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Show Tll lirt ' vA' ,x ; rtZ'HW- .- ;M! ' ;. v A. , -- - ' 'v - 2 """- - . t v ''"'i By George Dibble Robert T an undergraduate. Barrett inclined strongly to traditional realism in art After receiving a BFA degree from the University of Utah he enrolled at the University As ' ROSY, IkhDpitVr oj J.Yhn imJ if orobnn . of Iowa for graduate study ,ril C im:n M9,-)392-. j"- - ' X"' : lex- f, "' T " (k s,'5fecN 9-- .m. This beautifully carved gravestone, done by John Henry Bott in 1892, exemplifies the painstaking effort by its creator. Tribune Staff Writer Gravestones have long been recognized as a valuable historical record of an area and its traditions They are equally valuable as an aesthetic record of the areas folk art and the work of its artisans exhibit of Utah Gravestone Art opens Sunday at the Utah Art Council's Glendinning Gallery, f!7 E South Temple. The exhibit, sponsored by the Council's Folk Arts Frogram, includes a wide variety of examples of this unique art form Many of the earliest gravestones in Utah were carved by European stonemasons and woodcarvers who were among the first pioneers, according to Carol Edison, project director for the exhibit We have also found markers made by untrained carvers, often friends or she said. family of the deceased, They are usually simply made, but the Hrt is often more touching and poignant than that on more traditional stones. Doves, lambs, flowers and rlaped hands, the traditional symbols of death and resurrection, are fouid in almost every area. They vary with the skill and sensitivity of the carver and also with their personal significance as memorials to the deceased. An Continued From Page The core of the collection is a group of rubbings and historical information donated to the Council by Maury Hascltinc, Martha Schack, Peg Billings, Jo Brooks and Mary George. Interested in folk art and folklore, these women have traveled to cemeteries throughout the state to do rubbings of significant stones. They use pellon, a soft, felt like fabric, and carpenter's crayons to make the copies The exhibit also includes panels of the rubbings, casts and originals stones, photographs, slides, and some of the tools and work of one of Utahs earliest carvers, John Henry Bott. A reception honoring the women who donated their work to the collection will be held from 3 to 5 p m. Sunday. The exhibit will be open to the public at that time. It will continue to be on display through June 15. Hours will be Monday through Friday from 8 am. until 5 pm. Alta and Austin Fife, whose early research on gravestones laid the foundation for the exhibition, will also be honored at the Sunday reception. Artistic Diicctors Shirley Kirie ... a City Stages program FlU.li CONClilUS May May May May 16 17 18 Is made possible he a tpant fiom the Salt I tike Count il foi the Aits ('oik 45-7- . The Utah Museum of Natural History on the University of Utah campus will be the site for the fifth annual American Indian Arts and Crafts Benefit Sale to be held Sunday through May 20. A $250,000 collection of blankets, rugs, jewelry, pottery, sandpaintings, and photographs will be featured during the exhibit, which is open, free, to the public daily from 9:30 a m. to 5.30 p.m. The collection belongs to H. Jackson Clark II, an authority ori American Indian arts and crafts. All items on display will be available for purchase with proceeds going to the museum. The sale is sponsored by the Associates of the Utah Museum of Natural History. The Little Ads that pay oft BIG! PROTECT YOUR ROUE a FAMILY! 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He was and nobodys judging from his work fool two pluses on any newspaper. 'r: He describes with diffculty (says Lummis) the Indian. In a dispatch dated April 5, 1885, he agonizes: . . If a man who really hankered to hide out here got caught or killed, it would be because he was , either a blamed fool or playing to very hard luck, and yet there are acres of good, rational people all over this country who fancy that all there is to this Apache ''business is to chase Lo over a field until he gets tired or tie him up and and then perforate him with a bring him into camp in an express. . . Trying to hit of this matter, at my limited verbal fijfc bulls-ey- e range, is like trying to lasso a broncho steer with a of sewing cotton. Hold the dictionary up by the 'ySrd and still I cant shake out the vocabulary to tail, phrase the facts. Language will scarce graze the skin but heres a try: ' The North American Indian, has never been notorious as a dude or an ass in war. Chide his methods may be, but they are effective. It has put the superior white man to his trumps to get away with him ; and it never would have been done blit for infinitely better weapons, later superior numbers, and a judicious use of whisky. . . Dateline Fort Bowie is one of the better books on American Indians, one of the most interesting in connection with ArmyIndian relations and just a dandy to read. Thrapp has done very well in supplying footnotes; it is not a matter of reading more than you wanted to know about Apaches, and thats the truth. Harold Schindler. INSULATE . . Jewish Community Center 8:00 pm State Capitol Rotunda Noon 7.CMI Downtown Mail Noon Noon Trolley Square Amphitheatre 15 T2ne Begnimininimg Indian art E-- 2 vv Joan Woodbury & "ON THE LOOSE" ' PROTECT-DECORAT- E en COMPANY a New Bireed Jjord i ' 1. DANCE RIRIE-WOODBUR- Y TSne Last Miss Edision has also discovered many symbols that are typical of this region These include covered wagons, horses, representations of various temples and the words, Holiness to the Luinniis reports on Apache war 1 be- Gravestones: a look at the past Ry Tom Mi C art hey ake T i ibunt. Suiwl.iv, May Artists lm itation.il w it h watei coloi s bv id age will be present at the opening on M , 18 and the show w ill Dawna Barton that have a firm comhang until the mand of technical facility and apt t nd of tin1 month like a still lile Included are studies from Germany, expression I partieulai m soft overlays of deep tone and the An-la and Switzerland He was comof clean washes and missioned to do a series of color deft management white paper in a Pai k tltv theme eti lungs of Williamsburg, Va m comThe Intermouetam Art Co is prepar memoration of the United States Bicentennial celebratuon and has done submg an exhibit of 120 color eti lungs h the Austrian engraver Josef Eiden-hergo- r jects from Utah and other regions of the United States The noted etcher now 80 years -- 2R. (SSV. j: a comprehensive exhibit that includes a variety of subject matter approaches in a wide range of media A cause of contemstrong water color rendering of a porary leanings i d m planter arrangement seen through a at the window was used by the Utah Water-colo- r western school. Society on a poster announcing He got some their Fifth Annual Juried exhibition static occasionI agree with Kathryn MacKays ally but after three years of study conclusions that women in Utah have a during which he served as teaching traditionally never enjoyed the same assistant, he left with an MA and MFA accolades as men in the arts for various degrees and a German Academic reasons which she describes m a of Exchange grant from the Institute to an exhibition of International Education for study at the program foreword works by women artists at the Pioneer Hochschule dor Kunste (Academy of Memorial Theater. But traditional Arts jn Berlin). assumptions" of sorts may have disStudents could elect to work with an couraged aspiring male as well as advisor who inclined in a particular female artists In a practically oriented direction, but were able to explore climate for career choices the persuaother art movements as they desii ed A sion away from art has existed for both year of study and travel, visiting the on grounds that it could be a profession of impecunious promise major museums left the Salt Lake City his for with convictions native The exhibition in the PMT Ixige strong earlier decisions to paint wllh realist Gallery presents the Utah Women surprising ,ORM emphasis, feelings that were remfoued after many critiques, seminars and visitations to student exhibitions throughout Germany Barrett returned to Utah last year to accept a position as artist m residence at the Kimball Art Center in Park City show of his drawings where a lone-maand paintings will be displayed through May 24 If is which was a little AHREKRAUER . l Varietys the spiee in Kimball gallery exhibit , - Sail Ih MVIH 842-970- 7 |