
Brown County Studio and Garden Tour
by Charlene Marsh
courtesy photo of Bob Birdsong, basket weaver
Last summer I drove the self guided Brown County Studio and
Garden Tour, visiting as many studios and gardens as I could
in one day.
A gray, stormy day slowed my start, but once on the road,
the countryside was charming and the mist rising from the new
fallen rain provided an ethereal backdrop.
With map in hand, I started with Dennis Watson's garden near
my home. The gardens, full of lilies, were created to honor his
deceased daughter, Stacy. Small pools and waterfalls greet the
visitor. A fishing shed by the pond invites you to linger and
enjoy pink water lilies in bloom.
Artist Amanda Mathis once lived in Mr. Watson's log cabin.
Also on the tour is her nearby studio on twenty acres of land
bordering Salt Creek. She takes inspiration from the beautiful
scenery to paint "contemporary primitive" acrylic paintings.
I headed south on picturesque State Road 135 to Spears Gallery.
Larry Spears was busy demonstrating raku pottery firing techniques.
This year his emphasis will be on reduction fired stoneware and
porcelain. The pottery is hand thrown on the wheel and various
glazes are added to the surface.
A long winding uphill drive leads you to Bill Root's sculpture
studio. I marveled at Bill's four-foot concrete carousel horse
standing in the middle of a flower bed. The studio is housed
in a large open barn. Mr. Root creates sculptures using cold
cast, fiberglass, woodcarving, and fired clay. A fiberglass replica
of the carousel horse is on display in his studio with other
sculptures. Samples of the sculpture molds provided a glimpse
into the intricate production process.
After leaving the Bill Root studio, I drove back north to
Salt Creek Road and the enchanted Faerie Hollow Pottery studio.
Cheri Platter creates porcelain pottery using Oriental calligraphy
techniques to paint roses, iris, and tulips. Her studio is full
of windows with views of the woodlands and gardens. The extensive
rose gardens have usually peaked by the time of the tour but
are still worth a look.
My next stop was the Gary Pearce studio. The yards and gardens
provided gallery space for the stone and copper sculptures. Mr.
Pearce is primarily a stone carver working with limestone and
marble. Some of the sculptures incorporate copper wire. Gary
uses hammer and chisel, power grinder and air hammer to create
his works of art.
I took so much time visiting each studio, garden, and artist
that I only had time to enjoy five locations.
I missed Helein Hart's Wildflower Studio, on the tour again
this year. She creates fresh, translucent watercolors incorporating
flowers, whimsy, humor, and verse, inspired by her hilltop view
of the natural beauty of Brown County.
The Birdsong Corner Baskets and Flower Farm features four
flower gardens, a pond filled with koi, and a home totally constructed
by Bob and finished inside with 13 Indiana hardwoods. The kitchen
features hand-constructed hickory cabinets and a tin ceiling.
The Birdsong's have been weaving baskets for 27 years and sell
them at the Brown County Craft Gallery. They recently started
crocheting old-fashioned log cabin rugs. Joan Birdsong is an
oil painter.
New studios on the tour this year include Brenda Roberts,
a landscape artist, Greg Schatz, a potter, and Chris Gustin,
a weaver.
Chris Gustin has woven thousands of rugs from materials salvaged
from mills as well as scarves and clothing from soft silks and
cottons. She has twelve looms in her Homestead Weaving Studio.
The walls are lined with colorful spools of yarn.
This year, Jay and Ellen Carter plan to welcome visitors into
their gardens. Established over a twenty-five year period, they
include annuals, perennials, shrubs, and water gardens. You can
also view their log cabin filled with antiques and early Indiana
art.
I won't be able to make the tour this year as I plan to host
tour visitors at my newly constructed studio on Lanam Ridge Road.
The building is painted in a rainbow of colors on the outside
and finished with oak hardwood floors on the inside. There is
a fish pool and fountain. Figurative, narrative, conceptual,
tufted fiber artworks, tufted handbags, and oil paintings will
be available to the visitors.
This year's tour takes place June 23rd and 24th. Look for
the Brown County 3rd Annual Studio and Garden Tour brochure for
a map and description of the tour. You can pick one up at the
Brown County Convention and Visitors Bureau, the Brown County
Chamber of Commerce, or at Tour HeadquartersBrown County
Inn and Restaurant at the corner of State Roads 46 and 135, and
T.C. Steele State Historic Site south of State Road 46 near Belmont.
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