
@ Gallery of the Blue Frog and @ St. Drogo’s , 7514 State St, Lowville (parking is behind the building). Contact Alesa Bernat for more info @ author@alesabernat.com


@ Gallery of the Blue Frog and @ St. Drogo’s , 7514 State St, Lowville (parking is behind the building). Contact Alesa Bernat for more info @ author@alesabernat.com




Lowville, NY — March 31, 2026
Youth of Lewis County (YOLC), in partnership with the Tug Hill Artist Network (THAN), has received dual grants as part of the Statewide Community Regrants program. The awards support a free, intensive summer arts camp for rural youth ages 12–17 and a community concert and youth workshop featuring the Celtic fusion act Femme Celtique.
Together, these initiatives expand access to high‑quality arts experiences and strengthen YOLC’s nationally rare, youth‑governed model of leadership, service, and creative empowerment.
The educational grant funds a multidisciplinary, Renaissance‑themed summer arts camp running July through September, which removes financial barriers and offers hands‑on instruction in character, costume design, dance, theatrical movement, and improvisational acting. Youth will participate in twice‑weekly sessions led by professional teaching artists Tanya Roy, Jim Goodenberry, Travis Widrick, and Kelley Martin. Four curriculum modules—costume/character design, Renaissance song and dance, theatrical combat, and improvisation—culminate in a student‑designed performance at the Lewis County Renaissance Faire.
“This grant allows us to offer an equalizing, empowering space where young people can explore identity, build confidence, and experience the joy of creative expression,” said Wyatt Wagner, Executive Director of YOLC. “Rural youth deserve access to the same rich artistic opportunities found in larger communities.”
The second grant supports the Femme Celtique Performance & Educational Initiative, featuring the high‑energy, female‑led Celtic fusion duo known for blending traditional bagpipes and bodhrán with modern rock and pop. A youth workshop will be held at 4 PM on Sunday, September 13, followed by a free community concert at 5 PM.
“Femme Celtique’s energy and relatability make them the perfect artists to inspire our community,” Wagner said.
Both projects highlight the collaboration between YOLC and the Tug Hill Artist Network, combining youth leadership with regional arts networks to build a vibrant creative ecosystem for the Tug Hill region.
Youth of Lewis County nurtures the well‑being of youth and young adults through peer support, mentorship, and community connection.
“This project is made possible with funds from the Statewide Community Regrants Program of the New York State Council on the Arts, with support from the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature, and administered by the St. Lawrence County Arts Council.”




What does former Led Zeppelin bassist John Paul Jones, jazz aficionado Béla Fleck, Mandarin lyrics to old-time music, and the first Official U.S. Cultural Mission to tour Tibet have in common? Abigail Washburn and Sparrow Quartet! This eclectic act debuted its new CD while ushering in the inaugural Delfest at Cumberland Fairgrounds Memorial Day weekend.
While billed as Abigail Washburn and Sparrow Quartet, it is interesting to note that sitting behind the bluegrass banjo is Béla Fleck of the Flecktones, whose name alone can generate huge crowds. Merging with Fleck is clawhammer banjoist and singer extraordinaire, Abigail Washburn, who can hold her own while sitting next to the great Fleck, which is no small feat as he continues to be one of the most innovative fusion artists in bluegrass. Fleck is known for his forays into uncharted musical territory, and the Sparrow Quartet is no exception, combining art and folk in a way that challenges, yet welcomes, the listener to take new directions. The banjo-heavy quartet is squared by strings–well, they are anything but square– with violinist Casey Driessen of the Duhks (from New York), themselves trailblazing musicians and songwriters, and cellist Ben Sollee (Turn on the Moon and Learning to Bend), whose style involves plucking strings and percussive bow techniques.
Washburn is touring this summer with the Sparrow Quartet on the heels of the release of her second, eponymously named CD. Both named Abigail Washburn and the Sparrow Quartet, which makes it difficult to refer to specific discography. The first, released in 2006 and the new one released in May of this year and produced by Fleck had more attention to the recording process than the first. In between these two Sparrow projects, twenty-eight-year-old Washburn was recording and touring with Uncle Earl—her other act.

