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Mill Power: Where Workers Once Made Bolts of Flannel, a Busy Mixed-Use Complex Hums Away

Architect Eddie Belk, 74 years old and dressed in a well-worn green T-shirt, khaki pants, and a red-and-white North Carolina State University ball cap, looks over what was once an enormous cotton-spinning room at Revolution Mill in Greensboro, North Carolina. It’s an impressive scene: two rows of 14-foot-tall heart-pine columns run down the middle of the expanse, longer than two football fields. Sunlight from the clerestory windows above creates patterns on the polished maple floors. White doors with transom windows on each side of this building and an adjacent one lead to 150 apartments with tall ceilings, recycled-glass countertops, and exposed brick walls. “No matter who I bring in here, they get that smile on their face trying to gather it all in,” he says, noticing my grin. “It’s a wonderful space. I’ll come in here just to spend a minute. Just to enjoy it.”

Decades ago, this space was impressive for different reasons. This was the heart of Revolution Cotton Mills, at one time the largest cotton flannel mill in the world. The spinning room was where hundreds of looms the size of golf carts clattered away, 24 hours a day. Cotton lint filled the air as fans moving along a track, still present on the ceiling, blew debris off the machines. Giant “air washer” units did their best to suck the particles out of the room. Workers, dubbed “lintheads” by those outside the mill communities, would leave their shifts covered in dust. Some came down with brown lung disease caused by inhaling fibers or lost fingers to the rapidly moving looms. Millwork was a dangerous job.

Photo Credit: Kate Medley

This spinning room is one of nine renovated buildings—six contiguous—on the sprawling 42-acre campus of Revolution Mill, a mixed-use development that includes apartments, offices, restaurants, shops, and event spaces. Belk, principal at Belk Architecture in Durham, North Carolina, is eager to show me them all. This is the 14th mill complex that Belk’s firm has worked on, and at 750,000 square feet it isn’t even the largest. That title goes to the 1-million-square-foot American Tobacco factory: nine buildings in Durham that Belk and his team turned into a mixed-use campus, the first tenants arriving in 2005. All told, Belk says he’s redesigned more than 7 million square feet of historic properties since launching his firm on his birthday in 1982. “This is one of my architectural children that I’m proud of,” he says of Revolution Mill in a lilting Carolina drawl. “By the time we got to this one, [old mills] were just something that we understood.”

We began our tour several hours earlier in what was the distribution warehouse, a five-story, brick-clad building that dates to 1915 (with a 1930 addition). Here, workers would store reams of finished flannel awaiting pickup via trains on adjacent tracks. Belk’s firm ended up removing a 40- by 40-foot section of the building’s interior to create a soaring atrium topped by skylights. At night, LED lights mounted on metal rings around concrete support columns shine upward. “It’s just a beautiful sight,” he says.

Traces of the building’s prior use can be found throughout: nicks on the columns from careless forklift operators, scorch marks from some past fire, an old bale press repurposed into a bench. On one concrete support someone has scrawled, “T.W. Nelson, Aug. 27, 1969.”

When Belk and his team surveyed the property in 2013, they found the majority of the mill buildings structurally sound. The sturdy columns and floors had done their jobs, but most structures required new roofs. As in many Southern mills, at some point the windows throughout the complex had been bricked over, as the advent of air washing systems and fluorescent lighting replaced natural ventilation and sunlight. During the rehabilitation, crews removed these bricks and repaired and replicated hundreds of windows and frames throughout, including in the warehouse, dubbed Mill House.

These days, the warehouse holds a coworking space, a nail salon, a cosmetic medical office, a future eatery and market, and three apartments on its ground floor. Upper floors contain another 30 apartments as well as office space, including the homes of two national textile design firms. More than four decades after Revolution Mill’s looms went silent, the textile industry has returned. “These companies have all decided, ‘Well, let’s go back to the mill,’” says Belk. “It seems very appropriate, doesn’t it?”

Photo Credit: Kate Medley

Revolution Mill’s roots date to 1891, when brothers Moses and Ceasar Cone, the two eldest sons of a prominent German-Jewish immigrant family in Baltimore, formed the Cone Export & Commission Company to broker Southern textile products. Soon they decided to operate their own mills and built their first Greensboro plant, Proximity Cotton Mills, which began weaving denim in 1896. Revolution was the brothers’ second mill; they opened it in 1899 with business partners Emanuel and Herman Sternberger specifically to produce cotton flannel. Six years later the Cones finished building White Oak Cotton Mills, which became the world’s largest denim factory, eventually supplying material for Levi Strauss, Lee, Wrangler, and others. Proximity Print Works, opened in 1912, was the South’s first plant to specialize in printed cotton fabrics.

Like other mill owners in the region, the Cones built self-sufficient villages for their employees. The company provided land for churches, stores, schools, playing fields, and recreation centers, and constructed hundreds of simple clapboard company-owned houses that workers leased. Black employees lived in a separate village and often worked lower-paying jobs at the mills or toiled in the houses of company higher-ups who occupied an area dubbed “Snob Hill.” By the 1940s, more than 2,600 workers lived in 1,500 houses around the four plants.

But by the 1970s, the American textile industry was in decline, as manufacturing jobs moved overseas. Revolution Mill produced its last flannel in 1982, and the complex was left to deteriorate. The local economy also declined as workers sought opportunities elsewhere. The other Cone mills closed, with White Oak hanging on until early 2018—one of the last remaining denim mills in the country.

Proximity Cotton Mills was razed, and many thought Revolution Mill would suffer the same fate. “Mills were not celebrated as part of North Carolina history at all,” says Benjamin Briggs, head of Preservation North Carolina, who previously consulted on the rehabilitation of Revolution as executive director of Preservation Greensboro. He says lawsuits from brown lung and the rapid decline of United States–made textiles precipitated the demolition of historic mills across the state. “How did you deal with our deep textile mill history?” asks Briggs. “You got rid of it.”

But starting in the late 1990s and into the 2000s, a couple of local developers, Jim Peeples and Frank Auman, saw an opportunity. They purchased Revolution Mill and transformed several buildings into office and event space. Although the economic bust of 2008 forced the pair to abandon their plans, Briggs credits the duo with saving the complex. In 2012 one of their creditors, Self-Help Ventures Fund, a Durham-based nonprofit and community development lender, acquired the property. It has since pumped more than $140 million into the project, with just over $40 million coming from federal and state historic tax credits and about $13 million from New Markets Tax Credits. The National Trust Community Investment Corporation (NTCIC), a for-profit subsidiary of the National Trust, provided critical tax credit financing needed for the Mill House rehabilitation, completed in May 2023.

Self-Help tapped Chicago native Nick Piornack, who had previously redeveloped historic buildings in Greensboro’s South End into a bustling restaurant and entertainment scene, as business development manager. Piornack says his role was to help “sell the sizzle,” but at that point, there wasn’t much of a spark. Although the mill sits just two miles northeast of downtown, it might have been another world. “The people downtown and in more wealthy areas had no reason to come here,” says Piornack, now general manager of the property. “It’s an old mill and it’s collapsing. How the heck are we going to get this thing back on the map?”

