Saturday Afternoon Community Workshops are offered FREE to our Rabun County community.
Participants will produce an edition of 10 handmade cards using the letterpress techniques. Cards (personal, thank you, holiday, etc...) will be folded to 5 X 7 inches with a blank insert, correct sized envelopes will be provided. Participants will be taught basic typesetting techniques, and how to set their own type and print cards. Finally, the cards will be folded and inserts glued in.
All experience levels are welcome.
ELIGIBILTY: Your primary address must be in Rabun County in order to attend this workshop. Upon arriving, you will be asked to show ID with your address.
Space is limited to 8 participants.
Each participant must register separately.
Open to local creatives over the age of 12.
Minors must be accompanied by a participating adult. Minors will not be asked for ID; only adults.
This workshop is offered for free only to members of our Rabun County community. If you don’t live in Rabun County but would like to attend a community workshop, email the Hambidge Office at office@hambidge.org.
Our free Community Workshops are supported in part by the Lake Rabun Foundation.
ABOUT THE WORKSHOP LEADER
Instagram: @craigburkhalter
Craig Burkhalter was born in Macon, GA in 1956. Except for his college years he spent the first 60 years of his life in Macon. He graduated from Central High School in 1974, earned an art and teaching degree from Georgia Southern College in 1979 and a Masters of Fine Arts degree in 2002. He has a daughter who teaches in Macon and a son who is an environmental lawyer in Washington, DC. He now lives in the southern Appalachian mountains with his partner, Helen Meadors.
Craig’s career was in arts education, first on the high school level, and later as a professor of printmaking and art history at Middle Georgia State University. While teaching he continued to produce art and has shown in over 300 group and solo exhibitions. He was also the chairman of the Contemporary Arts Exchange/Macon for 30 years.
After 60 years of living in Macon Craig moved to the mountains. His studio was in downtown Macon, and now it’s surrounded by mountains, and the nearest neighbor is a half mile away. Such a great change in life brought about great changes in his art. He now spends his days in his garden, his studio, and taking long solitary hikes in the woods.