Archive for August, 2009
Jackson Hole photographer David Brookover, owner of Brookover Gallery, will add a new gallery space in Santa Fe, New Mexico this fall. Brookover plans to commence operations in November. The new space, also be called Brookover Gallery, will occupy 2,000 square feet on Santa Fe’s famed Canyon Road. The new gallery will feature Brookover’s large format photography, with an emphasis on his new platinum prints.
“Santa Fe allows me to show work of the kind I’m becoming more interested in,” says Brookover. “The town offers an international clientele, a market more favorably geared, year-round, to the new emphasis in my photography.”
“I have so much stored away here that’s not really appropriate for Jackson, that I want to show. Santa Fe is the art market. The economy is slow, but I’ve been here nine years, and it’s time to dive in. I’m really excited.”
Brookover will rotate exhibits and says he’ll be in Santa Fe for an extended period of time to get things going. He’s been considering opening a new gallery for almost four years (Brookover opened his Jackson gallery in the lower level of his current space), but the timing had to be right. Serendipity happened; the right space became available. While the Jackson gallery displays color, black and white, and platinum prints taken in Japan, Wyoming, Colorado, Utah, New Mexico, California and other locations, the new space will concentrate on platinum images of Japan, the southwest and areas of the Colorado Plateau, horses and…nudes.
Yep, nudes! The last time I saw photographs of nudes on the Jackson Hole arts scene was several years ago, when Spencer Tunick’s nude landscapes came to town.
What a hubbub! I almost went to jail for writing about the show.
Brookover is branching out, taking a leap into the human landscape. He’s just
finished shooting a series of nudes–inspired in part by Edward Weston–and plans to introduce them to the public during Jackson’s September Fall Arts Festival. Currently, Brookover says he’ll include two platinum prints, black and whites, and a few color images.
And, Brookover has a coffee table book in the works. Black silk and boxed, it will spotlight his black and white images; a limited collector’s edition will include a platinum print.
Item #2
Painter Lee Carlman Riddell opens her new show, Field Days and Figures, at Trio Fine Art with an artist’s reception on Thursday, August 13, 6-8 pm. Riddell will talk about her work from 5-6 pm
Riddell’s rich color pops from her relatively small canvases; 8″ x 10″ is a preferred format. Titles from the show connote pastoral sublimity: “Willows & Meadow, Wyoming,” “Wisteria Over Door, Tuscany,” and “Fall Colors, Wyoming.” Printed on the show’s flier are poems by Riddell, describing her contemplative and creative connections to the spaces and places she paints: South Park, Wilson’s dike, Greg McHuron’s studio. And, in Italy, Florence and Tuscany.
Figure drawings are a part of this show, too. Field Days & Figures remains on display through August 29. 734-4444. www.triofineart.com.
The Legacy Gallery hosts a two-man show for Western artists James Ayers and Jason Rich this month. An opening reception will be held on Thursday, August 6, at the gallery, 75 N. Cache, on the Jackson Town Square southwest corner. Both artists will be present.
Ayers, a Rhode Island School of Design grad, is noted for his portraits of Indians. (John Byrne Cooke almost decapitated me for using the term “Native American,” a term, according to Cooke, coined by wrong-headed white men.) His travels and observations of Iroquois, Sioux and Hopi inform his works, oil paintings on canvas. I’ve read that he’s influenced by a diverse group of great masters: John Singer Sargent, Gauguin, Klimt, and Henry Tanner. That list encompasses myriad uses of light and paint; the latter artist’s painting style alone varied extensively over the course of his career.
Jason Rich also chronicles the Western life, but with a focus on cowboys and their
horses. Imbued with an illustrative golden light, Rich’s landscape-cowboy-horse portraits capture ranch life and individual moments of reflection, traversing the plains, resting the herd creekside, riding the range under endless skies fluffed by cumulous clouds. His love of ranch life springs from his own childhood on a Utah farm.
For additional information contact Legacy Gallery at 307-733-2353 or maya@legacygallery.com.
Item #2 : O’Connor at Galleries West
E.C. O’Connor’s solo exhibition, “Willing: Saying Yes to the Road Less Traveled,” is featured at Galleries West, August 6-19. The show highlights O’Connor’s productive Joshua Tree National Park residency, as well as landscapes painted in the Greater Yellowstone region.
Talented Jackson Hole artists of all ilk often go about their day-to-day lives unnoticed. O’Connor is one: she waits tables at Nora’s, landscapes, and does her fair share of outreach work in and around the valley. But, as has previous posts have reported, O’Connor is an accomplished landscape painter recently awarded the coveted Joshua Tree residency. At Joshua Tree, the artist created many new works–one painting will become a permanent part of that park’s collection.
“Many people perceive undeveloped areas as valueless and inhospitable,” says O’Connor. “In no place is this more true than in our nation’s deserts. My goal is to show the inherent beauty within a very harsh environment.”
She is a passionate on-location painter; no painting from photographs for her. As McHuron likes to do, O’Connor paints the “wow.” Her light recalls that of such master painters as Maynard Dixon, E. Martin Hennings and Edgar Payne.
An artist’s reception happens August 6, 5-8 PM. O’Connor will be in attendance–yay, I finally get to meet her!–and hors d’oeuvres, wine, beer, and the gallery’s hallmark chocolate fountain will be available. Call the gallery at 307-733-4412 or visit www.gallerieswestjacksonhole.com.
