Artist Lilli Otterbach wins JM art contest; work selected for JMArts Holiday Cards

SILER CITY, N.C. — Lilli Otterbach, an exchange student from the North Rhine-Westphalia state in northwestern Germany, was named winner of Jordan-Matthews High School’s fourth-annual holiday art contest.

The watercolor painting, “The Perfect Winter Morning,” will appear on holiday cards sold by JMArts, the Jordan-Matthews Arts Foundation, to raise money for JM artists. Otterbach receives an award certificate and $100 for rights to reproduce the work.

Holiday cards feature the painting on the front with a blank area inside for personal messages. The back lists the name of the artist and work, along with a very short artist statement about the painting.

Otterbach was inspired by waking up on a perfect winter morning and starting the day with a hot chocolate and view of the snowy forest.

“We’re delighted to have Lilli as part of the JM family this fall,” said JMArts President Rose Pate. “These cards will always be a lovely memento of a special friend.”

Preorders for JMArts Holiday Cards are now being accepted online at JMArtsHolidayCards.com. Cards are available online in packets of 15 cards and 17 envelopes for $15, a price that also includes domestic shipping. The domain forwards to a Google form, where you can place your order and pay online with a credit card or through the mail by cash or check.

Cards also will be on sale soon for $12 per packet, cash or check only, at Jordan-Matthews High School. Other retail locations will be announced on JMArts social media.

Previous JMArts Holiday Cards featured the works “Arctic” by Vielka Gonzalez, “Winter Solace” by Maggie Thornton and “Lighthouse on Christmas Eve” by Natalia Pozos Velasco.

More information about JMArts, including a schedule of upcoming arts events and information on membership, is available online at JMArts.org.

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Artist Lilli Otterbach created the work selected for the 2022 JMArts Holiday Cards, now on sale to celebrate the season and benefit arts students at Jordan-Matthews High School. (Photo by Rose Pate)

“The Perfect Winter Morning,” a watercolor painting by Lilli Otterbach, is the featured work on this year’s JMArts Holiday Cards.

JMArts to offer gourd art workshop supported by Grassroots Grant

SILER CITY, N.C. — Art students at Jordan-Matthews High School will have an opportunity to explore art using an unusual medium — gourds — thanks in part to a 2022 Grassroots Arts Grant announced yesterday by the Chatham Arts Council.

“Gourd-geous Art Day: Art Meets Nature” will be held this spring. The day-long workshop featuring artists Martha Danek and Cara Bevan will allow students to incorporate natural materials into works of art — not only for students in art classes, but also some students studying occupational and basic life skills. The goals are to allow art students to work with natural materials and non-flat surfaces as well as to give a wide range of students an opportunity to bond over art.

Working at her Red Barn Studio near Bynum, Danek specializes in mixed-media sculpture and 3-D paintings using gourds and found objects, often designing art pieces based on something important and meaningful. Last April, she led a workshop in gourd art as part of 2022 All-County Art Day, a daylong workshop for top student artists featuring different media and produced by Chatham County Schools.

A lover of nature based at her Cara Bevan Gallery in Trinity, Bevan is known for lifelike and whimsical art of animals, nature and fantasy — created in paintings, mixed-media sculpture, digital art and traditional illustration. Her work also includes sculptures made from multiple gourds with added wire, paperclay and epoxy clay.

“Pumpkins. Gourds. Just plants?,” asked Marcus Lawson, JM’s art teacher, who developed the workshop and worked with JMArts President Rose Pate on the grant application. “No! They can be works of art. We are so excited to offer our art students this ‘Gourd-geous Art Day.’”

The workshop is supported by the N.C. Arts Council, a division of the Department of Natural and Cultural Resources, with funding from the National Endowment for the Arts. The 2022 Grassroots Arts Grant for $1,050 covers half of the program cost; the rest will be matched by JMArts through member contributions and fundraising projects like this fall’s Raffle for the Arts and the annual sale of JMArts greeting and holiday cards.