Piornack thought Revolution Mill was a project that “people had to touch.” He began inviting different groups—young professionals, garden clubs, Rotary clubs, Kiwanis members—luring them with the promise of free food and drinks and “behind the scenes” tours. Using renderings created by Belk, he painted pictures of the mill’s future. “You’ll see this place in two years and you won’t believe it,” he told them. For several years, Piornack sold the promise, telling everyone he could. “All of a sudden, the buzz started,” he says. “People were telling people, ‘Boy, you won’t believe what they are doing over there!’ It just snowballed.”

Read the rest on Saving Places >

Changing Landscape: Revolution Mill weaving together past and present

What You Need To Know

  • Revolution Mill was built in the late 1890s by the Cone brothers 

  • It was the largest flannel mill of the south and supplied many items to soldiers 

  • The mill has been renovated into apartments, events spaces, breweries, office spaces, restaurants and an art gallery

  • Revolution is looking to expand on its 45-acre property

GREENSBORO, N.C. — Revolution Mill has experienced many working and living communities inside its walls for over 100 years.

The Revolution Mill was one of the mills owned by the infamous Cone brothers, Moses and Ceasar Cone. The duo were one of the textiles giants in the south, specifically North Carolina. 

Revolution opened its doors in the late 1890s as the largest flannel mill of the south with at one point 1,000 mills running for 16 hours a day, according to the Revolution Mill website. 

Looms continued to run, making flannels and items for soldiers at the mill until its closure in 1982, when it became vacant for a few years. 

The mill passed hands and began transforming into office and event spaces until it was purchased by private company Self-Help in 2012. Self-Help began a $100,000,000 renovation on Revolution Mill, according to the mill’s website.

Nick Piornack has a passion for preservation after working on restoration projects in downtown Greensboro. He began working on his largest project yet, Revolution Mill. 

“What I love is when people come visit, and I do tours quite a bit to show folks what's happened that have either been here before or had been here years ago and saw it as an old warehouse of the factory," said Piornack, the general manager and owner rep for Revolution Mill. 

Revolution Mill has passed in its thumping of machinery for the hustle and bustle of restaurants, breweries, event spaces, art galleries, business headquarters, store fronts and apartments. 

“Their eyes and their excitement. And they can't believe that, you know, we have 142 companies and 183 apartments and restaurants and all these things here that, you know, their memory is at the old and loud and manufacturing, and now it's all reborn again,” Piornack said. 

All of the newly built rooms inside of the mill used to be part of the working floor, full of machines and workers. 

“It’s completely restored of all the original floors are still in place, the the maple floors,” beamed Piornack. With original brick and some authentic window panes still standing inside the mill.

Along with original fire doors, fans to remove lint off of so called “lint heads” within the factory and the original beam structures where the looms would cut into the pillars used in the aesthetic design of the mill are revealing its history to new visitors. 

Read the rest and watch the video on Spectrum News >

This revitalized historic campus will revolutionize work-life balance in Greensboro

Revolution Mill, just minutes from downtown Greensboro, is an incredible opportunity for businesses and entrepreneurs who want to provide exceptional working spaces with an abundance of amenities for employees.


Greensboro is the third most populous city in North Carolina, behind Charlotte and Raleigh. Just an hour from the beautiful Blue Ridge Parkway and seated conveniently at the junction of three major highways, Greensboro offers residents an incredible combination of beauty, history, convenience and opportunity.

One example of that offering is Revolution Mill. The first flannel mill in the South, Revolution Mill was opened in 1898 by Moses and Ceasar Cone and cemented Greensboro as an important hub of North Carolina’s textile manufacturing economy. After almost a century in business, the mill closed its doors. The campus sat vacant for nearly two decades before Self-Help, one of the nation’s largest community development financial institutions, invested in the property and began early redevelopment.

While maintaining the name and honoring the important history, Revolution Mill is now a completely reimagined, revitalized, vibrant mixed-use space that allows residents, businesses and visitors a wealth of opportunities.

"Revolution Mill helped to establish Greensboro’s manufacturing tradition and its prominence as a community of innovation and artisanship. That legacy continues today," said Nick Piornack with Self-Help, general manager of Revolution Mill.

The 45-acre site is now a destination campus that is home to industry, apartments, art, galleries, restaurants and more.

Entrepreneurs and employers love to call Revolution Mill home because of the amenities it provides employees. Within footsteps, workers can get a coffee at Union Coffee, grab an award-winning pastry at Black Magnolia Bakery, or get lunch at Cugino Forno Pizzeria or Kau, North Carolina’s first all-encompassing restaurant, butcher and bar.

And when the clock strikes quitting time, employees can unwind their way. Turn one way and grab a beverage at The Bearded Goat, or turn the other and head to the on-campus fitness center and yoga studio.

In addition to these opportunities, Revolution Mill continues the legacy of artistry and artisanship. Public events include outdoor movies and concerts in the midst of carefully chosen public art. The permanent Central Gallery invites visitors to view rotating art exhibits featuring selections that appeal to art lovers of all kinds, from photography and quilts to impressionism and realism.

One past exhibit in the Central Gallery, Faces of Revolution, has a permanent home in the campus Hall of Fame. This expansive portrait collection tells the story of Revolution Mill through the intimate portraits and personal stories of the lives historically touched by the space.

"The history and tradition at Revolution Mill lends itself well to having local artwork featured prominently throughout the campus. It provides a warm and colorful environment for tenants and visitors alike," said Christy Smith with the CBRE|Triad leasing team.

CBRE|Triad has been handling the leasing efforts for the project’s office and retail space since Q4 2015, watching it evolve into this dynamic community. They have been involved in leasing 471,500 square feet to a combination of local, regional and national companies.


Read the rest on WRAL >

Venee Pawlowski of Black Magnolia Southern Patisserie wins national contest, talks expansion

Venee Pawlowski (photo by Dhanraj Emanuel Photography)

She’s done it again.

On Thursday, it was announced that local baker and community favorite, Venee Pawlowski of Black Magnolia Southern Patisserie won the national General Mills Foodservice Biskies contest.

The ask was simple, use Pillsbury’s Southern Style Unbaked Biscuits and combine them with two or more additional ingredients to create a unique new recipe. The grand prize was $20,000, a check that has now been cut to Pawlowski.

For her entry, Pawlowski created a fluffy buttermilk biscuit layered with brown sugar roasted apples, served with bourbon buttermilk sweet biscuit ice cream and topped with bourbon caramel, pecan pralines and salted toffee.

The judges noted that The Upside Down Apple Praline Biscuit is “an innovative twist on a simple classic” where “the biscuit shines as the star of the dish, blending perfectly with unexpected flavors to create a culinary masterpiece. And just when you thought it couldn’t get any better, the addition of biscuit ice cream takes this dessert to a whole new level of deliciousness!” 

She told TCB that one of her all-time favorite desserts is the classic Tarte Tatin, “so it just made sense to try this with a fluffy, buttermilk biscuit. (Plus, adding a scoop of ice cream never hurt anything.)”

In 2020, Pawlowski won another General Mills contest, that time for her mouthwatering Bourbon Banoffee Pecan Rolls which she serves on her bakery’s menu.

“Our family and team are beyond overjoyed for this win and what it means for the future of Black Magnolia Southern Patisserie,” Pawlowski told TCB. “We’re forever grateful for such an amazing community of people that help make our dreams come true every day.”

