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Posts Tagged ‘Obama’

Jun
14

Still. Reflective. Meditative.  Calm.  Mysterious.

Potent.

Landscape artist Jared Sanders’ depictions of barns, fields, rivers and trees — images reminiscent of rural Utah landscapes the artist experienced as a child — feel rooted and secured.  It’s as if these quintessential American structures have made a life decision to stay “home.”  No roaming.   This land is the place and there is nothing finer; all the lights of the city, the allure of a rocky sea coast, the scintillating Western mountain ranges are calculating sirens.  Not real.

This land is real.  And it holds great power — pounding hearts, eternal rhythms.

Jared Sanders has a new exhibition, “Seasons: One Man Show” on display at Altamira Fine Art June 17-29, 2010.    An opening reception takes place Thursday, June 17, 5-7:00 pm, at the gallery.

“Jared is an important and popular contemporary landscape artist. Although the scenery and barns he depicts in his paintings are primarily in or near the area where he lives, they seem to strike a nostalgic chord of recognition and serenity with admirers of his work no matter where they live,” says Gallery Director Mark D. Tarrant.   “His textured brushwork and subdued use of color continually create scenes which are simultaneously placid, yet compelling.”

Sanders, a tonalist, favors earthy, rubbed browns and dusky yellows; burnt reds and “old” blues and greens are aged–subdued–with the injection of grays.   Siennas and ochre oils warm up the cool palette.   Sanders intense attention to connecting objects and colors within each work is apparent; balance is flawless.

Contact Altamira Fine Art by phoning 307.739.4700.   www.altamiraart.com.

Item #2:

A small note about a big move:  Horizon Fine Art is decamping from its Center Street location and moving across town to new digs.

Horizon’s new address is Suite 202, at 30 King Street.  I believe that address is situated on the east side of King Street between Broadway and Pearl….and close to the corner of Broadway and King.

It’s just north of  from Shades Café and Sweetwater Restaurant.   Ooh, and a short walk down the stairs from Snake River Grill!   And in close proximity to Trailside Galleries, a few steps to the east on Broadway.

Congrats and Bon Chance, Horizon!

Who is moving in to your old space?    Anybody?

Email:  horizonfineart@wyoming.com.   Phone:  307.739.1540.

    Item #3:

    Laurie Thal, Wilson glass artist, has had her work snatched up by the President. Of the United States.  While exhibiting at a Washington D.C. craft show her work was admired by a member of the State Department. That staff member, Tracy Bernstein, asked Thal if she had any hand blown glass vessels depicting a peacock.  She did; the bowl’s design is by Lia Kass, long time creative partner to Thal.

    The bowl, shown at left, was purchased by the State Department’s Senior Gift Officer (what a cool job, shopping for fine arts to bestow upon heads of state!) and presented to Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and his wife by President and Mrs. Obama.   The Prime Minister visited D.C. last November.

    Thal also had a glass ornament on the Clinton Administration Christmas tree.  AND she’s got work displayed at the Governor’s residence in Cheyenne, Wyoming.   Congratulations Laurie and Lia!   Very cool.

    FINAL NOTE: LAST WEEK’S “ARTIST IN THE PARK ” EVENT HAS BEEN RESCHEDULED.  THE NEW DAY AND TIME ARE JUNE 19, 9 AM – 12 NOON.

    Jan
    31

    The message at Lyndsay McCandless Contemporary is CHANGE.  Somehow, in a sour economy for most Jackson Hole Galleries, LMC keeps on happening.  The large, loft-like space sitting at Jackson Street level has transformed itself into a place for happenings, 60′s style.  2009′s version of a record player is a d.j. named Mr. Whipple ( a 1960′s and 70′s lab-coated, bespectacled advertising character hawking toilet tissue–nice, soft toilet tissue ), wall art is the new tie dye, and a  communal creativity prevails.   Getting any attention in today’s art market is real tough;  galleries are asking their artists to go small, in order to bring down price points.  Three Jackson Hole galleries I know of have closed in as many months.   Galleries with strong client stables are calling upon those clients more often.

    LMC is the Madonna of Jackson Hole art galleries, working feverishly to stay fresh. Author readings, AIVO, children’s art, musicians in white vans rocking the night away, fire throwing, collaborations with non-profits, joining 1% for the Tetons (says you feel confident you have enough net income capital to donate, going forward, and you’re comfortable providing full access to your income ledger, and you are going with green marketing, and you get your picture taken by the very cool David Swift),  openly political art projects.   With the exception of regularly scheduled art openings around town, there’s no other action of the sort LMC provides monthly.

    So what’s going on over there?

    McCandless has a marketing background and she’s pumping it up.  Her next happening, pARTicipate for Change,  gets hopping this coming First Friday, Februrary 6, 5:30-7:30 pm.  The project keeps Obamamania going–I’m all over that.

