Loy Bowlin's Holy Jewel Home
Loy Bowlin gained notoriety in his hometown of McComb, Mississippi, as the self-proclaimed 鈥淥riginal Rhinestone Cowboy.鈥 In the late seventies, Bowlin started transforming his small home into a fitting backdrop for this illustrious persona; it became 鈥淭he Beautiful Holy Jewel Home: The Home of the Original Rhinestone Cowboy.鈥 After Bowlin鈥檚 death in 1995, the home was scheduled to be razed, but luckily, a Houston artist and collector by the name of Katy Emde purchased the house, carefully documenting and dismantling it before it could be destroyed. Through the assistance of the Kohler Foundation, Inc., Loy Bowlin鈥檚 art environment found a permanent home at the Arts Center.
The preservation of art environments is a complex undertaking, and usually occurs behind closed doors in conservation labs. For the first time, and throughout the entirety of 2016, the Arts Center is offering visitors unprecedented opportunities to observe, in real time, the processes involved in the preservation and presentation of an art environment.
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Loy Bowlin gained notoriety in his hometown of McComb, Mississippi, as the self-proclaimed 鈥淥riginal Rhinestone Cowboy.鈥 In the late seventies, Bowlin started transforming his small home into a fitting backdrop for this illustrious persona; it became 鈥淭he Beautiful Holy Jewel Home: The Home of the Original Rhinestone Cowboy.鈥 After Bowlin鈥檚 death in 1995, the home was scheduled to be razed, but luckily, a Houston artist and collector by the name of Katy Emde purchased the house, carefully documenting and dismantling it before it could be destroyed. Through the assistance of the Kohler Foundation, Inc., Loy Bowlin鈥檚 art environment found a permanent home at the Arts Center.
The preservation of art environments is a complex undertaking, and usually occurs behind closed doors in conservation labs. For the first time, and throughout the entirety of 2016, the Arts Center is offering visitors unprecedented opportunities to observe, in real time, the processes involved in the preservation and presentation of an art environment.