Monday, December 27, 2010
We've Moved
Instead of maintaining two or three sites, we moved fine art schedules and commentary to Rural Ways.
Saturday, June 26, 2010
Wine Store Show
Valerie will begin showing a series of river paintings at the wine store in Salt Lake later this week. The show is entitled "Down Stream" and it features much of the new work she has done this year, including this piece from a hike we took in Zion National Park. The wine store is located at 255 South 300 East in Salt Lake City. It is open daily from 11a to 7p, except for Sundays and holidays. All the pieces are for sale, but the wine store will not handle the transaction. So, contact Valerie to buy.
Tuesday, May 25, 2010
Black and White in Springdale
Our Springdale show opened today. It is called Southern Utah in Black and White, and it features images and charcoal sketches from around southern Utah. If you are headed to Zion during June, stop and check it out. The show is at the Canyon Community Center in Springdale until July 5th. The address: 126 Lion Boulevard (Beside the Springdale Town Hall) Springdale UT 84767.
Tuesday, May 11, 2010
Cedar Breaks Wildflower Festival
Each year, Cedar Breaks National Monument hosts a Wildflower Festival. This year, the festival runs from July 2-July 18. To advertise the festival, the Monument publishes a nice color poster that is distributed throughout southern Utah. To produce the artwork for the poster, the Monument conducts a contest. You are looking at this year's contest winner. This is a large painting of a bristlecone pine that Valerie completed during March. Today, the National Monument selected it for its 2010 Wildflower Festival poster. Keep your eyes open for its debut.
Sunday, April 4, 2010
Two Awards
The weather was quite pleasant in St. George this year. And the turn-out was great, lots more people than last year. Plus, Valerie won a pair of awards for two paintings that she made of the Green River in Dinosaur National Monument. She called the works, Lodore I and Lodore II, because they were of, you guessed it, Lodore Canyon. It was a good festival . . . and we'll likely return again next year.
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