Generation Charleston to Celebrate Speakeasy Style

Generation Charleston is going back to the roaring twenties for the annual Generations Celebration. Saturday, September 26 at 8:00 p.m., Generation Charleston will transform the University of Charleston Rotunda into a 1920’s speakeasy.

“The Generations Celebration is an opportunity for anyone, of any generation, to celebrate all that makes Charleston a great place to live and work, ” said Special Events Co-Captain Rachelle Beckner. “For the members of Generation Charleston – who have worked hard all year on community service projects, professional development, and promoting downtown living – it’s a time to let our hair down and enjoy our successes for the year.”

Once inside the speakeasy, guests will enjoy food, drinks and entertainment, and a “backroom” card game awaits those who can recite the speakeasy password (printed on tickets).

The 1920’s, more than another other decade, define 20th century America. Best known for prohibition, the rise of jazz, and the flapper, the 1920’s were a time of entertainment. To make the night an authentic 20’s entertainment experience, Generation Charleston will show a silent film during the event and play traditional 20’s music throughout the night. And it doesn’t stop there. Generation Charleston will offer swing dance lessons and then give guests a chance to show off their best 20’s dance moves in the swing dance contest.

Guests should don their finest 1920’s attire. Generation Charleston will award the best costume a $50 Capitol Market gift certificate.

Tickets are $25 each and are available on-line through the Charleston Area Alliance website at www.charlestonareaalliance.org. Don’t miss out on this event. It’s sure to be the cat’s meow!

Share

New Arrival: Quarrier Diner by David Riffle


Quarrier Diner – Mixed Media – 30″ x 23″ – David Riffle – 2007

The Purple Moon is pleased to announce the arrival of David Riffle’s Quarrier Diner to our gallery in downtown Charleston.

This 2007 mixed media work, which portrays one of Charleston’s most well-known landmarks, is being made available through a special arrangement with the local collector who acquired the piece from Riffle’s show at The Art Store in October 2007.

David Riffle is one of West Virginia’s most unique artists and his three dimensional works, like this one, create images that don’t simply jump off the page – they leap off and into the mind of the viewer. Often nostalgic – sometimes quirky – Riffle’s art always speaks to life in West Virginia.

Often with a surprise or two (or three) Riffle’s work contains reflections of his life – as the newspaper box in Quarrier Diner which features images of his wife and daughter on the front page of the paper.

This piece is made all the more important as the actual Quarrier Diner’s future currently hangs in the balance. This art deco-facade building has sat idle for several years now. Once a bustling lunchtime hotspot, the building now sits deteriorating and we could likely see the Quarrier Diner’s demise if it does not receive the attention it deserves as one of downtown Charleston’s true gems in the very near future.

David Riffle’s Quarrier Diner can currently be seen in The Purple Moon’s main gallery at 906 Quarrier Street. Hours are Tuesday – Friday 11am – 5pm and Saturday 10am – 4pm or other times by appointment.

Share

Closed Due to Death in Family

The Purple Moon will be closed from Monday, June 22nd through Wednesday, June 24th due to a death in the family. We will resume regular business hours on Thursday, June 25th and be open that evening for ArtWalk.

Our deepest gratitude goes out to the many who have contacted us during this difficult time.

Share

1 Year on Quarrier

It’s hard for us to believe but as of this week The Purple Moon has now been in our Quarrier Street location for one year.

The Purple Moon has been a labor of love for us but the success we have realized is solely because of the huge amount of support and patronage shown to us by you and others in the Kanawha Valley and our friends across the globe who visit us online.

As our way of saying Thank You, during this Thursday’s ArtWalk from 5pm to 8pm, The Purple Moon will be hosting a special event to celebrate our first year on Quarrier Street.

For this we will be opening a vintage art show, 20th Century ARTifacts, in The Over the Moon Gallery and for Thursday night only pieces from the ARTifacts exhibit will be available at a 25% discount. There will also be specials on our vintage glass, home accessories and furnishings in our main showroom, door prizes and, of course, wine and laughter.

We hope you will join us so we can have the opportunity to say “Thank you” in person.

Share

Call for Artist Submissions – Hard Times: a new dollar for america

The Purple Moon announces a call for artist submissions for the juried exhibit, Hard Times: a new dollar for america.

Submissions for this show are being accepted in two categories – 1) artists 18 years of age or older, or 2) student artists currently enrolled in high school. The second category, exclusively for young artists, is in keeping with The Purple Moon’s commitment to supporting arts education programs.

Artworks in all mediums (except video and ceiling mounted) are eligible and artists may submit up to three works. All works must fall within the theme of the show and meet the requirements outlined in the Prospectus.

DOWNLOAD PROSPECTUS HERE (PDF format)

Please review the Prospectus carefully as submissions which do meet follow the format for submission and show criteria will not be considered.

Submissions will be accepted via email and mail only and must be received on or before June 5, 2009. There is no entry fee for this exhibit.

Hard Times: a new dollar for america is The Purple Moon’s first juried art exhibit and will open the evening of June 25th, 2009 in conjunction with the ArtWalk and Festivall 2009 and will run through July 31, 2009..

The goal of the exhibit is to artistically focus on the changing and challenging economic landscape the nation and the world now finds itself in and examine the impact and perception of the dollar in modern society.

Submissions by artists must follow the theme of the show with works of art which re-design, revalue or re-evaluate the American dollar and which artistically address at least one of the following:

1 – A redesign of the American dollar bill.

2 – The revaluation of the dollar and its role in 21st Century.

