Posts Tagged ‘Walter Hood’
Spring Art Info; New Paths; Ahoy, Matey!
Back in catch-up mode thanks to that culprit, Spring Break. Very late breaking news, below:
Members Only, the Art Association’s 2011 exhibition of works by Art Association members of all ages, opens at the Artspace Main Gallery in the Center for the Arts Friday, April 15. A reception will be held 5:30-7:30 pm. Presented in memory of former Art Association board member Norman Shapiro, the show celebrates community creativity. Cash prizes and children’s class scholarships will be awarded.
Also opening April 15: Solidarity, featuring work by Amy Jurekovic and Amanda Sullivan in the Artspace Theater Gallery, is an exhibition about examining, celebrating, and defining self. 5:30-7:30 pm. www.artassociation.org
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Artists have until April 22, 2011, to submit qualifications and concepts to create art that will “enhance” Jackson Hole Community Pathways System North 89 pathway underpass. The underpass, scheduled for construction this summer, will consist primarily of four concrete retaining walls. Those surfaces will act as canvas for the artist whose ideas for embellishing the walls best meet non-profit visions for the space. The underpass will be a connector and gateway to the National Museum of Wildlife Art’s new sculpture trail, designed by Oakland based landscape designer Walter Hood. It also provides bike and pedestrian access between the Town of Jackson and Grand Teton National Park, running parallel to the National Elk Refuge.
Budget for the project is $25,000. To find out more about the project—and learn more about budget fund allocations—contact the Jackson Hole Public Arts Initiative by logging on to their website here. 307-413-1474.
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From the National Museum of Wildlife Art:
“Master wildlife artist Carl Rungius first visited Wyoming and Yellowstone in 1895, inspiring his life’s work of depicting Western animals. In a new exhibition, Above Timberline: Engravings by Carl Rungius, May 7 through October 2, 2011, the National Museum of Wildlife Art, which maintains the largest public collection of Rungius’s art in the U.S., will display its complete set of Rungius drypoints, featuring examples of many of his favorite subjects, the Rocky Mountains’ famous game animals in their natural habitat.
Also a big game hunter, Rungius used his anatomical knowledge of wildlife to create accurate portrayals. Equally accomplished as a painter of wildlife and landscapes, his work also serves as a valuable record of the
animals and their environment, while his reputation as a premier wildlife artist won him fans including President Theodore Roosevelt, whom Rungius worked with to help make positive changes in wilderness preservation and big game hunting.
The pieces on display in the museum’s new Above Timberline exhibition use an intaglio engraving technique known as drypoint etching, where lines are scratched directly into a cold metal plate, leaving ragged “burr” edges. While the burr is removed in copperplate engraving, in drypoint it is left intact to produce softer lines and a more painterly effect.” www.wildlifeart.org
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Painter Scott Christensen has three new works available; all measure 10 x 12 inches and are fine choices for those starting plein air collections. You can find out more about Christensen and his work at www.christensenstudio.com. Email kristinm@christensenstudio.com.
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A certain local arts writer continues to display aggressive hostility towards Jackson gallery arts. Does he consider everyone but himself an establishment enemy? His alter ego is a cross between a
Kennedy sailboating skipper and William F. Buckley, Jr.—-a Montauck Yacht Club member charicacture. And he sometimes goes out searching for his brother “Teddy.” Calling Dr. Freud! Therapists would opine that the excessive talk about his and others’ sex lives are distractions from ……….well, good luck with that.
We are so wild. Soon, the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem will be awash in wildlife as adults give birth, bears come out from hibernation, and the creatures of the Earth migrate to their summer habitats.
If Spring seems a little far off, stop by Trailside Galleries during the month of March and take in their annual Wildlife Discovery Show. Through March 31, 2011 the Jackson gallery showcases the works of Western artists exploring creative styles, subject matter and mediums. The roster of noted artists includes: Kyle Sims, Nancy
Glazier, Bonnie Marris, Ralph Oberg, Sarah Woods, Nancy Glazier, James Morgan, Sherry Sander, Lindsay Scott, John Seerey-Lester, Ryan Skidmore, Adam Smith, Daniel Smith, Linda St. Clair, Richard D. Thomas, and Kathy Wipfler.
Many new works are on exhibition. While you are there, take a turn upstairs and make your way back to the Jackson Hole Art Auction offices and gallery, where works slated to be auctioned off this September are also on display. www.trailsidegalleries.com.
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The Cultural Council of Jackson Hole announced that 2011-2012 Arts for All Grant Applications are available for arts and cultural organizations, as well as individual artists. The program is administered by the Cultural Council.
