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Living

May 2011: Real Estate

In the past couple of years, condominiums have suffered the most severe blow in a real estate market that’s struggling overall. Although all signs point to a slowly stabilizing, what experts call “saleable,” market—evidenced by fewer days on the market and more activity in both Charlottesville and Albemarle—the health of our condo market still lags.

The main reason behind it is, simply put, the difficulty of getting a loan. Since securing financing is the most important step in becoming a homeowner, making prospective buyers jump through impossible hoops can only hurt an already weakened market.

According to Jeff Johnson of local lender MetLife Home Loans, “Any time real estate goes down in value, condominiums are the first to be hurt. It’s because condominiums have to adhere to certain rules and regulations and restrictions.”

In fact, the trick about condo financing is that finding a mortgage lender who is willing to finance a loan will not depend solely on the usual stuff—the borrower’s portfolio, liquidity, down payment and credit score. The status of the condo development itself will also play a role. A complex can either be warrantable—with a much higher chance of being financed—or nonwarrantable—meaning it’s not eligible for financing through Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and is subject to strict guidelines.

If the ownership of the development is still in the hands of the developer, it’s nonwarrantable. If the development is multi-use, with commercial space and residential units, it’s nonwarrantable. If an individual owns more than 10 percent of the total units in the development, it’s nonwarrantable.

“The biggest thing you are looking at is the owner-occupied units compared to investment units,” says Johnson. In fact, if less than half of the condo units are owner-occupied, which leaves the majority of units rented out, it’s (you guessed it) nonwarrantable.
Although some lenders refuse to finance condos, Johnson says it can be done, albeit with great difficulty.

“You can get a loan if [the development] is nonwarrantable, but the bank would have to portfolio it, [meaning] they are going to hold it within their portfolio; they are going to use their own money,” he says.

There is another obstacle to condo financing. “If the condominium is nonwarrantable, or warrantable for that matter, and the HOA fees are more than 15 percent delinquent, the loan cannot be obtained,” says Johnson.

Another option would be to have a private investor add the loan to his or her portfolio. “Those are your only options.”

Know that the condo market here isn’t as bad as it could be.

“A lot of people [around the country] are losing their shirt, but some condominiums are in a desirable area and they are still bringing out a pretty price,” says Johnson. In Florida, for example, “you can buy a condominium pennies on the dollar,” but it’s practically impossible to find financing.

Locally, although the condo market has declined, Johnson says it hasn’t been as bad as other cities around the country. “Charlottesville is holding pretty well,” he says. “We are in a unique market and we are doing a lot of loans for condominiums.”

Be prepared for the mortgage process to take some time, and hedge your bets. “What I would recommend doing is calling a reputable lender and look up to see if the condominium is approved by [the Department of Housing and Urban Development] or Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae,” he says. “You just don’t waste a lot of time and energy.” 

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Living

May 2011: Rental Rescue & Toolbox

Rental Rescue

New leash on life
In 2008, I went to the Barracks Road Harris Teeter on a mission to buy some milk and fabric softener, and instead, came home with a 4-month-old puppy. Congratulations to whoever developed the pet-adoption marketing strategy of placing cages of cuteness between people and their Saturday morning errands—it works. As we prepare to celebrate the third birthday of Bodie, the beagle mix with the sad eyes I couldn’t live without, it has me thinking about how much our four-legged friends change our lives and our homes. Whether your dog has been a family fixture for years, or you’re making room for puppy, a few easy solutions can help you create a pet-friendly abode without sacrificing style or banishing Bodie to the backyard.

Floor plan
Dogs can put some serious wear and tear on a home (hence the reason many rentals that allow dogs require pet deposits). The floor is your dog’s main domain, so work from the ground up. Much like preparing for children or party guests, select floor coverings that can stand up to playing, paws, and the occasional accident.

If you’re house- or apartment-hunting with a dog, seek out those with easy-to-clean surfaces like hardwoods and ceramic tiles. Choose dark and patterned area rugs with a low pile to not only conceal messes, but minimize everyday damage to your floors. Consider modular carpet tiles to create a fun floor covering. Not only can you continually change your design, but if one tile gets damaged, you can simply swap it out. Try a vinyl mat or durable door mat under your dog’s food and water bowls.

Welcome waggin’
A comfortable and safe place for your dog to rest is a cornerstone of a pet-friendly pad. Place your dog’s bed in an area where it won’t need to be moved. Avoid high-traffic areas and hazardous rooms like the kitchen. A cozy corner of your living room or bedroom is a great spot, or if you have a smaller dog, place a bed under a desk or end table to conserve space.

With myriad stylish options available, your dog can be mod. Consider an affordable, eco-friendly dog duvet from Molly Mutt (www.mollymutt.com). Or make or recover your own dog bed with fabric that matches your décor from Les Fabriques (29N). I stuffed Bodie’s dog bed with old t-shirts, socks, and clothes of mine, so he’d pick up my scent and not fight me for my bed every night. Keeping your dog comfortable and close will keep you both happy.

Doggie décor
Prepare for daily life with a dog. Consider attractive slipcovers for your sofas and chairs. Slipcovers are not only durable but washable. If slipcovers aren’t in your budget and you’re worried about your sofa, canvas painter’s drop cloths can substitute. Run these neutral cloths through the washer and dryer, cover your sofa, and tuck the cloth into all of the creases and cushions for a nice, taut look. Rolled-up magazines tucked in will help hold the cover in place.

