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Exhibitions
What's Up & Upcoming: To The South
TORREY
Gallery 24 UP: The Proper Edge of the Sky, works by Laura Boardman and Larry Clarkson. Just because you may be getting away from Utah's metropolitan areas this summer doesn't mean you'll have to go without some of its finest art. The small rural town of Torrey, located just west of Capitol Reef National Park and north of the Escalante area, provides art exhibits of some of Utah's finest painters and this summer is no exception. Gallery 24, in the center of town at 134 East Main Street , is hosting an exhibit of two Wasatch Range painters who also maintain residences in Torrey area.
Laura Boardman and Larry Clarkson are both artists who bring their backgrounds in design to their very personal interpretations of the Western landscape. A successful practicing graphic designer for more than twenty-five years, Clarkson is now Professor of Design at Weber State University. He spends much of his time in the outdoors, hiking, skiing, climbing and kayaking the mountains and deserts surrounding his home in Salt Lake and his cabin in Grover. Boardman practiced interior designer for seventeen years before devoting full time to her painting. Like Larry, she too, splits her time exploring the landscape surrounding her homes in Salt Lake and Torrey.
The exhibition's title, "The Proper Edge of the Sky" is taken from the title of a book by Utah author Ed Geary and reflets the artists' personal interpretations of the vast western landscape. Boardman calls her paintings ”reactions to beautiful moments.” These moments often take place in the sky, which usually dominates the majority of her canvases. Sometimes the sky engulfs the entire canvas, leaving only a small strip of land at the very bottom of her compositions. Her skies can be quiet still moments of migrating clouds or more theatrical episodes of nature's wonder as in "Tuscarora Storm." |0|
Clarkson, likewise, is inspired by the landscape. It is the source of his spirtuality. “The challenges of modern life alienate us from nature," the artist says. "We begin to view the landscape as a mountain peak to conquer, or a commodity to exploit, but man’s archetypal relationship to nature is deeper than that”. Clarkson uses his background in design to find the structural components of the landscape that speak to this archetypal relationship. In the area around Torrey, including Caineville Mesa, |1| he finds an abudant source of material to explore strucutres that reflect Nature's embodiment of time and timelessness
The Proper Edge of the Sky continues through the month of July.
ST. GEORGE AREA
St. George Art Museum UP:The Regional Exhibit, an exhibition with artists from Arizona, Nevada, and Utah invited to submit their work in any media or style completed in the prior two years to be juried for inclusion (see May edition) Thru July 8. UPCOMING: July 22 to October 14, 2006 Arts for the Parks exhibit in the Main and Mezzanine Galleries and Wallace Lee’s Park Legacy in the Legacy Gallery.|2|
The Arts for the Parks competition was created in 1986 by the National Park Academy of the Arts, in cooperation with the National Park Foundation. The program is designed to celebrate representational artists, enhance public awareness of the National Parks, and to contribute to programs benefiting the National Park System as well as the public. Each year jurors review over 2000 entries of artwork that depict areas governed by the National Park Service. One hundred artworks are selected to travel throughout the Nation including for the first time ever, the City of St. George Art Museum, and catalog of this exhibit is available for purchase in the Museum Store.
PRICE AREA
Museum of the San Rafael (64 N. 100 East, Castle Dale, 435-381-5252) "Prehistoric Wildlife and Western Art of Utah," featuring paintings by Joseph S. Venus, Clifford Oviatt and sculptures by Gary Prazen and Eldon Holmes, through 2006.
Helper Gallery Stroll UPCOMING: In conjuntion with the Helper Arts Festival (August 18-20), Helper area galleries and artist studios will be holding fine art exhibitions showing local and visiting artists including: Cliff Bergera, Janet Bergera, David Dornan, Lindsay Frei, Marilou Kundmueller, Ben Steele, Charley Snow, David Richey Johnson, Thomas Elmo Williams and Scott Yelonek.
CEDAR CITY
Braithwaite Fine Art Gallery: UP: Thru September 2 the 63rd Annual Art Exhibition Presented by the Cedar City Art Committee. Cedar City's finest artists will display their artwork at the gallery. This exhibit is organized by the Cedar City Art Committee.
EPHRAIM
Central Utah Art Center UP: Big Ball of String, an installation by Pam Bowman (see page 1).
UTAH COUNTY
Gallery OneTen: UP: Renascent, an installation by Pam Bowman in the Main Gallery (see page 1). AND Don your Regalia by Cassandra Barney and Gretchen Elsner. Cass Barney and Gretchen Elsner are traveling from Vancouver to install paintings and accompanying interactive fashions (to touch and put on). Barney's portraits and figures capture the souls of heroines, everyday women who have found strength and personal victory in their diverse experiences. Their soft eloquence reflects life's many moods. Her new installation with fashion artist Gretchen Elsner, Don Your Regalia, connects the women in her paintings to the world outside through fashions that tell their stories. This innovative installation opens a new avenue for how viewers can connect with the art. Those attending the installation are invited to not only see but to also experience the art as they touch and even try on the clothing. Barney and Elsner encourage viewers to explore the art and fashion, to search for the stories of these women. Each dress contains words and symbols providing insight into the women in the painting's life. Some dresses even contain hidden pockets where the embroidered stories unfold.
