BEREA,KY - IT'S A LONG WAY TO BEREA
FROM MARCH/APRIL 2007 ISSUE
CARA ELLEN MODISETT

Destinations Archive:



Photo by O'neil Arnold

This little Kentucky town at the edge of the Blue Ridge is home to weavers, potters, bark birdhouse builders and furniture makers. Berea College is at the heart of it all, and through its unique history art has grown and thrived.


Crafted hands. Cheryl Powell is one of many artists who’ve created hands around Berea; this one is in front of the Kentucky Artisan Center.

Belle Jackson was in Japan. Berea, Ky. has a sister city there and she was onstage during a music festival, when she saw a man standing with his guitar. She reached out, touched it gently, and said, “Martin D28.” He lit up and replied, “D35!” and handed the instrument to her.

“I speak a couple words of Japanese,” says Jackson, “like ‘where’s the bathroom?’” But when she sang “Long Way to Harlan” on a stage across the world, with a view of Mt. Fuji in the distance – “they knew the chorus!”
It’s a long way to Kentucky from there, and even when you’re only driving six hours from Roanoke, Va. it’s a long way, because Berea feels – happily – like another world.

Belle Jackson is the town’s tourism director, and her story is Berea’s story, in a lot of ways. Never mind that she speaks in sound bites any radio producer would love, she means every word of them.


Threads of many colors. Churchill Weavers was founded by missionaries in Berea in 1922.


“I am the child raised by the village,” she says born and raised here, granddaughter and great-granddaughter to men who helped build the L&N Train Depot (now the visitor center where her office is housed), daughter and granddaughter to hairdressers. She went to Berea College, and like every other Berea College student – 80 percent are from the Appalachian region, all must show financial need and all must show academic aptitude – she worked in lieu of paying tuition, in the hospital lab.

Up until a few decades ago, the college ran the newspaper, the fire department, the only hotel, the electricity, the water department, the pharmacy. It was the first college in the south to admit women; it was the first college in the south to admit African-Americans – before the Civil War. The college’s crafts program drew artists and students from all over, and they’re still here, though graying, says Jackson.


Work and learning. Berea College students such as Amy Harmon work in lieu of tuition, many in the arts.


The town is more independent now, though the college is still the heart of it. Berea is shaded by the college’s history of diversity and liberalism – the likes of Alex Haley, Desmond Tutu and the Dalai Lama have visited, lived, spoken or served on the college board here. Students at the college can elect to live in the school’s ecovillage, where they live “off the grid,” run a greenhouse and dry their laundry on clotheslines. And, as Jackson eloquently puts it, “combining massage with rotator cuff surgery isn’t seen as weird.”

I’m staying in the Boone Tavern, the hotel that the college has run since the wife of the first president came up with the idea to build it after she found herself entertaining up to 200 guests a summer. It’s a beautiful place, especially in the holidays, when I’m here with my mother along for company. The parlors are lit with Christmas trees and strung lights, and there’s hot apple cider brewing in the lobby. I stay up late, catching up on e mail by wireless in the room and reading in the second-floor sitting room. I catch myself staring long into a mirror, looking backwards down a carpeted hall, waiting for ghosts.


History major? Berea College student Brenda Hornsby is combining her major with her “labor assignment” – the ceramics studio – to make historically accurate pots and glazes.


Berea is walkable. The Boone Tavern is at one end of a full block of restaurants, galleries, a coffee shop, the college bookstore. Step across the street and you’re on campus proper, with its old holly trees, or across the street in two other directions and there are more galleries.

Appalachian Fireside Crafts is one of the oldest galleries in the town, member-owned, with a great art deco sign above its door and quilts, pottery, ironwork, jewelry, woodwork, books and toys inside – it was once a bank, and so the vault is now devoted to fabric art and clothing.

Churchill Weavers, some blocks away from the center of town, has its own unique history. Started in 1922 by David and Eleanor Churchill, missionaries who taught weaving to impoverished women in India, it now ships its throws and garments to stores including Bloomingdale’s. The looms are the original ones that David designed and built, with parts replaced every so often.

Log House Craft Gallery, in a 1917 building, is owned by Berea College, and comprises two floors of work. Wood pieces, ironwork, brooms and woven items made by students is sold here and in the Boone Tavern gift shop; it’s all a continuation of the college’s major role in revitalizing regional handcraft in the 19th and 20th centuries (heavily influencing such endeavors as the creation of the Southern Highland Craft Guild).


Behind the loom. Aisulu Masylkanova, a 2006 graduate of Berea College, demonstrates weaving.


Nearly everywhere you walk, you’ll find woodworkers, weavers, potters and others, in galleries and studios in town. And each gallery is different – I didn’t find myself walking into gallery after gallery and seeing the same pieces, the same artists. They also reflect a polarity evident throughout town and campus: a strong, devoted traditional arts community, and a strong, devoted contemporary arts community.

The Kentucky Artisans Center is the newest center of creativity in Berea – built of limestone, designed by by Kentucky architects, it opened three years ago just off Interstate 75. The ceiling is southern pine, the roof slate and copper, the floor clay tile. It’s filled with art, books, music recordings and craft, all by Kentucky or Kentucky-connected artisans, many of whom demonstrate here on Fridays and Saturdays. Even though it’s primarily a retail space, it operates a bit like a museum too, with rotating exhibits put together by Gwen Hefner, who serves as public relations director, curator and programming director – and a potter in her hard-to-find spare time, so she knows the other side of the art business too.


Art for sale. The Kentucky Artisan Center, just off exit 77 (above) and in-town galleries such as Appalachian Fireside Crafts (top), offer traditional and contemporary creations by local and regional artists.


“We have had many artists,” says Hefner, “that have written us and said that without us they would not have been able to make it.”

In a way, the center continues what the college started – the idea that yes, an artist – or a town – can live by art.

 


Interviews Coming Soon


BEREA LINKS

Berea College

Town of Berea

Berea College Crafts

Berea Arts Council

Kentucky Artisan Center

Kentucky Artisan Heritage Trails

Artists and Shops

Appalachian Fireside Gallery

Brian Boggs Chairmakers

Churchill Weavers

Gastineau Studio

Debra Hille

I Love My Stuff

Jax Arts and Crafts Rugs

Jean's Unique Creations

Jeannette's Jewelry

Knotty Pine Woodworks

Rude Osolnik, master woodturner (1915-2001)

 

ADDITIONAL LODGING