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Art Across Alabama

Alabama Living Magazine

Collectives and Cooperatives Support Artistic Talent

By Colette Boehm

Alabama’s art cooperatives, collectives and galleries celebrate talent, diversity, and inspiration throughout the state. The organizations supporting artists are as varied as the work they display. In premiere galleries, small co-ops and working studios, from the state’s mountainous regions in the north to the beaches on its coast, these organizations and facilities are dedicated to supporting and promoting an amazing assortment of art and an arts community that is flourishing.

The arts are alive and well in Selma and the surrounding community, thanks to ArtsRevive, a non-profit incorporated in 2003. Executive Director Becky Youngblood is animated when she talks about the myriad ways the membership-based organization has worked for the past 22 years to celebrate the rich cultural diversity and talent in their area, which has spurred economic and community redevelopment.

Francesca Emerson, a Selma potter who creates her own works in ArtsRevive’s CREATE Space, enjoys the art at a recent Roots and Wings annual art show in Selma. Courtesy of Samantha Jones

 “We hired our first executive director in 2012 and now have five employees,” she says. “We’ve repurposed four buildings in downtown Selma, we partner with the city and county schools as well as the Edmundite Missions to provide arts education, we built a community garden, have growing programs in pottery and quilting, and we take over 200 children to see the Alabama Symphony Orchestra in Birmingham.”  The quilters have donated more than 150 quilts to the Sabra Sanctuary, Bloom House and local nursing homes, among others. 

Folk artist Scott McQueen enjoys being a part of the arts community at the Kentuck Art Center in Northport.

She opened the organization’s Gallery 905 in November 2015 with 40 artists and it’s now grown to more than 100 displaying their artwork from paintings in various genres, ornaments, pottery, sculpture and more. “Our mission is to build community through the arts,” she says, supporting local artists, creating an arts and culture district downtown, developing Selma as an arts destination and creating learning opportunities in the arts. “We fill a lot of voids.” 

Mentone Arts Center is a focal point in a town known as an artistic community. Each of the more than 60 juried artists and makers who display work in the center has ties to the Lookout Mountain region. The center is a non-profit that often collaborates with other local organizations, including the Little River Arts Area Council and the Mentone Educational Resources Foundation, to further its goal of preserving and promoting the community’s artistic roots.

“Mentone is a very special place,” says artist Meg Justice, an exhibiting artist there, who feels a special connection to the community. “It is very supportive of the arts and artists and even had an artists’ colony here in the ’30s. This support and love of the arts was one of the main reasons we moved here.”

Meg also has a connection to local wildlife, which is evident in her intricate linocut pieces. “Inspiration is right out the back door. We have so much wildlife on Lookout Mountain, it’s an inexhaustible
supply of inspiration.”

The Huntsville Art League has been in existence since 1957 and is dedicated to education, inspiration, and empowerment of artists. The league is made up of artists and patrons, including nearly 50 exhibiting artists at its gallery at Lowe Mill. Pieces in the gallery include paintings, photography, jewelry, woodwork, and more. Active members, like digital graphic artist Shawn Dunahoo, work shifts in gallery. He welcomes the opportunity to participate.

“It’s so hard for new artists to get out in front of people,” Dunahoo says. “The cost of starting your own gallery or business and the difficulties of breaking into that world as a new unknown … How do you get past that? This is perfect for them. There’s very little cost.”

The Kentuck Gallery Gift Shop is located on the Kentuck campus in Northport. The arts program has been around for more than 50 years and the shop displays the work of a variety of affiliated artists.

That cost includes an annual membership and monthly rental of gallery space, both of which are a great value, in his opinion. “Usually, artists will sell enough to cover that from the very get-go.

One layer of her work includes running the business side of the collective. “When I’m behind the desk,” she says of her day-to-day operations, “I’m there to represent all of us.” Today, nearly 100 artists and makers are benefiting from her dream to give them a place they feel represented.

Artist Linda Munoz’s work is represented throughout the state, both in galleries and as public art. Her home is not far from Black Belt Treasures Cultural Arts Center in Camden. The non-profit was started in 2005 with the objective to stimulate the economy in Alabama’s Black Belt region through the sale and promotion of fine arts and heritage crafts. More than 400 artists are now represented there, including Munoz, who created the gallery’s sign using her signature mosaic style and including artifacts from fellow Black Belt artists. The sign is just one of her prominent projects created because of her commitment to support community-driven art.

