Art of Charleston

Art of Charleston 🎨 Artist 🖼️ Fine Art
🖼️ Shop Fine Art Prints and more at
www.artofcharleston.com In 2017, I moved the studio to Mt.

I am a third-generation Charlestonian, and my artwork reflects my love for Charleston and the Lowcountry. After graduating from the Ringling School of Art & Design in 1989, I returned to Charleston and launched Renaissart Graphic Design in 2000. Pleasant and was honored as the Piccolo Spoleto poster artist. Inspired by Bev Doolittle and Highlights Magazine’s “Hidden Pictures,” I often include subt

le animals like birds and squirrels in my pieces, making each viewing a new experience. I enjoy traveling, woodworking, and spending time with my family. To learn more about me and my work, please visit my website at
www.artofcharleston.com

05/29/2026

Tulips Are Better Than One

The original was created with gouache and brush on illustration board in the late 80’s... one dot at a time! It’s always been one of my favorites. The house reminds me of the one I grew up in. Not the grandeur, or the landscaping... but the brick, the arches and windows, and the ornamental ironwork are all very similar to my childhood home in Charleston, and it brings back very fond memories.

https://www.artofcharleston.com/warehouse-open-edition-prints/art_print_products/john-chitwood-tulips-are-better-than-one

Here is a question worth sitting with: what do you actually see when you walk into your own home? Not what is there, but...
05/27/2026

Here is a question worth sitting with: what do you actually see when you walk into your own home?

Not what is there, but what do you still notice? What draws your eye?

What have you stopped seeing because it has been there so long?

"Cloud Watcher" and the online art gallery is here, if you need to switch things up.

https://www.artofcharleston.com

05/23/2026

Map of Edisto Island

This rural Sea Island about 26 miles southwest of Charleston, SC is named after the Native American Edistow people who initially inhabited the island. The first Europeans who succeeded in settling were the English in the late 1600s. Early landowners harvested timber and deerskins, planted indigo and rice, and kept herds of free-ranging cattle. Plantation owners grew wealthy and famous from their production of long-staple Sea Island cotton. The labor was done by hundreds of slaves who developed the creole Gullah language and culture on the islands and in the Lowcountry, distinctive for its African traditions.

https://www.artofcharleston.com/warehouse-open-edition-prints/art_print_products/map-of-edisto-island

Last chance for my Art Fest Sale! If "Happy Hour" or anything else in the collection has been on your mind, today is the...
05/16/2026

Last chance for my Art Fest Sale!

If "Happy Hour" or anything else in the collection has been on your mind, today is the final day to use code ARTFEST26 for 20% off.

This virtual sale packs up tonight!

https://www.artofcharleston.com

May tends to pull people outside, and I think that changes how we see our interiors when we come back in. What about you...
05/16/2026

May tends to pull people outside, and I think that changes how we see our interiors when we come back in.

What about you? Does spending more time outside in warmer months give you the itch to rearrange?

Thanks for stopping by to check out Catnap today.

And, I'm genuinely curious, what will you be moving around this spring?

https://www.artofcharleston.com

Address

1123 Chuck Dawley Boulevard
Mt. Pleasant, CA
29464

Opening Hours

Monday 10am - 4pm
Tuesday 10am - 4pm
Wednesday 10am - 4pm
Thursday 10am - 4pm
Friday 10am - 4pm

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