Invest in an attractive basket to hold all of your dog’s toys. As toys and bones start to wear out, replace them. Leaving chewed-up dog bones lying around can actually damage your floors and furniture. Keep some attractive canisters or tins for treats, readily available but away from temptation.

Placing a hook for collars and leashes by the door will keep you organized and help create a routine for your dog. An antique sailboat cleat from Artifacts did the trick for us.—Ed Warwick

Toolbox

Get a grip
If your toolbox consists of only one tool, make it a pair of locking pliers. These heavy-duty, multi-purpose pliers grip, clamp, bend, loosen, tighten and generally own whatever job you set out to accomplish with them. Originally branded as Vise-Grip pliers in 1924, their styles (and uses) have only expanded since their invention. Locking pliers have the gripping jaws of standard pliers with the feature of easily locking, thus maintaining pressure without sustained squeezing from the user.

For example, let’s say you have a bolt that is rusted onto your bicycle’s axle and no amount of WD-40 or wrench action is getting that sucker off. It’s time to get out the locking pliers. Clamp onto the bolt with the pliers parallel to the wheel spokes. If the pliers are not firmly locked around the bolt, remove the pliers and tighten the screw at the end of the handle and retry. The pliers should lock once you’ve squeezed the handle as far as it will go and the teeth should remain attached to the bolt, hands free.

Now, rotate those pliers clockwise (Remember, “righty, tighty; lefty, loosey”) and the bolt should come loose without a lot of strain. Once the bolt is loose enough to unscrew by hand, you are ready to remove your pliers.

Hold the handles gently and simply press a finger, or the palm of your hand, onto the end that sticks out of the third “handle” (it’s between the two outside handles). This should instantly release the locking mechanism and simultaneously lock in your amazement at this incredible tool.—Christy Baker 

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News

Trump tees off

Donald Trump is a busy man these days. In the past few weeks, the nation watched Trump hector President Barack Obama to release his birth certificate, and consider a presidential campaign of his own. Meanwhile, local residents have wondered what The Donald plans to do with his prime Albemarle County real estate.

The Trump Organization plans to keep its 700-plus Albemarle County acres, the former Kluge Estate Winery, as a “first-class vineyard,” says a Trump advisor.

Last month, the Trump Organization purchased more than 700 acres of the Kluge Estate Winery & Vineyard at auction for $6.2 million. Rumors almost immediately started swirling over the future of the land, formerly owned by Patricia Kluge and William Moses, who will remain involved with the property. Among the rumors: Will the winery become a golf course?

An Albemarle County course wouldn’t be Trump’s first golf interest in Virginia. In 2009, Trump bought the Lowes Island Club golf course in Potomac Falls, just outside the nation’s capital. The renamed Trump National Golf Club, Washington D.C., is an 800-acre property with two 18-hole courses.

Prior to the winery auction, Trump bought 216 acres from a trust named for John Kluge’s son. The property, which abuts Kluge’s former residence—the 45-room Albemarle House, bought back by Bank of America at a foreclosure sale—was once a private golf course designed by Arnold Palmer. However, the land is under conservation easement with the Virginia Outdoors Foundation.

According to easement restrictions, the only activities permitted on the property are agriculture, viticulture, horticulture, and temporary or seasonal activities that “do not permanently alter the physical appearance of the Property.” They also include “temporary outdoor activities involving 100 or more people [which] shall not exceed seven days in duration,” unless approved in advance. Trump remains interested in Albemarle House, but Jason Greenblatt, executive vice president for the Trump Organization, says its current price is “completely unreasonable.”

Trump’s winery property is zoned “rural area,” which “does allow, with a special use permit, a golf center,” says Ron Higgins, Albemarle County’s chief of zoning. “But it would have to go through a public hearing, [and a] special use permit process” with the county.

The property is also under conservation easement. According to Higgins, the easements “would determine what you can and cannot do, depending on how they are written.”

According to an easement dated October 18, 2005, Kluge Estate Winery & Vineyard, LLC granted VOF “an open-space easement in gross over, and the right in perpetuity to restrict the use of real estate” of 648.29 acres in the county. Under the easement restrictions, earth removal “shall not alter the topography of the Property except for dam construction to create private ponds” or to build permitted structures and buildings. The easement also prohibits a full-service restaurant.

Contacted for comment, Trump’s business advisors say a golf course is unlikely.

“We do plan to keep it as a first-class vineyard,” Greenblatt tells C-VILLE. “We have no plans for a golf course.”

Greenblatt adds that it would be “a shame not to be continuing it as a vineyard.”

“We think that Bill and Patricia are very smart and talented people,” says Greenblatt. “And we will have them continue to manage the property.” 

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News

Horning in

Zinnia and her half-sister, Ella—short for Ellamenope—ran to the fence and wagged their short tails when called. They enthusiastically hopped and bleated while Woolen Mills resident Laura Covert uncovered two baby bottles filled with milk. Three times a day, Covert and her husband cross their 1.5-acre garden to feed two of the first miniature dairy goats permitted in city backyards.

Ella (pictured), along with her half-sister Zinnia, now calls Woolen Mills her home. Owner Laura Covert says her two goats will begin to produce milk in a year.

“I didn’t expect them to be so social. That was something that totally took me by surprise,” says Covert while Zinnia chews a button off Covert’s beige pants. Ella, not to be outdone by her one-week older sister, curls up in Covert’s lap.

