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Daufuskie Island, located in the heart of the Lowcountry, has not only been inspiration for the name of Studio D’awfoskee but moreover, its history and culture, merging with endless marshlands and beautiful ancient trees, are the inspiration for the work displayed at our gallery.

current exhibition

the walrus and the carpenter

Islanders claim that pleasing either, the walrus or the carpenter, was never high on anybody’s list ever on Daufuskie. But one cannot help but wonder whether keeping the peace in such wonderful place essentially requires pleasing both. Yin and yang or in unison, sometimes it just requires a little storm to clear the sand away. And so islanders will and can say again “it will be grand!”

southernmost

No U.S. Highway ends at the Southernmost point in South Carolina. Daufuskie Island does not have any highways. Dangling off the end in South Carolina but flirting with Savannah in Georgia gives us hope that things will be just fine. The heart gets what the heart wants, and not what restrictions and mandates require. And because Daufuskie doesn’t possess that Highway to end at the Southernmost point of the State, the dunes and sandbanks of the island do their job for us. Winding through the sea, bypassing afar structures built by men, they remind us that life is more than man-built structures that ultimately end somewhere anyway. Often unglamorous.

little pink containers

Squint and you can see them. Merchants of sugar, tea, and rum on the Billy O’Tea shipping by the island to deliver their goods to the good people in Savannah. If, of course, the pirates don’t get them before their ship enters safer waters and harbors. Now, rumor has it that One shipping company in particular painted their containers pink to make them look like Little Pink Houses and therefore please certain beach folks on Daufuskie. With that they will certainly buy good will and secure themselves a shielded sail into the before-mentioned harbors.

the walrus and the carpenter

​The sea was wet as wet could be,

The sands were dry as dry.

You could not see a cloud, because

No cloud was in the sky:

No birds were flying overhead —

There were no birds to fly.

The Walrus and the Carpenter
Were walking close at hand;
They wept like anything to see
Such quantities of sand:
‘If this were only cleared away,’
They said, ‘it would be grand!’

~Lewis Carroll

previous exhibitions

visit us

The beautiful Mary Field School, also known from Pat Conroy’s book “The Water Is Wide,” but more recently for the greatest Coffee Shop on the island the magnificent work of Indigo Blues, is home to our little gallery. Come by and enjoy an ever changing display of our work.

how to get to daufuskie

We do not have a bridge. That’s a good thing but it makes coming to our wonderful island a little bit more an adventure than just hopping in your car driving off into the sunset. Ferries and golf carts are involved one way or the other but please go to the website of one of our friends who will not just explain the whole process but organize an unforgettable stay on Daufuskie.

203 School Road
Daufuskie Island, SC 29915

Open by Chance or Appointment.

 

We will try to be at the gallery every Wednesday, Thursday, and Saturday from 12pm to 4pm. However, Travels and Privateering might prevent us from doing so.

mary fields school

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