Arts and Culture

Baltimore’s Visionary Art Museum among many elevating Finster’s profile

Howard Finster's "Super Powers" (1984) is on view in the exhibit "The Visionary Experience: Saint Francis to Finster" at the American Visionary Art Museum in Baltimore.
Howard Finster's "Super Powers" (1984) is on view in the exhibit "The Visionary Experience: Saint Francis to Finster" at the American Visionary Art Museum in Baltimore.
By hpousner
Oct 13, 2014

The restoration over the last three years of the Rev. Howard Finster’s Paradise Garden folk art environment in the northwest Georgia town of Summerville also is proving to be a factor in a growing revival of interest in the work of the prolific artist more than a decade after his death.

The latest evidence is Finster’s powerful presence in a sprawling group exhibition at the American Visionary Art Museum in Baltimore on view in the documentary “Paradise Garden,” which will be screened at the Goat Farm Art Center on Nov. 18.

Meanwhile, the Paradise Garden Foundation is readying for “A Turn in the Garden,” its annual benefit membership party on Oct. 18, when guests will enjoy a progressive dinner and live bluegrass music as they tour Finster’s Noah’s Ark-styled tribute to mankind’s creations.

The show celebrates what the American Visionary Art Museum bills as the “Earth’s most dynamic and intuitive ‘evolutionaries’: inventors, scientists, America’s founding fathers, dreamers and saints,” each of whom has been “touched by some lightening bolt of greater understanding, insight, grace and muse.”

In addition to Finster, the exhibit probes the giant otherworldly paintings of psychic and “remote viewer” Ingo Swann, the spiritual life of guitarist Jimi Hendrix, the cosmic works of polymath Walter Russell and the religious experience of sci-fi icon Philip K. Dick as drawn by cartoonist Robert Crumb.

Through Aug. 30, 2015. www.avam.org.

The Goat Farm is not only the site of the screening, but is helping support its marketing and distribution via one of the arts center’s Arts Investment Packages.

7 p.m. Nov. 18. Free (donations accepted). Goat Farm’s Goodson Yard, 1200 Foster St., Atlanta. To reserve: www.eventbrite com.

Carpenter Michael Sanders helped restore the "Rabbit Hutch" at famed folk artist Howard Finster's Paradise Garden in Summerville in summer 2013. A lot of work has been done in stabilizing of the elevated Rolling Chair Ramp, restoration of mosaic walkways and interior work on the World's Folk Art Chapel. PHIL SKINNER / PSKINNER@AJC.COM
Carpenter Michael Sanders helped restore the "Rabbit Hutch" at famed folk artist Howard Finster's Paradise Garden in Summerville in summer 2013. A lot of work has been done in stabilizing of the elevated Rolling Chair Ramp, restoration of mosaic walkways and interior work on the World's Folk Art Chapel. PHIL SKINNER / PSKINNER@AJC.COM

5-9 p.m. Oct. 18. $30; $55 couples (includes membership). A chartered bus will depart the Goat Farm at 4:15 p.m.; $45 per person for ride and party. 201 N. Lewis St., Summerville. 706-808-0800, paradisegardenfoundation.org.

Through May 2015 in the Pop Culture Gallery, World of Coca-Cola. Attraction hours vary. $16; ages 65 and up, $14; ages 3-12, $12. 121 Baker St. N.W., Atlanta. 404-676-5151, www.worldofcoca-cola.com.

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hpousner

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