Terra Nova Gallery UP: Historic Provo: Andrew Ballstaedt, David Hawkinson and Todd Orchard thru July 28. Three local artists have captured the character of Provo's architectural heritage -- including the Reed Smoot Home, the Paxman Home, and Academy Square -- using various styles and mediums.
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Gallery 303, HFAC BYU UPCOMING: Touched, MFA Final exhibit by ceramicist Melanie McGee sponsored by Terra Nova Gallery. |3| Throughout her childhood McGee enjoyed traveling with her family and being involved with her father’s profession of puppetry and storytelling. Experiencing puppet performances from all over the world, she developed an appreciation for style, composition and design at a young age. Throughout her life she had a natural ability for the visual arts but it wasn’t until high school that she discovered her love for clay. She furthered her education at Chico State in California, completing her Bachelor’s Degree in Visual Art with an emphasis in ceramics. As a graduate student at BYU she is looking forward to attaining her terminal degree in order to teach at the university level while showing her work in galleries across the country.The show will be up from the 18th through the 31st of July with an artist reception on Friday, July 28th from 6-9 pm.
Brigham Young University Museum of Art
UP: Just Enough Is More: The Graphic Design of Milton Glaser, on view from June 30 through October 7, 2006. This new exhibition introduces viewers to the work of Milton Glaser whose conceptual approach to solving design problems has positioned him at the forefront of the field of graphic design and illustration.
"Being a child of modernism I have heard this mantra all my life. Less is more," says artist Milton Glaser. "One morning upon awakening I realized that it was total nonsense, it is an absurd proposition and also fairly meaningless. If you look at a Persian rug, you cannot say that less is more because you realize that every part of that rug, every change of color, every shift in form is absolutely essential for its aesthetic success. You cannot prove to me that a solid blue rug is in any way superior. However, I have an alternative proposition that I believe is more appropriate: Just enough is more."
Just Enough Is More: The Graphic Design of Milton Glaser, explores the conceptual development of Glaser’s work from preliminary drawings to finished designs and reveal how he arrives at successful designs by including “just enough.” The approximately 100 works in this exhibition will include original drawings, sketchbooks, paintings, lithographs, silk screens and mass-produced posters that will give viewers an intimate look into Glaser’s design process by exploring the evolution of his designs, as well as the ways in which his use of specific conceptual elements informs his artistic conclusions.
In a supermarket of choices, how do you begin to solve a design problem?” Glaser asks. “A more meaningful kind of procedure occurs when the problem is not susceptible to a reliance on previously successful formulas or to an intellectualizing of the content. The creative process is essentially a blind process where you do not pre-structure, and you have to allow information to arise in a spontaneous way uncontrollable by the will. The most meaningful developments in my work are those that occurred involuntarily and blindly, without my knowing what I was going to do, when I had enough faith in my own creative process to be willing to wait for it to happen without my will demanding it.”
Glaser has been called the “Picasso of Pop” and a “modern Renaissance man” for his ability to constantly reinvent himself in a variety of styles; and over the past 50 years, the 77-year-old graphic designer and illustrator has created some of the profession’s most influential and enduring work. The list of his design accomplishments includes everything from record album covers to packaging, from posters to newspaper designs, from toys to textiles, from books to logos, from Web sites to restaurant interiors, and from theme parks to calendars.
As co-founder of Pushpin Studios in 1954, Glaser had a powerful impact on the course of graphic design. Pushing against the formalist ideas of modernism, he incorporated narrative, humor and historical references in his quest for ground-breaking design. In 1968, he co-founded “New York Magazine,” which became the model for city magazines and spawned a multitude of imitations. Six years later, he established Milton Glaser, Inc., where he creates corporate and institutional identities for civic and commercial ventures. He has designed more than 300 posters for a variety of clients and has conceptualized the environmental and interior design of restaurants, shopping malls, amusement parks, grocery stores and other retail entities. In 1983, Glaser partnered with Walter Bernard to establish WBMG, a publication design firm located in New York City. Since its beginning, they have designed more than 50 magazines, newspapers and periodicals worldwide.
ALSO SHOWING:Tapestries: The Great 20th Century Modernists, features works by Picasso, Matisse, Calder, Kandinsky and many of their contemporaries who were inspired to transform their own compositions into monumental wall hangings. (see page 1).

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