7 minute read
Heritage Honored
CheRISh THE Legacy
ANNUAL GULLAH CELEBRATION HONORS NATIVE ISLANDERS’ HISTORY
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BY HILTON HEAD MONTHLY | PHOTOS SUPPLIED
The Hilton Head Island Gullah Celebration will present the 26th Annual Celebration on Hilton Head Island throughout the month.
The Feb. 1-27 event, which includes art and food, crafts and music and history, invites attendees to “Experience the Culture and Cherish the Legacy” of the Gullah Community on Hilton Head Island.
Amiri Geuka Farris is the featured artist. He has been featured in more than 50 solo and juried exhibitions internationally, including the National African American Museum of History and Culture. Farris received his MFA in painting and BFA in illustration from SCAD.
“Amiri’s art captures the spirit of the Gullah people perfectly. This year’s featured image is everything we have hoped for. It captures the joy of our culture and the rich heritage that we’re happy to share with everyone who joins the festival,” says T. Curtis Barnwell III, Hilton Head Island Gullah Celebration Committee Chair.
“Arts Ob We People” opens on Tuesday, Feb. 1, at the Art League Gallery and runs through February. It is 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. The Hilton Head Island Gullah Celebration Opening Party is at the Art League Gallery 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. Feb. 9. The celebration continues with a Freedom Walk in honor of National Freedom Day at Historic Mitchelville Freedom Park on Saturday, Feb. 5, from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Visitors will learn about the historical connection of Ft. Howell and Mitchelville through the stories passed down from generation to generation. Speakers include the Rev. Dr. Robin Dease of St. Andrew by the Sea and Dr. John Newman of Volunteers in Medicine.
The celebration will include vaccines and surprise guests, screenings, and wellness information provided by Memory Matters, Hilton Head Hospital, Hilton Head Regional Healthcare Senior Center, and Hilton Head Island Fire, Life and Safety, a news release said. On Saturday, Feb. 12, “A Taste of Gullah” returns to the Arts Center of Coastal Carolina with food trucks offering traditional Gullah food, including conch stew, shrimp gumbo, fried chicken, fried fish and oxtail stew. The Gullah Market on Saturday, Feb. 19 will have an array of arts, crafts, food vendors, music, and cultural performances.
Gullah Culture will be on full display at the Coastal Discovery Museum.
A “Celebration of African American” authors is set for Saturday, Feb. 26, in Bluffton, which includes a Gullah food tasting.
GULLAH CELEBRATION EVENT CALENDAR
THROUGH FEB. 27, 10 A.M. – 4 P.M.
FEB. 5, 10 A.M. – 1 P.M.
FREEDOM DAY CELEBRATION
Historic Mitchelville Freedom Park, 229 Beach City Road, Hilton Head Island
FEB. 9, 5 P.M. - 7 P.M.
FEB. 12, 12 P.M. – 3 P.M.
A TASTE OF GULLAH
Art Center of Coastal Carolina, 14 Shelter Cove Lane, Hilton Head Island
FEB. 19, 11 A.M. – 5 P.M.
GULLAH MARKET: ARTS, CRAFTS, MUSIC AND FOOD
Coastal Discovery Museum, 70 Honey Horn Road, Hilton Head Island
FEB. 26, 12 P.M. - 3 P.M.
CELEBRATION OF AFRICAN AMERICAN AUTHORS
Rotary Community Center at Oscar Frazier Park, 11 Recreation Court, Bluffton
HILTON HEAD SEAFOOD FESTIVAL CELEBRATING ITS 15TH ANNIVERSARY
BY TIM WOOD | PHOTOS SUPPLIED
Andrew Carmines has never looked so forward to the signature event that honors the life of his brother, David. COVID sidelined the Hilton Head Island Seafood Festival for a year, but that just means a bigger and better event this year.
