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Show - faSf C6 THE DAILY HERALD, Provo, I tah. Fnd- -, January 22, l VISUAL ARTS CALENDAR PAINT AWAY: An oil portrait painting by David Lindsay from 6-Feb. p.m. 25, at Provo Art and Frame. 201 E. Center St., Provo. in the U.S. The first showing in Washington. D.C., was a sell-ouWhile m L.A. the MOA tour will take in the new J. Paul Getty Museum and other artistic highpoints of the area. A group flight, hotel accommodations for three nights, meals, ground transportation arid guided tours are included in the rate of $950 (double occupancy). Reservations and deposits are due by Jan. 27. Future MOA cultural tours include London, New York. Spain, San Francisco, Paris. Scandinavia. Arizona and Japan. For more information, call Bonnie . Souliere at 4,ll,i8, The cost of the class is $60 plus model fee. Call 491 9270 to register. UU MEETSM: The Utah Valley Artists' Guild will hold its monthly meeting on Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at Provo Art and Frame. 201 W. Center St. This is a Change in place. The guest presenter is Marty Robbins. He will instruct members on preparing quality slides and presentations for submission to art exhibits. There will also be an informal potluck dinner. Bring your own utensils and something to add to the dinner. Business matters will be discussed to fill positions on the board. All residents of Utah Valley are invited to become members of the Utah Valley Artists' Guild. Membership dues are $20 a year. Dues may be paid at the monthly meetings or checks may be mailed to the guild president, Shirley Smithers. 240 N. Center St.. American Fork. 84604. COWBOYS building on the CEU campus in Price. It is open Monday through Friday from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. For evening and Saturday viewing, please call James L. Young, extension (435) 613-529(435) 637-212Admission is free. stops class is offered COWBOY POETRY: The 15th annual Cowboy Poetry Gathering will fill the town of Elko, Nev., from Jan. 23 30. with cowboy poets, musicians, gear makers and just plain folks who appreciate the culture of the American West. The week-loncele-- ' bration begins with a rodeo, slides into a of series workshops, brings in a dance and a couple of night-timconcerts and builds to an extravaganza featuring some of the best cowboy poets and musicians in the country. Tickets are available by calling 1 (800) 880 5885 or via at tbaerwest-folk.org- . For accommodation information, call the Elko Chamber of Commerce at 1( 800) 428 7143 or visit its Web site at AT WESTMINSTER: Westminster College presents a performance by cowboy poet Wallace McRae at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Nunemaker Place on the southwest corner of campus. 1840 S. 1300 East. Salt Lake City. The reading is free to the public. McRae is a respected cowboy poet in the U.S., who combines a knowledge of western heritage with a background in literature and drama. www.elkonv.com. STILL PHOTOGRAPHY: Kimball Arts Center presents the Magnum Cinema, History of Film. Cinematic Still Photography through Feb. 8. Gallery hours are Monday-Saturdafrom 10 a.m. p.m. and Sunday from FRAMING BEAUTY: The BYU Museum of Art will host "Frames of Beauty: examining the Eye of the Beholder" exhibition in the Home Study Center. The exhibit runs through June 5. noon-- p.m. daily and the art exhibit is free to the public. ART FARM: "The Art Farm," a 12 week BOOK SIGNINGS: Deseret Book is offering several days of book signings at many of their locations throughout Utah this week. Van Evans, author of "The Food Storage Planner." and Vicki Tate, author of "Cooking with Home Storage," will t3e present at all signings. Today Jan. 22 at the Provo Deseret Book. 989 S. University Ave., Evans and Tate will sign from 5-- p.m. On Saturday, they will be at the Deseret Book in Cottonwood Mall. 4835 S. Highland Dr., Salt Lake City, from noon-- p.m. and then at the Bountiful location. 