When asked if the Upside Down Apple Praline Biscuits would be added to her regular menu, Pawlowski said that she plans to make the item available starting this weekend available as a biscuit by itself or “all the way” with their house made Bourbon Sweet Biscuit Ice Cream, Bourbon Caramel, Praline Pieces and Toffee.

As reported by TCB in the past, Pawlowski has been baking for years.

She had previously worked in a coffee shop before the pandemic and had been training to be a pastry chef, when she decided to start baking with her daughter; as they baked, they found that their favorite item was cinnamon rolls.

That’s how Black Magnolia was born.

In the summer of 2022, Pawlowski opened a brick-and-mortar, grab-and-go location at Revolution Mills where she serves her baked goods daily. Her pastries can also be bought at Borough Coffee at Double Oaks, Common Grounds, Cille & Scoe and Danny’s Restaurant in Greensboro.

Read the rest on Triad City Beat >

Black Magnolia Southern Patisserie is open for business in Revolution Mill

GREENSBORO, N.C. (WGHP) — We have an update to a FOX8 Foodie story we first brought you in 2020!

That year a local baker, Venee Palowski, won a National General Mills recipe contest with her Bourbon Banoffee Pecan Rolls. That win helped her launch her own bakery. 

Black Magnolia Southern Patisserie Opened late this summer at Revolution Mill in Greensboro. Palowski says winning that contest helped her build a customer base at pop-ups around town and selling to local restaurants and coffee shops. 

With a loyal customer base, she and her husband felt confident enough to open a brick-and-mortar bakery. 

Black Magnolia Southern Patisserie specializes in breakfast pastries, especially cinnamon rolls and unique flavors of sweet rolls. Shannon Smith stopped by the shop for a taste.

See more on Fox8 >

Tenants lining up for retail space in renovated Triad mill building

Potential tenants are showing interest in the latest renovation project in an area already boosted by two recently completed similar projects.

Construction is underway on Phase 2 of Revolution Mill, the renovation of Mill House off Yanceyville Street, just northeast of downtown Greensboro. Nick Piornack of developer Self-Help and general manager of Revolution Mill, told Triad Business Journal that he has four letters of intent from prospective retail and/or restaurant tenants for the four, first floor retail spaces.

Delivery on the building is expected in May or June 2022.

C.T. Wilson of Durham and Greensboro is the general contractor on the $36 million renovation of the five floor, 167,000-square-foot building into a mixed-use facility. The closest building on the campus to Yanceyville Street, Mill House is planned to have two restaurants, retail and office spaces, and 33 apartments.

The plans for Mill House call for a 5,800 SF restaurant anchoring the first floor with a patio over the banks of North Buffalo Creek, which runs along the back of Mill House, separating Mill House from Revolution Mill Apartments. Piornack said he's negotiating for that premier restaurant space with a local tenant.

A $525,000 grant will be used to dredge and widen the creek and build a stronger bank that will allow better access while combating flooding. Big rocks and boulders will be added for cosmetic purposes.

"It will be turned from a liability into an asset," Piornack said of the creek.

An 1,800-square-foot atrium with a skylight is a central feature of the building's interior.

Piornack said two current Revolution Mill tenants have expressed interest in moving to Mill House, taking up to a floor apiece on the three top levels.

The second floor will have office spaces of 7,000 SF and 2,800 SF, plus apartments. The third, fourth and fifth floors will include about 12,600 SF of office space and apartments. Total office space will measure about 60,000 SF.

"There's going to be some really cool architectural features," Piornack said.

Subtracting the atrium and common space, Piornack said Mill House will have about 120,000 SF of rentable space. Revolution Mill and Mill House are managed by Kane Realty of Raleigh.

Mill House won't be the final phase at Revolution Mill, said Piornack, who pointed to the 13 or 14 acres south of the creek, a mostly open space along Yanceyville with a 13,000 SF industrial building at the west end, as the next phase, once Mill House is up and rolling. Self-Help refers to the next phase as the "Olympic" tract. Development there will be mostly new construction, a contrast from earlier phases.

See the Article on Triad Business Journal >

Tucker Bartlett: Make New Markets Tax Credit permanent

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Once abandoned, the 45-acre Revolution Mill in northeast Greensboro is helping transform a formerly written-off neighborhood into a major driver of economic development. What started as 600,000 square feet of empty historic mill buildings has transformed into galleries, creative studios, office space, mixed-income residential units and public amenities like restaurants, cafes, greenway trails and community spaces. The project is spurring further investment, including the renovation of other historic mills creating additional affordable housing.

Northeast Greensboro is a community with a rich cultural and socioeconomic history. When the Cone Textile facilities closed in the 1980s, it experienced extensive disinvestment. Today, northeast Guilford Greensboro experiences a poverty rate of 27.9%. Revolution Mill is helping change that statistic.

The project would not be possible without help from the New Markets Tax Credit (NMTC). The NMTC provides patient, flexible capital to businesses and communities left out of the economic mainstream, creating quality jobs, improved services and economic opportunity.

One of the most efficient community economic development tools for low-income communities ever enacted, the NMTC has leveraged an unprecedented level of investment to both rural and urban low-income communities, generating more than $110 billion in total capital investment through public-private partnerships and creating more than 1 million jobs. The NMTC has an outstanding track record of revitalizing some of the poorest, most disinvested communities in our country — and it has the potential to achieve even greater success.

Read the rest on News & Record >>

Three Adaptive Reuse Projects in North Carolina Reinvent Historic Mills

Architects and developers are transforming these staples of the South—located throughout a 120-mile region from Winston-Salem to Fayetteville—into infrastructure fit for today.

When architect Louis Cherry first walked into the Adams-Millis Hosiery Mill, a 1920s factory in High Point, North Carolina, his jaw dropped. “It was majestic, almost like a Greek stoa,” he says of the cast-in-place concrete structure and the two-foot-wide columns with flare mushroom cap tops and square drop caps. Designed to facilitate intricate work, the mill had narrow floor plates and could allow for “all kinds of natural light” despite windows that had been boarded up over the years. “I saw the potential for this to be a gorgeous space.”

The Adams-Millis Hosiery Mill is just one of a constellation of old mills and factories dotting the North Carolina landscape. Known for its history of tobacco, furniture, and textile manufacturing, the region has come a long way since the industry’s decline in the early 20th century, with the ghostly industrial shells being transformed into hardy buildings. Over the past few decades, a fervent army of developers, architects, and community leaders from Durham to Winston-Salem have joined hands to repurpose these staples of the South into infrastructure fit for today.

Congdon Yards, High Point

This spring, High Point’s Adams-Millis Hosiery became Congdon Yards. Twice a year, the city hosts High Point Market, ushering in 75,000 people and 2,000 exhibitors from around the globe. Building on the city’s status as the “furniture capital of the world,” the old mill has been converted into a 225,000-square-foot design hub for furniture designers and entrepreneurs.

Congdon Yards consists of three buildings wrapped around a parking lot-turned-courtyard: Plant 7, an L-shaped assemblage of two buildings, and The Factory, a brick structure with oak floors and timber columns. Repurposing the 100-year-old factory didn’t come easy. For example, the L-shaped building at Plant 7 spanned five floors on one side and four on the other, so most floors didn’t align. “My idea was to cut a big hole in the middle where they come together and create a very dramatic cascading atrium,” says Cherry, who designed a steel stair that now snakes around the elevator core, connecting every level.