Last September, City Council passed an ordinance that allowed city residents to own up to three miniature goats—dehorned, weighing less than 100 pounds and, if males, neutered. The goats must remain on their owner’s property at all times. Covert says she thought about raising dairy goats before the ordinance passed, both for the milk and to provide her family’s 10 ducks with a few friends.

“I was surprised that it went through so easily,” says Covert about the ordinance. “I know there is a big community in Charlottesville that’s interested in local food. If you are going to have a pet, it might as well be a productive one, right?”

Zinnia and Ella are Nigerian dwarf goats, a popular dairy breed, and will begin producing milk in a year. Heidi Passino, who runs Dragon Hill Farm and sold the goats to Covert, says Nigerian dwarf goats are unique because “they are the smallest of the dairy breed, so they don’t produce as much milk as the larger breeds.” Their milk has lots of butter fat, according to Passino. “It makes the milk rich and creamy, and it’s ideal for cheese making or yogurt,” she says.

While owning a goat is not rocket science, says Passino, goats are dependent upon humans for their survival. “Do your research. Look at the breed carefully,” she says. “Just be clear that you are prepared to go out in the freezing rain and take care of your animals.” Nigerian dwarf goats are priced anywhere from $50 to $300.

And if you take care of your goats, they may also take care of you. The City of Charlottesville recently contracted Goat Busters of Afton for three weeks of invasive plant management in Pen Park. The animals will help tame privet, honeysuckle and kudzu in the park. City landscape manager John Mann calls the goats “very cost-effective.”

“Prior to this, all we were able to do was to try to keep the vines out of the trees so the trees will survive,” says Mann. He adds that because most city parks are located in wetland areas, chemical use is a significant concern.

“Some chemicals are used as a follow-up, but you can imagine the goats have taken care of the majority of it,” says Mann. “So if there is any use of chemicals, it’s very limited.” 

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News

A redistricting brawl?

Say what you will about Virginia’s political class (after all, we certainly have), but it simply can’t be denied that they are, by and large, a pretty genial bunch. Sure, those chowderheads over in Prince William County enjoy fulminating about the imaginary tsunami of illegal immigrants flooding our commonwealth, and our increasingly unhinged Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli never met an anti-science witch hunt he didn’t like, but even these nutters seem like models of common sense and collegiality when compared to certain other intolerant state governments (cough—Arizona—cough).

Governor Bob McDonnell struck a mighty blow to the Assembly’s first redistricting proposal. Rather than swing at each other, however, the House and Senate opted to hug out a compromise.

In fact, no matter how contentious things might get in Richmond, it’s hard to imagine our General Assembly ever degenerating into a real knock-down, drag-out, Wisconsin-style fracas. Now, whether this is due to the inherent decency of Virginia’s elected officials, or simply the Assembly’s culture of good ol’ boy camaraderie, we won’t speculate (O.K., it’s the latter), but by now we’ve pretty much grown used to the capital’s complete lack of real combat or confrontation.

Which is why the events of the past few weeks have come as such a refreshing surprise. It all started with Governor Bob McDonnell’s unexpected veto of the Assembly’s redistricting plans. Now, the fact that the governor would object to the Dem-controlled Senate’s crazy gerrymandering (which pitched four Republicans into a bloody battle for two seats) came as no surprise. But his outright veto of both plans seems to have caught some Republicans napping. Even though the House had willingly coupled its plan with the Senate’s—passing both as a single bill—members still professed to be “surprised and disappointed” by McDonnell’s action, whining to the Washington Post that “a veto doesn’t seem very productive.”

Meanwhile, on the Senate side, Majority Leader Dick Saslaw was getting all blustery about it, insisting that he wouldn’t “change one period or one comma” of his proposal. What’s more, if we’re to believe a recent report in the Washington Examiner, Saslaw was already working overtime to make sure that his preferred candidate, Arlington County Board Member Barbara Favola, secured the Democratic nomination for the not-yet-created 31st District Senate seat. Using such time-honored tactics as threatening phone calls and pressuring potential candidate’s business contacts, Saslaw comes across in the article as a sort of Boss Tweed on the Potomac, micro-managing every aspect of his vast political kingdom.

Which is why we’re so excited to finally see some old-school, bare-knuckle brawling as the unstoppable force of McDonnell’s veto pen meets the immovable object of Saslaw’s iron will. In fact, we’re absolutely certain that the ongoing clash over the Assembly’s redistricting plans will slowly metastasize into a legislative bloodbath of historic proportions.

What’s that? The House and Senate have already entered into bipartisan negotiations, worked out their differences, and approved a new compromise plan?

Dagnabbit! What is wrong with these people? Don’t they realize that some of us require constant infusions of political conflict to survive? At this rate, our dream of watching half the General Assembly flee the state on the Starlight Express, with Ken Cuccinelli and a rabid pack of bloodhounds in hot pursuit, seems very remote indeed.

Curse you, Virginia! Why does everyone here have to be so darn nice? You know, it’s times like this that we would seriously consider moving to Arizona, except that we hate the heat. And institutionalized racism. And being governed by certifiable lunatics.

But still, if that Kumbaya crew in Richmond doesn’t start stirring up some real trouble sometime soon, we might have to start vacationing in Wisconsin. 