Uncle Earl’s new CD, “Waterloo, Tennessee” (their second) and produced by John Paul Jones of Led Zeppelin fame, is a distinctive blend of multiple instrumentalist fusion bluegrass/old-time folkster females, each “ G’earl” with her own solo career like Washburn. It is rare that you find a versatile woman like Washburn who finds time to tour with two incredibly powerful acts, not to mention has time to release her own material. “Songs of a Traveling Daughter” (2005), her debut CD, was the result of deal that came to her after an extended stay in China. Her musical relationship with Béla Fleck began on this CD, which also included appearances by Ryan Hoyle of Collective Soul and Jordan McConnell of the Duhks.
A former law student, Washburn spent years living and studying in China, becoming fluent in Mandarin. She was back in the States at the International Bluegrass Music Association conference, sitting in the hallway jamming like all old-timers do when not performing and Nettwerk Music offered her a deal. Washburn felt particularly attached to old-time music after her return from China and was new to it as well as the banjo when she was offered a deal. Her love for the banjo stems from listening to North Carolina’s Doc Watson and becoming intrigued by his style. Her membership in the quartet is quite a feat when considering she is sitting next to Fleck, who has 35 years under his belt.

One thing Washburn has kept in common with all three acts is the use of her cultural connection to China. Her solo CD takes its name from an epic Chinese poem, which is really “Song of the Traveling Son.” The title song and “The Lost Lamb” Washburn sings in Mandarin. She has blended in traditional Mandarin dialect and sounds with her love of old-time mountain music. She says the blending captures her roots as a human being and as an international citizen, the resulting music is her exploration of what it means to feel intimately connected to two cultures at the same time. She does Mandarin old-time with Uncle Earl as well. Her song “Streak of Fat, Streak of Lean” with the G’earls turned into a kung fu clogging video (available for download on youtube), which won the Country Music Televisions Pure Twelve-Pack Award in April of this year. Washburn can be incredibly humorous as well as talented.
The pairing of Fleck and Washburn is unique enough since they are both banjoists, but when listening to Mandarin sung against a clawhammer banjo, a bluegrass banjo, a cello, and a fiddle , the Sparrow Quartets’ already unclassifiable music becomes even more so. They learned much of their material for the new CD when they were touring on the first U.S.-sponsored cultural mission to Tibet and China late last year, and so there are a couple of Chinese folk songs, a Cossack melody, some traditional tunes, as well as several Washburn songs, which she says, have been “sparrow-tized!”
Fleck is a long-time admirer of Washburn, calling her skills intuitive when it comes to music. The Sparrow Quartet is unconventional, says Fleck, and therefore, in line with his musical forte. He often feels that it is the four of them against the world when it comes to playing and sharing their music because there are so few bands doing what they are doing.
Fleck says that he and the other members created structures around Washburn’s songs – and these structures are first rate. They played two songs at Delfest influenced in this manner: “Kingding Qingge (Old-Timey Dance Party)” and “Taiyang Chulai.” Even though the crowd seemed a bit perplexed at first by the dichotomy of sounds, they responded with a standing ovation. In addition to the songs sung in Mandarin, Washburn sings “Great Big Wall in China.” While this song is not in Mandarin, it is nonetheless a song of her great attraction to the East. Another song from the new CD, “A Fuller Wine,” might go over as a top 40 song with the right marketing were it not so “sparrow-tized.” Another extraordinary twist found “Strange Things,” a traditional song done the Sparrow way, eerily sandwiched between “Overture,” featuring Washburn’s unique yodeling, and “Captain,” an incredible vocally savvy tune that especially reflects Washburn’s range and her ability to manipulate her voice—sultry and sweet at the same time. They played flawlessly except for Cary breaking every horsehair on his bow, as if only to prove how hard they played.
Like Washburn, Fleck is no different, having a busy schedule as well. Ever since hearing Earl Scruggs on the banjo and beginning lessons at 15 under the guidance of Tony Trischka, Fleck has continued his progression through all types of music with all types of musicians. Invited to play for New Grass Revival by Sam Bush at age 24, then he began a seventeen-year streak of playing with the Flecktones with Future Man (Roy Wooten) and Victor Wooten. He finds time to play with the Bluegrass Superstars, which encompasses the best of the best of all areas of music like Edgar Meyer, Yo-Yo Ma, David Grisman, and Jerry Douglas; and with TRIO featuring Jean-Luc Ponty and Stanley Clarke. In his spare time, he guests with acts like Phish and Dave Matthew. His newest CD is The Enchantment with Chick Corea (2007). Fleck has won 10 Grammies and with a total of 25 nominations, including spoken word. As further confirmation of Fleck’s success in expanding the relevance of the banjo, the nominations cover more categories than any other musician.
More recently, Fleck has become a cultural emissary like Washburn, having recently (2005) fronted the money and time to produce a documentary with his brother Sascha Paladino on the evolution of the African banjo. He wanted to see how the banjo in the modern world evolved in relation to its creation in Africa. He visited four African countries: Tanzania, Uganda, Gambia, and Mali where he traded songs, stories, and history with numerous people. The film, entitled Throw Down Your Heart was handed the people’s choice award “24 Beats per second” by SXSW Film Festival this year. The web site, throwdownyourheart.com, is interactive with some music from the film playing in the background. Fans are keeping their fingers crossed that a CD will soon come out as a companion to the documentary.
What will they do next? Given the nature of each member’s individual pursuits, anything is possible. Washburn’s roots are in African spiritual music, having sung with several black gospel choirs, so perhaps there is a documentary awaiting her too. Or perhaps a new pioneering Fleck-Washburn joint effort. For now, while Washburn will work on a new solo CD later this year, Fleck will be coming out with a holiday CD – remarkably, a genre he has yet to explore.
Sources
by Kelley Rae
A Rose and an Amaranth blossomed side by side in a garden, and the Amaranth said to her neighbor, “How I envy you your beauty and your sweet scent! No wonder you are such a universal favorite.” But the Rose replied with a shade of sadness in her voice, “Ah, my dear friend, I bloom but for a time: my petals soon wither and fall, and then I die. But your flowers never fade, even if they are cut; for they are everlasting” (Aesop’s Fables, Sixth Century).



