🚀 go-pugleaf

RetroBBS NetNews Server

Inspired by RockSolid Light RIP Retro Guy

Thread View: alt.arts.poetry.comments
14 messages
14 total messages Started by "Will Dockery" Fri, 24 Jun 2005 21:40
Pasaquan & Saint EOM
#137465
Author: "Will Dockery"
Date: Fri, 24 Jun 2005 21:40
115 lines
5172 bytes
Pasaquan and Saint EOM:

<http://www.pasaquan.com/>

<http://www.rawvision.com/back/steom/steom.html>

----
Posted on Wed, Jun. 22, 2005 from
<http://www.ledger-enquirer.com/mld/ledgerenquirer/>

Peace, love and art

Eddie Owens Martin had a vision of a place packed with peace and love
and art, a place where race did not matter and for that matter, neither
did sex. It was a place with lots of love.

"Lots of love, lots of peace," says Fred Fussell of the Pasaquan
Preservation Society, the Marion County group now charged with keeping
Martin's vision alive years after the artist passed on. "There would be
no discrimination of any kind," Fussell says of Martin's vision.
"Everybody would be interested in the arts, and in peace and love and
all that."

So there should be lots of peace, love and art to enjoy Saturday as the
preservation society reopens Martin's place to the public. The 7-acre
art compound has been off-limits to all but special tour groups for
three years now, which may explain recent shortages of peace and love.

Deep in the pines outside Buena Vista, Pasaquan is the realization of a
vision Martin had in New York in the 1930s, while ill and running a
fever. He saw a tall trio from the future who told him they came from a
place called Pasaquan, where the past, the present, the future and
everything else all come together. They told him to go home to Georgia
and "do something." He did.

The son of a white sharecropper, Martin had left home after seeing his
daddy kill a puppy a black family had given the 14-year-old Eddie.
Eventually he drifted to New York City and found a new family among the
castaways of Greenwich Village. He sucked up the city's art culture and
became a flamboyant character, calling himself "St. EOM" after his
feverish vision of the future.

Then he came home to Georgia, to do something. He built Pasaquan out of
an 1880s farm. He raised walls of concrete around it, and built faces
and symbols and figures into the walls. He made them shine in bright
colors with oil-based house paint.

In 1986 the artist and fortune-teller saw that an illness was going to
kill him, so he killed himself first. He left behind not only 15,650
square feet of painted art that forms Pasaquan's outer shell, but also
more than 2,000 individual pieces of art: oil and watercolor paintings,
ink and pencil drawings, sculptures and costumes.

He left it all to the Marion County Historical Society, which in 1987
tried to give it to the Columbus Museum, which in 1989 turned it down.

Since then, Martin's work has been exhibited in the National Museum of
American Art, the New Orleans Museum of Art, the Museum of American
Folk Art, The Library of Congress, the Contemporary Arts Center in
Seattle and other institutions.

Art more easily endures in a museum or gallery than out in the woods.
Maintaining a place made out of peace, love, concrete, metal, wood and
house paint is a challenge.

Part of the reason the preservation society is inviting the public back
to Pasaquan 10-4 p.m. Saturday is not only to make a few bucks --
admission will be $5 for all who aren't children age 5 or younger --
but also to publicize its plight.

Formed within the Marion County Historical Society in the early 1990s,
the preservation society took possession of Pasaquan in 2003. It has
picked up a few grants to do some repair and repainting, but it hasn't
the estimated $1.5 million needed to fully restore and preserve
everything Martin left behind.

The organization hopes that again having public events at Pasaquan will
be good public relations, teaching people about the place and its
meaning.

The folks familiar with it never seem to lose interest. Fussell says
they ask about it a lot, and call to try to set up special visits --
everyone from Columbus State University art students to soccer teams.

"There was a woman from LaGrange who brought a group of graduating high
school seniors as her graduation gift to one of the girls," he says.
"The girl got to invite 10 of her friends to come along. We've had
several classes from LaGrange College and from CSU to the place."

Recently the sponsor of a soccer team in Columbus for a tournament
tried to take some players out to tour Pasaquan but couldn't fit the
trip in.

Preservationists hope reopening Pasaquan on the last Saturday of each
month this summer will help reconnect people with Martin and his work.
"The ultimate goal is to have the place pretty much restored if we
possibly can and open on a regular basis, almost a daily basis, by the
Fourth of July, 2008, which would be Eddie Martin's 100th birthday,"
Fussell says.

It would honor the life of a poor farm boy who left home with nothing
and came home with a vision.

"I built this place to have somethin' to identify with, 'cause there's
nothin' that I see in this world that I identify with or desire to
emulate," Martin once told a biographer. "Here I can be in my own world
with my temples and designs and the spirit of God."

His world of peace, love and art still awaits the future out in woods
near Buena Vista. And where else around here now can you find peace,
love and art all in one place?