“We’re going to donate our millionth dollar to local charities this year, so that just means the world,” said the Shell Ring Oyster Co. & Hudson’s Seafood House on the Docks chef and founder of the Seafood Festival, which is Feb. 21-27. “There is so much to be excited about this year, plenty of evolution but the same core spirit of adventure in the outdoors that defined David so much.”
What began as a water festival in 2004 morphed into a seafood festival in 2007 at Shelter Cove Community Park. Now in celebration of its 15th anniversary, the week-long event will culminate once again at the newly renovated waterfront at Shelter Cove Harbour and Marina.
“We’re so thankful to Honey Horn for all they’ve done for us through the years. When I first came back from the West Coast and we started this, we weren’t big enough for Shelter Cove,” Carmines said. “But now this event has a following, a spirit and we’re excited to be anchored by the water once again.”
Also new this year is a fireworks celebration to commemorate the anniversary and celebrate the impact the David M. Carmines Memorial Foundation has made in the Lowcountry and beyond.
The week kicks off with a Daufuskie Island history and artisans tour offered by Outside Hilton Head and a two-hour introduction to shrimping, oystering, clamming and crabbing by Capt. Chris and Matthew Shoemaker of May River Excursions.
Early week events include a Feb. 23 Callawassie Island tour of homes and a Feb. 24 Salt Water Supper where a lineup of celebrity chefs will cook a multi-course dinner at the Omni Oceanfront Resort. The culinary artists include John Cool, Bryan Noury, Andrea Reusing, Brother Luck, Hugo Ortega and Michael “Sully” Sullivan.
Friday, Feb. 25, begins with a series of master classes taught by the chefs and ends with the Pig Pickin’ and Oyster Roast from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. at the Coastal Discovery Museum, filled with good eats, brews, wines and live music. Hosting the evening’s festivities is renowned foodie and actor Luis Guzman.
The lineup of chefs and pit masters includes Tim Nelson of Whiskey Room, Robert Owens of Grand Champion BBQ, Orchid Paulmeier of One Hot Mama’s and the SERG Restaurant Group, CheFarmer Matthew Raiford, Clayton Rollison of Callawassie Island Club, John Tesar, Jake Wood of Lawrence BBQ in North Carolina, Philippe Feret, owner/baker Social Bakery, The Sea Pines Resort, Scott Bodkin of Fish, Lee Lucier of Local Pie and Carmines.
Carmines said the growth of regional and national chef participation in the event is rewarding to give such a spotlight to the efforts of local fishermen.
“They bring their families, go fishing, make a weekend of it. We show them our soft-shell shedding operation, how we shuck oysters,” Carmines said. “They’ll work with black sea bass that was swimming the day before. That’s exciting for us to showcase and for the chefs to be part of, seeing the best of what we do here on the island.”
It leads up to the Saturday event, featuring unlimited samplings from hundreds of varieties of wine, beer and spirits; family activities, and free children’s shows.
New this year is a RFID wristband that comes preloaded with $10 in culinary credit and allows for contactless payments and discounts to restaurants and retailers around Shelter Cove. Many of the top local and regional restaurants will serve seafood and more.
Tickets for the early week events range from $49 to $200. The master classes are $89 to $149.
General admission to the Pig Pickin’ and Oyster Roast is $90 and the Saturday festival is $85 for adults and $12 for ages 21 and under. An Above Board Weekend pass gets you a discounted ticket to the Friday dinner and the Saturday festival.
Tickets to the Festival include a souvenir wine glass and access to cooking demos and tasting sessions with the industry’s leading chefs and master sommeliers, mixologists, winemakers and brewmasters.
“I think this is the elixir we all need. Missing last year was a downer,” Carmines said. “But the idea of breaking the $1 million mark in the help we provide to The Children’s Center, The Coastal Discovery Museum and so many more champions of this community, it will make the wait so much more worth it.”
For more information on volunteering or buying tickets to the Festival, visit hiltonheadseafoodfestival.com.