Mary Martin Gallery

Historic Charleston, South Carolina

Charleston Art Gallery

Mary Martin Gallery

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ML GALLERY

Charleston

Corporate  Art Collections


Mary Martin Gallery can help you create your own corporate or private collection of original art. We will happily join your team including your architect if you are building a new building and /or your designer. There is no substitute for creating a presence within your work space or living space through the skillful use of original art. Our artists have been selected because their work is stunning both in residential and commercial space.  In addition, we work with many artists nationwide who can provide the art of your choice by commission.

Consult your tax advisor for the appropriate funding for your corporate art collection.  We can help structure your multi-year acquisition. Your art collection can be carefully constructed to demonstrate to the public who you are and the mission to which you are dedicated.  Original art conveys an indescribable energy to the space it inhabits. The collection can serve as a legacy for the future.

 


Bob Ichter

Bob Ichter
Bob Ichter - Ritz Carlton - Atlanta
 
the installation
 

Carefully chosen art creates a ‘sense of place’ in Atlanta hotels

By JENNIFER BRETT

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Sunday, May 17, 2009

The black and white pictures, many of them copied from photos borrowed from the Atlanta History Center, are arranged in silver frames of varying sizes, a clever Atlanta-centric design element conceived by consultant Matthew L. Whitaker of International Art Collaborative.

“It’s not just a pretty picture on a wall,” said Whitaker. “We’re creating a sense of place.”

It’s a trend guests will see at several upscale Atlanta hotels, where the walls of lobbies, hallways and even guest rooms are carefully curated. At a time when properties in the high-end market compete ever more assiduously for every booking, an impressive art collection has joined the list of luxe amenities guests have come to expect.

“I have always been in awe of the person who selects the art at the Ritz-Carlton,” said Leslie McLeod, who attends and has chaired numerous events at the hotel. “If I wouldn’t be caught and put in jail, I would love to have some of it. They’d probably frisk me though, and I don’t look good in stripes.”

The Ritz-Carlton’s downtown property features a number of works by Atlanta artists. R. John Ichter, for example, created “Seas of Europa,” a mixed media piece on canvas displayed near the entrance.
The Buckhead Ritz-Carlton installed more than 3,300 new works during its renovation last year, including locally themed pieces such as prints of the Swan House.

“We wanted to capture an essence of the South,” said general manager Jon McGavin.

Similarly, the newly renovated Georgian Terrace, which plans a grand reopening on May 21, boasts a number of pieces with a vintage Atlanta feel. A painting of a moss-draped tree by Atlanta artist Jonathan Bouknight greets guests near the main desk in the lobby. Livingston, the hotel’s restaurant, is decorated with paintings depicting the 1939 premiere-night party for “Gone With The Wind.”

“The Georgian Terrace is an Atlanta icon, and we selected art that would maintain the integrity of the design while modernizing the hotel for the discerning 21st century guest,” said developer Matt Reidy. “The art also pays homage to the location as the heart of the Midtown’s arts and culture district.”

Close attention to art isn’t limited to large luxury hotels. Alexis Edwards Amaden, whose family owns the Whitlock Inn in Marietta, recently purchased some vintage engravings to adorn the historic property’s walls. The mural on a back stairwell has an especially close connection, Amaden said. It was painted by her mother, local artist Nancy Edwards.

Back in town, the guests at the InterContinental Hotel might admire Atlanta artist Radcliff Bailey’s vibrant “Monoprint” by the elevator. “Nightlilies,” a the huge floral piece rendered in charcoal-colored oil, greets patrons headed to the ballroom. And bronze, wood and granite sculptures created by Donald Locke, a native South American now living here, are positioned near large windows looking out onto a verdant courtyard.

Less than a quarter-mile away is the new Buckhead W, famously dressed in country-club chic by designer Thom Filicia. Guest rooms are meant to feel like a local manse’s spare quarters, outfitted comfortably yet elegantly, with a local connection.

“We get so many comments on these,” general manager Marylouise Fitzgibbon said of the Atlanta-centric pieces. A visit to a randomly chosen guest room revealed framed photographs showing a close-up of the carving on the side of Stone Mountain, and a stylized view of the encased moving sidewalk visitors stand on while viewing sharks and stingrays at the Georgia Aquarium .

“We wanted a hotel that said, ‘This is our place,’ ” Fitzgibbon said. “Who wants to look at bland pieces bought in lots of 52 out of a catalog?”


 
 
Oak Steakhouse

 
Jean Claude Gaugy
Jean Claude Gaugy
 
Oak Steakhouse
Ed Klink
Cary Henrie
Cary Henrie at Oak Steakhouse
     
   
Kathleen Earthrowl   -   MD Anderson Cancer Center - Houston

     
Kathleen Earthrowl
Kathleen Earthrowl - MD Anderson Cancer Center
     
Kathleen Earthrowl
Kathleen Earthrowl
Kathleen Earthrowl
Kathleen Earthrowl
   
 
     
Doug Freed

   
Doug Freed
Federal Reserve Installation
Doug Freed - Emerson Headquarters
Doug Freed - Emerson
   
 
 
Martin Eichinger-Wings of Hope
Martin Eichinger
   
Richard Pankratz - Bronze
Richard Pankratz
     
Gregory Beck

     
Gregory Beck
Gregory Beck
     
Philippe Guillerm

   
     
Leon Bronstein

   
Leon Bronstein
Leon Bronstein
Collector 1

  Mary Martin GALLERY   
39 Broad Street 
Charleston, SC 29401 
Gallery Row on Historic Broad Street     
843-723-0303