The day I went to see visionary artist Charles Leslie (Les) Harris to speak with him about his work, I did not know I would be conducting his last interview. I was given the assignment for my graduate Creativity Class, concerning the topic of the process of creative mind. As a writer, I was to look at the way another artist pursues his process. And so with notepad in hand and my Sony digital camera, I drove to a section of Baltimore I was not familiar with: the Clipper Mill area between Druid Hill Park and Hooper and Rockrose Park.
It was a late fall day in 2007 and like most Maryland fall days, it was raining. The renovated warehouse district where his gallery is now housed is trendy and hip. Les probably didn’t even know that and even if he did, he wouldn’t have cared. His version of reality was all that mattered to him, a trait I admire in others.



His perspective comes from a man who was born and lived in the Hampden area of Baltimore, Maryland, very near where his gallery is—an area traditionally blue collar yet nonetheless has experienced a renaissance of creativity and avant garde storefronts and cafes in the past fifteen years. The embodiment of this diverse neighborhood, Les welded ships during World War II, and then served under General Patton as a Communications Officer on the front lines where he was a witness to the Battle of the Bulge. Afterward, having graduated from the Maryland Institute of Art and Johns Hopkins where he majored in Humanities, he went to New York City and studied acting and dance at the American Theatre Wing. Having danced for the Metropolitan Opera, Les went on to study with artist Charles Rain, exhibiting at the Alexander Iolas Gallery. Once Les returned home, he began to teach and committed the rest of his time to his work, bringing home with him the images of the world he had seen during his enlistment.