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Living

Found on Facebook

Tomas Rahal of Mas did not return calls for comment. Mike Lewis of Mono Loco denies that he wrote the entries and had no comment beyond a chuckle. […] represents excised quotes. Read the full exchange here: [PDF file]

Mono Loco @cvilletomorrow #cville Council adopts zoning changes to allow live amplified music at restaurants in more districts – but not Belmont http://bit.ly/eOeJBi

Tomas Rahal being loud and obnoxious doesn’t make you good or successful. live by the thugs die by the thugs. love seeing failing restaurants suddenly convert to music event programming, the toughest business in town, and expect everyone to understand that now their parking needs have quadrupled, trash and noise pollution are off the charts, crime climbs, property damage too,and regular customers given short shrift all for the quick buck. […] Jim Tolbert is right and wrong, it is about a few bad apples but it’s also about splitting a pie so many times nobody wins and taxpayers are left holding the bag for selfish assholes that pocketed the quick cash and screwed employees, vendors and neighbors – who’ll leave a big mess next?
April 19 at 12:00pm

Mono Loco ahhh it surely must be spring…birds are chirping…the rains are torrential and we have the ramblings of the soused petulant belmontian bacchus!…listen without over-simplifying…(mono loco, beer run, the tea bazaar all seem to seamlessly incorporate music and dining), in all other areas you so staunchly defend the democratic process..but now you sound strangely fascist…how ’bout we instead detail that market forces and poor management strongly dictated the fate of the aformentioned establishments..solely blaming music for their demise is akin to the hyper vigilant rationale john lithgow had for banning all dancing in Footloose…
April 19 at 1:44pm

Tomas Rahal seamless, sure, if you’re not the cop dealing with the mess, or neighbors woken up at 2 am by fights, doors slamming, yelling, or tequila-soaked drivers shooting off in the night. i love music and it plays a prominent role in Belmont and at MAS. we pay royalties to the artists we play, and spon-sor events in town, not just Belmont. No, music isn’t the culprit as you sophistically try to pawn that old chestnut off on the public again that Belmont is against live music. Please stop reading from the same old playbook and show up at city council or a neighborhood meeting sometime. […] i’m just saying when you are a restaurant be a restaurant, if you want to regularly program music, like The Southern, or the Jefferson or Pavillion, be a mu-sic hall that serves food. otherwise you get a permit for big events just like the big boys. […]
April 19 at 3:59pm

Tomas Rahal Even though between you and i this is all good fun, there are real consequences promoters don’t ever mention. and for the record, i never blamed music on its own, but people who act like strip-mining operators instead of responsible stewards, and guardians in the public interest. no restaurant has extended more help and resources to local community groups and neighbors than MAS. […] as for phrases like hyper-vigilant fascism, you’re way out of your depth. stick to what you know :pool-sitting, sorority girls, squeezie bottles,tequila, tacos and mesclun mix.
April 19 at 4:24pm

Tomas Rahal honeybadger don’t give a [expletive]!
April 19 at 4:35pm

Mono Loco not sure how this segued into charitable work…but knowing how your brain works I guess it all par for the course…but to suggest that only Mas can’t safely juggle the intricate complexities of dining and music and the rest of us mere peasants should thank you and praise hero worship for rescuing babies whilst putting out fires and app carrying your trash to who knows where is bordering on ludicrous…even for your larger than life ego…and I love you too bro!
April 19 at 5:20pm

Tomas Rahal Wow I know Im in sharky waters when you mention love! But I’m not surprised you miss the connections in all of this. We’ll keep on keepin on. I’m glad the peasants have you as a spokesperson. […] I would love to have your input in a public forum since your opinions are so representative of the mainstream. […]
April 19 at 6:18pm

Mono Loco Just for the record I was in attendance at city hall when the subject was broached on the sly by one Mr. Tolbert…word quickly spread…and the outpouring of support from local musicians and business operators (Maya, Beer Run, The Local, Blue Moon Diner, The Garage The Tea Baazar, Random Row Books and others is what lead to this decision…
April 20 at 9:47am

Tomas Rahal we’ll have to wait and see if this musical triage yields results.jim tolbert has consistently changed with the wind because he knows he’s not up for re-election, and the folks stomping in and screaming that music will die don’t vote. hell you don’t even vote in charlottesville. these concerned barkeeps will have to choose soon, increased revenues in food sales, or just booze? when they are taxed higher because their programming requires more resources from the city that regulates their licenses, what then? a discount for doofuses? […] right now, everyone is doubling down on pocket queens. good luck with that.
April 20 at 11:05am

Mono Loco at first i was going to counter by calling you Bill ‘O Baggins for you obvious rantings bereft of facts or fact checking!!…( i was at the city hall meetings, we also have supported varied charities, i have spoken on a UVA panel along with Rob Archer about minority run businesses, we also pay a large fee for trash removal and water..not even sure what the water/parking lot diatribe is about, we also pay ascap…and we pay plenty of taxes..so im not sure about how we’re in any way abusing or cajoling the system) …but these recent musings and harkening of gambling our restaurants away on short rift traveling musical […] is clearly more Beckian in its doom like scenarios and the false prophets of musical chicanery being being pulled over our “lack of depth” heads will most assuredly be our chariot to damnation… […] “live by the thugs die by the thugs…that was your quote and perhaps a telling vision of your communal view…one might venture to say that maybe YOUR charitable deeds aren’t yet accomplished…
April 20 at 12:47pm