Today, Plant 7 houses workspaces, a large community space on the ground floor, and a 6,070-square-foot workshop with commercial-grade woodworking equipment that is open to the public and available to designers and artisans. The Factory includes four event spaces and a restaurant on the ground floor. In a bid to avoid seasonal activities that leave the area desolate when businesses are closed, showrooms are excluded by zoning. “The idea has been to create a new downtown that is a 365 days-a-year downtown,” says Cherry.

Bailey South, Winston-Salem 

This shift to a new center of gravity in town is not an isolated example. In Winston-Salem, Innovation Quarter is a 1.2 million-square-foot research center housed in a series of repurposed R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. factories that hug Bailey Park–an old parking lot that’s been transformed into a 1.6-acre urban green space.

Once a tobacco and textiles manufacturing powerhouse, Winston-Salem, and particularly Innovation Quarter, now attracts students, artists, entrepreneurs, and executives looking for a vibrant community and creative collaborations. The coal-fired power plant which had stood dormant for over 20 years, has been transformed into Bailey South, a mixed-use retail and office space. “Historically all of the factories were built with excess capacity in mind, but that’s allowed for these buildings to be repurposed,” says Ben Schwab, a partner at local architecture firm STITCH Design Shop, which designed Bailey South, as well as the amphitheater in Bailey Park.

At Bailey South, STITCH Design Shop reused 97 percent of the existing power plant building. They then built a two-story addition to the south, and a six-story addition to the north, creating what Schwab calls a “common language” between them. Like at Congdon Yards, where the architects left a fair share of warts and dings, many of the building’s original quirks, like the 2 to 6-feet wide holes that had been cut for pipes, were kept and celebrated. Stitch also preserved the historic elevated railroad trestle that once brought coal to the power plant: it now provides access to the building’s second-floor office and retail entrance.

Revolution Mill, Greensboro

What to keep and what to shed is the challenge of every adaptive reuse project. In Greensboro, a former Cone Mills flannel factory has been transformed into a mixed-use complex abuzz with shops, offices, restaurants, and apartments. Designed by Eddie Belk of Belk Architecture, the complex consists of two long rows of connected buildings set around a courtyard that, over the years, had been filled with storage warehouses. “In order to bring back a warm, energizing space, we took those cores out and reopened all those windows so both rows of buildings had good views,” says Belk.

The mill closed in 1982, and much of the complex sat empty for decades. In 2012, Self Help Ventures Fund bought the mill and leveraged historic tax credits to bring it back to life. The main campus was complete in 2019 and Belk is now working on converting an old distribution warehouse into a new complex with two restaurants, additional coworking space, and 33 more apartments, making the number of living units a total of 183, including a portion dedicated to affordable housing. “There’s no greener building than the one that’s already built,” says Belk.

With over 84 adaptive reuse projects across North Carolina and Virginia, Belk has made a career of reinventing the past. He was the master planner for the American Tobacco Campus in Durham, completed in 2005, as well as the architect of Brightleaf Square nearby—a mixed-use campus in a set of converted tobacco warehouses. Both projects are now widely accepted as a catalyst for modern-day Durham, and for adaptive reuse projects in the area.

In the last ten years, Belk has designed half a dozen charter schools in old factory buildings. And in Rocky Mount, he transformed the second oldest cotton mill in North Carolina into an 82-acre modern-day campus. “There’s a reason I’ve been addicted to this for 40 years,” he says. “When I [renovate] the cotton mills, I feel like I’m walking in my grandfather’s footsteps, and I hope by adaptively reinventing these buildings, that we allow our grandchildren to walk in our footsteps.”

Read the article on Metropolis Mag >>

Self-Help on track to start $35 million Phase 2 of Revolution Mill in early 2021

The first phase of Revolution Mill, the $91 million mixed-use development in northeast Greensboro, is an unqualified success with 95% occupancy of its 150 loft apartments, three restaurants and more than 100 commercial tenants.

Now Self-Help Credit Union, the owner and developer of Revolution Mill, is now ready to move forward with a $35 million Phase 2 that it hopes to have completed in 2022.

By a vote of 8-0 Monday night, the Greensboro Zoning Commission approved rezoning 3.5 acres to light mixed industrial at 2005 Yanceyville St., clearing the way for a 145,000-square-foot mixed-use development in the Mill House, a five-story building that sits at the front entrance of Revolution Mill.

No one spoke in opposition to the rezoning proposal and no neighbors came forward with any grievances at a public meeting Self-Help organized. Hugh Holston, chairman of the zoning commission, summed up the lack of resistance and the unanimous vote in favor of the rezoning request.

“Revolution Mill has been an outstanding project for Greensboro,” Holston said.

Emma Haney, project manager of the Self-Help real estate team, called the Phase 2 of the project a “mixed-use microcosm” that has been greatly influenced by the success of Phase 1, which was completed in 2019.

“One of the most compelling parts from an underwriter’s perspective and from a real estate developer’s perspective is it’s just a little more of everything we’ve already seen have success in Phase 1,” Haney said. “That’s really informed the thinking for redevelopment of the Mill House.”

Plans call for 33 apartment units, 55,000 square feet of Class A office space, 10,000 square feet of retail/restaurant space and a co-working space. Eighteen of the apartments will be one-bedroom and 15 will be two-bedroom units.

The ground floor of the Mill House features 19-foot-high ceilings and floor-to-ceiling windows, and plans call for apartments, a co-working space with a mezzanine level and three retail spaces ranging from 1,300 square feet to 5,800 square feet. The largest retail space offers a deck overlooking Buffalo Creek and is seen as potential space for a restaurant. 

“The retail spaces can still be informed by the tenants,” said Haney, who said the campus could support another one to two restaurants. She also suggested a boutique fitness option is another possibility. 

The second through fifth floors will all be a mix of apartments and commercial space, and an atrium in the center of building will extend from the floor to the roof.“The market is at a place that it can comfortably support what we’re bringing online,” Haney said. “When we started Revolution Mill, there wasn’t an apartment market in this area. We’ve created a sub-market.”

Haney termed the area on Yanceyville Street as the Mill District, with Revolution Mill complemented by the 217 units at Printworks Mill Apartments that opened two blocks away earlier this year.

Read the rest on Triad Business Journal >

‘Playing with colors’: GSO artist Angie the Rose breathes vivid life onto her canvases

You’ve probably seen her work before.

Broad, colorful brushstrokes that branch out from a central point and create a sprouting form of rapturous color. Bright pinks and teal greens interact and weave in and out from one another in tear-shaped droplets that form clouds or tornadoes or, on rare occasions, the artist herself.

Greensboro artist Angela Barker, known by her artist name as Angie the Rose, has been creating art since she was a child in the mountainous landscape of western North Carolina.

“Ever since I was a little girl, those were the most vivid memories I have from my childhood,” Barker says. “I was either playing in a mountain forest or making art. I was really obsessed with horses and I drew what I saw or painted what I saw back then.”

