Archive for November, 2009
Trailside Galleries Holiday Miniatures Glow
Trailside Galleries Home for the Holidays Miniature Show presents a Santa-sized bag full of miniature paintings this December. Beginning December 1, and running through December 31, Trailside’s East Broadway gallery showcases works sized for your stocking by many of its artists.
“Subjects could be the sweeping landscapes of the West or the neighboring wildlife native to North America.  Many genres and mediums will be represented and collectors can be sure to find a wide variety of fabulous miniature paintings—perfect for the holiday season,” says Trailside’s Cara Kelly.
The gallery hopes this selection of small painting “jewels” will speak to our love of
the region’s special beauty, its sense of home and the pleasures of being surrounded by family and friends. The holidays are also a time for transformation and receiving nature’s oft intangible messages of hope, nourishment and love, as well as awareness of all that sustains us.
Trailside Galleries will be open every day during December, with the exception of Christmas and New Year’s. For information, contact Cara Kelly at cara@trailsidegalleries.com.
(This is the first of a two-part story.)
San Francisco landscape architecture Professor (U.C. Berkeley) Walter Hood has been hailed by KQED San Francisco Public Television and Public Radio as a leader in urban refurbishment. His resuscitation of local parks in Oakland and San Francisco, has “….integrated architectural features such as playgrounds, plazas and squares into city sites whose pasts are vibrant but forgotten. By reflecting the shifting cultural composition and respecting the evolving nature of neighborhoods….,[Hood] has created an oasis in these areas, and through his close involvement with the local communities, he developed tailored solutions for Bay Area based parks while retaining a cohesive artistic vision.”
Hood is principal of Hood Design; his reputation and projects span the globe. He’s at work on a new book, “Urban Landscapes: American Landscape Typologies.”
Last summer I had the pleasure of sitting down with Hood, and I asked him his impressions of Jackson’s landscapes–natural and man-made.
The first thing he told me was that green community plans are a relatively new thing.
Some years ago Hood met with Center for the Arts staff and officials to propose a project around the Center; that project didn’t happen, but Hood has had multiple chances to observe our town’s practices and choices about public art and landscaping.
“It was a great experience to come here… because I met so many people and I love this landscape. As a place, it is unique….I am much more interested in the landscape here and how we can live in a place and somehow bring the
accoutrements from other places…. I was just out in Teton Village, and you could be anywhere! I could be in some California town, some hillside town,” says Hood.
Hood imagines a trail system connecting all valley communities; on the flip side, he’s surprised to find that, in a place as unique as this, people are living much like people do in most other places: with a car out front, standard roofs, excessive traffic. In a place like Jackson, we should be forcing ourselves to change the footprint we leave upon the earth.
In a place like Jackson, public spaces should be about scaling and shifting the existing landscape, to enmesh people in a landscape experience so that art and landscape are “legible.”
Pointing to a cluster of aspens and evergreens on a Jackson street corner, Hood says he’d never plant such species on that spot.
“With Snow King there–it’s all about Snow King. The trees block it. If I am working in a neighborhood of small scale, that’s one thing. But this is huge, the glacier on that mountain is EVIDENT.”
Indeed, when I retrieve my mail on Pearl Avenue, cross over to Betty Rock, and look up, I now see big, bulky condos. Snow King is wiped from view. As Franz Camenzind has said, if people look up and can’t see the mountains, how can they be connected to the space? The rim is gone. Landscape lost.
The only people who will be able to see the mountain from that vantage point are the new condo owners.
“How can you not work in another way?” asks Hood. “I’m being completely conceptual, I know. But that’s one of the things that’s really important. Every time we do a drawing, we always show Snow King in the background. Because everything you do is in reference to this thing. How you make decisions. Take this
corner of town we’re talking about, with the trees, along this major street, Pearl Avenue, it would not be a hard thing to protect that view. You need to say that when you are on this street that ridge line view should be protected.”
Hood notes that our process is typical of what rural communities started doing in the 70′s.
“Before you know it, what you value is gone. You forget the place because you are so immersed in it. When you live there. It happens to a lot of communities over time because you stop seeing it. It becomes so familiar. Then one day you look around and wonder what happened. How did we get this way?”
Shhhhh. It’s a silent auction.
The 15th Annual Out of the Woods Silent Art Auction, an Art Association favorite, takes place Friday, November 20th, 6-8 pm at the Center for the Arts Theater Lobby.
We don’t have Todd around, but we still have his “shhh!” A sort of an in-house ‘palates and palettes’ arts event, the evening promises a throng of art-lover clamoring for food, wine and….local art. Artists donate works, and the public bids on art of all kinds, via a silent auction. It’s loads of fun, and all proceeds raise money for the Art Association’s Educational Programming.
On your mark, get set…..start shopping! For information, contact Amy Fradley at 307.733.8792 or email amyf@artassociation.org.
Also at the Art Association – specifically upstairs in the Artspace Loft Gallery – check out “Little Cayman,” on display November 13 – December 31, 2009.