-Tim Chitwood


Re: Pasaquan & Saint EOM
#634754
Author: Zod The Mighty
Date: Fri, 06 Dec 2019 21:14
116 lines
5507 bytes
On Friday, June 24, 2005 at 11:40:55 PM UTC-5, Will Dockery wrote:
>
> Pasaquan and Saint EOM:
>
> <http://www.pasaquan.com/>
>
> <http://www.rawvision.com/back/steom/steom.html>
>
> ----
> Posted on Wed, Jun. 22, 2005 from
> <http://www.ledger-enquirer.com/mld/ledgerenquirer/>
>
> Peace, love and art
>
> Eddie Owens Martin had a vision of a place packed with peace and love
> and art, a place where race did not matter and for that matter, neither
> did sex. It was a place with lots of love.
>
> "Lots of love, lots of peace," says Fred Fussell of the Pasaquan
> Preservation Society, the Marion County group now charged with keeping
> Martin's vision alive years after the artist passed on. "There would be
> no discrimination of any kind," Fussell says of Martin's vision.
> "Everybody would be interested in the arts, and in peace and love and
> all that."
>
> So there should be lots of peace, love and art to enjoy Saturday as the
> preservation society reopens Martin's place to the public. The 7-acre
> art compound has been off-limits to all but special tour groups for
> three years now, which may explain recent shortages of peace and love.
>
> Deep in the pines outside Buena Vista, Pasaquan is the realization of a
> vision Martin had in New York in the 1930s, while ill and running a
> fever. He saw a tall trio from the future who told him they came from a
> place called Pasaquan, where the past, the present, the future and
> everything else all come together. They told him to go home to Georgia
> and "do something." He did.
>
> The son of a white sharecropper, Martin had left home after seeing his
> daddy kill a puppy a black family had given the 14-year-old Eddie.
> Eventually he drifted to New York City and found a new family among the
> castaways of Greenwich Village. He sucked up the city's art culture and
> became a flamboyant character, calling himself "St. EOM" after his
> feverish vision of the future.
>
> Then he came home to Georgia, to do something. He built Pasaquan out of
> an 1880s farm. He raised walls of concrete around it, and built faces
> and symbols and figures into the walls. He made them shine in bright
> colors with oil-based house paint.
>
> In 1986 the artist and fortune-teller saw that an illness was going to
> kill him, so he killed himself first. He left behind not only 15,650
> square feet of painted art that forms Pasaquan's outer shell, but also
> more than 2,000 individual pieces of art: oil and watercolor paintings,
> ink and pencil drawings, sculptures and costumes.
>
> He left it all to the Marion County Historical Society, which in 1987
> tried to give it to the Columbus Museum, which in 1989 turned it down.
>
> Since then, Martin's work has been exhibited in the National Museum of
> American Art, the New Orleans Museum of Art, the Museum of American
> Folk Art, The Library of Congress, the Contemporary Arts Center in
> Seattle and other institutions.
>
> Art more easily endures in a museum or gallery than out in the woods.
> Maintaining a place made out of peace, love, concrete, metal, wood and
> house paint is a challenge.
>
> Part of the reason the preservation society is inviting the public back
> to Pasaquan 10-4 p.m. Saturday is not only to make a few bucks --
> admission will be $5 for all who aren't children age 5 or younger --
> but also to publicize its plight.
>
> Formed within the Marion County Historical Society in the early 1990s,
> the preservation society took possession of Pasaquan in 2003. It has
> picked up a few grants to do some repair and repainting, but it hasn't
> the estimated $1.5 million needed to fully restore and preserve
> everything Martin left behind.
>
> The organization hopes that again having public events at Pasaquan will
> be good public relations, teaching people about the place and its
> meaning.
>
> The folks familiar with it never seem to lose interest. Fussell says
> they ask about it a lot, and call to try to set up special visits --
> everyone from Columbus State University art students to soccer teams.
>
> "There was a woman from LaGrange who brought a group of graduating high
> school seniors as her graduation gift to one of the girls," he says.
> "The girl got to invite 10 of her friends to come along. We've had
> several classes from LaGrange College and from CSU to the place."
>
> Recently the sponsor of a soccer team in Columbus for a tournament
> tried to take some players out to tour Pasaquan but couldn't fit the
> trip in.
>
> Preservationists hope reopening Pasaquan on the last Saturday of each
> month this summer will help reconnect people with Martin and his work.
> "The ultimate goal is to have the place pretty much restored if we
> possibly can and open on a regular basis, almost a daily basis, by the
> Fourth of July, 2008, which would be Eddie Martin's 100th birthday,"
> Fussell says.
>
> It would honor the life of a poor farm boy who left home with nothing
> and came home with a vision.
>
> "I built this place to have somethin' to identify with, 'cause there's
> nothin' that I see in this world that I identify with or desire to
> emulate," Martin once told a biographer. "Here I can be in my own world
> with my temples and designs and the spirit of God."
>
> His world of peace, love and art still awaits the future out in woods
> near Buena Vista. And where else around here now can you find peace,
> love and art all in one place?
>
> -Tim Chitwood

Another relevant Tim Chitwood article....
Re: Pasaquan & Saint EOM
#829010
Author: Will Dockery
Date: Thu, 28 Jul 2022 11:48
120 lines
6060 bytes
On Saturday, December 7, 2019 at 12:14:14 AM UTC-5, Zod The Mighty wrote:
> On Friday, June 24, 2005 at 11:40:55 PM UTC-5, Will Dockery wrote:
> >
> > Pasaquan and Saint EOM:
> >
> > <http://www.pasaquan.com/>
> >
> > <http://www.rawvision.com/back/steom/steom.html>
> >
> > ----
> > Posted on Wed, Jun. 22, 2005 from
> > <http://www.ledger-enquirer.com/mld/ledgerenquirer/>
> >
> > Peace, love and art
> >
> > Eddie Owens Martin had a vision of a place packed with peace and love
> > and art, a place where race did not matter and for that matter, neither
> > did sex. It was a place with lots of love.
> >
> > "Lots of love, lots of peace," says Fred Fussell of the Pasaquan
> > Preservation Society, the Marion County group now charged with keeping
> > Martin's vision alive years after the artist passed on. "There would be
> > no discrimination of any kind," Fussell says of Martin's vision.
> > "Everybody would be interested in the arts, and in peace and love and
> > all that."
> >
> > So there should be lots of peace, love and art to enjoy Saturday as the
> > preservation society reopens Martin's place to the public. The 7-acre
> > art compound has been off-limits to all but special tour groups for
> > three years now, which may explain recent shortages of peace and love.
> >
> > Deep in the pines outside Buena Vista, Pasaquan is the realization of a
> > vision Martin had in New York in the 1930s, while ill and running a
> > fever. He saw a tall trio from the future who told him they came from a
> > place called Pasaquan, where the past, the present, the future and
> > everything else all come together. They told him to go home to Georgia
> > and "do something." He did.
> >
> > The son of a white sharecropper, Martin had left home after seeing his
> > daddy kill a puppy a black family had given the 14-year-old Eddie.
> > Eventually he drifted to New York City and found a new family among the
> > castaways of Greenwich Village. He sucked up the city's art culture and
> > became a flamboyant character, calling himself "St. EOM" after his
> > feverish vision of the future.
> >
> > Then he came home to Georgia, to do something. He built Pasaquan out of
> > an 1880s farm. He raised walls of concrete around it, and built faces
> > and symbols and figures into the walls. He made them shine in bright
> > colors with oil-based house paint.
> >
> > In 1986 the artist and fortune-teller saw that an illness was going to
> > kill him, so he killed himself first. He left behind not only 15,650
> > square feet of painted art that forms Pasaquan's outer shell, but also
> > more than 2,000 individual pieces of art: oil and watercolor paintings,
> > ink and pencil drawings, sculptures and costumes.
> >
> > He left it all to the Marion County Historical Society, which in 1987
> > tried to give it to the Columbus Museum, which in 1989 turned it down.
> >
> > Since then, Martin's work has been exhibited in the National Museum of
> > American Art, the New Orleans Museum of Art, the Museum of American
> > Folk Art, The Library of Congress, the Contemporary Arts Center in
> > Seattle and other institutions.
> >
> > Art more easily endures in a museum or gallery than out in the woods.
> > Maintaining a place made out of peace, love, concrete, metal, wood and
> > house paint is a challenge.
> >
> > Part of the reason the preservation society is inviting the public back
> > to Pasaquan 10-4 p.m. Saturday is not only to make a few bucks --
> > admission will be $5 for all who aren't children age 5 or younger --
> > but also to publicize its plight.
> >
> > Formed within the Marion County Historical Society in the early 1990s,
> > the preservation society took possession of Pasaquan in 2003. It has
> > picked up a few grants to do some repair and repainting, but it hasn't
> > the estimated $1.5 million needed to fully restore and preserve
> > everything Martin left behind.
> >
> > The organization hopes that again having public events at Pasaquan will
> > be good public relations, teaching people about the place and its
> > meaning.
> >
> > The folks familiar with it never seem to lose interest. Fussell says
> > they ask about it a lot, and call to try to set up special visits --
> > everyone from Columbus State University art students to soccer teams.
> >
> > "There was a woman from LaGrange who brought a group of graduating high
> > school seniors as her graduation gift to one of the girls," he says.
> > "The girl got to invite 10 of her friends to come along. We've had
> > several classes from LaGrange College and from CSU to the place."
> >
> > Recently the sponsor of a soccer team in Columbus for a tournament
> > tried to take some players out to tour Pasaquan but couldn't fit the
> > trip in.
> >
> > Preservationists hope reopening Pasaquan on the last Saturday of each
> > month this summer will help reconnect people with Martin and his work.
> > "The ultimate goal is to have the place pretty much restored if we
> > possibly can and open on a regular basis, almost a daily basis, by the
> > Fourth of July, 2008, which would be Eddie Martin's 100th birthday,"
> > Fussell says.
> >
> > It would honor the life of a poor farm boy who left home with nothing
> > and came home with a vision.
> >
> > "I built this place to have somethin' to identify with, 'cause there's
> > nothin' that I see in this world that I identify with or desire to
> > emulate," Martin once told a biographer. "Here I can be in my own world
> > with my temples and designs and the spirit of God."
> >
> > His world of peace, love and art still awaits the future out in woods
> > near Buena Vista. And where else around here now can you find peace,
> > love and art all in one place?
> >
> > -Tim Chitwood
> Another relevant Tim Chitwood article....