“The Arts for All grant program serves to distributes social service tax dollars from the Town of Jackson and Teton County for arts education, producing and presenting opportunities, and public projects by individual artists,” says the Council’s Alissa Davies. “Grant amounts can be up to $6,000, and all grants must be cash matched at least 1:1 by the applicant.”
Completed grant applications are due by June 1, 2011. Late applications will not be accepted. No support will be provided to organizations already receiving public support from Town or County funds. Arts for All funds are allocated to the Cultural Council at the discretion of the Jackson Town Council and the Teton County Board of Commissioners. There is no guarantee that these elected officials will approve Arts for All funding again this year.
For more information contact Davies at culturalcounciljh@gmail.com.
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There’s still time to send the National Museum of Wildlife Art (NMWA) your thoughts on its new sculpture trail, set to open to the public in 2012; the event coincides with NMWA’s 25th anniversary. Show your interest by logging on here and filling out an easy on-line questionaire.
NMWA’s President and CEO Jim McNutt has announced that the three-quarter mile long outdoor art venue designed by renowned landscape architect Walter Hood “will showcase nearly 30 permanent and temporary
artworks. The sculpture trail will connect to the recently constructed Jackson-to-Grand Teton National Park pathway via a new underpass for easy biker and hiker access. Sponsored in memory of James F. (Jim) Petersen, honoring his life-long commitment to education, art, and love of the Tetons, the sculpture trail further integrates the national museum’s collection with its natural – even rugged – Wyoming setting.”
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Finally, the Washington Post reported last week that the National Gallery of Art has acquired Thomas Moran’s “Green River Cliffs, Wyoming.” Long part of a private collection, the dramatic panorama joins two other Moran paintings already a part of the gallery’s collection. Moran’s work has steadily gained value over the years.
The National Museum of Wildlife Art (NMWA) holds an Open House at the Teton County Library for its new Sculpture Trail on Thursday, February 24, 4-6:00 pm. Free and open to the public, it is a chance to test your public art chops; and feel involved with creating Jackson’s first permanent, landscaped outdoor sculpture garden designed by urban landscape and site architect Walter Hood. Drawings, overview plans and various schematics will be available to view. Special laptops will be provided so that attendees can participate in a survey about the garden’s design. Museum representatives will be on hand.
In a May, 2009 post we wrote that “…the Museum says the trail will provide new ways for visitors to view wildlife art within a landscape; sculptor Richard Loffler’s Buffalo Trail will be part of the project. An amphitheater will replace the current drive at NMWA’s entrance and an “edge trail” will run along the east ledge of the current visitor’s parking area. Hood’s hope has always been to meld NMWA’s vantage point and contoured landscapes with views of the Elk Refuge, creating a greater visceral connection between the two sites.”
In a three-part Jackson Hole Art Blog interview with Hood, the Oakland-based landscape designer expressed high hopes for the project. ”If the landscape itself was powerful enough it could move people in fantastic ways,” said Hood. “That is what I am interested in. Standing out on NMWA’s hill, is there a way to allow a visitor to be in the Refuge? It is possible. NMWA’s architecture builds on the idea that it is “with the landscape,” and ironically that is one of the issues they are dealing with.” He added that he felt he could “….scale and shift existing landscape, so that art as well as the landscape is legible.”
“Attempt to eliminate design dichotomy, the experience of being either here, or there – either at the museum or in the landscape; either in Jackson or in the landscape,” Hood advised.
NMWA’s Sugden Curator of Education Jane Lavino worked closely with Hood on the project. “The museum’s new sculpture trail will directly connect to the North Highway 89 Pathway Project, a new branch of the Pathways system planned to lead from the north end of Jackson to Grand Teton National Park,” she says. “An underground tunnel will provide access to the museum, creating an inviting opportunity to mix culture and outdoor activity for bicyclers.”
Contact Jane Lavino or call (307) 732-5417 for more information.
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Friday, March 4, artist Kathryn Mapes Turner will lead 2011′s Federal Junior Duck Stamp program at the National Museum of Wildlife Art. A valued annual arts and conservation tradition, the program provides opportunity for youth to learn more about duck species and their habitats through art. Students will begin creating their entries for the 2011 contest, hosted by NMWA. Workshops are organized by age and take place in the Chrystie and Esperti Classrooms.
9:30AM – 12:00PM: K – 5th grade students.
1:00 – 3:30PM: 6 – 12th grade students.
Pre-registration is required. Call (307) 732-5435 to register. Museum Members $20, non-members $25.