Tomas Rahal […] We’re not anti- music just anti-dumbass which understandably u take offense with. […] U keep pretending to be down with local musicians but I can’t find your commitment anywhere. Your o’reilly tactics won’t work here. The local musicians eat @ Mas. We’re no threat to them so see but try it & where this gets you. Maybe you’ll sell more wings. You walk alone cholo
April 20 at 4:17pm

Mono Loco Um…many play and eat here as well..I’m not sure exactly what your dealio with the one upsmansship is…oops I forgot…you invented the internet as well…well others can play in the pool as well…and if the whale moves over a tad…(yes your wake is as large as your braggart ways are wide)…you will notice that there are laws in place to control noise…those controls are still in place… …instead of further toiling down the rabbit hole that is your lack of a cogent point…trash collection and parking?!!…your charitable acts…or is that community service?…and yes I will acknowledge Mas at the center of the universe for all things local and wonderful…but first I suggest you troll back to the top of this thread and see that I merely reposted a @cvilletommorrow tweet…somehow this brought the wrath of boozy Khan down upon me…read the first line you said… “being loud and obnoxious doesn’t make you good or successful”…and maybe read it again….slowly
April 20 at 4:53pm

Tomas Rahal Please Pepe Lopez u can never walk in my shoes accept your role as kaeto and move on. U continue to speak from a position of ignorance and arrogance. Stand on top of your trash heap and proclaim “ I’m king of the world”. […] Tonight I’m hurting by the death of a true friend, Terry seig so [expletive] off
April 20 at 6:12pm

Mono Loco …good grief is right…but wtf…is more like it…you need a effing proofreader…im arrogant??!!…you’re bloviated buffoonery seems to know no bounds….yet im arrogant?!!…well done Sir Mix it Up a Lot…you’ve somehow careened this convo into a ditch of your making…and now you wanna pull out the grief stricken card??…wow…well you’re right…i dont wanna walk in your plus size slip ons….that apparently have lost as most traction as this discussion…so i guess i’ll just retreat to my estate, lament my “king of the world ways” with some cheap beer and wait till they pass the tray of alms so that i may donate my piety to Mas and all that you’ve have done to/for us underlings…
April 21 at 11:34am 

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News

Signs of a crossing

The Welcome Wagon’s front man Vito Aiuto wore a black wool cap rolled up to expose his ears, framing a scraggly beard, a look somewhere between hipster and monk. The snap buttons on his rose-embroidered cowboy shirt rose to his neck. An acoustic guitar wound tightly around his chest, he faced his wife, Monique, The Welcome Wagon’s other singer. She occasionally, and softly, rapped a plastic mallet against the glockenspiel. Seven singers stood shoulder to shoulder onstage, flanked by a keyboardist, a guitarist and a bassist.

The Garage and New City Arts Initiative brought The Welcome Wagon, a Brooklyn-based folk rock band run by a reverend and his wife, to The Haven at First and Market in late March. The band’s music features religious thematics in the gospel tradition, but its album—and the concert at the Haven—was well-received by secular listeners and critics.

For those in attendance, The Welcome Wagon concert at The Haven at First and Market seemed like a normal night of music. But it wasn’t. Because when the members of The Welcome Wagon are at home, in Brooklyn, they aren’t a band as much as they are a singalong crew, with instrumentation. And they don’t often play clubs: Most of the time, they perform at Resurrection Presbyterian Church, where Aiuto, a reverend, also preaches. The group’s self-titled, debut record was well-received by critics—secular ones—and produced by one of folk rock’s leading artists, Sufjan Stevens, and released on his label, Asthmatic Kitty.

There was a time when the “Christian” label would’ve made fans of secular music roll their eyes. But the sanctuary at The Haven at First and Market was packed to the gills with concertgoers paying 10 bucks a ticket, a not insignificant price for a show by a little-known folk group on a boutique indie rock label at a non-venue attached to a homeless shelter.

That the show was such a success is testament to a growing trend in town, where art made within the Christian community is increasingly drawing a secular crowd—and is indistinguishable from secular art. Locally, the melding of religious and secular arts communities can thank groups like the New City Arts Initiative, the Garage, and Bifrost Arts.

These groups, their ties to faith invisible, serve up some of the most vital art in town, pushing back against the widely-held notion that the church, today, is a cultural regurgitator or a voice against risqué, challenging art. So locally, at least, you can forget about religious crusades against the Dung Mary and David Wojnarowicz’s ants on a crucifix, or Marilyn Manson versus the Pope. And forget about the dramatic oils of glowing Jesus atop a mountain. As with The Welcome Wagon, you might not know from the look, the sound, or the taste of it. But that may be Christian art you’re consuming.

A room of its own

A couple of years ago Paul Walker, the rector at Christ Episcopal Church, was walking down North First Street with Kate Daughdrill, an artist in the church’s fellowship program for recent college graduates. “She wanted her own space for a project,” says Walker. “We were walking by The Garage, where the previous music director here used to park, and she said, ‘What about this space?’”

With a fake hardwood floor, the small space became one of Charlottesville’s most lively galleries for emerging local artists and touring bands. Except perhaps for its pitched roof, there is nothing that codes The Garage as a Christian space—its website mentions no church affiliation. In the tiny structure there are no crucifixes. You leave events there without hearing a call to worship at Christ Episcopal on Sunday. When there’s music, you put a buck or two in a jar and pass it along. Sam Bush, a music minister at Christ Episcopal and a songwriter with local folk-rock act the Hill & Wood, now curates the gallery and says that The Garage’s relationship with the church has been very “supportive, yet undemanding.”