To correct Nancy Gene's error, this is where Charles Fowler works, as curator of Pasaquan home of the legendary artist, the late Eddie Martin.

HTH and HAND.
Re: Pasaquan & Saint EOM
#829039
Author: NancyGene
Date: Thu, 28 Jul 2022 13:10
4 lines
411 bytes
On Thursday, July 28, 2022 at 6:48:03 PM UTC, Will Dockery wrote:

> To correct Nancy Gene's error, this is where Charles Fowler works, as curator of Pasaquan home of the legendary artist, the late Eddie Martin.
>
There is no curator of the Pasaquan junkyard.  Fowler is the caretaker there.  He doesn't make enough money doing that to move out of his parents' house.  Not a success story to enshrine on AAPC.
Re: Pasaquan & Saint EOM
#829043
Author: will.dockery@gma
Date: Thu, 28 Jul 2022 20:22
23 lines
1703 bytes
NancyGene wrote:

> On Thursday, July 28, 2022 at 6:48:03 PM UTC, Will Dockery wrote:

>> To correct Nancy Gene's error, this is where Charles Fowler works, as curator of Pasaquan home of the legendary artist, the late Eddie Martin.
>>
> There is no curator of the Pasaquan junkyard

   ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

Again, you've made the same error, Nancy Gene. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

Pasaquan isn't a "junkyard":

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pasaquan

"Pasaquan is a 7-acre (28,000 m2) compound near Buena Vista, Georgia. It was created by an eccentric folk artist named Eddie Owens Martin (1908–1986), who called himself St. EOM. An internationally renowned art site, it consists of six major structures including a redesigned 1885 farmhouse, painted concrete sculptures, and 4 acres (16,000 m2) of painted masonry concrete walls. In September 2008, Pasaquan was accepted for listing on the National Register of Historic Places. Pasaquan was restored by the Kohler Foundation and Columbus State University between 2014 and 2016..."


"President Jimmy Carter visited the site in the early 1980s. In 2015, the Pasaquan Preservation Society won the Governor's Award for the Arts and Humanities for its work on Pasaquan. In 2016, CNN recommended Pasaquan as a tourist destination. In 2019, Atlanta recommended Pasaquan as a folk art destination..."

"In 2004, the Pasaquan Preservation Society solicited the Kohler Foundation for help in maintaining Pasaquan. The project was accepted in 2014. The Kohler Foundation collaborated with Columbus State University to restore Pasaquan's art. After two years of work, the site was re-opened to the public on October 22, 2016..."

HYTH and HAND.
Re: Pasaquan & Saint EOM
#829251
Author: Will Dockery
Date: Fri, 29 Jul 2022 17:08
2 lines
170 bytes
Charles Fowler live at 8pm discussing Pasaquan:

https://www.facebook.com/stories/1671420249618439/UzpfSVNDOjc1NDUwODI1ODkyNDU3Nw==/?view_single=1&source=shared_permalink
Re: Pasaquan & Saint EOM
#829262
Author: Michael Pendrago
Date: Fri, 29 Jul 2022 20:40
42 lines
1942 bytes
On Thursday, July 28, 2022 at 4:25:17 PM UTC-4, Will Dockery wrote:
> NancyGene wrote: 
> 
> > On Thursday, July 28, 2022 at 6:48:03 PM UTC, Will Dockery wrote: 
> 
> >> To correct Nancy Gene's error, this is where Charles Fowler works, as curator of Pasaquan home of the legendary artist, the late Eddie Martin. 
> >> 
> > There is no curator of the Pasaquan junkyard
> ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 
> 
> Again, you've made the same error, Nancy Gene. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 
> 
> Pasaquan isn't a "junkyard": 

Not to a pissbum who lives in a shed.

> 
> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pasaquan 
> 
> "Pasaquan is a 7-acre (28,000 m2) compound near Buena Vista, Georgia. It was created by an eccentric folk artist named Eddie Owens Martin (1908–1986), who called himself St. EOM. An internationally renowned art site, it consists of six major structures including a redesigned 1885 farmhouse, painted concrete sculptures, and 4 acres (16,000 m2) of painted masonry concrete walls. In September 2008, Pasaquan was accepted for listing on the National Register of Historic Places. Pasaquan was restored by the Kohler Foundation and Columbus State University between 2014 and 2016..." 
> 
> 
> "President Jimmy Carter visited the site in the early 1980s. In 2015, the Pasaquan Preservation Society won the Governor's Award for the Arts and Humanities for its work on Pasaquan. In 2016, CNN recommended Pasaquan as a tourist destination. In 2019, Atlanta recommended Pasaquan as a folk art destination..." 
> 
> "In 2004, the Pasaquan Preservation Society solicited the Kohler Foundation for help in maintaining Pasaquan. The project was accepted in 2014. The Kohler Foundation collaborated with Columbus State University to restore Pasaquan's art. After two years of work, the site was re-opened to the public on October 22, 2016..." 
> 
> HYTH and HAND.
Re: Pasaquan & Saint EOM
#829266
Author: will.dockery@gma
Date: Sat, 30 Jul 2022 04:05
33 lines
1971 bytes
Michael Pendragon wrote:

> On Thursday, July 28, 2022 at 4:25:17 PM UTC-4, Will Dockery wrote:
>> NancyGene wrote:
>>
>> > On Thursday, July 28, 2022 at 6:48:03 PM UTC, Will Dockery wrote:
>>
>> >> To correct Nancy Gene's error, this is where Charles Fowler works, as curator of Pasaquan home of the legendary artist, the late Eddie Martin.
>> >>
>> > There is no curator of the Pasaquan junkyard
>> ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
>>
>> Again, you've made the same error, Nancy Gene. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
>>
>> Pasaquan isn't a "junkyard":

> Not to a pissbum who lives in a shed.


Or to art lovers and critics around the world.

See below.

