Sponsored Content

Try This: Two new exhibitions at the Columbia Museum of Art

We highly recommend checking out “Tina Williams Brewer: Stories of Grace” and “Resurgence and Renaissance: Art of the Catawba Nation Since 1973.”

Sponsored by
Quilted art in foreground with quote on wall in background

“Everybody’s going to have their opinion about what it is that South Carolina means. I choose to believe that this is our ancestral home.” - Tina Williams Brewer

Photo by the COLAtoday team

Table of Contents

Hi, Greenville — Kayla here, feeling inspired after a visit to the Columbia Museum of Art and its two new, house-organized exhibitions: “Tina Williams Brewer: Stories of Grace” and “Resurgence and Renaissance: Art of the Catawba Nation Since 1973.” Read on to learn more about these shows and why you’ll want to plan a trip to the museum to check them out this summer.

What we tried:

We started with a tour through Tina Williams Brewer’s body of work, comprised of quilts she started making in the late ‘80s as a new mother. (She’d worked with ceramics and photography prior.) Brewer quickly developed her own style, working with found fabric, family heirlooms, photographs, newspaper clippings, and more, while exploring African and African American history and heritage through her pieces (which deserve to be experienced in person — they are stunning).

This career-spanning exhibition of Brewer’s meticulous work is the first of its kind in the Southeast, and we’re honored to have seen it.

What not to miss:

Standing in front of one of Brewer’s quilts is not unlike taking in an abstract painting. Her densely-layered, story-rich compositions reveal new aspects of themselves the longer you look, and it’s thrilling to notice the themes that connect her pieces.

Keep an eye out for the ancestors, aka figures that appear throughout Brewer’s work. They begin with their hands down, “but at some point, I raised their hands up. I have never gone back to the hands being down,” she explains.

While it would be impossible for the museum to be able to showcase the back of every quilt, there is one piece in particular, “Sequences: Soul Spirit Heart,” that is displayed suspended in midair to reveal a historical map of Pittsburgh. We were, admittedly, pretty enthralled by this one.

What we’re still talking about:

After walking through the galleries housing Brewer’s decades of work, museum visitors get to explore a 50-year exhibition that builds off a 1973 CMA exhibition of Catawba-made pottery. The citizens of the Catawba Nation have preserved and continue to celebrate their heritage through artistic traditions and innovation on display in “Resurgence and Renaissance: Art of the Catawba Nation Since 1973.”

Did you know? The Catawba Nation is the sole federally recognized tribe in South Carolina, and their pottery tradition is closely guarded and protected, taught only to Catawba citizens. citizens. In fact, it is the oldest continuous earthenware tradition in North America, dating back thousands of years.

Organized and shown in partnership with the University of South Carolina Lancaster, the exhibition also includes basketry, beadwork, quilts, digital art, and photography — roughly 70 works of art from more than 30 of the finest Catawba makers over the last half century, including those practicing today.

How you can experience this:

Tina Williams Brewer: Stories of Grace” and “Resurgence and Renaissance: Art of the Catawba Nation Since 1973” will be on view through Sunday, Sept. 3.

Things to know if you go:

More from GVLtoday
Spoiler alert: Traffic isn’t great. We dove into the Texas A&M Transportation Institute’s congestion data so you don’t have to.
Help us create a growing guide to small businesses by submitting your favorite local makers, restaurants, and professionals, and sharing this page with a friend.
“WHEN I think about Greenville, South Carolina architecture this is exactly what comes to mind,” the post said.
The new Meals on Wheels building features a 15,000-sqft kitchen with 5,000 sqft of storage for food.
The event, which also took place in cities like Charlotte, Raleigh, and Nashville in January, urges participants to explore new coffee shops in their city.
If the city moves forward, the plan would close part of East Court Street to cars and expand market and event space.
For every Bradford Pear you remove from your property, Clemson and the Forestry Commission will give you a free replacement, but only while supplies last.
You can just load your TBR (to be read) list, but these challenges and pop-up shops keep it interesting.
The Music in the Woods stage was damaged by Helene in fall 2024, and now the park and its supporters are working to rebuild.