‘Playing with colors’: GSO artist Angie the Rose breathes vivid life onto her canvases

Since then, Barker has moved past representational art to the forays of abstract visualizations. Her pieces evoke images of the natural world like plants or horizons, but Barker explains that much of her work, particularly the Molecular Series for which she’s known, draws inspiration from the small molecules that make up our bodies. In July, she debuted her first solo exhibit named after the series at the Revolution Mill’s Central Gallery, and many of her pieces can be seen at area shops like Vivid Interiors, Tiny Greenhouse and Lao.

Barker says she started the Molecular Series, which is characterized by a cacophony of primary and secondary colors that branch across canvases, about six years ago during a difficult time in her life. The artist, who is now 32 years old, was going through a kind of quarter-life crisis and had just finished what she calls her Dark and Moody series, the first cohesive collection of art she made as an artist.

“It was kind of depressing,” she says about Dark and Moody. “I didn’t know what I was doing with my life but once I was done with the series and I had gotten all of this funk out of me, I realized that it was time to work with colors again. It was about embracing a healing process of sorts.”

At the onset of the series, the shapes Barker created tended to be more insular and closed off. More recently, she has been paying a woodworker to create cut-out wooden shapes to make the pieces more three-dimensional and open.

“In the beginning they were closed like a bud,” she says. “I was going through a hard time in my life, and the more I started healing, the more [the shapes] started opening up.”

Barker’s intent was to emphasize the importance of human bodies and what goes on beneath the surface. Part of that was finding a way to empower women through her art and depicting that gender or sex doesn’t limit any person’s capabilities in life.

Read the rest on Triad City Beat >

Local Photographer Joins Nationwide Effort to Create 10,000 Complimentary Professional Headshots to Help America Get Back to Work

Nothing says “I’m ready to work” more than a freshly pressed suit, an updated resume, and of course, a professional headshot. Regardless of profession, COVID-19 sent millions of Americans to the unemployment line without warning. That is why local photographer Shelli Craig of Greensboro Headshots is participating with Headshot Booker and Brookfield Properties in the largest, single-day photo initiative that will provide 10,000 unemployed Americans nationwide with a complimentary, professional headshot to include with their resumes and post to job sites such as LinkedIn.

Shelli Craig will be producing the complimentary headshots on Wednesday, July 22 from 10:00 a.m. – 7:00 p.m. at the Brookfield Property located at Four Seasons Town Centre, 410 Four Seasons Town Centre Greensboro NC 27407. Complimentary headshots are open to anyone currently unemployed, but participants are asked to visit HeadshotBooker.com for details and schedule a time to be photographed. More than 200 photographers will participate across all 50 states, creating pop-up studios at nearly every Brookfield retail location nationwide. Headshots will be provided to participants on site through event photo sharing platform SpotMyPhotos.

Shelli Craig is the owner of Greensboro Headshots located at 1175 Revolution Mill Drive in Greensboro. She has been photographing clients for headshots, family portraits and senior portraits for 10 years. She is also a volunteer photographer for local groups such as earlier.org and March of Dimes.

See the story on YES! Weekly >

How to get boxed fresh produce and snacks with pickup at the Farmers’ Market

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Foster Caviness is a food distributor that usually delivers to restaurants and the like, but now they are reaching out to you.  

With their produce box campaign, they are boxing fresh fruits, veggies, and snacks in pre-packaged boxes that you order online and pick up at the Piedmont Triad Farmer's Market. It is a "no contact" delivery, meaning you pull up and tell them your order number and they put the box directly in your trunk. And you're done! 

You do have to pre-order online. You cannot purchase on-site. But the choices are fresh from local farms in North Carolina. The boxes contain fruit, veggies or a "stay healthy" box which contains a variety of items from milk and eggs to kid-friendly snack packs.

See the video on WFMY 2 >

Local companies large and small are pivoting to make protective masks for Cone Health

Local companies large and small are pivoting to make protective masks for Cone Health  |  News & Record

GREENSBORO — Lynda Layton leans over a sewing machine, carefully stitching a small piece of pleated navy blue fabric. She pauses, adjusts the swatch and stitches again. Within a minute, she has stitched elastic ear loops onto the fabric. What was just fabric and elastic is now a face mask that might be the only thing standing between a hospital worker and the coronavirus.

“If it can help anybody, that’s good,” Layton said.

Layton works on a sewing machine brought out of retirement from the textile industry. Layton herself is retired from Cone Mills, where she worked for 37 years. She now works part time in a sew shop for Hudson’s Hill, a small company that produces limited runs of denim wear and accessories like tote bags. The shop is in Revolution Mill, a former Cone mill that's now a sprawling mixed-use campus of offices, creative spaces and apartments. The fabric Layton sews is from Burlington, a former giant in the Piedmont textile industry that has a weaving facility in Reidsville. The masks Layton is sewing are being donated to Cone Health to provide a meager level of protection against the coronavirus for caregivers, custodians and other workers.

The path from Greensboro’s textile legacy to a hospital built on that legacy is not lost on Evan Morrison, owner of Hudson’s Hill and a self-professed geek of denim history, particularly that of Cone Mills.

“It’s been kinda cool to tap into the denim community to do things for the hospital system that was founded on denim money,” Morrison said.

Morrison, a Greensboro native who has traveled the globe pursuing an interest in textile and clothing, put his sew shop to work to make about 10,000 protective fabric masks after Cone Health sent out a call asking local companies to help with medical supplies. Morrison said the masks can be washed and reused.

“I read that health-care companies were suffering shortages of health-care equipment,” Morrison said. “Having a small-batch cut-and-sew facility and having a lot of network built within the local textile community, I thought we might be a resource.”

Morrison is just one of a growing number of local companies responding to a call Cone Health put out asking for donations of medical supplies to reinforce the hospital as patients affected by the coronaivirus COVID-19 climb.

Seth Coker also responded to Cone’s call.

Coker is a Greensboro developer who plays tennis with Dr. Dalton McLean of Cone Hospital. During a conversation with Coker, McLean expressed concern that the hospital would need more masks.

“I didn’t want our local health-care workers — not just the doctors and nurses, but the orderlies and other people that are working at Cone — to have to worry about this one thing that seemed like a solvable problem,” Coker said.

Coker turned to his old Grimsley High buddy Matt O’Connell.

See the full article on News & Record >

Greensboro Farmers Market Makes Valuable Connections with Local Food Locator

Greensboro, NC – The Greensboro Farmers Market (GFM, Inc.) has developed a digest for local food shopping by gathering information from its farmers and prepared food vendors to publish the Local Food Locator. The new online resource published April 2, 2020, aims to connect fresh, nutritionally dense local foods direct to customers. The tool has been refined each week, using feedback from customers and vendors, to create an easier user experience.

During the recent COVID-19 Stay-at-Home mandate, farmers and food producers are finding new ways to connect with their customers, including online stores and pre-ordering options, which allow customers to select from fresh-from-the-field produce, pre-payment options, and choose from pick-up options and/or delivery locations. These changes create safer shopping experiences, with minimal contact between vendors and customers.

This newly refined interface reflects the rapid changes happening in the small business world today; a shift in traditional retail models adding new online capabilities daily, during a time that social distancing and public health is paramount.