>>
>> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pasaquan
>>
>> "Pasaquan is a 7-acre (28,000 m2) compound near Buena Vista, Georgia. It was created by an eccentric folk artist named Eddie Owens Martin (1908–1986), who called himself St. EOM. An internationally renowned art site, it consists of six major structures including a redesigned 1885 farmhouse, painted concrete sculptures, and 4 acres (16,000 m2) of painted masonry concrete walls. In September 2008, Pasaquan was accepted for listing on the National Register of Historic Places. Pasaquan was restored by the Kohler Foundation and Columbus State University between 2014 and 2016..."
>>
>>
>> "President Jimmy Carter visited the site in the early 1980s. In 2015, the Pasaquan Preservation Society won the Governor's Award for the Arts and Humanities for its work on Pasaquan. In 2016, CNN recommended Pasaquan as a tourist destination. In 2019, Atlanta recommended Pasaquan as a folk art destination..."
>>
>> "In 2004, the Pasaquan Preservation Society solicited the Kohler Foundation for help in maintaining Pasaquan. The project was accepted in 2014. The Kohler Foundation collaborated with Columbus State University to restore Pasaquan's art. After two years of work, the site was re-opened to the public on October 22, 2016..."

And so it goes.
Re: Pasaquan & Saint EOM
#830044
Author: tzod9964@gmail.c
Date: Tue, 02 Aug 2022 20:17
124 lines
6241 bytes
Will Dockery wrote:

> On Saturday, December 7, 2019 at 12:14:14 AM UTC-5, Zod The Mighty wrote:
>> On Friday, June 24, 2005 at 11:40:55 PM UTC-5, Will Dockery wrote:
>> >
>> > Pasaquan and Saint EOM:
>> >
>> > <http://www.pasaquan.com/>
>> >
>> > <http://www.rawvision.com/back/steom/steom.html>
>> >
>> > ----
>> > Posted on Wed, Jun. 22, 2005 from
>> > <http://www.ledger-enquirer.com/mld/ledgerenquirer/>
>> >
>> > Peace, love and art
>> >
>> > Eddie Owens Martin had a vision of a place packed with peace and love
>> > and art, a place where race did not matter and for that matter, neither
>> > did sex. It was a place with lots of love.
>> >
>> > "Lots of love, lots of peace," says Fred Fussell of the Pasaquan
>> > Preservation Society, the Marion County group now charged with keeping
>> > Martin's vision alive years after the artist passed on. "There would be
>> > no discrimination of any kind," Fussell says of Martin's vision.
>> > "Everybody would be interested in the arts, and in peace and love and
>> > all that."
>> >
>> > So there should be lots of peace, love and art to enjoy Saturday as the
>> > preservation society reopens Martin's place to the public. The 7-acre
>> > art compound has been off-limits to all but special tour groups for
>> > three years now, which may explain recent shortages of peace and love.
>> >
>> > Deep in the pines outside Buena Vista, Pasaquan is the realization of a
>> > vision Martin had in New York in the 1930s, while ill and running a
>> > fever. He saw a tall trio from the future who told him they came from a
>> > place called Pasaquan, where the past, the present, the future and
>> > everything else all come together. They told him to go home to Georgia
>> > and "do something." He did.
>> >
>> > The son of a white sharecropper, Martin had left home after seeing his
>> > daddy kill a puppy a black family had given the 14-year-old Eddie.
>> > Eventually he drifted to New York City and found a new family among the
>> > castaways of Greenwich Village. He sucked up the city's art culture and
>> > became a flamboyant character, calling himself "St. EOM" after his
>> > feverish vision of the future.
>> >
>> > Then he came home to Georgia, to do something. He built Pasaquan out of
>> > an 1880s farm. He raised walls of concrete around it, and built faces
>> > and symbols and figures into the walls. He made them shine in bright
>> > colors with oil-based house paint.
>> >
>> > In 1986 the artist and fortune-teller saw that an illness was going to
>> > kill him, so he killed himself first. He left behind not only 15,650
>> > square feet of painted art that forms Pasaquan's outer shell, but also
>> > more than 2,000 individual pieces of art: oil and watercolor paintings,
>> > ink and pencil drawings, sculptures and costumes.
>> >
>> > He left it all to the Marion County Historical Society, which in 1987
>> > tried to give it to the Columbus Museum, which in 1989 turned it down.
>> >
>> > Since then, Martin's work has been exhibited in the National Museum of
>> > American Art, the New Orleans Museum of Art, the Museum of American
>> > Folk Art, The Library of Congress, the Contemporary Arts Center in
>> > Seattle and other institutions.
>> >
>> > Art more easily endures in a museum or gallery than out in the woods.
>> > Maintaining a place made out of peace, love, concrete, metal, wood and
>> > house paint is a challenge.
>> >
>> > Part of the reason the preservation society is inviting the public back
>> > to Pasaquan 10-4 p.m. Saturday is not only to make a few bucks --
>> > admission will be $5 for all who aren't children age 5 or younger --
>> > but also to publicize its plight.
>> >
>> > Formed within the Marion County Historical Society in the early 1990s,
>> > the preservation society took possession of Pasaquan in 2003. It has
>> > picked up a few grants to do some repair and repainting, but it hasn't
>> > the estimated $1.5 million needed to fully restore and preserve
>> > everything Martin left behind.
>> >
>> > The organization hopes that again having public events at Pasaquan will
>> > be good public relations, teaching people about the place and its
>> > meaning.
>> >
>> > The folks familiar with it never seem to lose interest. Fussell says
>> > they ask about it a lot, and call to try to set up special visits --
>> > everyone from Columbus State University art students to soccer teams.
>> >
>> > "There was a woman from LaGrange who brought a group of graduating high
>> > school seniors as her graduation gift to one of the girls," he says.
>> > "The girl got to invite 10 of her friends to come along. We've had
>> > several classes from LaGrange College and from CSU to the place."
>> >
>> > Recently the sponsor of a soccer team in Columbus for a tournament
>> > tried to take some players out to tour Pasaquan but couldn't fit the
>> > trip in.
>> >
>> > Preservationists hope reopening Pasaquan on the last Saturday of each
>> > month this summer will help reconnect people with Martin and his work.
>> > "The ultimate goal is to have the place pretty much restored if we
>> > possibly can and open on a regular basis, almost a daily basis, by the
>> > Fourth of July, 2008, which would be Eddie Martin's 100th birthday,"
>> > Fussell says.
>> >
>> > It would honor the life of a poor farm boy who left home with nothing
>> > and came home with a vision.
>> >
>> > "I built this place to have somethin' to identify with, 'cause there's
>> > nothin' that I see in this world that I identify with or desire to
>> > emulate," Martin once told a biographer. "Here I can be in my own world
>> > with my temples and designs and the spirit of God."
>> >
>> > His world of peace, love and art still awaits the future out in woods
>> > near Buena Vista. And where else around here now can you find peace,
>> > love and art all in one place?
>> >
>> > -Tim Chitwood
>> Another relevant Tim Chitwood article....

> To correct Nancy Gene's error, this is where Charles Fowler works, as curator of Pasaquan home of the legendary artist, the late Eddie Martin.

> HTH and HAND.

Misinformation must be corrected....
Re: Pasaquan & Saint EOM
#831678
Author: parnellos.pizza@
Date: Fri, 12 Aug 2022 05:37
128 lines
6397 bytes
General-Zod wrote:

> Will Dockery wrote:

>> On Saturday, December 7, 2019 at 12:14:14 AM UTC-5, Zod The Mighty wrote:
>>> On Friday, June 24, 2005 at 11:40:55 PM UTC-5, Will Dockery wrote:
>>> >
>>> > Pasaquan and Saint EOM:
>>> >
>>> > <http://www.pasaquan.com/>
>>> >
>>> > <http://www.rawvision.com/back/steom/steom.html>
>>> >
>>> > ----
>>> > Posted on Wed, Jun. 22, 2005 from
>>> > <http://www.ledger-enquirer.com/mld/ledgerenquirer/>
>>> >
>>> > Peace, love and art
>>> >
>>> > Eddie Owens Martin had a vision of a place packed with peace and love
>>> > and art, a place where race did not matter and for that matter, neither
>>> > did sex. It was a place with lots of love.
>>> >
>>> > "Lots of love, lots of peace," says Fred Fussell of the Pasaquan
>>> > Preservation Society, the Marion County group now charged with keeping
>>> > Martin's vision alive years after the artist passed on. "There would be
>>> > no discrimination of any kind," Fussell says of Martin's vision.
>>> > "Everybody would be interested in the arts, and in peace and love and
>>> > all that."
>>> >
>>> > So there should be lots of peace, love and art to enjoy Saturday as the
>>> > preservation society reopens Martin's place to the public. The 7-acre
>>> > art compound has been off-limits to all but special tour groups for
>>> > three years now, which may explain recent shortages of peace and love.
>>> >
>>> > Deep in the pines outside Buena Vista, Pasaquan is the realization of a
>>> > vision Martin had in New York in the 1930s, while ill and running a
>>> > fever. He saw a tall trio from the future who told him they came from a
>>> > place called Pasaquan, where the past, the present, the future and
>>> > everything else all come together. They told him to go home to Georgia
>>> > and "do something." He did.
>>> >
>>> > The son of a white sharecropper, Martin had left home after seeing his
>>> > daddy kill a puppy a black family had given the 14-year-old Eddie.
>>> > Eventually he drifted to New York City and found a new family among the
>>> > castaways of Greenwich Village. He sucked up the city's art culture and
>>> > became a flamboyant character, calling himself "St. EOM" after his
>>> > feverish vision of the future.
>>> >
>>> > Then he came home to Georgia, to do something. He built Pasaquan out of
>>> > an 1880s farm. He raised walls of concrete around it, and built faces
>>> > and symbols and figures into the walls. He made them shine in bright
>>> > colors with oil-based house paint.
>>> >
>>> > In 1986 the artist and fortune-teller saw that an illness was going to
>>> > kill him, so he killed himself first. He left behind not only 15,650
>>> > square feet of painted art that forms Pasaquan's outer shell, but also
>>> > more than 2,000 individual pieces of art: oil and watercolor paintings,
>>> > ink and pencil drawings, sculptures and costumes.
>>> >
>>> > He left it all to the Marion County Historical Society, which in 1987
>>> > tried to give it to the Columbus Museum, which in 1989 turned it down.
>>> >
>>> > Since then, Martin's work has been exhibited in the National Museum of
>>> > American Art, the New Orleans Museum of Art, the Museum of American
>>> > Folk Art, The Library of Congress, the Contemporary Arts Center in
>>> > Seattle and other institutions.
>>> >
>>> > Art more easily endures in a museum or gallery than out in the woods.
>>> > Maintaining a place made out of peace, love, concrete, metal, wood and
>>> > house paint is a challenge.
>>> >
>>> > Part of the reason the preservation society is inviting the public back
>>> > to Pasaquan 10-4 p.m. Saturday is not only to make a few bucks --
>>> > admission will be $5 for all who aren't children age 5 or younger --
>>> > but also to publicize its plight.
>>> >
>>> > Formed within the Marion County Historical Society in the early 1990s,
>>> > the preservation society took possession of Pasaquan in 2003. It has
>>> > picked up a few grants to do some repair and repainting, but it hasn't
>>> > the estimated $1.5 million needed to fully restore and preserve
>>> > everything Martin left behind.
>>> >
>>> > The organization hopes that again having public events at Pasaquan will
>>> > be good public relations, teaching people about the place and its
>>> > meaning.
>>> >
>>> > The folks familiar with it never seem to lose interest. Fussell says
>>> > they ask about it a lot, and call to try to set up special visits --
>>> > everyone from Columbus State University art students to soccer teams.
>>> >
>>> > "There was a woman from LaGrange who brought a group of graduating high
>>> > school seniors as her graduation gift to one of the girls," he says.
>>> > "The girl got to invite 10 of her friends to come along. We've had
>>> > several classes from LaGrange College and from CSU to the place."
>>> >
>>> > Recently the sponsor of a soccer team in Columbus for a tournament
>>> > tried to take some players out to tour Pasaquan but couldn't fit the
>>> > trip in.
>>> >
>>> > Preservationists hope reopening Pasaquan on the last Saturday of each
>>> > month this summer will help reconnect people with Martin and his work.
>>> > "The ultimate goal is to have the place pretty much restored if we
>>> > possibly can and open on a regular basis, almost a daily basis, by the
>>> > Fourth of July, 2008, which would be Eddie Martin's 100th birthday,"
>>> > Fussell says.
>>> >
>>> > It would honor the life of a poor farm boy who left home with nothing
>>> > and came home with a vision.
>>> >
>>> > "I built this place to have somethin' to identify with, 'cause there's
>>> > nothin' that I see in this world that I identify with or desire to
>>> > emulate," Martin once told a biographer. "Here I can be in my own world
>>> > with my temples and designs and the spirit of God."
>>> >
>>> > His world of peace, love and art still awaits the future out in woods
>>> > near Buena Vista. And where else around here now can you find peace,
>>> > love and art all in one place?
>>> >
>>> > -Tim Chitwood
>>> Another relevant Tim Chitwood article....

>> To correct Nancy Gene's error, this is where Charles Fowler works, as curator of Pasaquan home of the legendary artist, the late Eddie Martin.

>> HTH and HAND.

> Misinformation must be corrected....

