Louis Copt Documentary
Global Awareness Sparks interest in Kansas Prairie Fires. Artist Louis Copt films documentary based on Flint Hills prairie grass Spring burns. Kyle Garcia throws benefit to raise funds for artist film... June 6, 2008  

You can be a part of something big! 

 Louis Copt needs your funds and support to complete a very important PBS documentary:

First Friday, June 6, 2008 5-9PM  A Very Special Event

Phoenix Gallert Topeka & Prairie Renaissance Arts, Inc.  not-for profit arts educational programming,  present an Exhibit and fundraising event to help Kansas regional artist Louis Copt raise funds to complete his PBS documentary highlighting the renewing prairie fires of the Kansas Flint Hills.

Location:  we will not be hosting ths at our current gallery location, but will be in a new temporary exhibition space at Westboro Shopping Center: 

Fundraising Exhibit Address:

3129 SW Huntoon, Topeka Kansas (Next to Westboro Fine Arts, The Collective, Glass Expressions and Porterfields) 

The Evenings Activities:

Nationally Celebrated Musician,  Kelley Hunt will be preforming music she has written especially for the documentary sound track

Wine Tasting and refreshments: Previews of the The Documentary will be looped on a screen

throughout the evening Louis Copt will signs his latest print available at the event and will speak with the public about his film project.

Development Director, Kyle Garcia raises funds to help complete Louis Copt's PBS film documentary Kyle Garcia Development Director for Prairie Renaissance Arts, Inc. and owner of Phoenix Gallery Topeka, shakes Louis Copt's hand in front of a large prairie fire mural commissioned by Security Benefit Group installed at their Headquarters in Topeka Kansas.

Garcia began represent the works of Louis Copt in 1990. Over the years their close association has brought their collectors numerous exhibits and installations of importance and magnitude locallay and nationally.

"I am proud to be part of this important event.

The Prairie on Fire: A New Film by Kansas Artist Louis Copt

Louis Copt, Moonrise and Flames 24 x 36 phnxgal@aol.com for pricing

 

A new 12-minute art/documentary film by artist Louis Copt entitled “The Prairie on Fire” has just been completed. The short film depicts the cycle of the renewing fires through imagery and music.

Copt spent over two years capturing scenes of the Flint Hills in various seasons with the emphasis on the annual spring burn-off. Copt has been painting the Flint Hills prairie fires for almost twenty-five years and is known for his dramatic renderings of the fires at night. “I have always been interested in film and worked in film during college. It was only a natural progression for me to try and capture the drama of the fires and tell the story of this annual event”.

 Long time friend and nationally known musician Kelley Hunt was tapped to provide the interesting and provocative music for Copt’s film. I am excited and honored that she decided to work with me on this project. She definitely has a feel for what I am trying to say in the film”.

Artist Louis Copt Renews Global Awareness of Prairie Fires through PBS Documentary 

http://www.louiscopt.com/video.html 

Artist Bio:

ArtistLouis Copt has been painting full-time since 1984. He received a BA in art from Emporia State University in 1971. He has also studied at the Art Student's League in New York City and has taken classes in drawing and painting at the University of Kansas. Louis has lived and traveled in Europe. In 1991, he traveled with the Kansas Geological Survey on a 16-day re-photographic expedition through the Grand Canyon as their official artist. He has led painting workshops to the Kansas Flint Hills, and art travel programs to Washington DC, Los Angeles and Paris, France. Louis works with oil, acrylic, pastel, and watercolor.

 Although his main emphasis is on landscape painting, he also does still life and portrait work. Copt also teaches classes at the Lawrence Art Center and has taught at the University of Kansas .He is a board member of the Lawrence Arts Center, past President of the Lawrence Arts Commission and Lawrence Art Guild. Copt has been a member of the Kansas Watercolor Society, the Kansas City Artists Coalition and the Kansas City Barbecue Society. Louis shows regularly in galleries throughout the mid-west. Louis has participated in a number of national juried shows. Louis Copt’s work is collected by people throughout the world.

Garcia, throws a benefit for artist Louis Copt for funds to complete documentary

 

 

Archive for Monday, March 10, 2008

Artist’s filming of Flint Hills fires captures prairie cycles

Painter Louis Copt has finished a documentary about the grass cycles of the Flint Hills, focusing on the burning. He is pictured Wednesday in his studio Northwest of Lawrence.