The National Museum of Wildlife Art (NMWA) will build its new sculpture trail, designed by Oakland, California landscape wizard Walter Hood. In the planning process for several years, funding for completion of the project was secured via a $3.5 million gift from NMWA trustee Debbie Petersen. The trail will be named for her late husband, Jim Petersen. Ms. Petersen’s gift funds the trail and supports “future projects.”
Last year, the Jackson Hole Art Blog presented a three-part series on Walter Hood and his vision for the NMWA sculpture trail, and his prophesies and recommendations for future sustainable, artful landscaping in Jackson and Teton County. Those articles are available to read on this site.
The Museum says the trail will provide new ways for visitors to view wildlife art within a landscape; sculptor Richard Loffler’s Buffalo Trail will be part of the project. An amphitheater will replace the current drive at NMWA’s entrance and an “edge trail” will run along the east ledge of the current visitor’s parking area. Hood’s hope has always been to meld NMWA’s vantage point and contoured landscapes with views of the Elk Refuge, creating a greater visceral connection between the two sites.
The museum’s new sculpture trail will directly connect to the North Highway 89 Pathway Project, a new branch of the Pathways system planned to lead from the north end of Jackson to Grand Teton National Park. An underground tunnel will provide access to the museum, creating an inviting opportunity to mix culture and outdoor activity for bicyclers. www.wildlifeart.org.
Item #2:
The Cultural Council of Jackson Hole, with a mission to “ bring the arts and cultural organizations in our community together for the purpose of communication, collaboration, coordination and promotion of cultural life in Jackson Hole,” has opened nominations for this year’s “Award for Creativity.” The honorarium
acknowledges those whose contributions to the arts—visual, musical, written and performing—have impact and meaning to Jackson’s cultural base. 2009′s winners were Dancer’s Workshop Executive Director Babs Case and Center for the Arts major patron John Tozzi. Other past winners include Lyndsay McCandless, Joffa & Bill Kerr, Evie Lewis, Ken Thomasma, David Kornblum and more.
Submit your nominations by Monday, June 21st, to the Cultural Council. Nominations may be mailed to the Council at P.O. Box 3706, Jackson, Wyoming 83001. Or, email your choice to: culturalcouncil@gmail.com. The Council’s Alissa Davies notes that submissions must include “ your name, address, phone number and/or email, 500 words about the individual and their impact on the cultural fabric of our community, and two additional references with contact information. Consider the significant achievements of the individual; the broad and lasting impact of their work; and qualities that contribute to their artistic excellence.”
May I add that there are a number of folks whose contributions to the arts, though highly significant, are grass roots and community-oriented in nature. Often subtle, they are no less crucial. Please nominate anyone you believe helps support the arts; supporting the arts can mean a nominee provides significant financial support and boosterism, or it may mean that a shop owner dedicates continuous space and time to young artists. A person can be artistically innovative, build diversity, provide a service, teach, or actualize physical venues for the arts. The sky is the limit!
Each year winners are celebrated at a festive gathering, usually at the Center for the Arts. This year’s party and will be held Wednesday, September 8, 2010, a great kick-off to Jackson Hole’s Fall Arts Festival season.
For more information contact Alissa Davies at 307.690.4757 or email culturalcounciljh@gmail.com.
Item #2:
No details yet, but here’s a handy list of shows scheduled to take place this Summer and Fall, at Mountain Trails Gallery in glorious Jackson Hole, Wyoming! If a detail you need isn’t here, it’s because that info is TBA.
Show #1 :
Western Artists of America – Western Heritage Show - July 2 – July 10 Opening Reception: Saturday, July 3.
Show #2:
Jeff Ham – One Man Show - July 15 – July 22 Opening Reception: Saturday, July 17
Show #3:
Edward Aldrich – One Man Show - Aug.6 – Aug. 13 Opening Reception: Sat. Aug. 7
Show #4:
Landscape Show (Andrzej Skorut / Shanna Kunz) – Aug. 19 – Aug. 26 Opening
Reception: Sat. Aug.21
Show #5:
Robert Hagan – One Man Show - Sept. 2 – Sept. 9 Opening Reception: Sat. Sept. 4
Show #6:
Ty Barhaug & Tom Saubert – Sept. 15 – Sept. 22 Opening Reception: Wed. Sept.15
Show #7:
Oil Painters of America Regional Show - Oct. 9 – Nov. 10 Opening Reception: Sat. Oct. 9
Information: 307.734.8150.
“Years later I’m going back and looking at the projects we did. My critique is, they are pastiche. They are cardboard facades. The real town is a block behind them, and it’s still awful, in trouble. So we didn’t help the people who live there, the thing that was supposed to be helped.” – Walter Hood
Finding what is particular and special to a community is part of what urban landscape designer Walter Hood does; over the years it has become clearer to Hood that urban centers require different formulas for renewal, depending on relevant measurable goals.