Drool and live vicariously through News & Guide grand dame Liz McCabe, who has been visiting Little Cayman. The exhibit is billed as a collection of visions of the south seas idyll by McCabe, Jon Stuart, Laura McWethy, Tom Montgomery and others.
If they need someone to carry their bags, they should give me a call. www.artassociation.org.
Item #2:Â Thal Glass
Glass blower Laurie Thal blows and fires her magic goblets, vases and vessels in her Teton Village Road studio. Every fall -or early winter, depending on how you experience November - she hosts a holiday open house, and this year’s holiday event takes place Saturday, November 21, 9:00 am – 5:00 pm. This is a free event, and a fun excursion for the whole family.
Thal will be there, giving demonstrations and answering questions–the studio is typically stocked with a variety of glass items, in a variety of sizes and price points and a veritable rainbow of colors.
Thal has not supplied a contact phone number, but click on her website–linked above–for more information and a good look at her wares.
Wildlife photographer Tom Mangelsen’s October presentation at the National Museum of Wildlife Art was so packed, they had to send people away. So, Mangelsen is generously presenting his program again–at NMWA–on Thursday, November 19th, at 7:00 p.m. Mangelsen will talk about his nature photography, specifically the work now on view at the Museum. That exhibition, “The Natural World: Photographs by Thomas D. Mangelsen,” is on display through April 25th, 2009.
I can make this one, yay!  By the way, the last post on Mangelsen’s show was Twittered about, out in the enviromental-creative universe….proof we’re all connected. Proof that Wyoming’s artists are among the best in the world when it comes to representing this powerful place.
For information, give NMWA a call at 307.733.5771 or log on to www.wildlifeart.org.
Item #2:Â Repeat Arts Grant Opportunities
A second deadline has been added to receive grant money from Art Works of Wyoming (AWW), a Wyoming Arts Council program. Funding comes from the National Endowment for the Arts.
Timeline is as follows:
- December 11, 2009 2nd deadline to apply for AWW funds.
- February 11-12, 2010 WAC Board meeting and 2nd Art Works for Wyoming Panel.
- February 19, 2010 Award letters for second funding deadline issued.
For full details and guidelines, log onto the Wyoming Arts website here.
Item #3:
Colorado landscape painter David W. Mayer’s paintings “Autumn at String Lake” and “Spring Runoff” are to be included in the C.M. Russell Art Auction, in Great Falls, Montana next Spring. The auction takes place March 17-20.
Mayer, a colleague of painters Scott Christensen, T. Allen Lawson and other painters; he is an acolyte of such writers and artists as Richard Schmid, Edgar Payne, Joaquin Sorolla and the California Impressionists.
The C.M. Russell Art Auction is juried.
No matter where she goes to hang her hat, Jackson’s plein air artist Kathryn Mapes Turner paints the landscape. As a fourth generation Triangle X Ranch family member — the famed dude ranch is located in Grand Teton National Park — Turner grew up observing wilderness and ranch life in one of the most spectacular landscapes on earth.
Even Nobel Prize winning economist Paul Krugman noted Jackson Hole and Grand Teton National Park’s exquisite beauty while referencing the annual Fed Economic Summit that takes place there.
Turner also has strong Washington D.C. ties. She finds beauty in that city’s historic, classical landscape, an expansive city conceived as the seat of our country’s government. D.C.’s architecture is influenced by ancient Egypt, Greece and Rome and 19th century France.
For Turner, painting is a language expressing her deep appreciation of the world around her. “My paintings are my response to what I find magnificent. This magnificence can be found everywhere from the monumental to the mundane,” she says.
“Magnifique,” a collection of new paintings and drawings by Turner, opens Friday November 13, at Susan Calloway Fine Arts, in Washington.  An opening reception is scheduled that evening from 6-8 pm.  The show remains up through December 12th, 2009.
Says the gallery of Turner’s work, “Her superb drawing ability and familiarity with her subjects allow her to break at will from pure representation, successfully abstracting her subject matter without losing its essence. She moves seamlessly from watercolor to oil without changing her style, using each medium to its fullest extent to bolster her own style, rather than changing her style to suit the medium. This show will feature her cityscapes, landscapes and figurative works.”
Turner lives in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, where she is represented by Trio Fine Art.
For information, contact Susan Calloway Fine Arts by telephoning 202.965.4601; or email gallery@callowayart.com.
Item #2:
Contemporary Western artist Matt Flint, an artist featured at Lyndsay McCandless Contemporary, is one of six artists to be highlighted at the Wyoming Arts Council’s Biennial Fellowship Exhibit.
The exhibit is on display at Wyoming’s State Museum through January 9, 2010. An opening reception took place November 5th. The earth tones and primal forms Flint uses in his work bring cave paintings to mind; natural forms and images of birds seem scratched on ancient rock.  Check the Wyoming Arts Council website for full details.