“Our Market management team created the Local Food Locator to further simplify buying locally from Market vendors, by reorganizing our directory into familiar shopping categories (i.e. produce, eggs, meats, etc.),” said Lee Mortensen, GFM Executive Director and Market Manager. “Our aim with this locator is to serve as the bridge between the customer and vendor in as much as we can during this disruptive time. Shoppers are also recognizing the benefit of online/pre-order shopping directly from local producers over larger retail venues. Customers value knowing where their food comes and the limited number of channels it goes through before arriving on their plate.”

See the rest on Yes Weekly! >

Cugino Forno will expand to Clemmons

Cugino Forno is planning to open a Clemmons location this spring.

The wood-fired pizza restaurant has signed a lease for 6316 Clemmons Point Drive, next to Abbott's Frozen Custard in the Clemmons Town Center, said co-owner Joseph Ozbey.

Cugino Forno

Ozbey and his cousins, Yilmaz Guver and Adam Adksoy, own two other Cugino Forno locations. They opened their first restaurant in March 2017 at 1160 Revolution Mill Drive in Greensboro. They opened their second in March 2019 at 486 N. Patterson Ave. in the Bailey Power Plant in downtown Winston-Salem.

Ozbey said that construction is getting ready to begin on the 3,500-square-foot space in Clemmons, which is smaller than the 5,800-square-foot Bailey Power Plant space. He hopes to open the newest location in May.

Ozbey said the restaurant will seat about 100 people inside, plus perhaps 60 more on the large patio outside. The restaurant will again use long wooden picnic tables that seat 10 people each to accommodate large groups or encourage community seating.

The menu will be the same as the other Cugino Forno locations with one major exception: The Clemmons restaurant will not sell gelato. “Since there is frozen custard next door, we don’t want to compete with our neighbors. We’re happy to send people next door if they want ice cream," Ozbey said.

Cugino is known for its wood-fired ovens that can cook a pizza in less than two minutes. Cugino doesn’t sell much else besides pizza, just a few salads, cannoli, cake and cupcakes. There will be beer on tap and wine in the Clemmons restaurant, Ozbey said.

Ozbey said customers have been asking for a Clemmons Cugino Forno for some time, but it took the restaurateurs until now to find a suitable location.

“Clemmons is exactly what we’re looking for — a place with a lot of families,” Ozbey said. “But we let our customers tell us where we should go next. At the end of the day, they are our bosses.”

See the article on News & Record >

'We're here to stay.' -- Inside Kontoor Brands' global headquarters in Greensboro

On the Kontoor Brands campus in downtown Greensboro, you'll see constant motion. Most every day of the week, a photoshoot is taking place. During WFMY News 2's recent visit, male models wore shorts and short-sleeved shirts that will debut in the summer.

At the design center at Revolution Mill, employees are preparing for next year.

"I just finished spring 2021 so we're about to start on fall 2021," said Betty Madden, Lee's Vice President of Design.

The staple of Lee and Wrangler designers is the five-pocket jean but their creations go far beyond that.

"We also make jackets, shirts, t-shirts, graphics, non-denim bottoms..." said Madden.

Those creations will be shipped across the globe.

"You can find Wrangler in Belgium, France, Germany, Poland, South America, everywhere," said Vivian Rivetti, the Vice President of Design for Wrangler.

You'll also find Kontoor employees worldwide. It employs 15,000 people with headquarters in Belgium and Hong Kong. Its global headquarters is in Greensboro, North Carolina also known as Jeansboro.

"This was a denim town so we're here and thriving in this community and making sure we are keeping denim alive in Greensboro. It's really fun," said Tom Waldron, Wrangler's Executive Vice President and Global Brand President.

Kontoor was formed when VF moved its headquarters and 85 executive jobs from Greensboro to Colorado. Wrangler and Lee spun off to create Kontoor. Waldron admits the announcement was a surprise.

 "It was shocking for all of us when it came out."

Kontoor has replaced those VF jobs and then some. It's hired more than 200 workers in the Triad including Lee's Executive Vice President and Global Brand President Chris Waldeck.

"I can tell you the city has been absolutely fantastic. The people of Greensboro have really embraced the employees that have moved over," said Waldeck. 

Designers Rivetti and Madden are also new residents of the Triad.

"Being down here in Greensboro is the most creative environment I've ever been in... I love being in this environment," said Rivetti.

"I think it's a quaint, sophisticated, interesting city with such a cool history especially for denim and textiles," said Madden.

Kontoor is less than a year old and has already grown. It opened the Lee and Wrangler Hometown Studio, a retail store in downtown Greensboro. Its new photo studio is used to create high-resolution images of their clothing to be featured online. The company also opened offices at Revolution Mill which is home to the company's global merchandising, design, product development, and innovation teams.

"Just walking in the door is inspiring every day to me," said Madden.

In all, about 1,500 people work for Kontoor in the Triad. Here's the breakdown: 800 at world headquarters at on North Elm Street in downtown Greensboro; 150 at Revolution Mill; 200 at a service support center on South Elm Eugene Street; and 350 workers at a distribution center in Mocksville.

"When people move in from outside whether it be from New York City, we bring a lot of talent in. They get here and they don't want to leave," said Waldron.

Kontoor may be a new company but their brands are steeped in history. Lee is 130 years old and Wrangler is over 70 years old. You probably recognize their fashions and the famous people who wore them. Actor James Dean wore Lee jeans in 'Rebel Without a Cause.' Actor Bob Denver wore Wranglers on 'Gilligan's Island.'

They are brands with a rich past and a company committed to the future in the Triad.

"This is a natural place for us to be. We're proud to be here. We're here to stay to build a great corporation together with the city," said Waldeck.

See the rest on WFMY >

‘Interiors’ at Gallery 1250 opens on Valentine’s Day

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Gallery 1250 director Jan Lukens said the theme of interiors in mid-winter resonated with him for a February opening. He said he reached out to several of his favorite artists that frequently address the subject of interiors, and put together a dynamic show of paintings, drawings, and mixed media artworks. Although he is not exhibiting in this show, Lukens paints full-time from his studio at Revolution Mill and is known primarily for his equestrian oil paintings and cityscapes.

“I am so excited about this show,” Lukens said. “We are setting a high bar for excellence in painting.”

Artist Tamie Beldue is a native of New York but has lived in Black Mountain since 2008, and her art is in several national museum collections. Beldue said she draws and works in a combination of graphite, watercolor, and charcoal and uses cold wax to seal and protect her drawings. She will have seven pieces in this exhibit dating from 2016-2020. Her inspiration behind this work comes from slightly different things, especially in her recent work, where interiors were constantly changing from day to day (during construction), along with the moving light. “I begin a drawing by dealing with the smaller parts, and when each part forms an image, I put all of the pieces together like a puzzle, and then it starts to make sense,” she said. Beldue will be in her third show at GreenHill this May and hopes to come to the ‘Interiors’ opening with “Greensboro becoming a happening place for the arts.” Julyan Davis is an oil painter who received his B.A. in painting and printmaking at the Byam Shaw School of Art in London. He hails from England but has lived in Asheville for 30 years, painting the American South and working in several national museum collections. Davis will have seven oil paintings in this show. He began painting interiors 15 years ago after painting a lot of architecture and urban scenes. 

 “I have empathy for people who feel trapped by their environment, and I think that comes across in my scenes of empty places, and in my ballad series,” Davis said. 