“A lot of them are projects that I do with community members,” Munoz explains, “like the steps at DeSoto Falls and the tree at Kentuck on the side of the gallery.” For many of the works, she has donated her time and talent. “That’s what you do. If you believe in engaging the community, that’s a great way to do it. People take ownership then of that artwork.” Her efforts to engage the community have included teaching an integrated mosaic arts program in schools across the Black Belt and organizing youth mosaic workshops with the Black Belt Glass Arts Guild.

Southern Art & Makers Collective in Montgomery aims to give support, visibility and affordable gallery space to regional artists.
Shawn Dunahoo is a member of the Huntsville Art League who displays his work in their co-op gallery located in Lowe Mill ARTS & Entertainment.

The 10,000-square-foot Coastal Arts Center of Orange Beach displays the work of more than 100 juried artists. The center’s waterfront campus includes a Clay Studio and Hot Shop, where resident artists work and teach onsite. This is also the site of a fine art festival each spring. The programs and events of the  city-owned gallery are also supported by a local Friends of the Arts group. The combination of efforts, according to Steve Burrow, a Gulf Shores potter, is a very positive one for artists. His pieces are characterized by coastal colors, sea creatures and wave-like movements and he says the center provides an excellent sales outlet.

“They sell our work,” he says of the gallery, “and they do a good job of that.” According to Burrow, the gallery, programs, and events have combined to raise the profile of art in the community. “They bring it all together.” Burrow says the gallery and its activities also connects artists with each other and the public, making the entire coastal creative community stronger.

These locations and artists are just a small sample of the amazing and diverse arts community throughout the state. New artist-led cooperative efforts are evolving all the time. One example is the Bluff City Arts Alliance, formed in 2023 in Eufaula, with the goal of celebrating local artists, igniting creativity, and encouraging community involvement. And of course, curated collections can be found at art galleries and museums around the state.

A variety of art forms are on display at galleries all across the state, including the Coastal Arts Center in Orange Beach.

One layer of her work includes running the business side of the collective. “When I’m behind the desk,” she says of her day-to-day operations, “I’m there to represent all of us.” Today, nearly 100 artists and makers are benefiting from her dream to give them a place they feel represented.

Artist Linda Munoz’s work is represented throughout the state, both in galleries and as public art. Her home is not far from Black Belt Treasures Cultural Arts Center in Camden. The non-profit was started in 2005 with the objective to stimulate the economy in Alabama’s Black Belt region through the sale and promotion of fine arts and heritage crafts. More than 400 artists are now represented there, including Munoz, who created the gallery’s sign using her signature mosaic style and including artifacts from fellow Black Belt artists. The sign is just one of her prominent projects created because of her commitment to support community-driven art.

Steve and Dee Burrow display their work, which incorporates coastal colors and critters, in the Coastal Arts Center in Orange Beach.

“A lot of them are projects that I do with community members,” Munoz explains, “like the steps at DeSoto Falls and the tree at Kentuck on the side of the gallery.” For many of the works, she has donated her time and talent. “That’s what you do. If you believe in engaging the community, that’s a great way to do it. People take ownership then of that artwork.” Her efforts to engage the community have included teaching an integrated mosaic arts program in schools across the Black Belt and organizing youth mosaic workshops with the Black Belt Glass Arts Guild.

Artist Linda Munoz shows the completed sign she designed for Black Belt Treasures Cultural Arts Center.

The 10,000-square-foot Coastal Arts Center of Orange Beach displays the work of more than 100 juried artists. The center’s waterfront campus includes a Clay Studio and Hot Shop, where resident artists work and teach onsite. This is also the site of a fine art festival each spring. The programs and events of the  city-owned gallery are also supported by a local Friends of the Arts group. The combination of efforts, according to Steve Burrow, a Gulf Shores potter, is a very positive one for artists. His pieces are characterized by coastal colors, sea creatures and wave-like movements and he says the center provides an excellent sales outlet.

“They sell our work,” he says of the gallery, “and they do a good job of that.” According to Burrow, the gallery, programs, and events have combined to raise the profile of art in the community. “They bring it all together.” Burrow says the gallery and its activities also connects artists with each other and the public, making the entire coastal creative community stronger.

These locations and artists are just a small sample of the amazing and diverse arts community throughout the state. New artist-led cooperative efforts are evolving all the time. One example is the Bluff City Arts Alliance, formed in 2023 in Eufaula, with the goal of celebrating local artists, igniting creativity, and encouraging community involvement. And of course, curated collections can be found at art galleries and museums around the state.

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