Sunday, November 22, 2009

The Chicken Man Can


S
outh Carolina residents hope local artist Ernest Lee is “around for a long time to come.”


It’s no wonder Ernest Lee, better known as The Chicken Man, was just voted Best Local Artist of 2009 by Free Times readers. Not only are his paintings popular throughout the state, but people can’t get enough of them. His patrons come from all walks of life, and keep coming back for more.

Curry Edwards of Columbia just recently made her ninth purchase from Lee’s outdoor gallery on the 1400 block of Harden Street. She passed his flamboyant display for the first time four years ago while driving home from work. “I thought, ‘I’d love to see what that is,’” says Edwards. The next time she saw Lee, she did a u-turn and pulled in.

Edwards now has a five-piece collection of Lee’s work hanging throughout her home, and has bought various pieces for jealous family members across the United States. She sent one of the Columbia legend’s palmetto trees to her daughter in Baton Rouge, La., so she would have “a touch of home.”

Lee first came to Columbia in 1999, and is now considered a trademark of South Carolina. His signature chicken paintings have made a big impression here in Gamecock Country.

He started painting chickens in 1979 when a friend suggested that he paint something that he owns. At the time, Lee had a bantam chicken, a beautiful red bird with long, colored plumes. Taking his friend’s advice, he started painting chickens, chickens, and more chickens.

Lee says he gets a lot of custom orders for his work. “I paint chickens playing golf, tennis, football, laying at the beach, and dancing ballet. I’ll paint whatever you want,” says Lee.

Alex Lawson, an art school graduate and the chef at Pawley’s Island Tavern, says he has a caricature Lee painted of him as a chicken, cooking. “Friends see it and say, ‘Hey, it’s you! It's a chicken!"

Hank Dehart, a journalism student at the University of South Carolina, is an avid fan of Lee’s. His latest purchase was a set of chicken caricatures for his girlfriend in North Carolina. “She was wearing pearls, and I was in a tux,” says Dehart of the two portraits. “She loved them.”

Like many of Lee’s clients, Dehart is a repeat customer. "I love the low-country style of Ernest Lee's art. I have five pieces in my apartment now, but including gifts, I've probably bought well over ten.”

Lee’s unique style is what makes such a lasting impression on people. “It’s not a repetition of other work I’m used to seeing in the area,” says Lawson. “You can tell the content is important to the artist.”

Mary Inabinett Mack of Beaufort, S.C., says she has featured Lee’s work in her folk art gallery, The Red Piano Too, for about 20 years. “He has his own style; simple, but universally appealing,” says Mack. The Red Piano features the artwork of over 150 artists, but Lee’s stand out from rest. Mack says his paintings always trigger comments from her patrons. “Most of them recognize his art and say ‘I know somebody who has his work.’”

Lee says he paints about 25-35 pieces a day, and they’re not all chickens. He is currently preparing for his Michael Jackson exhibit next summer at the Marriott Hotel in downtown Columbia. The event will be held from June 25-27, and will feature over 130 pieces celebrating Jackson’s career.

Lee will also be selling paintings commemorating the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., as well as the lives of Willie Nelson, Kenny Rogers, and “a host of others.” He will showcase about 150 paintings of his trademark chickens and palmetto trees.

Lee has been an artist for over four decades. “I started when I was 5 years old,” he says. As an artist, he believes in trying new things. He recently built his first monument, a Twin Towers memorial. He already has 500 hours into the project, and is one sunny-day away from finishing.

Dehart says he recently saw two of Lee’s paintings in his cardiologist’s office in Wake Forrest, N.C. “I couldn't help but smile because it reminded me of Columbia and my home in South Carolina.”

“You just don't see this kind of thing anywhere else,” says Dehart. “I want to see Lee around for a long time to come.”

Thursday, November 5, 2009

It's a SAD time of year


For many, this is the time of year when people are gearing up for the holidays and planning winter vacations. It’s a time when the air is charged with the excitement of another year’s passing, and the possibility of new beginnings. But for Sandy Fowler, this is time of year she has to brace herself.

“When the autumn comes, I feel like a bear going into hibernation,” says Fowler. “I start craving carbs, eat all the time, I’m chronically sleepy, and just want to be left alone.”

Fowler’s seasonal symptoms, which also include severe irritability, prompted her to attend a lecture, hosted by the local university, on Seasonal Affective Disorder. She immediately identified herself as a textbook case.

Dr. Michael Wiederman, a professor of Psychology at Columbia College, says SAD is biologically different from other forms of depression. Its “hallmark” is that it’s caused by a patient’s sensitivity to the decrease in light associated with the winter months. This decrease in light, says Wiederman, causes a decrease in serotonin levels, which in turn affects our circadian rhythms, interrupts our sleep cycles, and causes fatigue and depression,

According to the National Institute of Health, more than 35,000,000 Americans suffer from SAD. In 2008, SAD (along with other forms of depression) ranked number seven in USC’s top 10 reported health problems that impede students’ academic performance. With excessive daytime sleepiness and social withdrawal being among its main symptoms, it can damages a student’s ability to thrive during the winter months.

Wiederman says the best way to alleviate the symptoms of SAD is increased exposure to the right kind of light. Although sunlight may be in short supply during the winter months, there are other forms of full-spectrum light available. In addition to light panels, called light boxes, there is also a visor-like device that is worn throughout the day. These sources of light help increase serotonin levels and reset the body’s biological rhythms.

Fowler says the first time she sat in front of a light box, “it felt really good, like I was soaking it in.” She says she has the same response to sunlight, even if it’s a cloudy winter day and the light is diffused.

But even though SAD is easy to treat, it is not as easy to diagnose, says Wiederman.

“Diagnosing SAD is tough because you need to be able to recognize the cyclic pattern of the depression,” he says. In addition, you have to be able to rule out that it isn’t just seasonal blues tied to specific holidays, or a change in lifestyle due to the change in weather.

Some people assume they have seasonal depression because they feel drained and grumpy on rainy days, or down around the holidays, but Wiederman says this isn’t related to the more serious SAD diagnosis. “It’s much more prolonged than that,” he says; it’s not based on day-to-day weather patterns and events.

Unfortunately, says Wiederman, SAD is frequently misdiagnosed as clinical depression because of how closely they mimic each other. Unless a client specifies the seasonal pattern, it will probably be identified as depression; the possibility of SAD is “usually glossed over.” This results in a patient being prescribed an anti-depressant they don’t need, especially during the spring and summer months, when SAD goes into full remission.

Wiederman says if a patient currently taking an anti-depressant feels they have been misdiagnosed, they can work with their doctor to be weaned off of their anti-depressant during the sunny times of year. If they find that they do not need the medication, this can serve as an indicator of SAD.

But he stresses the importance of coming off of the medication slowly because an abrupt change in medication can cause immediate irritability, and other side affects that can also mimic depression.

Fowler says now that she has correctly identified her SAD symptoms and can properly treat them, the quality of her winter months has improved dramatically. Now that she knows the key is getting enough light, she spends 30 minutes each day soaking it in. This therapy gives her the energy she needs-the energy to plan that winter vacation, and face the holidays.