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Show The :vdt Smiths Rock Art photos part of USU Festival photo-journali- st traveling exhibit for the magazine Smith said his purpose in doing the original rock art photography and story was to raise the stature of rock art. If the purpose of art is indeed to inspire, educate and entertain, tlien rock art is fme art. The thing that has phased me most about the publication of the article is that the level of consciousness concerning this art has been raised. Smiths interest in photography began at the same time as his interest m mountain climbing. As a public relations director in the Marine Corps, he continued to pursue his interest While in the corps. Smith has had a n show with David Douglas Duncan and was responsible for the establishment of a museum of photography. The author of Windsinger, Smith is a naturalist and a freelance writer. He is a frequent contributor of articles to the New York Times and is currently working on his second book. The Western Art Invitational may be seen daily, through Saturday, from 2 to 1 of the HPER 9 p.m. in Gymnasium Building, adjacent to the Great West Fair portion of the Festival of the American West. Admission to the exhibit is included in the price of admission to the fair, $3 for adults. $1.50 for children. Those under seven are admitted free. issue of National Geographic magazine. Smith had no idea that the color photographs would end up in an exhibit during the Festival of the American Weot That is exactly what happened as National Geographic enlarged and framed 21 of Smith's prints, fiamed them, and at the expense of the magazine, shipped them to Utah to be part of the Western Art Invitational in conjunction with the annual festival, now through Saturday on the campus of Utah State University. n The invitational features western .American painters, sculptors and photographers, including Smith, and original Ansel Adams photos of western sites. Others exhibiting include Jon Anderson. Farrell Collett, Glen Edwards, Avard Fairbanks, Edward Fraughton, Jerry Fuhriman, Harrison Groutage, Ed Taggart and Ev Thorpe. The works by Smith are of Utah Rock Art, photographed in Southern Utah. well-know- canopy that in-troduces shoppers to one entrance of new Anderson and Jonathan Bronson. Hours: 10 a m. to 5:30 p.m.,'Tuesday through Saturdays. The Lodge at Snowbird Gallery, watercolors by Kirk Randle through summer. The Cliff Lodge Gallery, Snowbird, photographs by Rolf Kay through Aug. 15. h Bullocks's Gallery, East, watercolors by Kathy Wilson, Larry and Sharlerte Christensen, Beverly Harpster and Mariorie 4744-9t- Holt. Duck Blind Gallery, Second Floor, Trolley Square, watercolors by Turk Evans and Nancl Ayn, bronzes by Sonny Timme, woodcarvings by Robert Negaard, Jack Gallatly and Miles Sweeney. Hours: Mondays through Fridays, 10 a m to 6 pm and Saturdays, 9 a.m. to 4 pm Remember the glittering signs, flashing Capitol Hill at night logos and fiery neon tubes searing the dark like hot irons? Main Street today, with its flat trim facades and leafy borders, is becoming a staid avenue with dignified doors, bronze letters and windows that seem to apologize for a commercial look. Stained Glass Color is coming back, however, in the form of stained glass. Two establishments in the new Crossroads Mall are employing the emoluments of an old art to enrich their buildings. Commercial Security Bank is using interior installations and Weinstocks has a canopy that moves boldly from the facade at the head of Main Street. school. Their works will be exhibited in the Salt Lake Art Colters Main Gallery through Sept. 6. An artists preview and reception will be held Friday from 7 to 10 p.m. Hours at the center are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesdays through Thursdays, 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Fridays, and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays. Admission is 50 cents. Vorrt Gallery, Hotel Utah, by Conrad Harold Hook n, Ramon Rice, Stuart Heimdal, Kimbal Warren. Mike Hadley and Jim Taylor, and sculpture by John Praxen and Jim Taylor. Hours: Monday through Friday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. and by appointment. 