Pittsburgh, with its steel industry history, at one time existed for opposite reasons than Jackson exists. But, says Hood, Pittsburgh (sort of a sister city for me, and a great example in urban renewal) has found itself again. Like other mid-west industrial towns Pittsburgh fell on hard times; hard enough that a few decades ago many were giving it up for lost. Jobs disappeared, people left in droves, and the city was gritty and depressed.
Jackson and Pittsburgh have traditionally relied on single industries. Jackson’s magnificent beauty and location have made it an economy inflated by landscape; Pittsburgh’s economy relied on steel.
Now Pittsburgh’s economy is strong; it has weathered this recession relatively well,
in large part because the city has taken pains to attract diverse market sectors. Healthcare, education, technology, financial jobs play a large role. City parks are being restored. Abandoned spaces are recycled into new housing and businesses.
Hood opines that whatever direction Jackson takes in shaping its future, keeping traffic in check is crucial. Open space cannot be fully protected unless we control congestion and emissions.
“I think where we are as Americans, things are hitting the fan. We will have to make some really serious decisions about the land. I have a lot of projects where people are investing in alternative transportation modes; they are starting to say “we don’t need that much parking.” They are beginning to say we want to be greener—it will force them to act differently.”
Its community locking horns over a new Comprehensive Plan, Jackson’s town and county officials are attempting to correctly address a demand for affordable housing. The risk of over development is very real. To date, officials are treating mass transit as a finishing touch for building more units; most urban planning takes the opposite approach.
Whenever I return to Jackson from the east coast, my immediate sense is Jackson’s traffic is under control. Then summer arrives.
“In the winter it is really fantastic to be here—you could drive and everything goes back to scale,” says Hood. “When spring comes the scale gets smaller but it is still big. You see more in Jackson. It’s sensory overload.”
A national park’s purpose is defeated, says Hood, when 4,000,000 tourists a year jam the roads and the scenery is…”unseeable.” If you want to reduce traffic, and impact, you make roads smaller and narrower. Cars then have to get smaller. Discourage, don’t encourage, more traffic.
We agree that the town of Jackson should be about this place. That gentler transitions from park to town are optimal, but not planned. Approaching downtown Jackson, there is a sense that our open spaces are chopped off at the knees. It’s good, we conclude, that the National Museum of Wildlife Art is one of the first things you see. But many buildings and landscapings closer to town are visually harsh. Lots of aging concrete, signage, little shoulder softening, no real thought to the landscape.
And simply as a marketing concept, in addition to the conservation benefits, planning should accentuate sensitivity to place.
But what about helping a community through recession? Hood may not have
Jackson’s specific economic remedy, but he does have experience with plans that didn’t work.
Hood says that collectively, we often make big mistakes when trying to “save” community.
“There are some amazing places, but the way we act in those landscapes is still the freakin’ same way,” he notes. “I worked for a firm in the 90’s that would go to lots of small towns, particularly in Washington state. There was, at the time, the whole notion that you can go to these communities and save them by design. A lot of them have lost their industries; they were river towns and people logged, or fished…those economies died.
The community then dies.
So we’re in this amazing valley or setting and what do we do? Tourism. Immediately the main street programs help fortify the preservation of these towns—and I was into it. At the time it seemed like the right thing to do.
Years later I’m going back and looking at the projects we did. My critique is, they are pastiche. They are cardboard facades. The real town is a block behind them, and it’s still awful, in trouble. So we didn’t help the people who live there, the thing that was supposed to be helped.”
Hood says the reasons people do choose to live in Jackson Hole are clear. Safety is big, he says, and that feeling of safety springs in large part from how we control growth.
“It is a gift to have the ability to just walk around without fear and collision. Last
night I saw a woman running in the near dark, without street lights, without fear. Wow. She’s safe, there’s no traffic, the landscape is still visible, and she wants to be there.
I could not do this where I live. Those are the kind of experiences to save. The ability to navigate the landscape at night! But more people, more traffic—more security and more lights come in. Success breeds more demand. It’s a circle. I asked for a room on the upper floors of my hotel, facing the mountains, so I could take that in. That’s the experience! I know why people live here.”
To find out more about Walter J. Hood and his work, log onto his website here.
Post Script: The Jackson Hole Art Blog is VERY happy to hear of Blaize Oswald’s encouraging progress as he recovers from a bad fall from a ski chairlift. Our prayers and best wishes go out to the Oswald Family.