In all, Chatham Arts Council awarded $15,000 this fall to local nonprofit organizations, groups that are hiring local artists to provide opportunity for local residents. Other organizations receiving grants include The Chatham County Partnership for Children, Chatham Artists Guild, Chatham Trades, Community Organizing for Racial Equality (CORE), Pittsboro Elementary and StreetSigns.

Pate said events like the gourd art workshop are possible because of the financial assistance provided through the Chatham Arts Council and its affiliates. “Opportunities like this only happen when so many people are willing to work together: students, faculty, artists, contributors, volunteers and partners like the Chatham Arts Council,” she said. “We’re blessed that so many people care for our students and want to give them opportunities to develop new skills and new perspectives.”

More information about JMArts, including a schedule of all upcoming arts events and information on membership, is available online at JMArts.org.

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Artist Martha Danek, left, works with Jordan-Matthews art student Carolina Fernandez Bello on gourd art during Chatham County Schools’ 2022 All-County Art Day, a one-day workshop, exhibition and panel discussion held in April for Chatham’s top student artists. (Photo by Marcus Lawson)

Carolina Fernandez Bello, a Jordan-Matthews Art 3 student at the time, worked with artist Martha Danek to create this painting on gourd last April during the Chatham County Schools 2022 All-County Art Day. (Photo by Chip Pate)

Carolina Fernandez Bello, a Jordan-Matthews Art 3 student at the time, worked with artist Martha Danek to create this painting on gourd last April during the Chatham County Schools 2022 All-County Art Day. (Photo by Chip Pate)

“Gourd-geous Art Day: Art Meets Nature” is supported by the N.C. Arts Council, a division of the Department of Natural and Cultural Resources, with funding from the National Endowment for the Arts.

JM Selected to Perform North Carolina’s First School Production of ‘Frozen’

Only one school in each state was selected in a national competition
to receive free rights and support to produce the Broadway musical’s
first-ever high school performances

SILER CITY, N.C. — It won’t be long until “Let It Go” rings from a Siler City stage with Jordan-Matthews High School being selected in a national competition to be the first high school in North Carolina to produce Disney’s “Frozen: The Broadway Musical.”

The award was announced today by Educational Theatre Association, Music Theatre International and Disney Theatrical Group, companies responsible for “Frozen” productions worldwide. The schools announced as part of The United States of “Frozen”: Love Is an Open Door — one offered in each U.S. state and territory — will be the first-ever school productions of “Frozen” anywhere in the world. The prize package includes exclusive, free rights to produce three performances; a free digital script, score and orchestrations; and a free video license.

Based on the hit 2013 animated feature film, Disney’s stage adaptation of “Frozen” opened on Broadway in March 2018. The film’s co-director and screenwriter Jennifer Lee wrote the musical’s book, and songwriting team Kristen Anderson-Lopez and Robert Lopez penned brand-new music for the stage. The Broadway production of Frozen is currently on tour in North America.

“Honestly, I was shocked when I got the news,” said Jordan-Matthews theater teacher Sawyer Shafer, who developed the contest application and is in his first year of teaching in Chatham County Schools. “I entered us in the final hours of the competition because I wanted to make sure the reviewers understood exactly why we would be the perfect choice to represent North Carolina. I was hopeful, of course, but I understood this was a long shot. It seems to have paid off.”

Performance dates have not been announced, though all of the first school productions will run from now through January 2024. Shafer said Jordan-Matthews is currently looking at performing “Frozen” late next fall in a joint production with Chatham Central High School, where Shafer also teaches.

Organized around the theme “Love Is an Open Door,” the national contest was designed to promote inclusion and outreach in high school theater programs. Organizers expect schools to use their production to strengthen their school communities, provide outreach to underserved groups and support an inclusive and diverse theater program. Shafer is currently exploring ways to involve other high schools in the district — to reflect that national theme and a similar emphasis in Chatham County Schools’ new One Chatham Strategic Plan.