460 W. 500 South, from 3 4 p.m. and then at the Layton Hills Mall location in Layton from 5-p.m., all that same day. course that teaches children to use colors, texture and imagination to create different forms of art begins its next session Tuesday. Classes meet once a week for two hours; the cost is $150, which includes tuition fees and materials. Classes are offered for children ages 412 and a special teen night is held in early February. Each class is held to a limit. For registration materials and more . Farm Art The call at information, The Art Farm studio is located at 1934 N. Geneva Rd Provo. WESTERN ART AND COWBOY CRAFT: The Peteetneet Academy presents the Western Art and Cowboy Crafts Exhibit through February. Many western and cowboy pieces are in the show. LOCAL ARTiST FEATURED: Local Brent Franklin (B. F.) Larsen and Ella Gilmore Peacock will be featured in Gallery 303 in the Harris Fine Arts Center at BYU. The exhibition runs through Jan. 29: museum hours are Monday-Fridafrom 9 a.m. 5 p.m.. The event is free and the artists Sculptors exhibiting Grant Speed, David G. Argyle and Jeff Wolf. Art works are by Aaron Jones. Gary Kapp. Fred Lyman, Lynne Millman and Neva Christensen. Craftsmen Bill Boswell. Clay Chnstensen and Neva Christensen are displaying items of rawhide braiding, leather braiding and horsehair hitching. public is welcome. A native of Utah. Larsen is best known for landscape paintings of his home state. He studied at Snow College and then transferred to BYU where he received a master's degree in 1922. Larsen studied at the Art Institute of Chicago and then traveled to Paris to study. Peacock's paintings focus on the rural ; ART TOUR: The BYU Museum of Art is sponsoring a cultural tour to Los Angeles Museum of Art to view a collection ; County iof Van Gogh masterpieces March 3-On !loan from the Van Gogh Museum in 'Amsterdam the exhibition is making two ; Ideas and briefs for the Performing Arts Calendar need to be submitted to the paper by Monday for Friday's publication. Story ideas should be discussed two weeks prior to the event. Press releases can be sent to The Daily Heraid at RO. Box 717, Provo, Utah 84603 HUTCHIN6S MUSEUM: by John Hutchings, a Utah native. The collection includes rocks, minerals, fossils, reptiles, corals, Native American artifacts, paintings, photographs and sculptures. Tiie museum is open 9 a.m.-- 5 p.m., Monday-SaturdaAdmission is $2.50 for adults, $2 for students over 12 and senior citizens; $1.50 for young children. THE WRECK OF JULIA ANN: This trav- to or The museum houses a collection of items collected eling exhibit from the Australian National Maiitime Museum in Sydney is featured at the Museum of Church History and Art through January. The three-masteAmerican ship, Julia Ann. was headed from Sydney to San Francisco, loaded with passengers and coal in 1855, when it was blown into a hidden coral reef during a storm. Five of the ship's 42 passengers drowned when the ship broke in half and sunk. The continuing special exhibit. "The Homemade Kingdom: Mormon Regional Furniture." is on display at the Museum of Church History and Art in Salt Lake City through January. Museum history curator Mark Staker needs objects from the U.S. dating before 1950 to help tell the story of welfare. Among other things, he's looking foi early fast offering envelopes and the bags and boxes used to package products made for distribution. Artifacts and photographs of help given internationally during disasters such as earthquakes and famines are difficult to locate. Anyone who can help locate any of these items may call Staker at (801) 240-175or write him at the museum. 