Why, then, would a music minister run a space like The Garage at all? “On a foundational level,” says Bush, “what The Garage is about is bringing people together. It’s funny to talk about, because there’s never been an agenda. I’m not really sure what The Garage is. It’s basically a gift to the community for people to do what they want with it.”

Across town, All Souls is a two-year old congregation based on Jefferson Park Avenue. Similar to The Garage, its pastor Winn Collier says that All Souls supported an artist-in-residence, the songwriter and musician Brendan Jamieson. (Because the church is small that position has since morphed into something more). “We wanted to free Brendan up to do his art, and do it in our city,” says Collier. “Not at all to serve our internal community.”

This kind of freedom of programming stands in stark contrast to what Bush, 25, says he experienced as a young person of faith. In the 1990s, he says, a lot of the artistic opportunities for people in the church felt like evangelical tools, more about spreading the word of God than celebrating unrestrained self-expression. “The Church tried to imitate culture, and what you had were all these cheap imitations of good things,” he says.

Paul Walker, rector at Christ Episcopal Church, says that the church has long been a patron of the arts, commissioning sacred art like Tiffany stained glass (background). But the Garage, a no-strings-attached patronage of art for art’s sake, is “new to us,” he says.

So The Garage is, in one sense, a reaction to that artistic climate. “We want bands that people think are weird. We want art that is challenging,” says Bush.

Providing patronage for the arts “grows out of our understanding of who God is, that God is the God of creation and beauty,” says Collier. “Part of God’s character is to create things that are good.”

Maureen Lovett is the arts director for the New City Arts Initiative. The local nonprofit is an offshoot of the International Arts Movement, an organization founded to “gather artists and creative catalysts to wrestle with the deep questions of art, faith, and humanity.’” The International Arts Movement was founded by the New York-based painter Makoto Fujimura who has said in a recent interview that major critics have told him that, if he did not identify as a Christian, he would be among today’s leading artists.

Lovett, who is a UVA graduate, interned there before helping to found New City Arts locally. “IAM provided more of a network, so I was able to see people who were making really good work, were Christians, but were being very thoughtful in their work. But their work wasn’t all message-driven. It was just really good.”

New City Arts uses an ambassadorial model that would fight what Lovett calls “fragmentation,” or rifts in the community. The fight against fragmentation takes conversation, which New City Arts facilitates. (In addition to regular conversation events, Lovett is collaborating with the Piedmont Council for the Arts on a pastor’s forum for the spring.) But improving the conversation between different far-flung regions of the community takes actual resources.

One is shelter. So like The Garage, the New City Arts Initiative runs a gallery out of the WVTF and Radio IQ studios on Water Street. Also like The Garage, that gallery space has served as a springboard for emerging local and regional artists, often in collaboration, to showcase art. And in its bright office on the top floor of the Haven, New City Arts earlier this year installed a resident artist, Patrick Costello.

Though Costello was raised Catholic, he is not what you’d think of as a “Christian artist.” He doesn’t regularly go to church or identify as an active Christian. But Lovett says the thematic content of his art—broadly, it explores the life cycle, and where people and nature intersect—echoes Christian values. “Patrick may not identify himself as a Christian,” says Lovett. “But he identifies with a lot of our values, like generosity and Shalom,” a word used in the International Arts Movement to refer to a quest for “wholeness.”

“Patrick’s work in particular tries to work through the elements of the everyday, and how it relates to the broader cosmos. The church talks about that all the time,” says Lovett.

As a rector who also studied poetry at UVA, Walker understands art as more than just an evangelical tool: “Art is, theologically speaking, like the grace of God—it’s without contingency or qualification. So we don’t do exhibits or support the arts as a means to an end, so-called Christian art that would be used for evangelism or even something like beautification.”

Walker says that arts patronage isn’t new to Christ Episcopal: The church recently produced a book about its gorgeous stained-glass windows designed by Louis Comfort Tiffany. But The Garage represents a crossing of the line, from supporting sacred art for the sake of the church, to supporting art for the sake of the community at large.

“This kind of patronage is new to us,” says Walker.

Building interest

Ken Myers was an arts editor at NPR’s “Morning Edition” through the early 1980s, but lost his job when the station cut much its fine arts programming. In the early ’90s he founded Mars Hill Audio, a locally-produced audio periodical featuring interviews and other cultural content that today has a circulation of about 6,500. “I wanted to try to encourage people of faith—Christians in particular—to be more thoughtful about culture,” says Myers, who also has a degree in religion from the Westminster Theological Seminary.

Myers quotes The New Republic art critic Jed Pearl, who says that a broad interest in being creative, matched with a widespread ignorance about art’s formal qualities, has created an environment of “laissez-faire aesthetics.” (And not just in churches, he notes.) “I think there is a lot of noise made by Christians about culture,” he says. “But the level of discernment, deliberations, and involvement is pretty low.”

Isaac Wardell runs a music nonprofit called Bifrost Arts. On Bifrost’s compilation albums, popular secular musicians perform Christian hymns and spirituals. “There’s no reason that making good music and being in the church should be mutually exclusive,” Wardell says.