Upon arriving at the gallery and shaking off the rain and November chill, I met his daughter Heather, who was there to greet me. She informed me that Les and his wife, Sally, were going to be late because they were having car problems and were waiting on Triple A. This gave me the opportunity to talk to Heather and browse the art in the Labyrinth at the Amaranthine Gallery. The rain was a welcoming sound in the warehouse as it ran down the industrial tubing, sounding similar to a waterfall and exactly what I would expect while looking at Les’ work— spiritual and calming. I had looked up Amaranth before I went to the gallery and found out that it is a flower known for never withering, which I found to be a welcome metaphor for Les’ work as I explored his vast labyrinth. Heather was easy to talk to and we immediately engaged in an effortless conversation. She was my age with a shock of grey hair and an affable smile. I quickly found out that she was the middle child—all of them named after greenery: Holly, Heather, and Laurel. We laughed at my observation. I asked her about her father’s artistic process, and she informed me–as if she read my mind–that his process was just as important as the art itself. I expected to hear this. She also told me that he doesn’t think art is art without frames. I noticed this immediately when I saw how he incorporated frames into his art – sometimes they are merely an extension of the canvas as if it has spilled out onto the frame organically. Some canvases are created with frames attached. The three-dimensional aspect of it is intriguing. I have always loved art that moves beyond two dimensions. As we continued through the display, I also admired his kinetic sculptures. They were cylindrical designs of various sizes that stood in the middle of his modern art display. His use of color is vibrant—cool blues and violet mixed with warm reds and vermillion. He uses some original design, somewhat stylized, but interesting and eye-catching to say the least. He has one particular painting that incorporates a desk that extends from the canvas out into three-dimensional space. The design is carried from the vertical wall to the horizontal desktop and then to the open drawers. There were moments when I felt like I had fallen down the rabbit hole. What a lovely way to escape the world for an afternoon.


I noticed his fascination with chairs, which were equipped with miniature solar systems instead of seats. One Baroque painting had a doll extending from it dressed like an angel – the same angel in the painting. Another one had mop heads, and a broom integrated into it, and if I had given it a cursory look, I would have probably missed them. These are just a few of the aspects that make him a visionary artist: the objects he used to transcend the modern world and the way he uses them. Interestingly, most of his art is about other artists’ works, which is daring and humbling. He covers the history of art in many ways— the only thing I didn’t see was imitations of cave paintings at Lascaux. His work stops at modern art essentially, not really venturing into postmodernism.

Les had been making art, using artists as his subject for over 25 years and nothing had stopped him until that point. At 84, Les was slowing down due to his macular degeneration, a disease which slowly robs its victim of sight in an insidious way. Objects, which were once brilliant, become unclear, shadowy, and colors become indistinguishable from each other—at least those of the same intensity on the same end of the color spectrum do. Orange looks pink or blue looks violet. Along with these symptoms, Les had lost the ability to see fine details or to recognize faces. I cannot imagine anything more devastating to an artist. Heather showed me a machine he used to work on his novel, another artistic endeavor and one that was also inhibited by his vision loss. The machine magnified letters hundreds of times so that Les could see to write. The process was painstaking for him, but he had continued to work on his book, probably because he could not paint any longer.

When Les finally made it (the tow truck dropped him off), the first thing he said was, “You have to excuse me. I’m blind.”
Heather said, “Oh, Dad, that’s not true. You can still see some.” I could see her intent was to keep him positive and focused on his work rather than his failing health.
Ironically, it wasn’t the macular degeneration that caused Les to stop painting; depression did. After being in the People and Hunt building, called the Studio Gallery and then later the Labyrinth at Amaranthine for 25 years, he was forced to move when the Clipper Mill renovations began in 2005. Besides costing him $10,000, the move caused him to sink into a depression that was with him until his death. He was extremely attached to his work the way it was situated, the way it was presented, the way it stood in the building it had been in for all those years. Having to change all of that after 25 years was disconcerting to him to say the least—it had caused his composition to be skewed. Compounded even further by the move and his macular degeneration, Les was also losing his memories. He didn’t even remember painting some of his most precious pieces. Not only was he robbed of his site to continue creating but his memory of what he had created was taken from him as well.
I could tell that he was highly intelligent and had information which was beyond my understanding. He would say things like, “the first male was female,” which I understood, and “the first Greeks were Jews, which I wasn’t so sure about” and “I am a 666,” in reference to his birth on June 15, 1923. In numerology, each part of his birthday became part of the 6: June is the sixth month, the 15 becomes six by adding one plus five; the 19 becomes ten and the 23 becomes five and when added it becomes 15, which in turn is adds up to six. We then acknowledged being fellow Geminis. In fact, his birthday is the day after mine and the day before my grandmother’s. Our other connection was that he used to lecture at Villa Julie College (now Stevenson University) where I also taught. He enjoyed our confections, which he felt were cosmic in some way and he began to share more with me.
Les was a Christian Scientist. He placed much stock in numerology and spirituality as I do and so his proclivity towards these things made him even more endearing to me. Aside from his being an incredibly talented artist and an intelligent man, Les reminded me of my grandfather in some ways. He was kind and sensitive and had great rapport with his daughters – at least with Heather, and according to her, he was a great father to grow up with – a thing I admire for not having had one. He sat with me in the last room of the labyrinth and as I sat there, I was marveling at the Egyptian horoscope charts – the only thing he remembers painting. In fact, he claims that he is not talented or disciplined enough to have painted the works in the gallery but that people have assured him they are his. He made sure he painted what work was unfinished. I laughed because I told him I didn’t feel that anything was ever finished and that sometimes maybe they are not meant to be finished. I think he liked that assessment. I also suggested to him that maybe he was a vessel for some sort of message from the benevolent universe and he liked that idea as well. He said, “Yes, divine dissemination.” He struggled talking about his life’s works because of the myriads of things keeping him from it. He chased words like they were buses he was late catching. There were times when he had a hard time holding back the tears and I knew if he cried, I would cry, and so I hoped that he could manage so that I could too.