45 N. West Temple St., Salt Lake City, Utah For more information, call Rana Lehr at 344-2543. areas of Utah's Sanpete County. Her artwork is known for its direct honesty of the area and how it captures the sense of rural Utah. For more information, call Todd Frye . at DINOSAURS IN THE SNOW: Ogden s Eccles Dinosaur Park is now open for the first time during the winter from 10 a.m.-p.m. on Saturdays. Experience the dinosaurs as they have never been seen before, under a blanket of fresh fallen snow. For more information, cali (801) 393-DIN- p.m. FIRST NIGHT EXHIBIT: A special First Night exhibit of paintings by prominent local artists is on display through the month of January at the Historic County Courthouse. 100 S. University Ave.. Provo. The building is open from 9 a,m.-- VISUAL BEAUTY: E. J. Bird displays his art at Spnngville Museum of Art. 126 E. 400 South. Spnngville, through Feb. 2. The museum also has an exhibition of works by local Utah artist Richard L. Hone on display. Got if in PRINTING MUSEUM: Crandall Historical Printing Museum features a collection of antique printing equipment and presses of Louis E. Crandall. The museum is located at 275 E. Center St., Provo and is open weekdays from p.m. There is no admission Hours are 9 a.m.-- 9 p.m., Monday-Friday- ; 10 a.m.-- p.m. on Saturday, most Sunday and holidays. Admission is free; call (801) 240-461- 5 for group tours. ART TALKS: Art Talks are informal discussions with the curators, writers and artists exhibiting their work in the galleries at the Salt Lake Arts Center, 20 S. West Temple St., Salt Lake City. The talks are free to the public. The on Wednesday talks are from evenings. Gallery hours are Tuesday-Thursdaand Saturdays from 10 a.m.-- 5 p.m.; Friday from 10 a.m.-p.m. and Sunday. 5 p.m. The gallery is closed Mondays and holidays. SALT LAKE ART CENTER: The main gallery at the Salt Lake Art Center is showing "Behind the Lines: Drawings and Objects by Michael David Hall" through 3 and "Frontage Road: A Reinterpretation of John Steinbeck's Of Mice and Men" by artists David Baddley, Aden Ross and John Schaefer through Feb. 14. The center is located at 20 S. W. Temple St., Salt Lake City. The hours are Tuesday through Thursday and Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Friday, 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. and Sunday, 1 to 5 p.m. The gallery is closed Mondays and holidays. Admission to the center is free. April BYU MUSEUM OF ART: A free exhibit on the design of antique cars is on display through March 7 at the BYU Museum of Art. "Art on Wheels: A Century of American Automobile Design" uses dozens of cars that exemplify the century-lon- g trend toward integrating the parts of the automobile into an increasingly stream-lineand unified artistic form. Also on display are 50 artists ffOfli each state in "Colorprint USA" exhibit. It contains 50 versions of the artists' prints; all the prints will be shown in exhibitions every state. GALLERY EAST: The acrylic and digital on canvas that comprises the art of will be showing at Lynne Brooks-Kor- n Gallery East on the College of Eastern Utah campus through Feb. 22. The paintings are of the Pacific coast and its environs. Hung like banners, unstretched, unframed, with grommets, they encompass the viewer in their own reality. Gallery East is located in the main Boshard and Jones Galleries. The museum is open 10 a.m.-p.m., Monday and Thursdays 10 a.m.