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Jasper Job featured at By TOMMY JOYNER Assistant features editor Artists are strange people. Of all people who need recognition and critical acclaim to actually survive their pain, it is the artist who is most often ignored. But occasionally, an artist rises to the top of the heap. "Just scraping by" becomes a thing of the past, and suddenly the artist is a big hit at all the celebrity parties. We know their names: Andy Warhol, Salvador Dali, Norman Rockwell, Georgia O'Keefe, Ansel Adams. Jasper Johns, who lived in South Carolina much of his life, now enjoys this same acclaim, and he and his work are being featured in the "Jasper Johns Retrospective," April 30 ? Aug. 6 at McKissick Museum. Jasper Johns is considered to be one of the hottest artists in the world, and this is proven, if by nothing else, by the fact that Jasper Johns' work sells for more money than any other living artist. The McKissick exhibit, says museum director Lynn Robertson Myers, will follow Johns' work from about 1960 to 1981. "We're not try , ?| . JWBMBEir 1 ^PrPWH I A killer i The onh is the \a\ Pi I ! Mi V .N0RTHW001 TESS HARPER KAREN YOUNG ?J0 ; (meKENGORDSJOHNt Tl I "itTRtCTIO '" -E- ."] PANA rC ! u??? w MQutms ?ccwm?t? 1 ?ggjn MMWT >|?IW?? _u OKIGINALSOi OPENS FR .*jO " its' work McKissick ing to show the biggest and best of Johns' work, but we will show how his work has evolved over the years and how he's handled different art forms," Myers said. Jasper Johns was born May 15, 1930, in Augusta, Ga., and was sent to live with relatives in Allendale, S.C., shortly thereafter. He attended school in the state and entered the University of South Carolina after high school. In 1950, when he was 19, Johns moved to New York City to begin his art career. Johns worked as a clerk in a bookstore, studying and painting all the while, until he learned to get by on part-time work. Johns awaited his "big break," and it finally found him in 1958. He was offered his first oneman show by avant garde gallery owner Leo Castelli, which was a huge success. There will be a lecture giving a more sensitive, in-depth view of Johns and his works at 3 p.m. May 7 at McKissick Museum. The lecture { will be conducted by Robert Ochs, a former USC professor who taught Johns when he attended the j university. * i ? LDMAN KEVIN M, is back on the streets. i nno uuhn ran efnn Kim f wwiiw vuii uiup mill a LA/yer who set him free. ^^HH| I DALYwDEREK GIBSON"? FSHEMDALE FILM CORPO D PRODUCTION GARY OLDMAN KEVIN BACON E DON BAKER "JERRY GOLDSMITH SSPHILIF DALYwDEREK GIBSON "MARK KASDAN "RC vision- "TMARTIN CAMPBELL Copyright 198 UNOTRACK ALBUM AVAILABLE ON VARESE SARABANOE RECORDS, CASSETTES ANDCOMPAC' IDAY, APRIL 28th EVE Singer and guitar slinger Lead singer of Violent Femmes, Gort looker T. 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More tnan ouu tnreeong demo tapes were submitted in February, and out of these, 12 i groups were chosen to compete in our regional competitions. Picked as emi-finalists, Quintessence headed o New Orleans' Storyville jazz club ; or the southeastern contest, hosted < tnd judged by Doc Severenson of I The Tonight Show. The perfornances were 25 minutes apiece, in 1 vhich Quintessence performed four ( unes, all penned by band leader and ceyboardist Paul Reichle. ] The group's victory in New < Orleans raked in a $1000 check, some ] -lennessy cognac and a trip to Los < We Take You f?*CONf jtpii /I 25 _fv 7 i 2712 Middleburg Dr., 1^ p Suite 10& [jf DEST ANNOUNCEME NEW UVUIK PAN 1ZZA S PIZZA MENU Additional Toppings jude Our Special Blend of Pepperoni. Mushrooms. Ham. 0 00% Real Cheese. Green Peppers. Black and Grec Sausage. 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