Then, I asked him about John Stewart Bell’s theories, which I am only familiar with because I read what I could about Les before meeting with him and he consistently referred to Bell’s theories in his former interviews. This changed the conversation from his not remembering to something he could latch onto.
One way of conceptualizing the world is the ART schema proposed by Immanuel Kant and others where ART stands for Appearance, Reality and Theory. Appearance is the facts of experience, both inner and outer, Reality is the hidden cause behind these Appearances, and Theory is the stories we tell one another about both Appearance and Reality. But Les uses Bell to discount Appearance, which I find amazing because it speaks to how he saw things. His view was completely not attached to what we would call reality. Now, I am not saying that I understood his ideas completely. His supposition of Bell’s that “reality is non-local,” is further complicated by his reinforcing it in his art. The crux is: none of this is observable! What complicated my grasping of “reality as non-local” is the idea that this reality is also free of gravity. Les said, “Man needs a god and a god is free of gravity.” I can apply this idea even further to his art by suggesting that it is also free of gravity – except as it intersects with his viewet at the moment we first view it. After that, it falls in with Bell’s theory. Les accepted that as a pretty good hypothesis, but I was really lost. I more of less just completely accepted his ideas as metaphysical explanations of the nature of life as we know it. I think in general, the whole theory is some sort of butterfly effect, where the butterfly flaps its wings on one side of the world and because of it, a tsunami rages on the other side of the world.


When I asked Les about his creative impulses and where they started from, he was clear that other art inspired him. He projects mythology and history onto art and that becomes part of his mythos in his creative process. There were times when words left him. He had to grasp for them and sometimes they came; often they escaped him completely; occasionally I managed to utter the correct one to help him along. The loss of his words brought tears to his eyes and then to mine. I could not help but think about how much of a theft this is to his sense of humanity. When we talked about his creative process, he said that nearly all his work was done between 10 pm and 2 am. I could relate to that because that is usually when I am the most creative. I think something exists in the universe at that time—something that is unquantifiable and unequivocal – just like Bell’s theory. Once again, Les exclaimed that he did not remember painting most of his works. He only remembered the Egyptian charts. He then went on to admire some of them, especially his craftsmanship that was included in his framing and in his display: some of them were on rods he crafted beside the frames that became part of the art itself. And then, he told me the story of a student, named Robert, who he taught at the Park School when he was faculty there. Robert was dying of aids. Les painted him into a particularly interesting painting that has a male figure tumbling through it. In order to accomplish this feat, Robert posed for him in a room with many mattresses on the floor. Robert then tumbled across them while Les captured those movements. Les felt that Robert was then immortalized in his painting—captured in his gravity defying leaps across the canvas. Robert had already passed.



We moved on then to the conversation about his book. He had been working on it for years. Dwellers on the Thirteenth Floor was to be his opus but working around his macular degeneration, painstakingly using this special magnifying machine to create the words he needed to finish the book when he could manage to pull them from his brain was exhausting. I asked him where he was in his work on the book and he exclaimed, the fourth floor. He made me laugh out loud. He liked it that he made me laugh and then he laughed. He attempted to explain what the book was about and again, I was lost. It had to do with mythology involving Venus and Mercury. He saw it in his head but trying to get it from there to paper was the problem. I suppose a visual artist has a difficult time translating visual images into words, especially one who is losing his vision, his memory, and his words. This is a lesson to the rest of us to get it down before we forget. He said he dreams the idea behind his book and then he must re-write it for the waking mind. He then jokingly said that he went to bed drunk at 6 pm after two bottles of wine every night just so he could dream. He made me laugh, because he said it so seriously. Then he went on to school me in how to pronounce Stolichnaya (stuhLEECH-nah-yah), telling me that everyone had been saying it wrong for years.