444-7t- h Mondavs-Saturday- Crossroads Mall on Main Street, is the design of Ogden artist Dale Brjner who Staff Photo tv Tim Kofty was commissioned to do work after he was named winner of canopy competition. by Angelo Caravagha, member of the University of Utah art staff The site, to be formally opened Aug. 20, includes a courtyard where initially, theatrical and musical performances will be arranged by the Salt Lake Council for the Arts. The Second South entrance is flanked by the two bronzes one a figure of a young woman swinging a child by the arms. Slender proportions critically posed above the base add to the dynamic play of figures in space On the opposite side a young men carries a child on his shoulder The feeling of youth and exhilaration is in each, but the figure of the child in the second is somewhat stiff not supple in movement. Angelo Caravaglia's relief sculpture adorns the upper portion of a bnck stele at the northeast comer of the building. Twelve themes of historical import are represented. The forceful relief depicts scenes from entrance of the pioneers to the valleys of the state to the epic linking of the transcontinental railways. There are representations of scenic areas, mining, industry and agriculture The reliefs which also accompany the corporate name may be more readily recognized and enjoyed as the patina of mellowing bronze takes on a lighter color The city's image gams sophistication as it ages. We may miss the exotic glow at night but the daytime look is more becoming, thanks to leaders who promote the look and to planners, builders and artists who give it expression Grand Canyon A sunrise over Grand Canyon's Desert View Tower flames across the cover of a new publication by Paul F. Gerrhngs, Down The Grand Staircase, Grand Canyon's Living Adventure. Grand Canyon Publications, Salt Lake City. The delightful essay in word and picture begins at Brian Head at the top of Cedar Breaks National Monument over 11,000 feet above and descends in a step ladder geography to the bottom of Grand Canyon. sea-lev- el Both are the works of designer Dale Bryner, Weber State College staff member who also serves as manager and designer for Glass Editions, an Ogden firm which produced these and other Salt Lake City p.m. Tuesdays through installations. Thursdays, 10 a.m.-- 9 p.m. Bryner, who exhibits painting in local and Fridays, 10 a.m. 5 p.m. Sundays. regional shows, produced the handsome illustrations Salt Palace Gaik.-?-. ;.r for the widely read book, Orrin Porter Rockwell, written by Harold Schindler, historian and Salt Lake Palace, Associated Utah Artists annual summer show Tribune Sunday Editor. Salt Lake Art Center, 20 S. West Temple, "North Mountain: A Utah Artists' Com-munitAug. 8 through Sept. 6. Hours: 10 a.m.-- 5 -- Every Blooming Thing, through Aug. 16. Salt Palace gallery, East, figure painting and hours. landscapes by J.F. Wixom, Brigham City Museum tiles by Lark Lucas, mixed Gallery, main gallery: drawVan Adrien media by ings by LaConte Stewart ; Suchtlelen, color aides by collection gallery: American Steve Peterson, oils and Indian pottery . Hours: Man-dawatercolors by Linda Flan11 a.m. to 7 p.m., nery and oils by Howard Tuesday through Friday, II McGlaughlin. a.m. to 5 p.m Saturday 1 to 7 p.m Gallery 54, 54 W 4th South, Gallery 54, 56 W. 4th South, paintings by Dan Baxter and Al Rounds, sculpture byt watercolors by Homer H. 5en-! Clark M. Peter Fillerup.gnd through August. Hours: weekdays, 10 am to nis Smitfi. 