Absolutely.
Re: Pasaquan & Saint EOM
#831834
Author: Will Dockery
Date: Fri, 12 Aug 2022 22:15
120 lines
5860 bytes
Zod The Mighty wrote:
> Will Dockery wrote:
> >
> > Pasaquan and Saint EOM:
> >
> > <http://www.pasaquan.com/>
> >
> > <http://www.rawvision.com/back/steom/steom.html>
> >
> > ----
> > Posted on Wed, Jun. 22, 2005 from
> > <http://www.ledger-enquirer.com/mld/ledgerenquirer/>
> >
> > Peace, love and art
> >
> > Eddie Owens Martin had a vision of a place packed with peace and love
> > and art, a place where race did not matter and for that matter, neither
> > did sex. It was a place with lots of love.
> >
> > "Lots of love, lots of peace," says Fred Fussell of the Pasaquan
> > Preservation Society, the Marion County group now charged with keeping
> > Martin's vision alive years after the artist passed on. "There would be
> > no discrimination of any kind," Fussell says of Martin's vision.
> > "Everybody would be interested in the arts, and in peace and love and
> > all that."
> >
> > So there should be lots of peace, love and art to enjoy Saturday as the
> > preservation society reopens Martin's place to the public. The 7-acre
> > art compound has been off-limits to all but special tour groups for
> > three years now, which may explain recent shortages of peace and love.
> >
> > Deep in the pines outside Buena Vista, Pasaquan is the realization of a
> > vision Martin had in New York in the 1930s, while ill and running a
> > fever. He saw a tall trio from the future who told him they came from a
> > place called Pasaquan, where the past, the present, the future and
> > everything else all come together. They told him to go home to Georgia
> > and "do something." He did.
> >
> > The son of a white sharecropper, Martin had left home after seeing his
> > daddy kill a puppy a black family had given the 14-year-old Eddie.
> > Eventually he drifted to New York City and found a new family among the
> > castaways of Greenwich Village. He sucked up the city's art culture and
> > became a flamboyant character, calling himself "St. EOM" after his
> > feverish vision of the future.
> >
> > Then he came home to Georgia, to do something. He built Pasaquan out of
> > an 1880s farm. He raised walls of concrete around it, and built faces
> > and symbols and figures into the walls. He made them shine in bright
> > colors with oil-based house paint.
> >
> > In 1986 the artist and fortune-teller saw that an illness was going to
> > kill him, so he killed himself first. He left behind not only 15,650
> > square feet of painted art that forms Pasaquan's outer shell, but also
> > more than 2,000 individual pieces of art: oil and watercolor paintings,
> > ink and pencil drawings, sculptures and costumes.
> >
> > He left it all to the Marion County Historical Society, which in 1987
> > tried to give it to the Columbus Museum, which in 1989 turned it down.
> >
> > Since then, Martin's work has been exhibited in the National Museum of
> > American Art, the New Orleans Museum of Art, the Museum of American
> > Folk Art, The Library of Congress, the Contemporary Arts Center in
> > Seattle and other institutions.
> >
> > Art more easily endures in a museum or gallery than out in the woods.
> > Maintaining a place made out of peace, love, concrete, metal, wood and
> > house paint is a challenge.
> >
> > Part of the reason the preservation society is inviting the public back
> > to Pasaquan 10-4 p.m. Saturday is not only to make a few bucks --
> > admission will be $5 for all who aren't children age 5 or younger --
> > but also to publicize its plight.
> >
> > Formed within the Marion County Historical Society in the early 1990s,
> > the preservation society took possession of Pasaquan in 2003. It has
> > picked up a few grants to do some repair and repainting, but it hasn't
> > the estimated $1.5 million needed to fully restore and preserve
> > everything Martin left behind.
> >
> > The organization hopes that again having public events at Pasaquan will
> > be good public relations, teaching people about the place and its
> > meaning.
> >
> > The folks familiar with it never seem to lose interest. Fussell says
> > they ask about it a lot, and call to try to set up special visits --
> > everyone from Columbus State University art students to soccer teams.
> >
> > "There was a woman from LaGrange who brought a group of graduating high
> > school seniors as her graduation gift to one of the girls," he says.
> > "The girl got to invite 10 of her friends to come along. We've had
> > several classes from LaGrange College and from CSU to the place."
> >
> > Recently the sponsor of a soccer team in Columbus for a tournament
> > tried to take some players out to tour Pasaquan but couldn't fit the
> > trip in.
> >
> > Preservationists hope reopening Pasaquan on the last Saturday of each
> > month this summer will help reconnect people with Martin and his work.
> > "The ultimate goal is to have the place pretty much restored if we
> > possibly can and open on a regular basis, almost a daily basis, by the
> > Fourth of July, 2008, which would be Eddie Martin's 100th birthday,"
> > Fussell says.
> >
> > It would honor the life of a poor farm boy who left home with nothing
> > and came home with a vision.
> >
> > "I built this place to have somethin' to identify with, 'cause there's
> > nothin' that I see in this world that I identify with or desire to
> > emulate," Martin once told a biographer. "Here I can be in my own world
> > with my temples and designs and the spirit of God."
> >
> > His world of peace, love and art still awaits the future out in woods
> > near Buena Vista. And where else around here now can you find peace,
> > love and art all in one place?
> >
> > -Tim Chitwood
> Another relevant Tim Chitwood article....

Since Pasaquan is on topic again tonight.

