High Museum of Art Atlanta
Thank you for reaching out to The High Museum. We are three thrilled to hear you have acquired Laura Pope, Forresters’ home and museum and are beginning to explore preservation options for the site. The department of Folk and Self-taught Art at The High Museum express our enthusiastic support for this effort, and would like to provide some historical precedents that may help your case in this letter. The practice of artistic environments has historic and important routes in and around the Southeast (especially in Georgia). Most notably, there are two sites that have been recently preserved, which in their time served as an important destination for artist, enthusiast, musicians, and curators for decades. They now attract visitors from all over the country:
- Pasaquan in Columbus, GA built by Eddie “St. EOM” Martins
https://pasaquan.columbusstate.edu/
- Paradise Garden in Summerville, GA built by Howard Finster
https://paradisegardenfoundation.org/
- Ava Maria Grotto in Cullman, AL
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ave_Maria_Grotto
Sadly, sometimes these environments do not survive to be preserved and are dismantled, or destroyed often against the artists will or after their death. This prevents their art from being enjoyed and understood, and its original contacts and scrubs, the communities of these unique, invaluable, local treasures.
Artist Nellie Mae Rowes, home, which she called the Playhouse, in Vinings, Georgia was a local treasure and popular destination that was sadly destroyed shortly after her death.
https://www.judithalexander.org/nellies-playhouse-video
Living Atlanta-based artist and musician, Lonnie Holley had his art environment, condemned and destroyed by the Birmingham airport authority in 1997. He now works in Atlanta and has found a Normas success in both the main stream and self-taught, art worlds, including exhibitions at Atlanta, contemporary Art Center, mass, MOCA, and inclusion in forthcoming exhibitions at the met (New York,), and the Deyoung museum (San Francisco).
https://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/26/magazine/lonnie-holley-the-insiders-outsider.html
There are tens of other examples of important folk and self-taught art environments that have been sites of pilgrimage, tourism, praise, and collected by Major Art institutions, such as the Smithsonian Museum of American art. The Kohler foundation in Wisconsin has been actively preserving and restoring many of these environments, and ensuring their continued stewardship through the country. They have published a book about Art environments, and their preservation efforts which we encourage you to get a copy of:
Best of luck in your endeavors,
Erin Nelson
Curatorial Assistant | Photography and Folk & Self-Taught Art
High Museum of Art Atlanta Letter