5 p.m. North Light Gallery, Irv-Salt Lake Art Center Corley's , 1984 S. State, photridor Gallery, 20 S. West ographs by Mel Lewis, Temple, photography exthrough August 13. Hours: 10 hibit: by a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday Fred "Prize Fighters" Wright, "Scenes" by through Saturday. John Schaefer through Sept. 1. Hours: Tuesdays-SundayUniversity of Utah Art 10 am to 5 p.m Gallery, Art and Architecture Canter, U of U campus. Fridays, 10 am to 9 pm Student Art Show, through T.P. Gallery, 252 S. Main, August. Hours: weekdays, 8 oils by Lewis Brown, Daniel am to 5 p.m. Yazzie, sand paintings by Vicky Allen, Willard Johnson Salt Lake Art Cantor, 20 S. through Aug. 3. Hours: West Temple, "Painters of 9 a.m. to 4 Taos The Formative pm Years: The Harrison Eitei-ior- g Collection," In Main Waking Owl, 1240 E. 4th Gallery, water colors by South, stained glass by Willy Roger Bailey through Aug. 3, Littlg through Aug. 10. Hours: Tuesdays-SondavHours: weekdays, 10 am to 10 am to 5 pm, Fridays i p.m. Saturdays. 10 am to 5 until 9 p.m., closed Mondays. pm, Sundays, 12:30 to 5 p.m. Bralthwaite Fine Arts GalStone Age Crafts, 89 E. lery, Southern Utah State City, 9th South, masks and pupCollege, Cedar Quits-Quilte- d pets by Lucy Fairchild Prints," through through August. Hours: 11 Aug. 10. Hours: weekdays: a.m. 6 p.m. Tuesc.ays 10 a.m. to 7 p.m., Saturdays. through Saturdays. 1 to 7 p.m. Sundays, Artery Arts, 178 W. 300 Artists Workshop and GalSouth, oils, watercolors, lery, Trolley Square, metal drawings by Margaret . sculpture, iewelry, and Wadsworth, May Blair, Greg drawings by Rick Blacfcerby Barnes, Dan Mecham through August 9. Hours:through Aug. 29. Hours: 9 a.m.a.m. 6 p.m. Mondays Monday to Friday 10 p.m Saturday 10 p.m. to 6 through Fridays, 10 a.m.-- 2 pm pm Saturdays. upstairs stained-glas- s By George Dibble Salt Lake Citys Main Street from TTie commission for the canopy was awarded to Bryner in a competition conducted by a Los Angeles architectural firm. Preliminary drawings and a model were rendered by a special process that the artist has developed which produces the luminous effect of light passing through glass. The arch of steel and glass is suspended above a section of the walk approximately 30 by 40 feet in dimension. Flat sections of glass, 16 in number, complete the circular span. Two more courses extend the number to 48. semi-circul- Abstract Design blue and green patterns make up an Red, gold, abstract design with a suggestion of fanciful cloud formations. The wall beneath is covered with mirrors which extend the image, doubling the apparent dimensions of the arch. Incorporated into American Savings new building complex at Second Smith and West Temple are two bronze sculptures by Dennis Smith and a stele or pictograph, as company spokesmen have termed it. s. presenting the 1 980-8- ar k Mondays-- The Art Studio, 1959 S. 11th East, portraits by Shauna by Clinger. serigraphs Brooke Morrison, water- Donna Barton. colors by Hours: 10 a.m. to 5 30 p m. Artists In Action Gallery, Heritage Square, 580 S. West Temple, one woman show of watercolors by Rovee Dawn Gordon July 11 through August 12. Hours: 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Saturday. Utah Museum of Fine Arts, University of Utah campus, Ulfert Wilke Collection: Art of five continents, and Magic Realism" Hours: Mondays through Fridays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Saturdays and Sundays, 4 to 5 p.m., hnd the second Monday of the month, 7 to 9 p.m. I 7 Salt Lake Citys daftime look beguis to glow ART CALENDAR Dallas 3. I9M) Augusl The art scene tain Artists Cooperative after they began meeting on Thursday nights to discuss their work and philosophies. Each bolds strong Mormon beliefs which are