On his website video, he gives advice to artists, “Whatever peculiar interests we have, it’s where they all meet that’s interesting. The goal is to bring them all together in one’s art.”

Geoffrey Johnson, of Winston-Salem, is a native of Greensboro. He received his BFA in painting from the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. His paintings are collected internationally and are in numerous corporate collections. He has had sold-out solo shows in New York City, Alexandria, Virginia, and Charlotte for 20 years. Johnson, who paints with oil, said he had been very fortunate in how his art keeps moving. He will be exhibiting four oil paintings all done within the year.

“My inspiration for some of this work comes from my travels with my wife to Savannah and our love of the old houses there and with it being such a moody place,” Johnson said. “Some of it comes from Charleston, and other cities, and some are completely made up and not even residential.”

Johnson said he might use a photograph as a take-off point, but mostly, he has worked out of his head for the last seven to eight years. He plans to attend the opening with his wife and manager, Edith.

Greensboro painter Sam Wade graduated from Weaver Academy with a concentration in music and moved to Nashville to explore the music scene. He became interested in art and studied at Middle Tennessee State University. Ten years later, Wade moved back to Greensboro in 2017 to start Foundry Studios & Gallery. Wade paints with oil exclusively and will have four new pieces in this show. His inspiration for this work comes from wanting to create an effect of “absurdity mixed with familiarity.”

“I start by scanning an old photograph into Photoshop where I manipulate, stretch and change the elements,” Wade said. “Then, I use the transformed image to paint on canvas by.” He is looking forward to being at the opening and showcasing of these new atmospheres to contrast the unusual “bizarre” portrait paintings he is known for.

Philip Link is a Greensboro artist who received his BFA in painting from UNCG. He has been painting professionally, off and on, since 1978. Link will have five pieces (three are new) that are primarily brush paintings with acrylic marker and charcoal accents.

“These paintings have more of a conceptual element that leaves something to the imagination, whereas my landscapes are more direct.” Link said his work is kind of a “divinely-led thing,” and he always starts with a prayer.

“The picture tells me what it needs, and I follow the lead as the messenger.” Link has exhibited in GreenHill recently and looks forward to the opening.

Renaissance Man: Jan Lukens’ passion to paint

Renaissance Man: Jan Lukens’ passion to paint  |  Revolution Mill

The shortest distance between two points may be a straight line — unless you’re pursuing a career as a professional artist, as Jan Lukens has discovered over a lifetime. His large, vivid, hyper-realistic canvases of horses, wildlife and cityscapes that fill his studio in Revolution Mill, all precisely wrought in the finest detail, are the culmination of a childhood dream. One that began with, yes, the straight lines of a child’s stick figures but took a turn in the Prehistoric Age.

“There was nothing remarkable about what I was doing,” he says of the rudimentary cowboys and Indians or soldiers engaged in battle that he and his first-grade classmates liked to draw in crayon during art class at Irving Park Elementary School. But at home, the seeds of his artistic ability were taking root. “I had a set of dinosaurs and printed on the belly of each one was the name.” So he could name and identify them: “the stegosaurus and the T-Rex and the triceratops, and all these weird amazing-looking creatures,” Lukens recalls. “I was always fascinated with animals anyway. These were crazy, wonderful.” He had also taken to copying photographs in Newsweek and National Geographic on sample pads of printing paper his father would bring home from his job at Pilot Life Insurance. Perched at a coffee table at his parents’ feet as the family watched TV, “I would do that two or three hours a night, just because that’s what I liked to do,” Lukens remembers.

A year later, those hours of practice would come to the fore when, one day, a second-grade class assignment was to draw a Tyrannosaurus Rex. Lukens’ advanced rendering of the dinosaur was well beyond those of his classmates, who, along with the teacher gathered round his desk expressing admiration and awe. “That’s when I realized, ‘Wow! I’m pretty good at this, and nobody else in the class can do it; this is pretty cool.” In the ensuing years, he would capitalize on Beatlemania, parlaying his skills into a lunchroom trade by copying images of the Fab Four from trading cards and other memorabilia for appetizing contents of his classmates’ lunchboxes. “I saw my market and I went after it,” he jokes. A foreshadowing of things to come.

By the time he was coming of age in the early to mid-1970s, Lukens had spent about a year at East Carolina before withdrawing to work for a couple of years. He also faced another hurdle: His preference for representational art, exemplified by Renaissance masters Titian, Caravaggio, Rubens and Velázquez and later artists such as Corot, Degas, John Singer Sargent, George Bellows and Edward Hopper, was unfashionable at the time. “It was all about Modern art,” Lukens remembers. With Abstract Expressionism ruling the day, art instruction emphasized “an idea,” he observes, while basic skills — drawing, composition, color — “got swept under the rug.”

Nonetheless, his dream of becoming a professional artist burned bright. To fulfill it, he enrolled in a nascent but rigorous commercial art program at GTI (now GTCC). He was one of only eight out of 120 students to graduate and embarked on a career as an advertising illustrator. “When I was in advertising, I would make ads and then do the illustration for it, because that’s what I really wanted to be doing. Not making ads. But I also needed to make a living as an artist. And this was the best way I could figure out,” he concedes. He talks of the layers of agency bureaucracy — art directors, creative directors, committees of clients — affecting the final outcome of his work. “You learn to put your ego in a box,” he notes.

After 15 years in the business and earning a good living, Lukens was approaching a turning point. He was also keenly aware of changes in the business that the digital age had ushered in. “All the art directors and illustrators were sitting in front of a computer all day long doing their work. And I thought, ‘There’s no way I’m going to do that.’”

He wanted to paint full time and knew he had to find a market — just as he had with his lucrative Beatlemania enterprise all those years ago — and considered wildlife paintings, which were popular. The only problem? “You do three paintings a year, you pay for a thousand prints of each and you’d spend the rest of the time selling those prints,” Lukens says. “That just didn’t appeal to me. I just wanted to paint all the time.”

In the early ’90s, a visit to the Sedgefield Horse Show with a colleague provided him with a solution. “I got the picture pretty quick that this is an expensive sport and all the people who participate in it are wealthy.” In other words, he’d found a market. It would take some trial and error, and making the rounds of the horse-show circuit with a vendor’s tent and forging connections that led to clients by word-of-mouth, but again, Lukens succeeded.

His approach to equestrian portraiture was unusual. Working in acrylics, Prismacolor pencil and watercolor from photographs taken at his clients’ stables (“you can’t get a 1,200-pound horse to stand still”), he applied his uncompromising representational style in depicting equine anatomy, highlighting every sinew beneath the sheen of his subjects’ glossy coats. But he brought to his compositions a contemporary feel, perhaps owing to his advertising background. In one painting, the graceful curve of a horse’s neck dominates the foreground, as its head is turned in profile. In another, the muscles of a foreleg are set in high relief, framed by the rider’s boot in the stirrup at the painting’s edge. Sure, Lukens’ artistic eye didn’t always jibe with clients’ wishes and he’d have to make concessions, as he did in the advertising business, but he was living out his dream.

Or partially.

Lukens’ desire to work in oil on canvas, like his Renaissance idols, tugged at him. “I started thinking: ‘How can I improve?’” the artist remembers. “I literally thought, ‘these old masters that painted oil on canvas .  . . I’m just not worthy.’” He tried the medium on his own, took workshops here and there “but just couldn’t get it.” And that’s why, at age 47, Lukens went back to art school.