Painter Louis Copt has finished a documentary about the grass cycles of the Flint Hills, focusing on the burning. He is pictured Wednesday in his studio Northwest of Lawrence.

March 10, 2008

The Prairie on Fire

Louis Copt's art film on the burning of the Flint Hills. Enlarge video

Louis Copt

Louis Copt watches the TV screen, which shows a roaring, crackling fire rushing through brown grass in the Flint Hills.

All that’s missing is the smell of smoke and the terror of actually being there.

“It was way too windy to be burning that day,” Copt says with a smirk.

He would know — he was the one holding the video camera.

Copt has built a successful artistic career, in part, on his realistic paintings of Flint Hills fires. But for his latest project, he put down his brushes and picked up a video camera.

“The Prairie on Fire,” a 12-minute art film/documentary on the burnings, premieres during an event Tuesday night at Pachamama’s, 800 N.H.

“I guess it’s the challenge,” Copt says of his fascination with prairie fires. “Fire is light, and artists and photographers are concerned with light. There’s a fascination with fire, which is light itself.”

The process

Every spring, landowners and ranchers in the central Kansas Flint Hills burn off dead grass from the winter to speed up new growth and discourage trees from sprouting up.

That green grass, in turn, fattens up cows that become world-class Kansas beef.

For three years, Copt drove through Chase and Morris counties during burning season — which starts in late March — in his Chevy pickup with an “Eat Beef” license tag on the front. He calls this is “passport to the Flint Hills.” He looked for fires to document.

He also returned to the area during other parts of the year.

The end result, a 12-minute film, is divided into three segments:

• Pre-burning, with brown tallgrass shown in late winter.

• The fires.

• Post-burning — both the charred soil immediately after a burn and the cows grazing on green grass in the weeks following.

Aside from music and two quotes put on the screen about fires, Copt lets the video speak for itself.

For Copt, who has a studio northwest of Lawrence, learning a new craft was a challenge — and, he admits, a bit intimidating. He took a film-making class at the Lawrence Arts Center and bought a video camera.

But given that he typically takes still images of fires and then paints based on those images, Copt says shooting video wasn’t that different from his usual creative process.

“When I photograph, I try to compose the image or the frame and not look at it as a photograph, but as a finished painting,” he says. “I follow the same principle when I’m shooting film.”

The message

Copt, a native of Emporia, wanted others to understand and appreciate the fires he grew up watching.

“Mainly, it’s something to show them that fires are a natural type of phenomenon to preserve the grass,” he says.

It’s a phenomenon Kelley Hunt can appreciate. Hunt, who also previously lived in Emporia, is a Lawrence musician known for her blues songs. But she teamed with Copt, a longtime friend, to write the score for “The Prairie on Fire.”

She was impressed by how Copt captured the blazes.

“I think it’s really similar to what he does anyway,” Hunt says. “He’s a painter, and this is another way to see things with a painter’s eye, just with a camera.”

Much of the music Hunt wrote is ethereal synthesizer music to capture the mystery of the burnings. The last portion, with the renewal of the prairie, has more upbeat blues music.

“I think this is a metaphor for now matter how dark times may seem, you can burn off the old stuff and the new growth comes in,” Hunt says. “It may seem dark and scary, but the sun will rise again.”

‘Primordial’ fascination

The 12-minute video is the first incarnation of Copt’s footage. He’s working with Jim Hoy, an English professor at Emporia State University, on a 30-minute version that will incorporate interviews with ranchers and experts on the burnings.

“The way I’m approaching it,” Hoy says, “is from a practical point of view — both the folk methodology and purpose, and bringing in the scientific reasons for burning.”

Hoy, who has written portions of books about prairie fires, says he understands the fascination.

“There’s something primordial about fire,” he says. “There’s something fascinating to humans about fire. Why do we like wood-burning fireplaces? They’re inefficient, dirty and a lot of work. But we love them.”

Copt says KTWU, the PBS station in Topeka, has expressed interest in broadcasting the half-hour version of the film. He’s hoping additional PBS stations will pick it up as well.

He says he wants the final film to be educational but keep the same raw nature feel as well.

“It’s going to be kind of a balancing act,” Copt says. “I want to keep it artistic but interesting to someone who wants to gain knowledge.”