For the past eight months, weโve been celebrating our Year of Arts by featuring all different types of arts organizations, from theatres and fine art galleries to local artists and art installations.
This month, that yearlong celebration is coming to a crest with the 50th Mount Gretna Outdoor Art Show!
As the inspiration behind the Year of the Arts and one of Sunshine Artistโs Top 200 art shows, the art show is heralded as a hallmark event for the small town of Mount Gretna each year.
So, much like any other 50th birthday celebration, we decided to look back at the early years of the art show and how it has grown throughout the decades. In doing so, we had the honor to speak to one of the founders of the art show, and a professional artist himself, Bruce Johnson. Taking us right back to 1975, Johnson generously shared a humor-filled recollection of the showโs early years and how an idea over drinks on New Yearโs Day has become the show weโre celebrating todayโฆ
And then, weโre turning from the past to the present with current art show director Kerry Royer, as she shares an inside look at this yearโs show.
In this article…
A Short History of the Mount Gretna Outdoor Art Show
The early days of the Mount Gretna Outdoor Art Show
โSounds like a great idea, letโs do itโ
It was the early hours of New Yearโs Day in 1975 when Bruce Johnson and Reed Dixon planted the seed for an art show in Mount Gretna. In the dining room of a Gretna cottage where their New Yearโs Eve parties had converged, Johnson and Dixon chatted about the many outdoor art shows that they had attended.
In that dining room with them was John Wenzler, then chair of the PA Chautauqua, the group overseeing much of the programming in Gretna. As Johnson and Dixon proposed the idea of an outdoor art show in Mount Gretna, Johnson remembers the response of Wenzler, โsounds like a great idea, letโs do it.โ Just months later, the inaugural Mount Gretna Outdoor Art Show was held.
โMount Gretnaโs Woodstockโ
Deeming it โMount Gretnaโs Woodstock,โ Johnson recalls the anticipation that they felt before the show, stating, โThe funny thing is that no one knew what was going to happen. We [Reed and Bruce] knew what an outdoor art show was, but no one else knew.โ
With art displayed on snow fencing that was borrowed from the state, the first art show brought together around a hundred artists, including work from both Johnson and Dixon. And much like the three hundred plus volunteers that help at the show today, Johnson, Dixon, and Wenzler garnered help from around the Gretna community. โWe had a lot of great friends, and a lot of people did a lot of work for this show,โ says Johnson. โEverybody had a job to do, and thatโs one of the things that made it so much fun.โ
Although they had worried that the Gretna residents would not โlike all the people invading their space,โ Johnson found that most welcomed the excitement of watching the show from their porches. Some residents, like himself, even took to hosting artists in their homes, โWe had 30 people at our houseโsome even on our porch in sleeping bagsโthey were absolutely everywhere,โ says Johnson.
In discussing that first year, Johnson admits that there was one bad thing that happened. Perhaps unsurprising for many who frequent Mount Gretna, that โbad thingโ was parking related. โA police chief was called,โ says Johnson. โReed and I worked very hard to get people to the show and he went berserk ticketing cars because there were people parked where they shouldnโt be. We were very upset with him because he probably handed out about 100 tickets.โ
Though surely not the best for their marketing, the ticketing didnโt hinder the art show from a successful return the following year. Not only that, but they even brought in support from nearby Fort Indiantown Gap National Guard Training Center, thanks to a connection through John Wenzler, โJohn was so important because he knew everyone,โ says Johnson. โHis son-in-law was a military police at Indiantown Gap, so he brought the MPโs down and they became the traffic directors and guarded the displays at night. They even turned it into an army exercise.โ
โFrom the inside out, it was an awful lot of funโ
Bruce Johnson and Reed Dixon continued to run the show for the next few years, taking turns creating the annual poster and using their advertising expertise to share the show with other artists. As professional artists themselves, Johnson and Reed also continued to display their own work while running the show, โMy space was where the music was, right in the middle of the show. In case any problems came up, I wanted to be easy to find,โ says Johnson.
