A Tradition of Inspiration | Bella’s Featured Artist: Julie Adams

Art enables us to find ourselves and lose ourselves at the same time.

~ Thomas Merton

In her second story studio, Julie Adams was energized as the portrait of her son came to life on canvas. It was a new style for her; an oil finished in pencil. It gave the impression that the painting was not quite completed, “like my son,” she mused. “He’s not finished yet, as a person. None of us are.”

Then she learned that English artist Mark Demsteader was gaining fame and popularity in his country for the using same technique; her enthusiasm grew. “That’s what I was doing, too. When I saw his work it gave me more confidence.” Even amid comments from people saying, are you going to finish that? Julie thought, “Yes! It made me feel good that it worked for Demsteader. It could work for me, too.”

Even though Julie wonders if the new method will be well received she believes that an artist cannot worry about that if “you’re going to grow. Sometimes you have to do something even if it is just a phase. You then grow and move onto the next stage.”

A Tradition of Inspiration | Bella’s Featured Artist: Julie Adams | Aiken Bella Magazine

Portraits and Payment

Portraiture was popular among the ancient Egyptians 5,000 years ago, as a way of recording the appearance of a person. Portraits depicted the status and wealth of the models. It was common to embellish the attractive traits of the individuals rather than be realistic about their appearances. Later when customers were more than just the affluent and upper class, artists were able to create realistic paintings of their subjects.

Ever notice how in many colonial portraits the model sits at an angle with one arm front, or is painted only from the waist up? Cost was not based on how many people were in the commissioned piece; it was calculated by how many limbs were to be painted. Consequently the saying that something is “costing an arm and a leg” indicates one will have to pay a high price for something.

When Julie is commissioned to do a portrait, she ponders on what is unique about the personality of her model. Sometimes a gesture or an expression emits a narrative that she expands upon when painting. “I like to capture the real person,” she says, “ones with lots of character. I love one I painted where a young girl was chewing on a string of pearls or another was biting her lip; or a photo of two girls who seem to have a playful history together. The narrative you get from looking at them tells you something about the people.

A Tradition of Inspiration | Bella’s Featured Artist: Julie Adams | Aiken Bella Magazine

Art Eyes

Influenced by art history and her studies, Julie keeps developing her talents by “taking something from what you see or from an artist like Demsteader.” She gets stimulation from her classes and students. “A synergy develops there with everybody working and getting excited about something. Students inspire.”

The great outdoors are not one of her inspirations. She tried painting once next to a pasture. “I’m not a nature girl. I looked for cows. I was next to a stream that looked snaky to me. The wind was blowing my canvas. No, I am an indoor figurative painter.” She laughs.

Once the lights are out and the door is locked at her studio, Julie has come to realize the artist in her follows her wherever she goes. She sees things in people others miss. “I like to put on my art eyes. Once you have been drawing or studying a person a long time you can’t just leave it.” She smiles at me. “Like now I see light playing with your cheekbone; I love how the light plays across your cheek and chin, and I hate that I don’t have a pencil or piece of charcoal.  I just can’t turn it off. When I paint I hope to put on canvas what I perceive differently so another person can see what I have revealed.”

A Tradition of Inspiration | Bella’s Featured Artist: Julie Adams | Aiken Bella Magazine

Cultivating Talent

Julie teaches students that have had some painting experience, but some never picked up a brush. “They step right in and join me wherever I am. They’re learning from each other or from a conversation I may have with another student. I give brief lessons and remarks.” The lesson might be on pallet choices and mixing or point-of view. After a brief discussion her students go to their easels and paint.

“I highlight what they’re doing the correct way. The person next to that student will listen and learn from that conversation. If I read a good book on art and painting I will also teach a few lessons from that.”

Julie starts beginners off with teaching the basics of painting two pears. Students learn many things by creating that one canvas; drawing, value (shading), perspective, point-of-view, lighting, and they learn that shadows follow form. Finally students get to color. Advising them that all they need are the three primaries, white and black, students learn hands-on about mixing paint for their own art.

“They create their own secondary and tertiary colors. By using that avenue they don’t have to buy as much while learning faster.” Julie loves that the students support and help each other. She asks the class to add their own suggestions for someone’s art work.

This talented artist started teaching almost 11 years ago. Her husband had died and friend Jody Powell told Julie she needed to get out of the house and teach. She was convinced and started off with four students. Some of her original students are taking classes from her today.

Still grateful for that push from her friend, Julie shared a story about how they met. “Jody’s wife, Nan, and I were school mates in college. We moved to Atlanta where Nan had a blind date. Her blind date introduced me to my husband. Then later my husband said he wanted me to meet his best friend, Jody, who married Nan. We all became close friends and even got married three months apart. Jody was very much a part of my life. He spoke at my husband’s service.” Julie proudly informs me that Jody was Jimmy Carter’s press secretary.

Julie wants to keep teaching as long as she can. She has three commissions to paint and is enthusiastic about exploring the Demsteader technique. “I need to paint.  I’m not happy if I can’t paint. I get itchy and bitchy if I can’t do it. But I don’t want to lose time with family either. I’m not a recluse.”

The Julie Adams Studio is located at 143 Laurens Street in the Croft Building in downtown Aiken. The 2019 Annual Artist Studio Exhibit is November 8 – 9 from 10:30 am to 4:00 pm.

