump

Smoke Duke's Mixture Natural Tobacco – George Schwartz Germania Hall – Savannah, GA

© Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

The Milwaukee Sentinel - November 14, 1912 - Google

Saturated & Rehued © Frank H. Jump

Desaturated & Dehued © Frank H. Jump

Sepia © Frank H. Jump

Grayscale © Frank H. Jump

Trinkets & Trash dot org

Durham Smoking Tobacco & Duke’s Mixture. Fine cut tobacco (Roll your own, RYO). Two classic brands of cigarette tobacco which originated in the 1860s-70s in Durham, NC. Flu cured tobacco made the smoke from these cigarettes mild, that is, easy to inhale. These examples date from after 1911, following the breakup of the American Tobacco Trust. – Trinkets & Trash dot org

The only references I found about Germania Hall was in Google Books in a book by Whip Morrison Triplett called Savannah – Illustrated in postcards.

Savannah - Postcard History Series © Whip Morrison Triplett

Savannah - Postcard History Series © Whip Morrison Triplett

Internet Resources:

Wholesale Poultry – Skull Graffiti – Urban Ediglyph – Savannah, GA

© Frank H. Jump

Frank & Co. Wholesale Dry Goods & Notions – Savannah, GA

© Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

Frank & Co Wholesale Dry Goods & Notions - 131-133 Broughton Street - Savannah, GA - Ebay item

Notions: A notion is an accessory in the sewing industry. The word is usually used in the plural. Notions are sewn or glued onto garments and manufactured goods; their manufacture is an industry in itself. Notions include all types of fasteners and novelties. Examples of notions are buttons, zippers and beads. – Wikipedia