Alongside their crew of volunteers, they expanded the show each year, adding in many of the elements that are seen today such as the kidsโ art show, the emerging artists section, and live music. For refreshments though, their offerings were a far cry from the gourmet food court that the show boasts today, โAt the original art shows, a family who lived in Gretna and owned Burger Kings and Pizza Huts would take over the firehouse and garage to serve hamburgers and hotdogs,โ says Johnson.
But though the food may have taken a few years to improve, the show itself grew quickly from a hundred artists that first year to over two hundred in the years that followed. While they kept to a strict 50/50 split, โReed and I were both paintersโ2-D artistsโit was our rule that the art show would be 50% 2D and 50% 3D,โ Johnson and Dixon focused heavily on enhancing the artistsโ experience, โWe tried to do all we could to make the artists feel good,โ says Johnson, โincluding selling their work, because if youโre an artist at a show and youโre not selling, youโre not coming back.โ
Johnson also credits much of the showโs growth to their word-of-mouth marketing, โIf 100 artists are all doing shows, thatโs where theyโre going to talk to each otherโโoh that show was awfulโ or โoh that show in Gretna, itโs the middle of nowhere, but you should see itโโso we promoted to artists, because without artists you donโt have an art show.โ Further, both Johnson and Dixon were working as art directors at Armstrong Worldwide Industries at the time, which Johnson says gave them valuable resources and expertise in media and advertising.
โOther people began making it what it is todayโ
After running the show those first few years, Johnson and Dixon eventually handed the baton to Karl Gettle, who would serve as the director for 15 years. Following Gettle was Linda Bell, who served at the helm for 20 years, before the showโs current director, Kerry Royer, took the reins. In looking at the years that followed after he stepped down, Johnson credits these three directors with the showโs continued success, โWe ran the show maybe four or five timesโฆ then other people began making it what it is today,โ he says.
While no longer the director, Johnson continued to exhibit his professional work at the art show for many years. More recently, he was commissioned to create the poster for the 46th show in 2020, and over the years, t-shirts, posters, and even puzzles have been printed with his work for the Mount Gretna Outdoor Art Show.
Prior to this yearโs art show, Johnson will be featured in a dialogue about the history of the art show during the PA Chautauquaโs Summer Art Lecture on Wednesday, August 14, at 7 p.m. The lecture is open to the public and will take place at the Hall of Philosophy, 212 Gettysburg Ave, Mt Gretna, PA 17064.
Learn more about the art show here!
Special thanks to Bruce & Donna Johnson for sharing their time, stories, and sharp memories with us!
About Bruce Johnson
Bruce Johnson was born in 1944 in Allentown, PA. After earning a Bachelor of Fine Arts from the Philadelphia College of Art, he served for three years as an Army illustrator in Europe, earning the Army Commendation Medal for his work with NATO. Johnson later became the art director at Armstrong World Industries, and he received multiple design awards in that role.
Eventually, Johnson left advertising and began a successful career as a professional artist. Known for his whimsical pen and ink drawings and a member of the American Watercolor Society, Johnsonโs work has been featured in countless art shows, including 64 solo shows, and he has been commissioned by many major corporations, such as the Hershey Trust Company, Boy Scouts of America, and General Electric. (bjohnsonltd.com)
Celebrating the 50th Mount Gretna Outdoor Art Show
An inside look at the 50th Art Show with Kerry Royer
The big 5-0
For the town of Mount Gretna, the art show is always a big deal. With more than 200 exhibiting artists and voted as one of โ200 Bestโ byย Sunshine Artist,ย thereโs no doubt as to why director Kerry Royer calls it โthe hallmark event of our town.โ So, with the art show celebrating its 50th go-around on August 17 and 18, excitement has been building all year long, โItโs our 50th show, so itโs a real celebration this year that weโve reached that milestone,โ says Royer. โWe have some special music performances and weโve been doing art installations all summer leading up to the show.โ
New this year
While a cake and piรฑatas might suffice for some 50th birthday celebrations, Royer is taking the celebration further by unveiling an entirely new element to the show: the Mount Gretna International Film Festival. Referred to as MTGIFF on the art show website, the festival will take place on Sunday, August 18 from noon โ 3 p.m. in the historic, open-air Gretna Playhouse.