-- p.m., Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday; and noon-- 5 Saturday. The Museum Cafe is open fix lunch weekdays on the mezzanine level. For more information, call 378-ARTBYU VISUAL ARTS FACULTY: A large survey exhibition of work by BYU's visual art faculty is shown in the Museum of ' Art's Ashton-JackmaBarlow and Marriott Galleries through May. Each faculty member displays a significant body of work. Lectures, conferences and debates allow the work to be explored in depth while it is on display. Admission is free. For more information, call MONTE L BEAN LIFE SCIENCE MUSEUM: Recently accredited by the American Association of Museums and the Association of Systematic Collections, the Bean Museum has received the Donald G. Cox International Wildlife Collection, donated by Cox of Detroit, The collection includes more than 250 specimens of ungulates (hoofed mammals) from all regions of the world: many are very rare and seldom seen. The collection becomes part of the permanent collection and is exhibited on the third floor of the museum through January. Also showing at the museum: "Africa: A diverse continent" in the Bean Memorial Room "Waterfowl" in the Center Atrium "Synoptic Collections" on the first floor Admission to the museum and its exhibits is free. Museum hours are Monday-Frida10 a.m.-- 9 p.m.; Saturday, 10 a.m.-- 5 p.m.; Sunday, closed. For more information about the Bean Museum, call 378-635dougmuseum.byu.edu or fax 378-373- aim EVER HOMI r AFTER 2 20 4 35 7 15 ps ill FRIES Mm mi anew waar rat UHT JtE BUCK '3i i ."j 1 MM leva aMiaauaaWrCaM PO" STEP MoM services performed by students under professional supervision All 2:M 4:40 7:20 10:0012:30 Sat 56566, i 120 West Main American Fork 75311 iii MTMKAYCOKENi Nightly 7:00 9:15 (PG-1- I Daily 7 & 9 p.m. Sat. 5:00 SHOWS MEET JOE BLACK (pg 13) , Nightly 7:00 Sat. Mat. 3:00 $4 50 JL pa W..W 4 QftlanforcAcC by Robert Bolt BYU (Preview) Januaiy or Student ID) January Ticket! half price for previews Fme Am Ticket Office Januaiy Matinee 2 p m., January 30 Tua S.L. February Tickets also available at the MOA 3) 0casons 7:30 p.m. Margetts Theatre Harris Fine Arts Center MtW.-T- $9 ($2 off with Daily 4:55 7:20 9:45 Sat. 12:05 2:30 4:55 7:20 9:45 I Hit T MIN KbU LINE (R) 8:00 Daily 4:30 T Expiration I TQ17NE CINEMAS 1 (PG-1- (PG-1- Box Houston, Texas, 77256. The phone number is (713) 965-995- A BUG'S LIFE tup PO. WorldFest-Housto- BiU EARTH SCIENCE MUSEUM: the Earth Science Museum is displaying a rock and mineral collection and (G) uauy 4:au :uu a:ou Sal 12:30 2:30 4:30 7:00 9:00 YOU'VE GOT MAIL (PG) Daily 5.00 7:20 9:45 Sal. 12 20 2:40 5:00 7:20 9:45 agStfitg J 39 7 U1VM Ml 4 SI 7:30 i 55 12:15 independent filmmaker wishing to submit a film to the festival should enter by Feb. 12. For more information on the annual 26x36 poster event, plus a free depicting the dramatic city of Houston at night, with the entry and information kit on the back of the color poster, send name and address to: Entry Director, Sat 12:10 2:25 4:40 7 25 9 40 30 1204:00 6:50 9:4012:25 1:11449 7 NIJS11M i: 4:20 7 05 9451205 Call for indy entries: The 32nd annual WorldFest-Housto- n International Film Festival will continue with its dedicated independent film screening format for the Any upcoming unspooling on April BYU Daily 4:40 7:25 9:40 Perms reo S6.9S 451-750- AiKa 4 CtaMran $3 CLOSED SUNDAYJ A CIVIL ACTION Fabulous Services S195 $16 00 af J:I5:KI7:1005123S 12:M.M unarm February. For information on joining American Mothers, call Nancy Peterson at (801) Mich. Sat 12:15 2:30 4:50 7:10 9:35 Let Us Introduce You To Our rat verse, 100 lines or less, Short Story one story of 2500 words or less and Essay or Article one entry of 2500 words or less. The contest is open to any mother and only unpublished, material is eligible. The writer must be a member of AMI or join upon entering. The state deadline is Jan. 31. All entries must be postmarked no later than Jan. 31. Send entries to PO. Box 117, Logan, Utah, 84323. Winners will be announced at the state AMI convention in West in North Park in Provo. Hours are Wednesday, Friday and Saturday from 2-- 5 p.m. (PG-1- Style CONTESTS: Mothers Poetry Contest American Mothers. Utah Association is now accepting entries for its annual literature contest. The theme is "Cherish the Hands that Nurture a Child." There are four categories in which to submit entries: one poem traditional