A Cut Above



PHOTOGRAPHER CREDIT: 
A Cut Above | <p> Decorate your Big Day with storied (and snipped) art forms</p>

Couples agree that Charleston’s pervasive sense of way-back-then makes it a timeless spot to say “I do.” It’s fitting, then, that two Lowcountry artists are bringing a pair of antique art forms—paper cutting and its black-on-white heir, silhouetting—to weddings throughout the Holy City.

Paper cutting as an art involves shaping hand-cut paper into forms, tableaus, and sculptures and dates as far back as the sixth century. Silhouettes (profile portraits or scenes clipped from black paper and mounted on white) gained a following in the mid-1700s, and only faded from popularity with the advent of photography in the mid-19th century.

Locally, the demand for silhouette art was kept alive thanks to a few nationally renowned artists here in the Lowcountry, like Carew Rice, who was dubbed “America’s Greatest Silhouettist” by poet Carl Sandburg.

But back to those Big Days. For weddings, Carew’s grandson Clay Rice carries on the family tradition by clipping custom bride-and-groom portraits and landscape silhouettes of ceremony sites to be printed on stationery suites and reception décor. He also offers on-site portrait cutting, meaning he’ll snip guests’ silhouettes at the reception for them to take home. “Because the silhouettes are black on white, they have a certain formality and elegance about them,” says Clay. “And that’s what people really want for their wedding—it’s a perfect match.”

Local artist Eric Vincent, who has been crafting paper sculptures since the early 1990s, also has a way with scissors. Eric can bring to life just about any subject or scene you’d want as a centerpiece at your reception (and in your home after-the-fact). “Couples are really only limited by their own imaginations,” says Eric, who once fashioned an underwater world complete with mermaids for one marine biology-loving groom. His other nuptial offerings include paper-cut cake toppers and pop-up invitations.

The keepsake factor plays into both art forms. When silhouettes are stored in protective frames and paper sculptures in either acrylic boxes or shadow boxes, the pieces should last for decades on end.

“Sculptures more than 10 years old look as good as new,” says Eric. “They will really last a lifetime.” And when you’re building a life together, isn’t that the best sort of memento to have?


Clay Rice
Clay’s silhouettes (and on-site services) start at $1,000.
Call (843) 697-4353 or visit RiceGalleries.com.

Eric Vincent  
Eric’s work ranges from $500 (for cards) to $2,500 and up (for large-size sculptures).
E-mail eric@vincentmediagroup.com.


 

Photograph Courtesy of Clay Rice

The Wedding Row

January 17 2019
We couldn’t come up with a better love story than Taylor and Jonathan’s if we tried. They met while she was in dental school and he was completing his medical residency. (She’s a dentist, he’s a...

January 16 2019
Who doesn’t have a soft spot for college sweethearts? Liz and John met their sophomore year at Providence College in Rhode Island, not knowing that nine years later John would propose on the very...

January 14 2019
Oh my gosh is he a good guy! After meeting at work (at the Daniel Island Club), Ginny says she didn’t even know she was on her first date with Daniel when he offered to spend an afternoon helping her...

January 11 2019
OK. So these two New Yorkers are kind of a big deal (she’s a VP at a hedge fund group and former account head at the Olgivy agency with an MBA and he’s a marketing director at a Big Apple firm and...

January 10 2019
We want to be invited to *that* New Year’s Eve party! We’re talking about the one where Mount Pleasant native Bree met Mobile, Alabama-born Josh, and the two hit it off enough for us to be talking...

January 9 2019
Lanier and Luke met in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, during a Friendsgiving supper one November along with some 30 pals. That run-in led to a friendship that turned into a romance and by 2017, the two were...

January 8 2019
O.M.G. You are so going to love these two! For starters, they tricked—yes, tricked—their families into a shared Thanksgiving vacation in Charleston that turned into a surprise wedding for them and...

January 7 2019
We hate to do this to you, but we have to tell you some things about bride Sarah Grace that might very well intimidate you (like it did us). Yes, yes, yes, she and her sweetheart Martin (aka “Bug”)...