โThe film festival really encompasses a brand-new art form for us that includes storytelling, writing, acting, cinematography, and it allows artists of a different genre to be a part of a nationally ranked show,โ says Royer.
MTGIFF also serves a greater purpose for the Gretna community, โWeโre doing this in memory and honor of Michael Evan Deitzler, who was a community member whose dream it was to start a regional film festival,โ Royer explains. By honoring the life of Deitzler and his passion for film, the festival โhopes to cultivate and spread the creativity of filmmakers from all over the world by means of coming together and celebrating film โUnder the Trees of Old Chautauqua.โโ (mtgretnaarts.com).
All entries to the festival are short filmsโfive minutes and underโand the winning entries will be awarded and screened during the festival on Sunday. The awards given will include those for standard genres such as horror and comedy, as well as a Lebanon County resident spotlight and a best of high school spotlight.
โMasters of their chosen mediumโ
With 200 artists exhibiting at this yearโs show, thereโs no shortage of variation among the works that will be on display, โWe have many different categories, and the artists exhibiting are really masters of their chosen medium,โ says Royer. โWe have pottery, ceramics, painting, fabric & fiber, metal work, sculpture, jewelry, precious metals, nonprecious metals, wood, and then every artistโs interpretation of those mediumsโmixed media, digital.โ
Although the art show no longer follows the 50/50 rule established by its founders, Bruce Johnson and Reed Dixon, in which the show was required to be split equally between 2D and 3D works, the show is still juried. For artists, as explained by Royer, the jury process means that their work must pass through a panel of professional artists and educators which rotates each year. While this ensures the quality of work in the show, it also helps increase variety among the artists chosen, โSo, we may not have the same artists back every year because our professional jury is different each year.โ
In this yearโs show, there will be 45 new artists who have not exhibited at the show before. Additionally, through the art showโs โEmerging Artists Program,โ there will be 10 exhibiting artists who have yet to exhibit their work in any shows, โThe art show supports the Emerging Artists Program so that we can encourage the next generation of artists to learn the business end of selling their art and having an opportunity to experience what itโs like to exhibit in a major show.โ
Putting it all together
Kerry Royer has been running the art show since 2018. Attracted to the townโs โconvergence of art and nature,โ she is a resident of Mount Gretna herself and celebrates the role that the arts play in the town, โI think that Mount Gretna has harnessed the power of the arts to build community,โ she states. โThereโs really a place for everyone to be involved in the art show.โ
And that statement is no exaggeration: Royer shares that it takes around 300 volunteers to transform the small town for the show each August. In talking to visiting artists, Kerry explains that this feat is often a topic of conversation, โThey canโt believe what weโre able to put together in this tiny little community,โ she says.
Royer admits that it often feels like a puzzle deciding where each artist will display their work around Gretnaโs small streets and pathways, but as one who was able to run an art show through a global pandemic and into its fiftieth year, it is of little surprise that Royer rises to the challenge, โI often say that our charm is our challenge, but we make it work,โ she chimes.
As the entire Lebanon Valley comes together for the Year of the Arts in honor of the 50th art show, Kerry shares in the celebration of not just the arts, but the way in which the arts are embodied in Mount Gretna, โI think itโs just our unique sense of place. We have this charming community, we set up the tents on the streets that are lined with these Victorian cottages, we have the canopy of the tree, we have our grassy parks, and our historic buildings, and itโs all encompassed in that area.โ
Learn more about the art showย here!
About Kerry Royer
Kerry Royer has been in her role as the director of the Mount Gretna Outdoor Art Show since 2018. She serves as the vice board chair of Visit Lebanon Valley and as a board member of the Mount Gretna Arts Council.
With a masterโs degree in art education from Penn State University and a graduate certificate in arts in medicine from the University of Florida, Royer also works as manager of arts and music programs at healthcare facilities.
She recently authored โPorches of Mount Gretna: A Photo Journalโ alongside photographer Shannon Fretz. The book can be found at the Mount Gretna Visitor Center, Mount Gretna Area Historical Society, and MG Mercantile. Royer resides with her family in Mount Gretna.