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Caroline Marshall Draughon Center for the Arts & Humanities
Black Belt Treasures at Pebble Hill

Join us on Saturday, December 6, 2025 for a special holiday event. The day will include a holiday market, artist demonstrations, and more. 

FEATURED ARTISTS

  • Betty Anderson (Gee’s Bend dolls)
  • Billy Baggett (metal sculptures)
  • Claudia Pettway Charley and Francesca Charley (Gee’s Bend quilts)
  • Angela Fernandez (mixed media)
  • Kristin Law (pottery and printmaking)
  • Lisa and Dani Lemler (jewelry)
  • Andrew McCall (vine baskets and barn wood art)
  • Bud Rogers (woodcrafts)
  • Laura Spencer (goat milk soap and natural skincare)

FAQ

Parking: Available in our lot (no permit required) and along Debardeleben Street. Directions to the Caroline Marshall Draughon Center for the Arts & Humanities at Pebble Hill may be found here

Payment: Card, check, and cash accepted.

Interlocking colors that look like a quilt square with the words Black Belt Treasures underneath

Black Belt Treasures Cultural Arts Center is a non-profit organization based in Camden, Alabama. The organization was started with the objective to stimulate the economy in Alabama’s Black Belt region through the sale and promotion of fine arts and heritage crafts, as well as the provision of arts education opportunities. 

 

 


Learn About the Black Belt

Read "Black Belt Region in Alabama" from the Encyclopedia of Alabama. (Black Belt Treasures Cultural Arts Center has an article too!)

Watch Alabama Black Belt Blues, a one-hour documentary produced by One State Films in partnership with Alabama Public Television (APT).  The film, directed by Alabama filmmaker Robert Clem, is about the state’s African American blues tradition from the days of slavery through the 1930s and ‘40s, when John and Alan Lomax were able to record hundreds of songs for the Library of Congress with the aid of Sumter County folklorist Ruby Pickens Tartt, to the present day. View the film here.

Watch our playlist on YouTube: