art + exploration by Jennifer Drinkwater
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PAINTINGS

G. G. G. (Greenwood Girls' Garage)

G. G. G. (Greenwood Girls' Garage)

$1,500.00

Jennifer Drinkwater. G.G.G. (Greenwood Girls’ Garage), acrylic on wood, 15” x 15” x 1.5” , 2025

G.G.G. (Greenwood Girls’ Garage) arrives wired and ready to hang. Each panel is handcrafted by mounting a smooth plywood surface onto a sturdy, mitred wooden frame that provides depth and support to the painting. The sides of the panel are sanded and finished for smoothness.

Please allow 3-4 weeks for shipping and handling.

Twenty percent of profit supports ArtPlace Mississippi, an nonprofit arts organization in Greenwood, Mississippi.

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The community story that inspired G.G.G. (Greenwood Girls’ Garage)…

In 2019, I spent a day with Yolande Van Herdeen, an expat South African whose path serendipitously led her to Greenwood, Mississippi. When I met her in 2019, Yolande was serving as the artist-in-residence at ArtPlace Mississippi, a community art center in downtown Greenwood offering classes and programs for all ages. What stayed with me from that visit wasn’t just the art itself, but the way Yolande explained the unique role ArtPlace plays in Greenwood.

Greenwood has 15 schools- public, private, religious. For a town of 13,600 people, that’s a lot. Each school has its own community with its own activities, sports and events. Add that to the dozens of churches in town, the many neighborhoods and private clubs, and it becomes clear why it can be such a real challenge to cross paths with people outside your own school, church, club, or neighborhood.

And so ArtPlace functions as a kind of bridge where youth from all schools, regardless of their art experience, can come and hang out and maybe get to know each other in the creative environment as well as teens in the teen art club (and the Grown Folks Art Club if you’re adult). In a town where cultures often run in parallel without ever crossing, places like this are rare. And they matter, deeply.

In 2019, ArtPlace Mississippi had a happening woodshop on the second floor of their downtown facility. If you’ve not spent much time in a woodshop, this one checked all the boxes: electrical saws and drills, a large wooden worktable, clamps, hand tools, spare lumber all covered with the fine mist of wood chips. Woodshops smell amazing, like fresh possibility and the forest.

In 2018 and 2019, this particular woodshop was outfitted at ArtPlace for Girls’ Garage workshops, which were held several times a year to teach women over 16 years basic building skills with power tools. Usually, 8 to 12 women would sign up and  learn to build lamps or Christmas trees made from recycled wood or other inspired projects. As they put it: ‘Greenwood’s Girls’ Garage is for ladies—both young and a little less young—to learn the basics of power tools, construction, and the confidence to take on projects of their own.’”

The Greenwood program was modeled after the original Girls’ Garage, founded in California in 2013 by an architect who set out to build confidence in young women and help close the gender gap in construction fields. Since then, more than 1,000 young women in California have taken part, completing 207 projects—including several that served their communities. The impact has been striking: nearly 96 percent of participants report a boost in confidence, a crucial shift during such a formative stage of life.