The result is that churches will sustain an interest in “culture” for defensive reasons. “There is a concern that the church is becoming really, really marginalized,” says Myers. “To avoid being marginalized, we need to demonstrate that we’re interested in things that other people are interested in.”

But if the arts are a public aspect of community outreach for churches—even if an organization’s church flies under the radar—they are an equally important part of engaging parishes. In his 2003 book All in Sync: How Music and Art Are Revitalizing American Religion, the Princeton sociologist Robert Wuthnow writes that it was against all odds that communities of faith survived the 20th century. Women joined the workforce, families moved all around and people started living longer.

And yet, congregations remained steady. In 2001, as in 1971, four in 10 people claimed to have attended a church service in the previous seven days. Wuthnow’s study found that most Americans believe that those interested in the arts are more likely to pray, and that art can deepen the spiritual experience. In short, those with an interest in the arts are likely to take spiritual growth seriously. Churches nationwide have been taking note.

One such church is All Souls. Collier says that his congregation just finished a program called “The Art of Lent.” During Lent—the 40 days leading up to Easter—members of the church made art that was displayed as if the church was a gallery. The art ranged from poetry and painting to performance art. Collier says that little of it could be recognized as an expression of faith.

Lovett too says that she’s been involved in a group, led by Trinity Presbyterian Pastor Wade Bradshaw, of around 20 artists—old, young, mixed-race, mixed-gender—who are trying to maximize their creative potential using The Artist’s Way, the book by Julia Cameron. “It’s not a Christian curriculum,” she says. “Conversations have been about self-doubt, or a higher power. It’s almost like AA for an artist.”

Collier says there are theological reasons for supporting creativity—which he prefers to “art,” which can be alienating. At the mass, Collier printed a manifesto of sorts, subtitled, “Does God Care About Elvis and Mona Lisa?” The answer, he says, is yes. “If you open up the Bible to Genesis, one of the first things you pick up about God is that God is creative.”

Noticing that what He made is good, God moves on to the next thing, separating heaven from earth, light from dark, gathering the waters, and making plants, fruit and beasts to enjoy and eat it all. Then he rests. “In Eden,” Collier wrote, “God did not make trees that were merely functional, bearing fruit that was blandly nutritious. God crafted trees that were ‘pleasing to the eye and good for food.’”

Staying safe

Myers put his finger on a central question in “Christian art:” If a church adopts arts programming, it faces the possibility of backfiring if that interest in art is “a kind of public relations display for your church. That’s likely to be perceived by people who really care about art,” he says.

Says Lovett, “The broader issue that we address is that the arts, in contemporary church, have been labeled as ‘good’ if they’re either ‘safe’ or ‘useful.’ Our hope [with the New City Arts Initiative] is to instill the belief that art can be good and useful and true in itself, and that there are these values of generosity and hospitality that the church holds as true.”

Dave Zahl echoes that sentiment. About four years ago, he founded Mockingbird Ministries with a few friends in New York City who wanted to do something both creative and faith-related. They threw a few ideas against the wall to see what’d stick. What did was a website, which re-launched after Zahl moved the organization to Charlottesville last year. On the website writers “basically looks at how theology plays out in everyday life.”

Art, he says, is a powerful tool in that search. “I’m just interested in seeing how the same themes that occupy people who wouldn’t think of themselves as religious—how those are the same things that Christianity is bound up with.”

He notes that Christian art often takes two paths. “A lot of Christians will take something that’s good and try to produce some antiseptic version of it that suffers in comparison. That’s the more evangelical way to do it.”

“Then there’s the more Catholic or Orthodox way, which is to elevate the sacred so far above the profane that never the twain shall meet. Which I find is as equally devoid of connection. It’s a human tendency, but it’s one that the church suffers from particularly,” he says.

Maureen Lovett is the arts director for the New City Arts Initiative, an organization based in The Haven at First and Market that uses the arts to connect disparate portions of the local community. In addition to supporting a resident artist, New City Arts runs a gallery out of the WVTF and Radio IQ Studios, on Water Street. Although its board of directors is ecumenical, says Lovett, New City Arts is “not a Christian organization.”

Perhaps the most obvious example of these values—“safe” and “useful”—is in contemporary Christian music. “I always cared about church music,” says Isaac Wardell, Director of Worship Arts at Trinity Presbyterian and founder of the nonprofit Bifrost Arts. “I always thought it was kind of a shame that church music was so bad. You can turn on anything from ‘Seinfeld’ to ‘South Park’ to ‘Saturday Night Live,’ or make a joke at a bar and everybody gets it.”

Wardell was born to a pair of UC-Berkeley graduates who hopped on the “Jesus People” train of the 1970s, traveling the country in a Volkswagen van. That generation’s “Jesus music” is credited with planting the seeds for today’s Contemporary Christian Music.

Today, Wardell’s brother is a classical ballet dancer. A lifetime pop music lover, Wardell took a degree in music composition to New York, and used that expertise for studio work with the likes of Sufjan Stevens and Blitzen Trapper. Of his and his brother’s career choices, says Wardell, “Neither are real common things in suburban late 20th-century evangelical culture.”

Compelled by the power that church has to get people singing together, and while living in New York, Wardell started hosting interfaith singing events, which drew a crowd that was half-religious, half-secular. And then something funny happened: People started singing together. Wardell discovered Charlottesville after taking the act on the road. He says about 50 people showed up to sing together in town.