Shafer plans to shape the production to reflect the community’s diversity and cultures, with the musical’s setting in the kingdom of Arendelle reflecting students’ cultural and family backgrounds. The goal, he said, is to make sure children attending the show can see themselves reflected in the beloved Disney characters. Plans are also being developed to collaborate with local businesses and community groups to make performances as inclusive and accessible as possible.

“This is an amazing opportunity for our theater program,” said Jordan-Matthews Principal April Burko. “Not only will our students be among an exclusive group of young performers to be the first to tell this story in high schools across the country but they will also mark the beginning of a new era for the musical theater program at Jordan-Matthews. Students who will take part in our new theater classes will be able to take on more significant production roles. And, for the first time in forever, our students on stage will be accompanied by a live orchestra.”

This national recognition comes at an exciting time for Jordan-Matthews theater. The school is offering credit theater classes this fall for the first time in many decades.

After decades with no theater at all, JMArts, the Jordan-Matthews Arts Foundation, was formed 10 years ago to bring theater back to the small rural high school. For the first three years — when no money was available to purchase licenses to perform Broadway musicals — media coordinator and JMArts president Rose Pate wrote parody jukebox musicals and used performances to raise money and build student interest.

It quickly caught everyone’s imagination. Their third Broadway musical, “Grease,” sold out all three performances. A few years later, “In the Heights” accelerated interest and began attracting more students to free theater workshops offered for students after school. More than 200 people and groups participate each year in the musical and related events, which have included student art exhibitions, public lectures and community breakfasts for children.

Along the way, several Jordan-Matthews students received Best Actor nominations for Triangle Rising Stars, the regional musical theater competition leading to the national Jimmy Awards on Broadway. Late last spring, the school’s “Oklahoma!” cast received a Triangle Rising Stars nomination for Best Ensemble. Though he was not on the Jordan-Matthews staff at the time, Shafer was hired as director for the production, an experience that led him to pursue a career in teaching theater.

And now, the program has received national attention by being awarded the state’s first high school production of “Frozen.”

“This is a huge win for our students,” said Chatham County Schools Superintendent Dr. Anthony Jackson. “I applaud new theater teacher Sawyer Shafer for aiming so high and working with JMArts to pursue this amazing opportunity for students. What could be better during this inaugural year of the program than to be recognized for the work and the long standing tradition of the program?”

Dr. Jackson also said the contest’s focus on building an inclusive community is essential in Chatham’s diverse community. “This wonderful opportunity truly represents our One Chatham strategic focus by opening new doors of opportunity,” he said. “I am confident that this one experience has the power to change lives. In Chatham County Schools, we believe that the arts are an essential pathway for student success. Best wishes for an amazing performance and experience for students.”

JMArts is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt, charitable organization providing what JM students need to succeed in dance, music, theater and visual arts. All money raised through individual donations, admission fees, fundraising events and grants goes directly to providing performance showcases, educational opportunities, instruments and supplies for students.

The nonprofit is best known for JMArts Scholars. Scholarships are awarded each year allowing returning JM students to pursue intensive study over the summer, usually at weeklong, residential workshops offered on university campuses. Other major projects include the school’s annual musical, a variety of public events and the New York Arts Adventure, where eight students travel to New York City for five days over spring break to experience the best in the arts and learn directly from several world-renowned professionals.

More information about JMArts, including a schedule of all upcoming arts events and information on membership, is available online at JMArts.org.

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Actor Buck Thornton, performing the leading role of Curly, sings during the Jordan-Matthews High School production of “Oklahoma!” in March with actors Clara Rojas, from left, Traycee Wall and Alana May. (Photo by Chip Pate)

Theater teacher Sawyer Shafer joined the Jordan-Matthews High School faculty this year after directing “Oklahoma!” last spring, a production that earned the Jordan-Matthews cast a Best Ensemble nomination in the Triangle Rising Stars regional musical theater awards.