    Here’s the skinny: This First Friday, you can’t just show up to eat  organic pizza (Where was that yummy pizza January 20, at Pub Place?  We ate bad cafeteria food! Even kids pushed that stuff around on the plate.  The dancing, however, was FAB! )  This coming Friday, all comers are asked to actively participate in the creation of a work that will come to life on a wall-sized piece of canvas. Create to the theme of participating for change, and the finished product will be photographed and sent to the President.  We audaciously hope!  We hope with audacity?  I’m still stuck on the “hopefully” grammar thing.

    “I also want people to experience that excitement and joy of acquiring a
    piece of art…so we will be giving away small pieces of art all night
    to everyone who walks in the door. Maybe it will create a mini-trading
    sensation,” says McCandless.

    Here’s some ways to participate:

    1. Hang/install your artwork, up to three pieces, framing optional.    Explore “Change.”

    2. Contribute to the free-art collection. ( LM: “I am taking old photos/paintings/sketches and cutting them up into mini-art pieces (@ 2″ x 3″). I have one that Alissa Davies gave me in September as her ‘card’. I carry it around in my wallet as a little transportable piece of art that makes me smile. I will write on the back of all of them “www.lmcontemporary.com Art It Forward”)

    Lyndsay!  I love you!  You used single quotations around a word! ( ‘card’ ) I get in trouble from Swift when I do that on Tammy & David Fight About Movies!  You go girl!  You mean, by single quotes, that the card isn’t a real business card, but you use it as such, it has that spirit, that function, is some way related to the entity “business card.”   Did we go to the same high school? Did you have Miss Cole for English class?

    3. Bring art supplies/inspiration to use for the art wall-markers, sharpies, charcoal, adhesive stuff, photos, scraps of paper, crayons, safety pins, post-its,—paint requires lots of extra’s, brushes, water, containers—”but we
    could make it work!”

    Artists need to get their work to LMC by Wednesday, February 4.

    Artists who have signed up (I’ve corrected spelling as far as I can; apologies for any remaining misspelled names!)

    Anthony Birkholz…video installation
    Nicole Burdick and Micah Richardson…ice installation
    Bland Hoke…Center of Wonder Public Art ambassador
    Amy Larkin
    Bronwyn Minton
    Alissa Davies
    Babs Case
    Rachel Kunkle
    Ben Carlson
    Susan Thulin
    Emma Adkisson
    Bryce Billings
    Ashely Hogge
    Jeremy Kusmin
    Rich Goodwin
    Steven Glass

    Gone Missing Teton Art Lab will make an appearance, with its own installation.

    Visit www.lmcontemporary.com, or call 307-734-0649/cell: 307-413-4331.

    End.

    Nov
    12

    (This essay was written January 2008, inspired by tributes to Martin Luther King. This month, we are inspired by our new President-elect, Barack Obama. Also, a reminder that this website’s content protected by copyright–TC)

    The day before our nation celebrated Dr. Martin Luther King’s birthday, I went to the gym. Alone in the place for over half an hour, I plodded along on the treadmill, channel flipped and considered my future and the future of Jackson Hole. How would they be tied together in the coming years? How would my new business, Jackson Hole Art Tours, fare? Would it be a rewarding experience, working to weave this new venture into Jackson’s tapestry? And would the business truly give back, and make a difference, as I hope?

    After a while Franz Camenzind arrived, and now we were two. Not long ago I’d sent a note to Franz, an emotional response to the Jackson Hole Conservation Alliance’s holiday meeting and party. The evening featured Charlie Craighead’s slide presentation about his life growing up with wildlife, and how our relationship with wildlife has had to change as people flood to the valley and we develop more and more land. It was a wonderful evening, spent with some of Jackson’s most creative and change-making citizens. The crowd was warm, optimistic; everyone seemed bright with hope.

    And hope is everything.

    I clicked over to the Tennis Channel, looking for Nadal’s Australian Open quarterfinal match. It wasn’t on, and I complained to Franz. In the second I looked away from the screen, Franz said, “Isn’t that it?” I looked up, and there was Nadal.

    “Anything else you’d like me to make happen?” Franz teased.

    “Yes,” I replied. Boo-yah, my own personal genie! “I’d like you to make me the person who wakes everyone up to the true connections between the arts and conservation. I want to be that person here by 2010 and I want to instigate a dynamic, creative project that will draw everyone’s attention to the fact that, now, our environment and arts cannot survive without one another.”

    Remember, I’m on a treadmill here. And those weren’t my exact words, but they’re close enough.

    I sensed Franz doubted the validity of my theory. But he humored me. “Think about it,” I said. It takes creativity to communicate the beauty and utter indispensability of our natural world. Consider, for a second, the void of a world with no painters, sculptors, writers, and all manner of artists sending up messages about the earth? And where would artists be if not for our planet’s magnificence? What else inspires infinite prayers, offered via a brush, or a pen, or a camera’s lens? We would be living in a hellish, cold place. Bleak.

