Art Notes: Sculpturefest marks 35 years of art in a Woodstock pasture

Charlet Davenport, of Woodstock, Vt., and her husband created Sculpturefest 35 years ago at their home in Woodstock, Vt. On Wednesday, June 28, 2023, Davenport drives toward a piece by Stefania Urist. (Valley News - Jennifer Hauck) Copyright Valley News. May not be reprinted or used online without permission. Send requests to permission@vnews.com.

Charlet Davenport, of Woodstock, Vt., and her husband created Sculpturefest 35 years ago at their home in Woodstock, Vt. On Wednesday, June 28, 2023, Davenport drives toward a piece by Stefania Urist. (Valley News - Jennifer Hauck) Copyright Valley News. May not be reprinted or used online without permission. Send requests to permission@vnews.com. valley news photographs — Jennifer Hauck

Hector Santos' piece is one of the works at Sculpturefest in Woodstock, Vt.  (Valley News - Jennifer Hauck) Copyright Valley News. May not be reprinted or used online without permission. Send requests to permission@vnews.com.

Hector Santos' piece is one of the works at Sculpturefest in Woodstock, Vt. (Valley News - Jennifer Hauck) Copyright Valley News. May not be reprinted or used online without permission. Send requests to permission@vnews.com. Jennifer Hauck

Charlet Davenport, middle, talks with her sister Pam Patterson and brother-in-law David Patterson, of Lincoln, Mass., around a piece by Justin Kenney at Davenport's home in Woodstock, Vt., on Wednesday, June 28, 2023. Davenport and her husband Peter created Sculpturefest 35 years ago. It opens on Sunday, July 2. (Valley News - Jennifer Hauck) Copyright Valley News. May not be reprinted or used online without permission. Send requests to permission@vnews.com.

Charlet Davenport, middle, talks with her sister Pam Patterson and brother-in-law David Patterson, of Lincoln, Mass., around a piece by Justin Kenney at Davenport's home in Woodstock, Vt., on Wednesday, June 28, 2023. Davenport and her husband Peter created Sculpturefest 35 years ago. It opens on Sunday, July 2. (Valley News - Jennifer Hauck) Copyright Valley News. May not be reprinted or used online without permission. Send requests to permission@vnews.com. valley news photographs — Jennifer Hauck

Sculpturefest opens Sunday, July 2, 2023, for its 35th year in Woodstock, Vt. This piece by Melanie Brotz is made from driftwood and will be in the show.  (Valley News - Jennifer Hauck) Copyright Valley News. May not be reprinted or used online without permission. Send requests to permission@vnews.com.

Sculpturefest opens Sunday, July 2, 2023, for its 35th year in Woodstock, Vt. This piece by Melanie Brotz is made from driftwood and will be in the show. (Valley News - Jennifer Hauck) Copyright Valley News. May not be reprinted or used online without permission. Send requests to permission@vnews.com. Jennifer Hauck

By ALEX HANSON

Valley News Staff Writer

Published: 06-29-2023 11:53 PM

Around 40 years or so ago, Charlet Davenport was serving on the Vermont Arts Council.

She was still a new resident, having moved to the state with her husband, Peter, in 1962. (She’s still a newcomer even now, she said.) At the time, AVA Gallery was still a minnow, and Ellison Lieberman’s Gallery 2, in Woodstock, was one of the only commercial galleries in the state.

For sculptors, particularly those who wanted to work in larger and natural forms better suited to the outdoors, options were even more limited. The Arts Council provided awards to one painter and one sculptor a year, which didn’t seem sufficient to Davenport.

So she started an event at the Davenports’ home on Prosper Road in Woodstock. It was part sculpture show and part fundraiser for the Arts Council.

“This was something I decided Peter and I could do,” Charlet said in an interview Tuesday. They had horses at the time, so they told artists, “It has to be horse-friendly and winter-worthy.” One of Peter’s own sculptures, a series of circular metal forms still standing in what used to be a pasture, served as a kind of equine neck-scratcher.

That was the start of what might be the longest-running art show in the Upper Valley. Sculpturefest opens Sunday for its 35th year. Visitors can meet the artists at 3 p.m., and jazz pianist Sonny Saul and singer Grace Marie Wallace will perform at 4:30 p.m.

