The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Festival offers art, fun, music at Piedmont Park Aug. 18-19

- By Fleming Smith Margaret.Smith@coxinc.com

Nearly 250 artists will converge on Piedmont Park on Aug. 18-19 for the ninth annual arts festival held by the Atlanta Foundation for Public Spaces. The free festival, geared toward families, will also feature live music and activities for children.

Families attending the carnival can wander from booth to booth to see a wide array of different types of art, including glass blown, metalwork, leather, jewelry, paintings, photograph­y and sculptures. To exhibit their wares at the festival, artists must go through a rigorous applicatio­n process.

In addition to the exhibition booths, the festival will also involve demonstrat­ions by artists, a pavilion to feature new artists, festival food, music and a play area for children. The event is dog-friendly as well.

Randall Fox founded the Atlanta Foundation for Public Spaces to support artists in need financiall­y, he said. Their arts festival therefore seeks to create an event where community members can attend for free and “celebrate the art world and its contributo­rs.”

In the years since its beginning, the festival has continued to add different activities. This year, attendees can expect a yoga kickoff in the morning and a silent disco.

“We created an arts festival to showcase the incredible artists and crafters that love and work in and around Atlanta and the Southeast. We hope we built an

event that really symbolizes what Atlanta is about,” Fox explained.

Artist Valerie Stickles, owner and designer of Penguin Arts Jewelry, said the Piedmont Park Arts Festival is one of the highlights of the season for art- ists “because of the amazing location and the interestin­g people that I meet under those massive oak trees each year.”

The festival is expected to be crowded, so Fox recommende­d using MARTA (Midtown station or Arts Center station) or walking on the Belt- line, but there is a parking deck on-site (rates are based on length of time).

According to Fox, the festi- val attracts artists from across the Southeast and the rest of the nation.

“It’s an h onor to support them, and hopefully we will continue to give them a platform to showcase their mediums,” he said.

Many proceeds from the festival are donated to charities that support artists. The festival has often contribute­d to Georgia Lawyers for the Arts, which provides pro bono legal services to artists.

“What many people don’t realize (is that) artists depend on their sales at an arts festival to pay their mortgage, utilities and (to) cover the cost of participat­ing. It’s their livelihood. If the weather is bad or sales are down, they often don’t have a way to meet expenses, andwe’reheretohe­lpthem out and offer support,” Fox said.

Stickles said the event “is truly inspiratio­nal. The local arts community, Piedmont Park and its visitors all benefit from events like the Piedmont Park Arts Festival because of the increased public exposure to unique local art and the ability to interact directly with working artists during the festival.”

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY THE ATLANTA FOUNDATION FOR PUBLIC SPACES ?? The Piedmont Park Arts Festival will feature exhibition booths for artists to showcase their pieces, as seen here at last year’s festival.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY THE ATLANTA FOUNDATION FOR PUBLIC SPACES The Piedmont Park Arts Festival will feature exhibition booths for artists to showcase their pieces, as seen here at last year’s festival.

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