or free Poetry pictures whose identities were lost during Daily 4:50 7:10 9:35 & mation, call (801) 5334195. the museum's recent renovation. The museum is at 500 North and 500 PTt1Wtffft.W!Tfafly,WW PATCH ADAMS Cut ARTS FELLOWSHIP: Sponsored by the Utah Arts Council's Visual Arts Program, the fellowships help further the development of working artists. Fellowships are available in crafts, drawing, mixed media, painting, photography, printmaking, sculpture and conceptual art. For more infor- DAUGHTERS OF THE UTAH PIONEERS MUSEUM: Come in and find Porter Rockwell s bullet-riddle- d hat. Also, please help in identifying some pioneer PATCH ADAMS U .affjW rlrT7 "- Mir ipm Monlay NiaM Family W SS M tor EMM Family Tuesday BaraaM -- ay: Ml Vmn all Day anly 50t Boi Office Ofaas Taeay al VM p.m. showing at the BYU Museum of Peoples and Cultures. Samples of Guatemalan, Indian, American Indian, Oceanian and Fteruvian cultures are displayed within the exhibit. The museum is 100 E. 700 Norm. Provo. Admission is free. For more information, call 37&6112. HERITAGE MUSEUM: The Heritage Museum in the SCERA Center at 745 S. State St., Orem, showcases the community's history. Exhibits include a diorama of 1940 s Orem. early churches, an old Bible, a vintage organ, schools, railroads, agriculture, old guns and war items, antique clothing and various household items, Indian artis and much more. facts, a Models of the buildings as well as photographs and treasures from the past are on display. Free tours are by appointment. For more information, call Payson CINEMA I BYU MUSEUM OF PEOPLES AND CULTURES: The elements of weaving unite with aspects of different cultures and peoples in a new exhibit, "Common Threads: Weaving Cultural Identity." now IortttPfb u(tzmm MM I dinosaur skin impressions. Regular exhibits include two fully e camptosaurus and mounted, allosaurus skeletons, a 15CwtiilliorHar-ol-d Jurassic dinosaur egg. A new sauro-poskull is on display. tours are availGuided and able. Hours are 9 a.m.-- 9 p.m., Monday; 9 and noon-- 4 a.m.-- 5 p.m., Tuesday-Frida- y p.m. on Saturday. The museum is at 1683 Canyon Rd., west of Cougar Stadium. Admission is free. For more information, call 378-368- . 84150-3810- charge but donations are welcome. Lectures by Louis E. Crandall and Thomas K. Hinckley on the role of printing in the restoration of the gospel are presented evenings by appointment. For more information, call 377-777- The works are done with printmaking, which involves etching, screen printing and lithography. . The exhibition is on display in the hnpywww.byu.educfK Carmike WYNNSONG 12 764-000- 9 OO 375-800- 0 2230 N. University I Parkway vuiiuiiucc oiuoi c - r iuiw THIN RED LINE EVERY V'him I Ssamsh Fork FIGHTS HIS OWN MAN R..'5 I SPANISH 8 I Pleasant W jj ii.Mirti,..,,mi CAFiMidt Grove WATER GARDENS 312 WAR Garten CHECK WYNNSONG 12 6 4925 Or Norlti Edgewosd Dr. X.Mii . oo THEATRE Dl""" showtimes. f3 mm CARMIKE NOW tn ;J HIE d5E u 2 H' CEST MOVIE OF THE YEAR!" Jmnfhf VAnjal, WON ROBIN WILLIAMS PATCH ADAMS STORY BASED ON - A TRUE .VA -- L . 4925 EDGEWATER 764-000- 12 DR. - PROVD SORRY. NO PASSES ACCEPTED FOR THIS ENGAGEMENT. PLEASE CHECK THEATER DIRECTORIES OR CALL THEATERS FOR SHOWTMES. 9 H 0 III fl f'.'l'.'P.'miVtlitilitV.liarfgi., !.'H;H.'M J Daiy in Dolby Saturday & stereo 4:00 6:45 9:20 Sunday Matinee At 1:Z0 uMMmn(iiitTuoCTWwoucnota.iNft 1 I $ $ Check Theatre Listing For Showtimes 1 PLAYING iiij:iiiii!iiif:iiiri:iiini',imii cwcpu- - omok 3 WYNNSONG N v iiilllSiiiliiiBilBittPS rr. 0 "stf w ( Ml Kit!, JMtaaaaiiai..ia.aaitMaa-- TiaaataTliTi - """"aaliliT w 08 IK Wfl V. t y lin ajcwaWvJwW )B II U Ij rVrVwo" V narvT -i-wwiaMa-Mw-aaa--- ) Check Theatre llUlill (1 II ' l II sal li'i' a?7M4W) V3 x Listings For Showtimes 7fii.nA09. www" -- m risnog ctwiSrtTE an HllSiKT r CEN1EH t m CMVt Check Theatre Listings For Showtimes uaapto 4 |