The following is an
excerpt from “Exploring Cajun Country: A Tour of Historic Acadiana” by Cheré
Coen
Bricklayer
Kenny Hill settled in the small bayou town of Chauvin in 1988, just below Houma, Louisiana, erecting a tent
on a bayou-side lot while he built his home. Then in 1990 he started creating
pieces of concrete sculptures throughout the property, mainly those with a religious
tone or a Biblical reference. There are angels and other celestial figures, a 45-foot-tall
lighthouse made up of 7,000 bricks, cowboys, soldiers and the artist himself,
sometimes expressing a conflict between good and evil. Hill didn’t create these
folk art pieces to share with others. He called his work a “story of
salvation,” according to Nichols State University, which now owns the property,
although by the year 2000 when he was evicted for not keeping the grass and
weeds down, he was dismayed by religion and reportedly knocked the head of
Jesus off a statue when he left.
The
Kohler Foundation purchased the property, which has been gifted to Nichols State in Thibodaux and is now the Chauvin Sculpture Garden and Art Studio. The site
at 5337 Bayouside Drive is open to the public from dawn to dusk but the NSU
Folk Art Studio’s hours vary; call (985) 594-2546 or the Nicholls State University Division of Art at (985) 448-4597.
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