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Show Modest Building Is Rendezvous j for Artist Folk of Salt Lake IT seems but a yellow brV-k build- ing, unimposir.g. unadorned, j mere! y neat a r. d substantial. j Exteriors, however, toil but little of what's within. And beyond the door cf 4S Fast South Temple will the stranger find a shrine cf art art capitalized, but not commercialized. For there dwrll Fome of the lead nig spirits of what sme, ca i 1 the city's Cuartier Uatm. the me.'tmg place of th'.se persons old and young whose interests are the mi ere-is of the 111US.-S. j ib-re no crass conini'-rcialis'n. here no blatenry of business. Ih;er.ituro al sculpture, music and painting are j ; tile centra themes ab;ut which t he i circle within lh.es-- wails ?!ian' 1 1 u i r talhs, ar.d their des;im.- inT'nai'S as Vf'.l. Her hve the thri-hbin- hopes of the youthm! s-t'k." r ai't.-r the sub- l:me in ex nr.-.-sii i. It that expres sion through music, literature or what not that is good. one room can serve to give the atmosphere of the place. It is that of Alfred Lambourne. poet, artist and writer. On its walls are the photographs photo-graphs of the great in circles of the literati and the artists. On the burdened bur-dened shelves of the bookcases ranges the works of masters living and long gone. In the corner a painter's millet! mil-let! e lies, the one which Mr. Lambourne Lam-bourne used as a hermit artist on Gunnison island in Great Salt Lake. From across 'lie hall come the strains of music, instrumental and vocal, too. A nd in the evening, if you will wail, is the eathonng of the clan. Then the singer and the harpist, harp-ist, the writer and the sculptor join together before their idols of perfection, per-fection, make their plans for the time whf n they. too. may mount the pedestals pedes-tals of great achievement. And who can lei! when that will be? |