    Art testifies, and as one of my favorite writers, Scott Russell Sanders has written, we’re telling the holy.

    Franz nodded, then asked me: “But what came first, the natural world or artists?”

    The natural world, of course.

    Having previously lived in Jackson, I returned five years ago. To hasten reconnecting to the valley, I attended the January 2004 ‘Greater Yellowstone Power of Place’ conference. Panel ‘teams’ made presentations and talked about their connections to one another. I attended the Arts and Environment discussion. The fact that the Arts and Environment panel had been conceived as an obvious duo struck home. I recall that while all the panel members honored each other’s work and visions, there was an impasse when it came to actually naming a tangible project that would allow everyone there to contribute, and that would provide something of educational value. Stoked by the conference energy, but feeling shy and new girlish, I didn’t speak up. However, I did describe a vision I had to one of the conference organizers.

    I imagine a giant, interactive screen. Glowing, luminous. This screen would depict everything within the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem: terrain, wildlife, flora, our rivers, lakes, weather, the sky, and snow—everything indigenous to our region. The screen’s function would be to educate the user about how development, global warming, water and air pollution, and human traffic change our ecosystem’s balance. For example, if someone wanted to know how five (or any number) of drought years would affect either wildlife, our rivers and lakes, forests and wilderness, they would touch a certain spot on the screen and the screen’s technology would transform its image to depict those effects: trout would having a tough time, declining lakes, all wildlife being challenged to find nourishment, parched grasses and trees. The number of wildfires would grow, and with those come smoky skies. That’s the short list, of course. The picture would be redrawn.

    Artists could imagine and render images. Conservationists and scientists would inform these artistic choices, be the books behind the art. And technology would figure out how all the components would function, build in images and text. There would be nothing like it in the world. This reflection of us would be its own technological museum, and any kid could use it, and want to use it. Adults would want to use it, as we use our computers and I-phones.

    This morning, on Martin Luther King Day, I flipped on my computer to scan the New York Times E-paper headlines. Photographer Camilo José Vergara has documented 12 urban murals of King; many are in Los Angeles and New York. He says such portraits of King are everywhere. One mural depicts King as the center figure in a triptych of images that includes Jesus and the Virgin Mary. One depicts him with Pope Paul—he’s also with Nelson Mandela and Malcolm X. Another shows King as a great teacher. And one portrait paints King’s image as a strong, confident leader atop a mountain of really hip graffiti art.

    On any given holiday Google incorporates relevant artwork into its home page graphics. Today three boys are drawing a chalk portrait of Martin Luther King on the sidewalk. How wonderful is it that the artists are young kids? How do they know about Martin Luther King? What inspired them to draw his image?

    Viewing these powerful, beautiful and respectful images, I was reminded of the recent political flap over whether King was responsible for igniting racial reform, creating its destiny and bringing his message home, or if this was Lyndon Johnson’s victory.

    Who first brought the Dream?

    Martin Luther King, of course.

    –Tammy Christel
    January 21, 2008

    Nov
    06

    “Not only is arts education indispensable for success in a rapidly changing, high skill, information economy, but studies show that arts education raises test scores in other subject areas as well. “   -Obama Campaign

    “Creative America for Obama” is the official arts group of the Obama for America campaign. Now that campaign furor is at rest, (we’re all resting, I think!) it seems auspicious to recap Obama’s campaign official arts platform.

    Yes, there’s an arts platform supporting and advocating for the arts as a powerful economic factor in America’s education and economy.

    To compete globally, the U.S. needs to support and invest in all creative efforts, starting with our children’s arts education. Arts translate into science and technology and are crucial in encouraging creative thinking.

    Says the NEA Chairman:

    ”The purpose of arts education is not to produce more artists, though that is a byproduct. The real purpose of arts education is to create complete human beings capable of leading successful and productive lives in a free society.”

    Although it would be some kind of miracle if these issues are addressed during Obama’s first term, Obama has said that he will:

    • Work to expand public and private partnerships between education and the arts by increasing resources for the U.S. Department of Education’s Arts Education Model Development and Dissemination Grants…”

    • Work to create an ”Artists Corps” to work in low-income schools and their communities.

    • Support increased funding for the NEA.

    • Promote Cultural Diplomacy—Obama’s campaign goes so far as to say that, “Artists can be utilized again to help us win the war of ideas against Islamic extremism.” Additionally, Obama feels attracting a foreign arts community to America will open more diplomatic doors and create greater cross-cultural dialog. Obama and Biden will also work to streamline visa application processes.

    • Provide health care to artists by acknowledging the unique needs of artists not receiving employee coverage and financially unable to carry their own health insurance.

    • Ensure tax fairness for artists. This includes enabling artists to deduct fair market value for their work, rather than just the cost of materials. See the “Artist-Museum Partnership Act,” introduced by Senator Patrick Leahy (D-VT).

    End

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