I went prepared with more questions than I could ever ask, and I ended up leaving with more information than I could ever write about. We ended on my butchering how to say Stolichnaya and then he wanted me to see the new restaurant they were constructing next door. He said we weren’t allowed in there but if we crept in the back way, we could see it. And so like a couple of teenagers, we snuck into the restaurant with Les acting like no one could see him and perhaps that was because he couldn’t really see them! I was so thrilled at his willingness to continue his exploration despite his losses and as far as the human spirit goes, he has it bursting over—onto canvas, into words, and at the gallery.
Les died a few months later of undisclosed causes. Perhaps his need to dream his world became the reality he chose. His non-locality of place has truly become free of gravity where I am sure he resides on the thirteenth floor. His Amaranthine Gallery indeed remains at http://amaranthinemuseum.org/

The Tug Hill Artist Network conducted a regional arts survey to better understand who is participating in the arts, what kinds of events people want, and how an arts network can best support the creative ecosystem across Lewis County, Jefferson County, and the broader North Country. The findings reveal a region rich with artists, culture‑bearers, and arts‑curious residents who are ready for more consistent, visible, and connected arts offerings.
Respondents show strong interest in concerts, theater, art exhibits, and hands‑on workshops, with many willing to travel 15–20 miles or more for compelling experiences. Facebook, social media, and word of mouth are the dominant communication channels, while email newsletters and local news sources play important supporting roles.
Artists in the region represent a wide range of disciplines—visual arts, music, writing, fiber arts, pottery, dance, traditional arts, and more. Many artists work across multiple mediums and sell their work through personal websites, storefronts, and informal channels. There is clear interest in a shared online marketplace and in‑person artist meetups.
Across the board, respondents emphasized the importance of affordability, reliable information, and opportunities for connection. Many expressed support for a dedicated arts publication or centralized calendar to help the community stay informed and engaged.
This survey is now closed!

Oct. 26, 2025
Oct 30, 2025 from 6-8 pm don’t forget to attend the Yokel Launch Party at Tug Hill Estate.
Oct 31, 10 am – 4:30 pm Join Little Village Mushrooms for a Halloween themed Mushroom Social!

Stop in and enjoy a free 8oz cups of mushroom tea. Three flavors of mushroom based herbal teas are available. Enjoy a free lunch snack in our decorated Halloween pop up space! Taste vegan tofu-mushroom and chicken Shiitake dumplings with dipping sauce.
Shop special deals on fresh mushrooms, mushroom products, books, and seasonal goodies. Enjoy promotional pricing on mushroom dumplings for your freezer and special event pricing on teas and fresh mushrooms. Shop a curated assortment of gently used mushroom themed books.
Snag your very own (free) copy of Yokel Magazine, volume 1 – a beautiful. new glossy arts zine conceived and designed by Rachel Grunert featuring local creatives. Lulu’s Cookies will be in the house with a variety of seasonal cookies–vegan options, too!
Stay a while… bring a sketchbook, journal, or book to read. Or stay for the Candle workshop:
Writer’s group: Don’t forget the writing group that meets at Croghan Library on the first Wednesdays of the month. Please join any time but check with the library at Phone: 315-346-6521.


Let’s celebrate! We invite you to share in the joy of community at Tug Hill Estates! Menu items will be available. Listen and talk to readers and celebrate their stories. And what location to share this event than at Tug Hill Estates?
This project is made possible with funds from the Statewide Community Regrants Program, a regrant program of the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature and administered by the St. Lawrence County Arts Council.
The magazine is available at Lewis County Libraries free of charge and includes Alesa Bernat, Maria Gabriela David Hoover, Nate Barker, Jennifer Wright, Anne Deering, Calvin Company, Kelley Rae Martin, April Sebastian, and of course Rachel Grunert.
The magazine will be available online soon so check the website. In the meantime, you can read more about Rachel here: Meeting Misfits
You can RSVP to the event here: Facebook

*All graphics are Rachel Grunerts