expressed in their works. The group hopes eventually to found a North Mountain: A Utah Artists Community, an exhibition of works by artists who live and work in the North Mountain and Alpine areas at the mouth of American Fork Canyon, will go on display Friday at the Salt Lake Art Center, 20 S. West Temple. The nine artists whose works appear in the show include Trevor Southey and Gary Smith, painters, Frank Riggs, Neal Hadlock and Dennis Smith, sculptors, John Marshall, industrial designer, Michael Graves, designer, Joseph Linton, architect, and Marvin Payne, singersong writer. The artists formed the North Moun John Jarvis. John Myruo, Nancy Lund, Paul Forester, Larry Winborg, Gary Smith, Harrison Groutage, and sculpture by Grant Speed, . Tribitn Hie large, Artists community show p.m. Tivoli Gallery, 331 S. Main, local artists Ken Baxter, rihune, Sunday ! two-ma- "I wanted Utahns to know that they have a cultural record in this state that is twice as old as that of the Egyptians, said Smith. Since National Geographic is an educational institution, it agreed to furnish prints for the exhibit. I'm pleased that these photos will first be seen in my hometown, my paintings Schwterino, .ike home state and at my home university. The photos will later become a Special to The Tribune When an article and photographs by Gary Smith were published ui the Janua LOGAN Atrium Callanr, Salt Lake Public Library, 209 E. 51ti South, pastel by Bettiame Andersen, Susan Oviatt, Sharon Spepherd. Aug. Hours: weekdays 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Saturday V a.m. to 6 1 line-v- 1 p of Great Theatre at PioneerMemorial Theatre October 2 with Opening Lemer and Loewes Saturdays. "Printed -- . Portrait Studio Sears portraitsp-avsprtcopies s 18 color photographic portraits 895 three 5 x 7s fifteen wallet size -- ! CHRISTENSEN BALLET ACADEMY Wiliam F. Christensen, Director K affiliated with Ballet West Fall Quarter Begins September 2, 1980 Full-tim- e Professional Faculty Suzanne Erlon, Internationally trained ballerina; New York City a principal with Ballet West. Barbara Ballet, Boston Ballet; Hamblin, former Ballet West principal; University of Utah Adjunct Assistant Professor of Ballet. Vicki Hutten Hawke, former Ballet West Pnncipal and Instructor at the University of Utah and Ballet West in Snowmass Aspen, Colorado. Tenley Taylor, Assistant Ballet Mistress, Ballet West; professional soloist, teacher, Rehearsal Supervisor of THE NUTCRACKER. Guest Faculty from Ballet West includes Artistic Director Bruce Marks, Toni Lander Marks, internationally famous ballerina and expert in the Buumouville method; Sondra Sugai and Ballet West principals. May 950 No limit on number of packages. Our selection of poses. 95 additional for each added person in portraits. Choice of backgrounds. Full package orders only. No age limit Adults and family groups welcome 1 td affective KHiUinui SUM This 7444. thru Aug. 9th, 9453, I Salt Lake City, Utah 84109. 1 980 VMS IIMH iM-akn- M 4x) fa ma 2WS12J Studio Hours: Tuts, thru SsL 10 a.m. lit 1 hour before store closing. Closed Sun. and Mon. ) For information, write Box ANNIE GET YOUR GUN deposit Pre-Ball- and 45th Smith 3 Irving Berlins J Classes: (age 6 & 7); Beginning through Advanced Ballet; adult classes, boys class; Academy class. Variations, Point, and other special classes at the renovated Fortuna School in Holladay (near 7-2- Uw your Scan chart card Sears Satisfaction fuaranttad or your moor y back I' v Til rV J ' yj ' 2 BEST SEATS IN THE HOUSE ONLY 8.34 A SHOW ON A SEASON TICKET . . . OTHERS FROM 4. 1 7 AND, THERES NOT A BAD SEAT AT PMT PMT SEASON PATRONS: YOU HAVE THROUGH THIS FRIDAY TO RENEW YOUR SEASON TICKETS CALL 581-696- 1 Box office open 1 0:00 A.M.-6:0- 0 or drop by . . . were at 300 P.M., Monday through Friday South and University Street k A |