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PVCC presents annual Let There Be Light outdoor art exhibition on Dec. 13

Crystal Graham
PVCC let there be light exhibition 2024
Eric Smart with Welding, Sparks, Night

The Piedmont Virginia Community College visual arts department will hold its annual Let There Be Light outdoor art exhibition on Friday, Dec. 13, from 6 to 9 p.m.

The event will take place on the PVCC grounds surrounding the V. Earl Dickinson Building, on the main campus in Charlottesville.

This family-friendly event is free and includes hot chocolate and warm apple cider served at no charge.

Let There Be Light celebrates the approach of winter and the longest night of the year with illuminated artworks and performances created by local artists, students and community members.

Although flashlights will be available to borrow, visitors to the exhibition are encouraged to bring their own to help guide them down lighted paths leading through the dark to the installations.

Visitors are also invited to decorate themselves with light to add to the festivities.

Local food trucks will be on site offering snacks and refreshments for purchase, and free parking is available adjacent to the site.

About the exhibition: Our natural world


The 2024 exhibition features glowing sculptures, a dance performance, an outdoor pottery kiln and the recurring theme of our natural world.

PVCC’s partnership with the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts continues with the return of “VMFA on the Road,” now housed in a new, state-of-the-art trailer.

The traveling gallery illustrates the universality of human emotions in its latest exhibition, “Love, Laughter, Tears: An Artist’s Guide to Emotions,” with paintings, prints, photographs and film from the VMFA permanent collection. The exhibition examines the relationship between art and emotion and considers how artistic depictions of emotions can connect humanity and foster mutual understanding.

PVCC let there be light Ashtin bowman
Ashtin Bowman’s sculpture “Where the Lost Things Go”
  • The Doran Family’s “Moon Blossom” – a secret nighttime garden with large glowing flowers
  • Ashtin Bowman’s sculpture “Where the Lost Things Go” – which suggests that lost trinkets and treasures of childhood were never truly lost but were instead borrowed by fairies
  • Alli Thompson & Dan Mahon’s Fruiting Bodies of the “Wood Wide Web” – an audio interpretation of the unseen subterranean chitter & chatter among the woods
  • David Posner’s “The Fan” – a musically interactive spectacle of dancing lights and colors
  • Alexandria Searls’ video installation “Welding, Sparks, Night,” highlighting the beauty of welding and photography with PVCC students featured in the films.
  • Stacey Evans’ window installation “Lighthearted Whimsy,” which displays clouds and train views, capturing the transitional moments of daily and seasonal rhythms and the interplay of artificial and natural light
  • Roberto Kamide’s “Vesuvius” – a conical structure made of wire and tissue paper
  • Rose Guterbock & Piper Groves’ tiny mementos in “Moon House: Altar of Light” – a reminder that light waxes and wanes but always ultimately returns
  • Chris Haske & Peabody School’s luminous “The Willow of Realms,” which holds small worlds of illuminated possibility
  • Inside the Dickinson Building, the PVCC Gallery will be open for viewings of its latest exhibition, “Process = Progress: Peeking Behind the Curtain of Creativity.” Paintings, a mural, drawings, sculpture and more showcase the often-hidden work of the creative process as artists make their finished pieces.

More information on Let There Be Light


In case of rain, Let There Be Light will be held Saturday, Dec. 14, from 6 to 9 p.m.

For more information, contact Fenella Belle at [email protected] or (434) 961-5362.

Crystal Graham

Crystal Graham

Crystal Abbe Graham is the regional editor of Augusta Free Press. A 1999 graduate of Virginia Tech, she has worked for 25 years as a reporter and editor for several Virginia publications, written a book, and garnered more than a dozen Virginia Press Association awards for writing and graphic design. She was the co-host of "Viewpoints," a weekly TV news show, and co-host of Virginia Tonight, a nightly TV news show on PBS. Her work on "Virginia Tonight" earned her a national Telly award for excellence in television.