The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Small art, small space and big plans define new gallery

Paper Plane wants to bring affordable art to College Park.

- By Felicia Feaster For the AJC

A tiny 600-square-foot space with a big ambition — to bring affordable art to College Park — Paper Plane Gallery is the brainchild of artist Jack Michael, 28, a Sewanee grad, former New Yorker, and now College Park resident who has become the unofficial champion of the artistic potential of Michael’s newly adopted hometown.

Tucked away on a side street on a block going through a mini-gentrifica­tion, the building that houses Paper Plane is now home to a hipster coffee shop, a taxidermy-festooned speakeasy and a mural by the street artist Yoyo Ferro.

Paper Plane’s second show since opening its doors this June is “3x3: Post-Its for the People.” This juried show encapsulat­es the spirit of a newborn gallery whose vibe suggests now-shuttered indie spaces like Beep Beep Gallery and Youngblood, both of which focused on a feisty, sleeves-rolled-up energy, emerging artists and wallet-friendly work.

Created to spotlight aggressive­ly affordable art (all pieces are just $20), “3x3” features a selection of hyperlocal College Park and national artists who have sketched, collaged, painted and printed on the workaday doodle pad and memory jog of standard Post-it notes. What is so often a to-do list and goad to work becomes in “3x3” a fugue, a meditation and a vehicle for experiment­ation.

Featuring just 26 pieces, “3x3” was juried by Michael, College Park-based artist Whitney Stansell and artist and SCAD printmakin­g chair Robert Brown, and is that rarest of things: a tightly edited group show. Though this is a young gallery with some definite kinks to work out, Paper Plane does seem to be guided by an interest in showing off work to its best advantage more than giving everyone who submits work a shot.

As might be expected, there are certainly less compelling, superficia­l works in this group show, though for the most part, the artists in “3x3” use their small format in creative and novel ways.

Some of the standouts are several demi-portraits including a gilded-with-melancholy black-and-white work in ink and graphite by Jamison Harper, whose delicate sketch of the features of a young woman is enlivened by a silver halo and Keith Haring-style rays that surround and spring from her body as if to suggest a special animating energy.

Artist Karl Gustav Kroeppler’s pharmaceut­ical still life graphite drawings of pills like gabapentin and hydroxyzin­e pamoate, spelled out in script above, are treated like significan­t architectu­re against the artist’s barren landscapes and hint at the outsize significan­ce of such substances in individual lives. Eugene Byrd’s striking, colorful works in acrylic paint and silkscreen reference the civil rights-era “I Am a Man” signs, and fill the limited 3x3 Post-it margins with some subtle commentary on race.

In an inventive work about how meaning is made, Christophe­r Stevens creates a triptych fugue on the progress of a paper crane. In his three-part deconstruc­tion of that origami bird, Stevens represents the bird in one sketch as a diagram/blueprint for building the creature; on another Post-it as a pencil sketch; and in the final work, a three-dimensiona­l sculpture, with the former representa­tions of a paper crane now morphed into the thing itself.

At $20 each, these office space miniatures won’t last long, but hopefully the spirit of upstart scrappines­s at Paper Plane Gallery will.

Disney Princess high tea

Calling all princesses (and princes)! Battle & Brew is holding a high tea for all the royalty in the land. Dress up in your finest Disney fashion, and enjoy six courses of tea and delectable treats. The event also will mark the debut of B&B’s new Aurora Blend tea. All ages are welcome, and the organizers stress that being a tween doesn’t make you too old to get your princess on. Tickets are $40; the $60 option gets you access to the VIP area and special gifts.

Noon-3 p.m. tomorrow. $40-$60. Battle & Brew, 5920 Roswell Road, Sandy Springs. 678-560-1500, battleandb­rew.com.

ALFI Brews & Bites on the Farm

Relax and refresh this weekend with good food, fine brews, live music and the opportunit­y to support the Atlanta Local Food Initiative. Serenbe Farms on the Southside presents local chefs Hilary White (the Hil), Thaddeus Barton (the Farmhouse) and Matty and Paddy Adolfi (Serenbe Farms), who will be cooking up an array of dishes to sample. Their culinary creations will be paired with beers from Jester King Brewery and Athens favorite Creature Comforts. All proceeds benefit the food initiative and its efforts to bring fruit trees to Atlanta farmers. The event will be held rain or shine.

5-7 p.m. July 31. $35. Serenbe Farms, 8715 Atlanta Newnan Road, Palmetto. 770-463-2610, serenbe.com. “Beautiful Users” and “On You: Wearing Technology.” Through Oct. 2. $10; $8 senior citizens, military, educators; $5 ages 6-17 and college students; free for children 5 and under and members. Museum of Design Atlanta, 1315 Peachtree St. N.E., Atlanta. 404-979-6455, www.museumofde­sign.org. “The Rise of Sneaker Culture.” Through Aug. 14. $19.50; $16.50 students and senior citizens; $12 ages 6-17; free, children 5 and younger and members. High Museum of Art, 1280 Peachtree St. N.E., Atlanta. 404-733-4444, www.high.org. “Taj Mahal and India: A Photo Exhibition.” Photograph­y by Frank Sharp. Through July 27. Free.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTOS BY PAPER PLANE GALLERY ?? “3X3: Post-Its for the People” is an exhibition of works on Post-It notes including “First Love” by Lacey Longino at the new College Park gallery Paper Plane Gallery.
CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTOS BY PAPER PLANE GALLERY “3X3: Post-Its for the People” is an exhibition of works on Post-It notes including “First Love” by Lacey Longino at the new College Park gallery Paper Plane Gallery.
 ??  ?? Jamison Harper’s “Psalm 43” is featured at Paper Plane Gallery.
Jamison Harper’s “Psalm 43” is featured at Paper Plane Gallery.
 ??  ?? Tamara Harper’s “Hey” is included in the exhibition “3X3: Post-Its for the People.”
Tamara Harper’s “Hey” is included in the exhibition “3X3: Post-Its for the People.”

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