A Tradition of Inspiration | Bella’s Featured Artist: Julie Adams | Aiken Bella Magazine

About the Croft Building…

Julie loves working in her studio in the historic Croft Block Building. “I feel like I’m part of the world while being by myself. I am alone and play music but can look out and I’m still part of the community.” The two story building was constructed in 1884 by G.W. Croft, an Aiken lawyer who was involved in local and national politics. He died in 1904 from blood poisoning that developed from a small splinter in his hand.


A Tradition of Inspiration | Bella’s Featured Artist: Julie Adams | Aiken Bella Magazine

Who is Julie Adams?

First Job

I worked for a newspaper, The Aiken Standard. I was a go-fer

Worst Job

I never had a bad job. Seriously.

Favorite medium

Oil Paint and Graphite

Favorite subject to paint

Figurative work

When did you know you wanted to be an artist?

16 years old.

Advice for an artist

Try not to listen to that ugly little voice that sits on your shoulder.

Role model

Mark Demsteader, a british artist known for his figurative paintings.

What do you do to relax?

Read and listen to good music. I listen to classical when I read and opera when I paint.

How do you get rid of a creative block?

Draw to get back into it, more like doodle. I will also go to an art gallery to get my juices flowing again.

One word that describes you

That’s too hard… well I guess it would be: Me.


Julie Adams’ Students and Their Art

A Tradition of Inspiration | Bella’s Featured Artist: Julie Adams | Aiken Bella Magazine


A Tradition of Inspiration | Bella’s Featured Artist: Julie Adams | Aiken Bella Magazine


By Phyllis Maclay

Picture of Phyllis Maclay

Phyllis Maclay

Phyllis Maclay is a published writer of articles in Country Woman Magazine, Parent Magazine, Easy Street Magazine, and Lancaster, Pennsylvania, newspapers. Originally from Pennsylvania, Phyllis moved to Aiken from South Texas. She has published children’s plays and her novel, A Bone for the Dog, a chilling story of a father trying to rescue his little girl, is available at Booklocker.com and through her FB page. Her story, Sweet Brew and a Cherry Cane, appears in the anthology Nights of Horseplay by the Aiken Scribblers.
Picture of Phyllis Maclay

Phyllis Maclay

Phyllis Maclay is a published writer of articles in Country Woman Magazine, Parent Magazine, Easy Street Magazine, and Lancaster, Pennsylvania, newspapers. Originally from Pennsylvania, Phyllis moved to Aiken from South Texas. She has published children’s plays and her novel, A Bone for the Dog, a chilling story of a father trying to rescue his little girl, is available at Booklocker.com and through her FB page. Her story, Sweet Brew and a Cherry Cane, appears in the anthology Nights of Horseplay by the Aiken Scribblers.

In the know

Related Stories

The Nutcracker | An Iconic Christmas Tradition | Palmetto Bella

The Nutcracker | An Iconic Christmas Tradition

For many, Peter Tchaikovsky’s The Nutcracker is a holiday tradition that kicks off the holiday season. When the music starts, you can close your eyes and allow visions of sugarplums, snowflakes, flowers, and an enchanted place enter your imagination. The Nutcracker is based on E.T.A. Hoffmann’s popular 1816 story “The Nutcracker and the Mouse King.” The idea to use the story as the basis for a ballet came from the impresario and director of the Russian Imperial Theaters, Ivan Vsevolozhsky, who had conceived of The Sleeping Beauty. Vsevolozhsky and the ballet master Marius Petipa, who had choreographed The Sleeping Beauty, wrote the libretto, or story line, for The Nutcracker and

Read More »
The August Bella Book Club Review | The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo | Aiken Bella Magazine

The Southern Book Club’s Guide to Slaying Vampires – by Grady Hendrix

Bella Book Club Monthly Selection by Nichole Miller The Southern Book Club’s Guide to Slaying Vampires, by Grady Hendrix, provides an unusual combination of classic horror and old Southern charm. Patricia Campbell is a stay-at-home mom who is trying her best to raise her teenage children and care for her senile mother-in-law. Her husband, a psychiatrist, is never home and is little help, and Patricia’s sanity is starting to run thin. After embarrassing herself at the snooty local ladies’ book club, she walks out to find some of the other members forming a new book group where she is introduced to true crime stories and a group of amazing women

Read More »
I Create Beautiful Things | Palmetto Bella

I Create Beautiful Things

If there was a job called Professional Creator, I could be THAT. I love to create stuff, all kinds of stuff. I like to find forgotten yarn and watch it become something new and beautiful. I glean from thrift stores or estate sales or garages or attics and find old balls of tangled messes and watch them unfurl, and then I create anew. I enjoy taking pieces of fabric, once serving their past-life purposes, and then cut and craft them into a new blanket or quilt. I am entertained by taking wood and screws and building stuff. Sometimes it’s bird atriums for my farm animals. Or functional things like a

Read More »
Artist Spotlight | An Artist In Any Medium: From Fashion To Water Color | Palmetto Bella

Artist Spotlight | An Artist In Any Medium: From Fashion To Water Color

In 2006, a determined Barbara Beach walked into a Charleston boutique with children’s dresses that she had designed and sewn together. The owner quickly added them to the inventory, and eventually shops from West Ashley to King Street were carrying Barbara Beach Designs for the poshest tots. Women would stare at the carefully crafted dresses and secretly wish the apparel were in adult sizes (this writer is guilty as charged). The demand for these classic with a modern twist creations was gaining traction across Charleston when Beach was named a Charleston Fashion Week (CFW) Emerging Designer in 2010. This accolade included a fashion show where her small models took the

Read More »