HTH and HAND.
Re: Pasaquan & Saint EOM
#831879
Author: Will Dockery
Date: Sat, 13 Aug 2022 07:38
126 lines
6572 bytes
On Tuesday, August 2, 2022 at 5:56:23 PM UTC-4, Zod wrote:
> Will Dockery wrote:
>
> > On Saturday, December 7, 2019 at 12:14:14 AM UTC-5, Zod The Mighty wrote:
> >> On Friday, June 24, 2005 at 11:40:55 PM UTC-5, Will Dockery wrote:
> >> >
> >> > Pasaquan and Saint EOM:
> >> >
> >> > <http://www.pasaquan.com/>
> >> >
> >> > <http://www.rawvision.com/back/steom/steom.html>
> >> >
> >> > ----
> >> > Posted on Wed, Jun. 22, 2005 from
> >> > <http://www.ledger-enquirer.com/mld/ledgerenquirer/>
> >> >
> >> > Peace, love and art
> >> >
> >> > Eddie Owens Martin had a vision of a place packed with peace and love
> >> > and art, a place where race did not matter and for that matter, neither
> >> > did sex. It was a place with lots of love.
> >> >
> >> > "Lots of love, lots of peace," says Fred Fussell of the Pasaquan
> >> > Preservation Society, the Marion County group now charged with keeping
> >> > Martin's vision alive years after the artist passed on. "There would be
> >> > no discrimination of any kind," Fussell says of Martin's vision.
> >> > "Everybody would be interested in the arts, and in peace and love and
> >> > all that."
> >> >
> >> > So there should be lots of peace, love and art to enjoy Saturday as the
> >> > preservation society reopens Martin's place to the public. The 7-acre
> >> > art compound has been off-limits to all but special tour groups for
> >> > three years now, which may explain recent shortages of peace and love.
> >> >
> >> > Deep in the pines outside Buena Vista, Pasaquan is the realization of a
> >> > vision Martin had in New York in the 1930s, while ill and running a
> >> > fever. He saw a tall trio from the future who told him they came from a
> >> > place called Pasaquan, where the past, the present, the future and
> >> > everything else all come together. They told him to go home to Georgia
> >> > and "do something." He did.
> >> >
> >> > The son of a white sharecropper, Martin had left home after seeing his
> >> > daddy kill a puppy a black family had given the 14-year-old Eddie.
> >> > Eventually he drifted to New York City and found a new family among the
> >> > castaways of Greenwich Village. He sucked up the city's art culture and
> >> > became a flamboyant character, calling himself "St. EOM" after his
> >> > feverish vision of the future.
> >> >
> >> > Then he came home to Georgia, to do something. He built Pasaquan out of
> >> > an 1880s farm. He raised walls of concrete around it, and built faces
> >> > and symbols and figures into the walls. He made them shine in bright
> >> > colors with oil-based house paint.
> >> >
> >> > In 1986 the artist and fortune-teller saw that an illness was going to
> >> > kill him, so he killed himself first. He left behind not only 15,650
> >> > square feet of painted art that forms Pasaquan's outer shell, but also
> >> > more than 2,000 individual pieces of art: oil and watercolor paintings,
> >> > ink and pencil drawings, sculptures and costumes.
> >> >
> >> > He left it all to the Marion County Historical Society, which in 1987
> >> > tried to give it to the Columbus Museum, which in 1989 turned it down.
> >> >
> >> > Since then, Martin's work has been exhibited in the National Museum of
> >> > American Art, the New Orleans Museum of Art, the Museum of American
> >> > Folk Art, The Library of Congress, the Contemporary Arts Center in
> >> > Seattle and other institutions.
> >> >
> >> > Art more easily endures in a museum or gallery than out in the woods.
> >> > Maintaining a place made out of peace, love, concrete, metal, wood and
> >> > house paint is a challenge.
> >> >
> >> > Part of the reason the preservation society is inviting the public back
> >> > to Pasaquan 10-4 p.m. Saturday is not only to make a few bucks --
> >> > admission will be $5 for all who aren't children age 5 or younger --
> >> > but also to publicize its plight.
> >> >
> >> > Formed within the Marion County Historical Society in the early 1990s,
> >> > the preservation society took possession of Pasaquan in 2003. It has
> >> > picked up a few grants to do some repair and repainting, but it hasn't
> >> > the estimated $1.5 million needed to fully restore and preserve
> >> > everything Martin left behind.
> >> >
> >> > The organization hopes that again having public events at Pasaquan will
> >> > be good public relations, teaching people about the place and its
> >> > meaning.
> >> >
> >> > The folks familiar with it never seem to lose interest. Fussell says
> >> > they ask about it a lot, and call to try to set up special visits --
> >> > everyone from Columbus State University art students to soccer teams.
> >> >
> >> > "There was a woman from LaGrange who brought a group of graduating high
> >> > school seniors as her graduation gift to one of the girls," he says.
> >> > "The girl got to invite 10 of her friends to come along. We've had
> >> > several classes from LaGrange College and from CSU to the place."
> >> >
> >> > Recently the sponsor of a soccer team in Columbus for a tournament
> >> > tried to take some players out to tour Pasaquan but couldn't fit the
> >> > trip in.
> >> >
> >> > Preservationists hope reopening Pasaquan on the last Saturday of each
> >> > month this summer will help reconnect people with Martin and his work.
> >> > "The ultimate goal is to have the place pretty much restored if we
> >> > possibly can and open on a regular basis, almost a daily basis, by the
> >> > Fourth of July, 2008, which would be Eddie Martin's 100th birthday,"
> >> > Fussell says.
> >> >
> >> > It would honor the life of a poor farm boy who left home with nothing
> >> > and came home with a vision.
> >> >
> >> > "I built this place to have somethin' to identify with, 'cause there's
> >> > nothin' that I see in this world that I identify with or desire to
> >> > emulate," Martin once told a biographer. "Here I can be in my own world
> >> > with my temples and designs and the spirit of God."
> >> >
> >> > His world of peace, love and art still awaits the future out in woods
> >> > near Buena Vista. And where else around here now can you find peace,
> >> > love and art all in one place?
> >> >
> >> > -Tim Chitwood
> >> Another relevant Tim Chitwood article....
>
> > To correct Nancy Gene's error, this is where Charles Fowler works, as curator of Pasaquan home of the legendary artist, the late Eddie Martin.
>
> > HTH and HAND.
> Misinformation must be corrected....

Whenever possible.
Re: Pasaquan & Saint EOM
#831907
Author: Will Dockery
Date: Sat, 13 Aug 2022 11:48
157 lines
6263 bytes
On Saturday, December 7, 2019 at 12:14:14 AM UTC-5, Zod The Mighty wrote:
> On Friday, June 24, 2005 at 11:40:55 PM UTC-5, Will Dockery wrote: 
> > 
> > Pasaquan and Saint EOM: 
> > 
> > <http://www.pasaquan.com/> 
> > 
> > <http://www.rawvision.com/back/steom/steom.html> 
> > 
> > ---- 
> > Posted on Wed, Jun. 22, 2005 from 
> > <http://www.ledger-enquirer.com/mld/ledgerenquirer/> 
> > 
> > Peace, love and art 
> > 
> > Eddie Owens Martin had a vision of a place packed with peace and love 
> > and art, a place where race did not matter and for that matter, neither 
> > did sex. It was a place with lots of love. 
> > 
> > "Lots of love, lots of peace," says Fred Fussell of the Pasaquan 
> > Preservation Society, the Marion County group now charged with keeping 
> > Martin's vision alive years after the artist passed on. "There would be 
> > no discrimination of any kind," Fussell says of Martin's vision. 
> > "Everybody would be interested in the arts, and in peace and love and 
> > all that." 
> > 
> > So there should be lots of peace, love and art to enjoy Saturday as the 
> > preservation society reopens Martin's place to the public. The 7-acre 
> > art compound has been off-limits to all but special tour groups for 
> > three years now, which may explain recent shortages of peace and love. 
> > 
> > Deep in the pines outside Buena Vista, Pasaquan is the realization of a 
> > vision Martin had in New York in the 1930s, while ill and running a 
> > fever. He saw a tall trio from the future who told him they came from a 
> > place called Pasaquan, where the past, the present, the future and 
> > everything else all come together. They told him to go home to Georgia 
> > and "do something." He did. 
> > 
> > The son of a white sharecropper, Martin had left home after seeing his 
> > daddy kill a puppy a black family had given the 14-year-old Eddie. 
> > Eventually he drifted to New York City and found a new family among the 
> > castaways of Greenwich Village. He sucked up the city's art culture and 
> > became a flamboyant character, calling himself "St. EOM" after his 
> > feverish vision of the future. 
> > 
> > Then he came home to Georgia, to do something. He built Pasaquan out of 
> > an 1880s farm. He raised walls of concrete around it, and built faces 
> > and symbols and figures into the walls. He made them shine in bright 
> > colors with oil-based house paint. 
> > 
> > In 1986 the artist and fortune-teller saw that an illness was going to 
> > kill him, so he killed himself first. He left behind not only 15,650 
> > square feet of painted art that forms Pasaquan's outer shell, but also 
> > more than 2,000 individual pieces of art: oil and watercolor paintings, 
> > ink and pencil drawings, sculptures and costumes. 
> > 
> > He left it all to the Marion County Historical Society, which in 1987 
> > tried to give it to the Columbus Museum, which in 1989 turned it down. 
> > 
> > Since then, Martin's work has been exhibited in the National Museum of 
> > American Art, the New Orleans Museum of Art, the Museum of American 
> > Folk Art, The Library of Congress, the Contemporary Arts Center in 
> > Seattle and other institutions. 
> > 
> > Art more easily endures in a museum or gallery than out in the woods. 
> > Maintaining a place made out of peace, love, concrete, metal, wood and 
> > house paint is a challenge. 
> > 
> > Part of the reason the preservation society is inviting the public back 
> > to Pasaquan 10-4 p.m. Saturday is not only to make a few bucks -- 
> > admission will be $5 for all who aren't children age 5 or younger -- 
> > but also to publicize its plight. 
> > 
> > Formed within the Marion County Historical Society in the early 1990s, 
> > the preservation society took possession of Pasaquan in 2003. It has 
> > picked up a few grants to do some repair and repainting, but it hasn't 
> > the estimated $1.5 million needed to fully restore and preserve 
> > everything Martin left behind. 
> > 
> > The organization hopes that again having public events at Pasaquan will 
> > be good public relations, teaching people about the place and its 
> > meaning. 
> > 
> > The folks familiar with it never seem to lose interest. Fussell says 
> > they ask about it a lot, and call to try to set up special visits -- 
> > everyone from Columbus State University art students to soccer teams. 
> > 
> > "There was a woman from LaGrange who brought a group of graduating high 
> > school seniors as her graduation gift to one of the girls," he says. 
> > "The girl got to invite 10 of her friends to come along. We've had 
> > several classes from LaGrange College and from CSU to the place." 
> > 
> > Recently the sponsor of a soccer team in Columbus for a tournament 
> > tried to take some players out to tour Pasaquan but couldn't fit the 
> > trip in. 
> > 
> > Preservationists hope reopening Pasaquan on the last Saturday of each 
> > month this summer will help reconnect people with Martin and his work. 
> > "The ultimate goal is to have the place pretty much restored if we 
> > possibly can and open on a regular basis, almost a daily basis, by the 
> > Fourth of July, 2008, which would be Eddie Martin's 100th birthday," 
> > Fussell says. 
> > 
> > It would honor the life of a poor farm boy who left home with nothing 
> > and came home with a vision. 
> > 
> > "I built this place to have somethin' to identify with, 'cause there's 
> > nothin' that I see in this world that I identify with or desire to 
> > emulate," Martin once told a biographer. "Here I can be in my own world 
> > with my temples and designs and the spirit of God." 
> > 
> > His world of peace, love and art still awaits the future out in woods 
> > near Buena Vista. And where else around here now can you find peace, 
> > love and art all in one place? 
> > 
> > -Tim Chitwood
> Another relevant Tim Chitwood article....