Galleries West twitters. You can also follow the gallery on Twitter (www.twitter.com/gallerieswest) and their page on Facebook (http://tinyurl.com/gallerieswest).
Item #3

Mary Roberson opens her new show, Nature is the Life of the Dream, at Altamira Fine Art on Thursday, August 6. A reception will be held 5:00-7:00 pm. More on this exhibit in my next post, but don’t miss what promises to be a good kickoff for a special show. connect@altamiraart.com.
Item#4
Jackson Hole Center for the Arts’ founder John Tozzi and Center resident Dancers Workshop Artistic Director Babs Case are 2009′s Winners of the Award for Creativity.
Case’s 11-year devotion to Dancers’ Workshop has transformed a small, back-office company into a state-of-the-art outfit. DW provides dance classes and performances for all ages, all tastes; its electric current and constant vivacity are one of Jackson’s main creative arteries. It’s all due to Case, who, in addition to her dancing and directing, is an accomplished visual artist. It could be said that Case ignited finding new venues for artists not able to appear in galleries, with her popular summer “Harpo’s Art Fair,” a day-long fun arts n’ picnic in Bab’s back yard. Fun like Alice’s Wonderland fun. Jodeen Tebay beautifully writes, “while dance is what brought Babs to the community, space is her true passion. On the stage, on paper, in textiles, in architecture, and in life she sees and creates beautiful compositions of space.”
Nobody deserves this award more than Babs Case. Congratulations, Babs!
Congratulations to, to co-winner John Tozzi, without whom Jackson would not have the magnificent Jackson arts hub, the Center for the Arts. Said Bruce Hawtin, “It is at times difficult to be creative and make a living. Because of John, the arts, all of the arts in Jackson Hole, have a home; therefore they have a place to be creative. That doesn’t spell success but it removes one of the obstacles.”
The Cultural Council of Jackson Hole invites everyone to attend the 15th Annual Award for Creativity Celebration on Thursday, September 10 from 5 – 6:30 p.m. at Dancers’ Workshop’s Studio 1 in the Center for the Arts. 2009 recipients will be presented with awards made by a local artist. This year’s artist is Laurie Thal.
Jeff Ham and Malcolm Furlow open a new show, “The West – Expressions in Color,” August 1 – 15, at Mountain Trails Gallery. An artists’ reception takes place Thursday, August 6, 5-8 p.m. Mountain Trails is ensconced in its new space, on the northeast corner of Jackson Town Square. Haven’t been in? Now’s your chance–both artists will be on hand.
Is it me, or does this gentleman look angry? Ham portraits have conveyed pride, spirituality…check his earlier big, brightly painted, delineated portraits. They’re thinking, “I’m huge. I’m beautiful. I’m iconic.” Now, paint is thrown in the face of confidence, a bloodied history is realized, and Ham’s “Blue Indian” is tear tracked, a devastating accusation in his eyes.
This evolved perspective is a good reason to check out Ham’s new works. His color and composition spring from a background in illustration — Ham is a Disney veteran.
“I do my best to translate emotion and feelings into color and communicate my individual interpretation of each subject,” he explained. ”My goal is to capture spontaneity. As an artist I am learning to express myself in an honest and straightforward manner.”
Malcolm Furlow wears a coat of many painting colors; his vivid canvases reflect a love of the outdoors, landscape, Western history, cowboys and wildlife.
Furlow lives and works primarily at his northern New Mexico ranch. Sitting under
the pinion trees provides peace and solitude that feed his creative soul. I remember a story about a bull, Ferdinand, who sat under a cork tree smelling flowers, away from all the other sparring, fighting bulls. It’s a story of peace. 307.734.8150.
Item #2:
Lyndsay McCandless plans on pulling out another First Friday this month. She’s got rocker Charlotte Potter and Friends set to play at Lyndsay McCandless Contemporary on Friday, August 7.
That’s great music. Drove by the gallery the other day, and McCandless still has works up; she’s not done. Perhaps she should just turn it all into a nightclub? A coffee house? We don’t have a coffee house. The kind with beatnik poets and red checked table cloths. Maybe Mike Bressler would show up and do a reading. Pay for his food. We don’t have a university town bookstore/bistro kind of place, where ensembles play cellos in the corner, and there are shelves and shelves of things to read, book-related items to buy, newspapers from around the world, AND art on the wall…ALL IN ONE PLACE. Breakfast would be nice, too.
Give 10% to the Art Blog, please. (nod, nod, wink, wink!)
PS: Lyndsay McCandless is promoting her new venture, SLAM, a farmer’s market for artists taking place on Saturdays, at 10:00 am – 5:00 pm, at the gallery. Finish up at the Town Square Farmer’s Market, then head on over to Jackson Street. 734.0649.
Item #3
CIAO Gallery’s deadline for entry to Nocturnes: Art Inspired by the Night
was July 31, but give gallery director Michelle Walters a call if you missed it. Walters tells me that anyone applying for CIAO exhibitions can do so online, via the gallery’s website. “Nocturnes” opening reception is scheduled for Saturday, August 22.
CIAO’s next deadline, for its 2nd Annual Call of the Wild is August 7th. The show will run during Fall Arts Festival week. Check the website’s “Call to Artists” tab. For more information contact Walters, or visit www.ciaogallery.com.