It might be best known among the art-viewing public as a place to stroll and picnic, but Sculpturefest has served artists as a place to show work unlikely to find a home anywhere else. The Davenports’ pastures have also been a launch pad for sculptors. Someone who wants to learn to draw can find paper anywhere, but a blank sheet for a massive stone sculpture by Hector Santos is harder to find.

Santos, a stonemason and my neighbor when I lived in Woodstock, visited the Davenports and said he wanted to make art. His first piece at Sculpturefest, “Earth’s Crust,” three stone columns planted at an angle and filled in with smaller stones, isn’t going anywhere. There are now three more Santos works on the grounds.

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This is a repeating pattern. Burlington artist Melanie Brotz, who works in driftwood, “came up to my studio and asked, ‘Can I have a residency here?’ ” Yes, it turned out, she could.

Sculpturefest is the most open art venue in the Upper Valley, available for viewing dawn to dusk almost year-round. Artists recognize that openness, too. Charlet talked about uniting “the Yalies and the Barres,” bringing together conceptual and abstract artists and traditional carvers working with Barre granite.

This year’s featured artist, Stefania Urist, sought the Davenports out. Urist, who lives in Londonderry, Vt., makes sculptures out of phragmites, or common reeds, an invasive plant. A piece she’s still installing supports the reeds with rebar and chicken wire. The resulting work, at least as it looked Tuesday, was spare and graceful and also embracing.

Urist also will have work on view this year at Socrates Sculpture Park, in Queens, N.Y. Founded in 1986 by artist Mark di Suvero, the park was one of the inspirations for Sculpturefest, as was Storm King Art Center, in New York’s Hudson River Valley.

While both of the New York venues often host work on a larger scale, particularly Storm King, which sits on 500 acres, Sculpturefest is true to its Vermont home, with works that fit the state’s more intimate landscape.

In a way, the Davenports’ move to Vermont centers on the same sense of scale and community. They’re both from the North Shore of Massachusetts but adopted their new close-knit town, first in an apartment overlooking Francis Mooney’s garage in Woodstock village and, within a few years, in the house on Prosper Road. They paid $12,500 for the house and another $8,000 for an adjacent parcel of land, Peter said. (That’s a little over $200,000 today.) He also purchased Roy Oil, a local fuel oil company.

Early on, Charlet attended a weekly play reading session in Woodstock’s Little Theater held by Bill Tyson, who’d taught drama at Yale. They got to know people in the village and as their children grew up, in the schools.

Sculpturefest is an example of the same spirit. “This place,” Charlet said, “it really depends on a community.”

Sculpturefest opens Sunday with a reception starting at 3 p.m. Picnics are encouraged if the weather cooperates. The art will remain on view at least until the end of foliage season. Admission is free.

More art

Matt Brown Fine Art, in Lyme, will hold a gallery talk on Saturday from noon to 2 p.m., a conversation between Brown and fellow artist Daryl Storrs about making prints for and about the landscape around them.

And this time of year is as good as any to pay a visit to BigTown Gallery. Though it’s past the western fringe of the Upper Valley, in Rochester, Vt., BigTown regularly shows work by artists connected to the Upper Valley and Dartmouth College. Currently on view are works by the late Ira and Helen Matteson, artists who retired to Thetford in 1994, and the late Dartmouth art professors Ben Frank Moss and Varujan Boghosian.

Music, outdoors?

The Hopkins Center was slated to kick off its series of concerts on the Dartmouth Green on Wednesday night, but the weather wouldn’t cooperate and the Hop was forced to cancel.

Going forward, as administrators are fond of saying, let’s hope for sunshine. July 13 brings the Garifuna Collective, no stranger to Upper Valley audiences, to the Big Green. The main event, also the final show in the series, belongs to the Ukrainian new music ensemble DhakaBrakha, who will perform Aug. 1.

If you missed Wednesday night’s show, the artists, Cachitas Now!, an Argentine cumbia ensemble, performs at Feast and Field market in Barnard on Thursday night. Go to feastandfield.com for tickets and information.

You can pick your friends ...

“American Pickers,” the History Channel show dedicated to proving that Americans are the best at amassing stuff, plans to come to Vermont and New Hampshire later this summer. They only want to pick through private collections, so if you think your cigar boxes full of Cracker Jack prizes would be the envy of the nation, you can contact the show’s producers at 646-493-2184 or AmericanPickers@cineflix.com.

Alex Hanson can be reached at ahanson@vnews.com or 603-727-3207.