And definitely on topic for the group today.

🙂
Re: Pasaquan & Saint EOM
#831932
Author: Victor Hugo Fan
Date: Sat, 13 Aug 2022 13:10
91 lines
5425 bytes
On Saturday, June 25, 2005 at 12:40:55 AM UTC-4, Will Dockery wrote:
>
> Pasaquan and Saint EOM:
> <http://www.pasaquan.com/>
> <http://www.rawvision.com/back/steom/steom.html>
> ----
> Posted on Wed, Jun. 22, 2005 from
> <http://www.ledger-enquirer.com/mld/ledgerenquirer/>
> Peace, love and art
> Eddie Owens Martin had a vision of a place packed with peace and love
> and art, a place where race did not matter and for that matter, neither
> did sex. It was a place with lots of love.
> "Lots of love, lots of peace," says Fred Fussell of the Pasaquan
> Preservation Society, the Marion County group now charged with keeping
> Martin's vision alive years after the artist passed on. "There would be
> no discrimination of any kind," Fussell says of Martin's vision.
> "Everybody would be interested in the arts, and in peace and love and
> all that."
> So there should be lots of peace, love and art to enjoy Saturday as the
> preservation society reopens Martin's place to the public. The 7-acre
> art compound has been off-limits to all but special tour groups for
> three years now, which may explain recent shortages of peace and love.
> Deep in the pines outside Buena Vista, Pasaquan is the realization of a
> vision Martin had in New York in the 1930s, while ill and running a
> fever. He saw a tall trio from the future who told him they came from a
> place called Pasaquan, where the past, the present, the future and
> everything else all come together. They told him to go home to Georgia
> and "do something." He did.
> The son of a white sharecropper, Martin had left home after seeing his
> daddy kill a puppy a black family had given the 14-year-old Eddie.
> Eventually he drifted to New York City and found a new family among the
> castaways of Greenwich Village. He sucked up the city's art culture and
> became a flamboyant character, calling himself "St. EOM" after his
> feverish vision of the future.
> Then he came home to Georgia, to do something. He built Pasaquan out of
> an 1880s farm. He raised walls of concrete around it, and built faces
> and symbols and figures into the walls. He made them shine in bright
> colors with oil-based house paint.
> In 1986 the artist and fortune-teller saw that an illness was going to
> kill him, so he killed himself first. He left behind not only 15,650
> square feet of painted art that forms Pasaquan's outer shell, but also
> more than 2,000 individual pieces of art: oil and watercolor paintings,
> ink and pencil drawings, sculptures and costumes.
> He left it all to the Marion County Historical Society, which in 1987
> tried to give it to the Columbus Museum, which in 1989 turned it down.
> Since then, Martin's work has been exhibited in the National Museum of
> American Art, the New Orleans Museum of Art, the Museum of American
> Folk Art, The Library of Congress, the Contemporary Arts Center in
> Seattle and other institutions.
> Art more easily endures in a museum or gallery than out in the woods.
> Maintaining a place made out of peace, love, concrete, metal, wood and
> house paint is a challenge.
> Part of the reason the preservation society is inviting the public back
> to Pasaquan 10-4 p.m. Saturday is not only to make a few bucks --
> admission will be $5 for all who aren't children age 5 or younger --
> but also to publicize its plight.
> Formed within the Marion County Historical Society in the early 1990s,
> the preservation society took possession of Pasaquan in 2003. It has
> picked up a few grants to do some repair and repainting, but it hasn't
> the estimated $1.5 million needed to fully restore and preserve
> everything Martin left behind.
> The organization hopes that again having public events at Pasaquan will
> be good public relations, teaching people about the place and its
> meaning.
> The folks familiar with it never seem to lose interest. Fussell says
> they ask about it a lot, and call to try to set up special visits --
> everyone from Columbus State University art students to soccer teams.
> "There was a woman from LaGrange who brought a group of graduating high
> school seniors as her graduation gift to one of the girls," he says.
> "The girl got to invite 10 of her friends to come along. We've had
> several classes from LaGrange College and from CSU to the place."
> Recently the sponsor of a soccer team in Columbus for a tournament
> tried to take some players out to tour Pasaquan but couldn't fit the
> trip in.
> Preservationists hope reopening Pasaquan on the last Saturday of each
> month this summer will help reconnect people with Martin and his work.
> "The ultimate goal is to have the place pretty much restored if we
> possibly can and open on a regular basis, almost a daily basis, by the
> Fourth of July, 2008, which would be Eddie Martin's 100th birthday,"
> Fussell says.
> It would honor the life of a poor farm boy who left home with nothing
> and came home with a vision.
> "I built this place to have somethin' to identify with, 'cause there's
> nothin' that I see in this world that I identify with or desire to
> emulate," Martin once told a biographer. "Here I can be in my own world
> with my temples and designs and the spirit of God."
> His world of peace, love and art still awaits the future out in woods
> near Buena Vista. And where else around here now can you find peace,
> love and art all in one place?
> -Tim Chitwood

For those who want the truth...!
Thread Navigation

This is a paginated view of messages in the thread with full content displayed inline.

Messages are displayed in chronological order, with the original post highlighted in green.

Use pagination controls to navigate through all messages in large threads.

Back to All Threads