3 – Alternatives to the dollar in the 21st Century.

For more information on this special exhibit visit the Hard Times: a new dollar for america website.

Share

Works by Sharon Lyn Stackpole Opening February 27th

The Purple Moon will be presenting Filters of color, word & light: Works by Sharon Lyn Stackpole beginning Friday, February 27th in the Over the Moon Gallery. The show will open with a reception with the artist from 6 – 9 pm in the gallery at 906 Quarrier Street in Downtown Charleston.

Sharon Lyn Stackpole studied art at Fairmont State and West Virginia University, but has also read poetry in coffeehouses in San Francisco, and worked as an award-winning reporter for the Wheeling Intelligencer and News-Register. Recently her series, Fictionaries, traveled around the state of West Virginia and also exhibited at the Beehive in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Fictionaries was all about the blending of word and image.

Ms. Stackpole’s current show is continuation and expansion of that blending. In discussing her work she said:

“As I continue this journey, this immersion into my art, I’ve gone through various obsessions. Obsessions with words, with sculpture, with painted glass, and with glass itself. Obsessions with color have transcended into obsessions with light — what changes it, what transforms it, what alters light, what filters it. I want those filters. I want to hold them in my hands and build.”

To read more about Sharon Lyn Stackpole visit her blog, s.m.ART.

Share

Blenko Glass – Collectors Should Wait for the Fat Lady to Sing


Blenko #585 Mulberry Pitcher – Wayne Husted – 1958 – View #1

Blenko Glass, a world renowned glass producer and one of West Virginia’s most famous businesses, announced to workers Friday afternoon, Jan. 30, 2009, that production had ceased. As rumors of financial difficulties have been in the wind for quite some time, and the company made some major leadership changes in the past year, this move came as no real surprise to anybody who had been paying attention.

With any luck this will not be the end of Blenko and hope still remains throughout West Virginia that it will not be. As the Charleston Daily Mail says in it’s editorial today, “With Blenko, it isn’t over until it’s over. Here’s hoping for the best.” I think this is the sentiment of every citizen in the state and Blenko collectors throughout the world.

The Blenko gift shop in Milton is still operating as of today. In fact, it has been reported that crowds were huge over the weekend and sales were brisk as people flocked to pick up remaining pieces of current inventory. While I’m certain many were collectors making sure they got pieces before they were gone I would venture to guess others were simply trying to “stock up” on the hope that prices would skyrocket. This happened when Fenton glass announced their closure in August of 2007 and prices temporarily soared only to go back to normal after the closure was avoided and the Williamstown, WV factory continued production.

As my primary interest in Blenko Glass is in their “Golden Age” pieces from the 1950’s and 60’s I did not make a beeline down I-64 this weekend to pick at what may not yet prove to be a carcass. Instead, I ran my usual route of places to find quality, vintage Blenko and managed to acquire a piece which had alluded me for a long time.

The #585 pitcher shown here was designed by Wayne Husted. The Mulberry color of this pierce-handled pitcher is highly sought after by collectors as it was only produced in 1958. This piece is one of Husted’s great designs and the pitcher I located in a local antique emporium is in fabulous condition.


Blenko #585 Mulberry Pitcher – Wayne Husted – 1958 – View #2

This time of crisis for the Blenko Glass Company will hopefully pass and the firm will keep producing high-quality, hand crafted glass for generations to come. That is certainly my sincere hope. Collectors of contempory pieces should pick up what they can (with the caveat that no one should be paying inflated prices as the final outcome of this situation is not yet known nor its impact on prices) and visit the Blenko gift shop. Surely every sale there will help keep the doors open if that is possible.

Avid collectors of vintage Blenko should, as always, keep their eye out for they pieces they are after – you never know when that perfect piece is going to surface – like the one I discovered this weekend.

But avoid dealers who are arbitrarily raising prices in light of these recent developments. For new pieces the true collectible value has yet to be established and for vintage pieces, long out of production, the news of Blenko’s woes doesn’t change supply one iota at this point. Ultimately, after the dust settles, demand could increase and impact prices but that has not yet been determined.

As was the case with Fenton just a few years ago, the fat lady has yet to sing and wise collectors are waiting for her song.

Here’s wishing for the best.

Share

Special Holiday Hours for The Purple Moon

Still looking for that special and unique gift?

The Purple Moon is extending hours of operation between now and Christmas and is chock full of fabulous gifts items!

Saturday – 12/20 – 10am to 6pm

Sunday – 12/21 – 1pm to 5pm

Monday – 12/22 – 11am t0 6pm

Tuesday – 12/23 – 11am to 6pm

Wednesday – 12/24 – 9am to 3pm

We hope you’ll pay us and the other locally owned and operated businesses in downtown Charleston a visit.

Share

Black Friday @ The Purple Moon

If you are among the people who believe the Friday after Thanksgiving is the time to do your Holiday shopping then I hope you’ll pay a visit to The Purple Moon at 906 Quarrier Street tomorrow. Opening at 8 a.m. for those early-bird  shoppers or after a quick breakfast at First Watch we will be open through 8 p.m. for the monthly ArtWalk.

Specials galore and the most relaxed shopping environment you will find this season await you at The Purple Moon.

In these economic times, the modern lady and I urge you to shop locally, if not at our place then at one of the many “home grown” establishments available in Charleston. You will find great, unique gifts while supporting our locally economy which will make for a wonderful holiday season all around our community.

We wish you a very happy Thanksgiving!

Share