At the time, in 1998, there were no institutions in the Southeast offering the classic academic curriculum the artist sought. His choices were by and large limited to the Northeast. Having lived for seven years alone on a 600-acre farm in Lewisville, he packed up his belongings and moved to a bungalow in the tiny coastal town of Old Lyme Connecticut, home of Lyme Academy of Fine Arts. “It was fantastic,” Lukens enthuses. “The second year I had over 1,000 hours of drawing and painting from a live model, which was the training that all my heroes from the Renaissance had.” With classmates ranging from recent high school graduates to 65-plus retirees, he was the only middle-aged student, but he says, “Everybody was in it together, there to learn.” He relished the moments, when live models would take breaks, affording the students opportunities to assess each other’s works. “I learned as much from the other artists during the model breaks as from the instructors,” Lukens says. One of them, Sam Adoquei, had made a profound influence in a life-drawing class. “He taught me how to construct the figure and the composition in a third the amount of time that I’d been spending,” the artist remembers. “That gave me two-thirds my time to develop my drawing. So all of a sudden, my work just looks phenomenally improved.”

He decided to study further under Adoquei’s tutelage at the National Academy in New York, conquering one hurdle of finding affordable housing through an equestrian connection, only to face another: The course of study began in early September of 2001. Lukens’ stay in New York started with the attacks on the World Trade Center, which the artist would witness from atop a 41-story building at 90th Street and Broadway. After a semester at the National Academy, he applied for the Copyist Program at no less than the Metropolitan Museum of Art, replicating the works of Velázquez. “It was as good as any class I took,” he allows. Sure, you can read about the artist or observe it. “Or you could attempt to copy what the artist has done, which forces you to observe all the nuances.” He likens the process to playing tennis against a stronger opponent, who ups your game. He was even filmed on PBS program, EGG the Arts Show, expressing a similar sentiment. Following his brief appearance on camera, the Met saw a spike in copyist applicants.

While living in New York, Lukens also took to painting streetscapes, but big city representational galleries were interested only in artists with Ivy League training. So in 2008, with his aging parents in need of help, Lukens headed home.

Greensboro, like so many places at the time, was falling into the slumber of the Great Recession, but Lukens still had his equestrian portraiture to keep him going. He was reconnecting with family and friends, ensconcing himself in the local arts scene. With a studio downtown, he took a notion to start painting streetscapes of the Gate City. In one, a ghostly Jefferson Building looms on the horizon. Another depicts the former location of the Green Bean, one of Lukens’ favorite haunts, glowing against a night sky. After his move to Revolution Mill, he would paint its courtyard, painstakingly recreating the individual bricks of the old factory. “I’ve always worked very tightly,” Lukens says. “I guess that’s my Dutch-German roots,” he adds.

This tendency stands out in a close-up of a butterfly alighting on a flower. The brilliance of the wings, with every marking visible and every vein of a plant framing the foreground, stands in stark contrast to a plain background of dark green. Lukens explains how he had painted out a busier background consisting of hills and woods and a pond that competed with the butterfly. The plainer background makes the image pop. It’s also bears out the artist’s love of oils. Not only is the medium more forgiving, allowing him to paint over something if he chooses to change, it also “creates an aura” or added layer of energy to the painting. 

Greensboro, it turns out, is more receptive to these true-to-life works. In fact, the world at large is waking up to the value of representational painting. “It’s huge!” Lukens says, citing a movement called Disrupted Realism, combining representational art with abstract, the vindication in his voice palpable. A major catalyst for the change in attitude? Social media. “I’m there for inspiration,” he explains. “When I have time to work on my own paintings, it’s the imagery that I’m finding on Instagram that inspires me that motivates me to tackle my next painting and how I’m going to tackle it.” 

It’s also led him to other artists, such as the five he’s highlighting in a new show, Interiors, which opened last month at Gallery 1250, across from his studio at Revolution Mill. As chronicled in this magazine last fall, Lukens proposed a use for the space originally intended as an extension of Weatherspoon. “One of the things that motivated me to start this gallery: I want to show the best professional painters in the area and showcase them. I want to expose them to people who might not be familiar with their work,” he says. The role of gallery director is uncharted territory for the artist, who estimates it’s taking up about 70 percent of his time. Even so, Lukens carves out enough to sustain the dream that he’s pursued so relentlessly, for, as he says, “It’s the only thing I’ve ever wanted to do.”  

See it on O Henry Magazine’s website >

Food Photographer Dhanraj Emanuel Puts Secrets on the Wall

Food Photographer Dhanraj Emanuel Puts Secrets on the Wall

After moving to the states, Dhanraj Emanuel craved the Indian dishes of his childhood. He had never cooked before, so he mixed spices by smell to sate his nostalgia.

Emanuel comes from a family of photographers. Soon enough, the two worlds collided and Emanuel found his way into the field of food photography. Finding commercial success required leveraging food to elicit emotions like desire, FOMO, or comfort. But his new project does just the opposite.

The project is an expression of Emanuel’s experience with overwhelming grief. He uses photography to deconstruct and make that origin abstract. “Reclaiming” interacts with the symbolic nature of color, texture and form using only powdered foods and spices.

Host Frank Stasio discusses the changing landscape of food photography in the age of social media and organic food with Dhanraj Emanuel, who is also an instructor at Randolph Community College. The exhibit is on view at Revolution Mill in Greensboro through the end of 2019 with a special reception on Saturday, Dec. 7 at 6 p.m.

Listen on WUNC >

Greensboro Farmers Market Temporarily Moving To Revolution Mill

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If the Greensboro Farmers Curb Market on Yanceyville Street is part of your Saturday routine, that routine is going to need some adjustment for the first month of the new year.

The Greensboro Farmers Curb Market at 501 Yanceyville St., across the street from the World War Memorial Stadium, is moving for the month of January 2020 to Revolution Mill at 1601 Yanceyville St.

The building at 501 Yanceyville, which has housed the Greensboro Farmers Curb Market since 1963, will have the interior painted and extensive ceiling work done, which is supposed to be finished by the beginning of February when the Farmers Market is scheduled to return to its home.

The work on the ceiling will highlight the curved barrel ceiling by removing layers of paint to reveal the wood lathing, and the massive interior steel beans will painted to bring focus to the expansive ceiling.

The Farmers Market management expects the majority of the vendors to make the move to Revolution Mill. It’s a good time for the move since the winter months are considerably slower at the Farmers Market, but the market at its temporary location will continue to offer fresh seasonal produce, eggs, dairy, seafood, meats, baked goods, crafts and more.

Greensboro Farmers Curb Market Executive Director Lee Mortensen said, “We’re building on the synergy with Revolution Mill created when we partnered in October for A&T Homecoming and we’re looking forward to returning to a refreshed Market building in February.”

During the past four years the Greensboro Farmers Curb Market has had nearly $200,000 in building and grounds improvement including the establishment of a chef demonstration kitchen and cafe, a community education and meeting room, interior and exterior performance states and an audio and video system.

If you find that your car takes you to 501 Yanceyville Street on Saturday mornings out of habit, the temporary location at Revolution Mill at 1601 Yanceyville is only a mile north.

See it on Rhino Times >