The Dairy Barn Arts Center today. |
By 1977, the dairy barn, virtually unused for ten years, was slated to be razed along with other buildings that the Athens Mental Health and Mental Retardation Center no longer used. The demolition date was fast approaching. But the local arts community had other ideas. The Hocking Valley Arts Council, artists, crafts persons, business leaders, government leaders and other concerned citizens, succeeded in saving the now 100-year-old barn. The Dairy Barn was saved and received its first funding in the form of $10,000 in grants making it possible to winterize, paint, and begin administrative duties of the arts center.
In 1978, the Dairy Barn was placed on the National Register of Historic Places as the Dairy Barn Southeastern Ohio Cultural Arts Center was established as a non-profit corporation.
The first full scale arts exhibition to show at the Dairy Barn, Quilt National '79, was organized in the summer of 1979. It was produced in collaboration with local quilt/textile artists including Nancy Crow. The Quilt National is a biennial juried exhibition of innovative art quilts and remains the largest and longest running show of its kind in the United States. It draws entries and visitors from
around the world.
On the property is this charming herb garden. |
"The works in a Quilt National exhibit display a reverence for the lessons taught by the makers of the heritage quilts. Many of the works hold fast to the traditional methods of piecing and patching. At the same time, however, the Quilt National artist is intrigued by the challenge of expanding the boundaries of traditional quiltmaking by utilizing the newest materials and technologies. These innovative works generate strong emotional responses in the viewer while at the same time fulfilling the creative need of the artist to make a totally individual statement."
Next...one of the greatest delights of the trip turned out to be the lodging where I stayed just 10 minutes outside of Athens, the Sand Ridge B&B and Native Garden operated by innkeeper Connie Davidson. It turns out there is a very unique story here.
In 2007 Connie moved to Athens and purchased the property with the intention of opening the B&B. But the land behind the farmhouse was overgrown with non-native and invasive species. It was a tangled mess. Today it has been transformed. The landscape now contains a prairie, woodland garden, butterfly garden, and a bog.
Dr. Frank Porter, of Racine, Ohio, is a regionally known landscaper and lecturer who promotes the use of native plants to enhance outdoor living spaces. Connie asked him to help her revitalize the overgrown and weedy landscape and he designed a Nature-scape on which they began work in the fall of 2009.
Within the confines of the property, there are several ecological niches that have become the home of a wide diversity of native wildflowers, grasses, vines, trees and shrubs.
They added a walking trail that winds through the gardens.
Across the road from the farmhouse. |
On the way to Cedar Falls. |
The geologic history and the human history are significant in this area. The landscape is made of mostly sandstones and shale. 350 million years ago bedrock formed a delta in a shallow sea that covered what is now Ohio. Subsequent years of uplift and erosion created the cliffs and gorges that are there today.
Cedar Falls |
Most photographed falls in Ohio |
Conkle's Hollow Nature Preserve features towering cliffs of Black Hand sandstone. |
A walk through the Conkle's Hollow gorge. |
Towering trees, powerful rock formations and occasional shafts of sunlight combine with the damp and shady atmosphere along the way in Conkle's Hollow. |
An enjoyable journey over this July 4th weekend and thanks for sharing it with me.