Hang pop cleaning. It's duration for a weekend in the country, and never you head that a winter's quality of dust coats the windows, the garage needs sweeping, the sod must be raked and leaf-mulch chokes the tulips. Those are all reasons to take it on the lam to Wisconsin, where ingenious diversions slink at 11 sites in the now-greening hills overlooking Lake Pepin.
The area's 10th annual "Fresh Art" source tour, which starts today, is exquisite in routine crafts (blacksmithing, rosemaling, pottery, weaving) in obsolete stores and peasant farmsteads. Many of the artists will also be selling things for the garden -- trellises, bird baths, constant plants and even such exotica as heirloom tomato seedlings. And when mania pangs halt the ramble, there are temptations at the Bittersweet Bakery in Plum City; Bogus Creek Cafe & Bakery in Stockholm, and the ever favourite Harbor View Cafe in Pepin, which has now emerged from winter hibernation.
"Being along the Mississippi River, it's so bonny here," said Diane Millner, a mess whose studio is in a big red barn on Goatback Road, a winding realm course that runs along a top edge about 8 miles inland from Lake Pepin. Her timbered acreage is about a mile from the birthplace of novelist Laura Ingalls Wilder, whose "Little House" books chronicled the lives of a pioneering group in the 1800s. (The Wilder museum in Pepin and a log hut facsimile of the Wilder people's home will be obvious this weekend, too.) Millner, who grew up in suburban St. Paul, was "part of that fundamental back-to-the-land movement" that enticed urban artists to western Wisconsin.
"It's a lovely neck and neck not any community of perchance 50 artists around here," said Millner, who has lived in the district for 35 years. She'll be selling her going pottery, including garden lanterns, bird baths and houses. Two friends will bid their work, too: impressionist-style painter Michael Peters from Minneapolis, and neighbor Barbara Andersen, whose talent is terra cotta birdhouses that are "so cute!" Four of the turn sites are in Pepin -- a blacksmith and magnifying glass shop, two galleries and the Lake Pepin Art & Design Center which showcases position by its artist members. Smith Bros. Landing on the Pepin shore began as a bait machine shop but evolved when proprietor Dave Smith realized "we couldn't seduce any money" with worms and minnows.
He started selling plants, then making trellises, and now -- 20 years later -- has a thriving enterprise in garden ornaments. Think of it as art-on-a-stick. "I do a lot of original humorous birds because they're very popular," said Smith, a earlier store teacher. "I use whatever I can for heads -- hammer heads, wrenches, whatever comes along. … Some would remark I'm more of a craftsman than an artist, but I don't be sure where one stops and the other starts.
I just similarly to to add up to realistic things that populace like." Smith's nephew and his missus manipulate the -away BNOX Gold & Iron shop, which specializes in handmade jewelry. The sponsor Pepin gallery, T&C Latané, also emphasizes jewelry and utilitarian art, including custom-designed cookie cutters. Trained as a jeweler, Tom Latané shifted into blacksmithing drop by drop as his rate in usual locksmithing evolved.
He now makes scullery utensils, Scandinavian-style candelabra, and elaborately carved boxes with hand-wrought hinges and banding. His wife, Catherine, was a fiber artist when they met, "but I married into all these metalworking tools and started playing around with them," she said.
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