Walt Phelan in his new multi-media gallery, Seraphim (Credit: Natalie Brashear)

Seraphim, a new multi-media gallery, will open Friday, July 15th, at 437 North Cleveland in the Crosstown area. And the first featured artist is about as Crosstown as you can get โ€” Hi Tone Cafe owner Brian โ€œSkinnyโ€ McCabe.

The gallery owner is Walt Phelan, who is becoming something of a Renaissance Man when it comes to the visual and performing arts. Phelan, 27, a guitarist in the Walt Phelan band, is a veteran of several Memphis bands, including Super Low. He also owns a recording studio, Purple Church Recording, which is located above the art gallery.

A print shop was in the space where the gallery is now located, but it was expanding and had to move to a warehouse, Phelan says. โ€œI always wanted to open a multi-media gallery and that space was big enough to do it.โ€

He opened Purple Church Recording in March, 2021. โ€œOriginally, it was just going to be for me,โ€ Phelan says. โ€œThen we started accumulating a lot of equipment.โ€

He then realized he could make more money from the studio by letting other people record their music there. โ€œIโ€™m having engineers come in. They rent out the studio and they can record their own artists. So, it’s kind of like a community-type thing. Anybody can rent it.โ€ 

He describes Seraphim as โ€œa dynamic exhibition space intended for local artists to rent for a period of time.โ€ That includes people who want to show a film, or hold a listening party for an album, or talk about a book they wrote. โ€œIโ€™ve got some guys that are holding a motorcycle show in there,” Phelan says. โ€œItโ€™s like a vintage bike show, where the guys have rebuilt the things. Theyโ€™ll roll them in, set them side by side, sell them, or auction them off.โ€

Phelan also is considering โ€œvendor pop-upsโ€ that would include food and vintage clothing. And he might add music to the mix. โ€œNot a full-on band. Iโ€™m thinking individual artists do singer-songwriter with just an acoustic guitar or keyboard.โ€

His main goal with Seraphim was โ€œto build a space that serves and brings people together in Memphis.โ€ He wants to cater to less established artists. โ€œI really want it to be a community thing. People can walk in and feel comfortable even if theyโ€™ve never had a show before. I want them to be able to come in and do their thing.โ€

Phelan, who performs around town, got into guitar in a roundabout way. He and a friend played the video game, Guitar Hero, when they were in the sixth grade at St. Dominic School. โ€œWe got pretty good at it.โ€ They then decided to learn to play actual guitars. โ€œThatโ€™s what shot it off, man.โ€

Phelan joined his first band, China Gate, which later became Super Low, when he was a junior at Christian Brothers High School. โ€œIt was kind of power-pop indy rock. We toured the country with those bands. But the pandemic hit and it just kind of fizzled out.โ€

Now, Phelan’s band current band, Walt Phelan, is โ€œa singer-songwriter kind of thing with a band behind it.โ€ The group released Worldโ€™s Away, an album of originals, in February, 2021. He describes their music as โ€œsynth-driven singer-songwriter indy music.โ€

When he announced he was opening a gallery. โ€œIt was just, โ€˜Oh, what is this guy doing? Heโ€™s never done anything with art before.โ€™ But artists need an outlet. It really fell in my lap and I thought, โ€˜Okay, Iโ€™ve got to do this.โ€™โ€,

Seraphim and Purple Church have nothing to do with religion. Quite the contrary. โ€œPlatinum Plus was a strip club in Southeast Memphis, says Phelan, โ€œso, when anybody who knows what that is hears โ€˜Purple Church,โ€™ itโ€™s a nostalgia thing.โ€

Asked how he happened to choose McCabe, Phelan says McCabeโ€™s wife, Katey, is an owner of the print shop that was downstairs. โ€œHe said, โ€˜Oh, man. Iโ€™ve been working on pieces during the pandemic I want to show off.โ€™ Every time he posts, people think itโ€™s a joke. But itโ€™s the real thing. Itโ€™s a slew of things. Some graphic art pieces that he made on his computer. Some tapestries he painted on.โ€

โ€œIโ€™ve always been the creative type,โ€ McCabe says. โ€œBasically, in high school I was in Honors Art 1, 2, and 3. As things go, my conduct kept me out of Art 4. But thatโ€™s another story.โ€

โ€œIโ€™d always doodle on stuff. Iโ€™m not taking myself seriously about this at all.โ€ The โ€œfunny stuff,โ€ he says, was โ€œkind of fecal drawing. Doo-doo on stuff. And being silly. Cheeseburgers. Things that motivate me.โ€

He kept his creativity up while running The Hi Tone Cafe. โ€œYou have to make posters for upcoming bands and attention-grabbing stuff. So, Iโ€™ve always had this creative side. And doing the booking for 300 plus shows a year for 18 years โ€” or however long Iโ€™ve been doing it โ€” thereโ€™s always something to create.โ€

McCabe says had a โ€œton of down timeโ€ during the pandemic. He’d just moved The Hi Tone Cafe to a new location at 282-284 North Cleveland Street, and wasnโ€™t getting crowds because of COVID. โ€œMy wife suggested I get back into art.โ€

He began making some โ€œgeometric color pop stuffโ€ on the computer. Then he ran across a black and white painting of singer-songwriter John Mayer at a thrift shop. โ€œAnd I was like, โ€˜It would be hilarious to make him shitting his pants.โ€™ I donโ€™t know why it struck me that day. So, I just started buying paintings at thrift stores and stuff and painting poop on it.โ€

Thatโ€™s why he titled his Seraphim show, โ€œdi-ART-rrhea.โ€

McCabeโ€™s show will open with a wine and cheese reception from 7 to 11 p.m. Friday, July 15th. โ€œAnd then Josh McLane is going to have some sandwiches,โ€ Phelan says.

Seraphim and Purple Church Recording are night-time projects for Phelan, who also is a guitar technician at American Musical Supply in Olive Branch, Mississippi, working on guitars Monday through Friday.

A recording studio, a mixed media gallery, singing and songwriting, and working on guitars โ€” whatโ€™s next for Phelan? โ€œThis is kind of it for me right now. The plan is in 20 years to be sitting in a mountain home in East Tennessee. But for now, this is what Iโ€™m doing.โ€

For bookings and enquiries, go to natalie@purplechurchrecording.com

Michael Donahue began his career in 1975 at the now-defunct Memphis Press-Scimitar and moved to The Commercial Appeal in 1984, where he wrote about food and dining, music, and covered social events until...