| Jim
Harrison
Jim Harrison's journey as an artist seems to have begun when
he first climbed onto a sign painter's scaffold on the side of
McCartha's Hardware in Denmark, South Carolina. The Coca-Cola
sign that he began that day with his mentor, J. J. Cornforth,
was the first of more than 100 similar signs he painted over
the next few years and shaped the future work of this South Carolinian
in many ways.
Now, an established artist and writer, Harrison has more
than 100 limited edition reproductions to his name. Reminiscent
of his earlier experiences as a sign painter, his work is known
for chronicling earlier twentieth century rural life. His strong
feelings for rural America touch on every aspect of earlier
ways of living, and his subjects -- railroad stations, churches,
one room school houses, country stores, covered bridges, and
farm buildings -- representing the spirit of an agrarian society.
"I sincerely try to put meaning to all of this in hopes
it has some historical value. The subjects I’m interested
in certainly need to be captured in books and on canvas. They
were an important part of our past," Harrison said. "With
my art what you see is what you get. I hope that my paintings
need no explanation. I simply want to communicate my message
to the common man on the street who claims to have no knowledge
of art but does know what he likes."
Harrison credits his mother with providing the encouragement
for him to develop his artistic interests beyond that of sign
painting. Her investment in his first art kit led to a lifetime
of work. During his years at Denmark High School, he was the "class
artist" and after graduation, he began his college career
at the University of South Carolina. Torn between his love
of art and the enjoyment of athletics, he pursued a dual major
in art and physical education. "At the time, I never really
saw any future for me in fine art. In college I sensed a feeling
that making a living for an artist was for the very few," said
Harrison. "My interest in drawing and painting was never
replaced by my newly chosen courses in education, but it seemed
more practical at that time. I can't remember a day passing
that I did not do a little sketching of some sort."
His first job after college marked the beginning of a successful
11-year high school coaching career at three schools. However,
his love for art was never far from him. In the mid-1960s,
he met Zita Mellon, an elderly art teacher in Allendale, South
Carolina. Mellon offered him the encouragement to realize his
potential. "I painted and I painted and I painted. And
she helped me," he said. "It was the first time I’d
had a taste of experiencing a little bit of the life of an
artist." This experience led to one of the major decisions
in his life as he turned down an offer to be an assistant coach
at Furman University and returned to his hometown to pursue
his career as an artist.
With no knowledge of the art market but with enthusiasm and
excitement, Harrison and his wife, Margaret, headed to New
York City in 1979 for the Fall Greenwich Village sidewalk art
show. His only sale during the three-week show was an $85 original,
and the trip cost him $800. "But I learned a lot on the
sidewalks of New York," he added. Several years on the
sidewalk circuit served him well as he learned his trade and
the business of art.
In the early 1970s, he published his first print, "Coastal
Dunes," and his work soon gained the attention of the
nation’s leading publisher of limited edition prints,
Frame House Gallery of Louisville, Kentucky. Since the publication
of his first print, many of his prints have appreciated up
to 3000 percent of their original value. In 1975, he became
associated with Hammer Galleries in New York and his one-man
show a few years later was a complete sell out before the exhibit
opened. Five other successful one-man shows followed and later
shows in San Francisco proved to be equally successful.
Today, Harrison’s work is distributed through his own
company, Jim Harrison Prints, in Denmark. He said that his
work is his life, and he surrounds himself with the things
he loves. Returning to Denmark was returning to his roots,
and the Jim Harrison Gallery is housed in the very building
where the young artist got his start more than fifty years
ago as an apprentice sign painter for J.J. Cornforth. "I
have a feeling for what I paint," said Harrison. "I
have a saying that art must have emotion in it. I like to paint
and write about the things I know -- which are rural things.
It's where I live and where I grew up."
Visitors to the Jim Harrison Gallery in the rural crossroads
town of Denmark can often find the artist hard at work on his
next piece of history. The Gallery features original paintings
as well as prints from Harrison’s more than thirty-year
career as an artist. Located on South Main Street, the Jim
Harrison Gallery is open to the public.
Since entering into a licensee relationship with Coca-Cola
in 1995, he has continued developing limited edition prints
learning the trademark. He has also begun developing other
products with the trademark, including canvas transfers, trays,
sun catchers, and calendars.
Throughout his more than 35 years as an artist, Jim's work
has included trademarks. His extensive research into American
advertising and his passion for capturing this nostalgic part
of our nation's history is evident in his work. Hammer Galleries
of New York sums it up best: "Jim Harrison is the country's
leading Twentieth Century advertising artist."
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