“We would blow into these towns where we didn’t know anybody. I’ve been touring for 10 years—I’m fully aware of how it works when an independent band starts touring. But we did 50 dates, and everywhere we went, we would have 50 [to] 100 people come out to these events that were not even publicized.”

Soon parishes were showing interest, ponying up some funding, and Bifrost Arts was born as a recording project. To date Bifrost—named for the bridge in Norse mythology that connected earth to the land of the gods—has released two compilations of religious music (a third is forthcoming) featuring artists of secular interest like the songwriters Damien Jurado and J. Tillman, as well as Sufjan Stevens. Wardell says interest was icy at first, but sales have since thawed, rising to 30,000 copies.

Wardell’s intention isn’t to alienate people who aren’t indie rock fans. His goal is to bridge the gap between contemporary secular taste and Christian music. Referring to how Christian music has been a “dividing line” between Christian and secular cultures, Wardell says. “I think it’s a real shame what happened in the last 50 years, maybe somewhat in the last 200 years, in America. If there’s one thing that people of faith, people that aren’t of faith, all have in common, it’s our capacity to experience beauty.”

You’re Welcome

Wardell was able to offer The Welcome Wagon funding that helped the group float a trip to a recent Bifrost conference in St. Louis, with a stop in Charlottesville along the way. The band’s route brought them through a variety of venues, from church venues like the Haven, to an Elk’s Lodge in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, to Johnny Brenda’s, a midsized Philly club with a two-floor bar area that surrounds the stage.

If all the work that these local organizations are putting in goes toward, as Zahl says, erasing the line between Christians and non-Christians, the effort is well on its way. Successful shows like The Welcome Wagon’s makes one question whether the future for “Christian artists” is rosier for modern artists than it was for, say, U2, who could only hint at their faith or else get sunk by the “Christian rock” label.

Meanwhile, if there is nothing that marks a place like The Garage as Christian, Bush says that what it achieves—bringing people together to celebrate the weird things people create—is in its execution about as close to Christ as it gets. The space is operated under the principle that, says Bush, “People operate more fully in freedom than under any given agenda.”

Bush also says it’s close in keeping with one of Saint Augustine’s famous dictates: “Love God, and do what you want.” 

Categories
Living

May 2011: Your Abode

What are you doing sitting on that couch? What’s with the overstuffed chair? who do you think you are, parking yourself at the dining room table? Get outside, for crying out loud! It’s springtime in Central Virginia, and it demands to be enjoyed. You can still sit down, we promise. And with one of these locally-sourced seats, you can sit in style too. 

From top left: The Curious Orange Store, 2845 Ivy Rd., 984-1042, $275. Blue Ridge Eco Shop, 313 E. Main St., 296-0042, $295. Ten Thousand Villages, 105 W. Main St., 979-9470. Snow’s Garden Center, 1875 Avon St., 295-2159, $120. Target, Hollymead Town Center, 964-0231, $60. Plow & Hearth, Barracks Road Shopping Center, 977-3707, $200. And George, 3465 Ivy Rd. 244-2800, $350/pair. Blue Ridge Eco Shop, 313 E. Main St. 296-0042, $275.

 

NEW C-VILLE COVER STORY: Signs of a crossing

Osama Bin Laden hoodwinked both his followers and millions of Americans into conflating the religion of Islam with his peculiar idea of holy war. This had terrible consequences. His followers attacked emblems of “The West,” even when it meant killing Muslims as well as so-called infidels; far too many Americans began believing that it was the Islamic religion, and not just a perverted inversion of the faith by a radical terrorist, that made the Twin Towers fall. Must religion divide a community or can it help unite one? A religion does present a particular worldview, one usually in conflict with other ideologies. No doubt the Christians interviewed by Andrew Cedermark for this week’s cover story consider their particular religious beliefs the only Truth. But when it comes to art, they do not demand that all in attendance bow in obeisance to their version of truth. Instead, many of them see art as an opportunity to speak across faiths. Rather than a pulpit only for ideas of Jesus, The Garage as administered by Sam Bush, an Episcopal music minister, welcomes one and all. Read the cover story here, and don’t forget to leave comments.

Love family speaks to SI on anniversary of death

One year ago today, UVA student and lacrosse player Yeardley Love was found dead in her 14th Street apartment building—a slaying that led to the arrest of Love’s on-and-off boyfriend and fellow UVA student, George Huguely. In the ensuing year, Love’s death made national headlines and prompted UVA officials to reinforce requirements that students self-report arrests, with particular attention to student athletes. Huguely, held at the Albemarle-Charlottesville Regional Jail, was indicted on charges that include first degree murder, and received a February 2012 trial date.

During the same time, Love’s family launched the One Love Foundation, a nonprofit organization that will help administer scholarships in Love’s honor, as well as build a turf field named for her. However, according to a new report from Sports Illustrated, neither Love’s mother nor her sister speak about Huguely or follow news reports about Yeardley.

"It doesn’t change anything," Sharon Donnelly, Love’s mother, tells Sports Illustrated. "It drags you down, so why get into that?" The entire story is available here.

While Huguely’s trial is slated for February 6, defense and prosecution will meet in court on November 7 to discuss any additional motions. Last month, Huguely’s attorneys told media that their client had "no intention" of killing Love.

"From the beginning, we said this case was a tragedy, but not an intentional criminal act," said Rhonda Quagliana, one of Huguely’s two defense attorneys. Read C-VILLE’s coverage of Love and Huguely here.