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Show In January Salt Lake Art Center to Sponsor Three New Exhibits National Mormon Arts Festival, Festi-val, BYU; North Mountain Exhibition, Salt Lake Art Center; Utah Sculptors Invitational, Invi-tational, Kimball Art Center, Park City; Springville Mu seum's National Art Exhibition Exhibi-tion and the Utah Arts Council Fine Arts Exhibition. "While Greed Ruled the Land" is a new collection of Please turn to page 7B The Salt Lake Art Center, 20 South West Temple, will be closed until January 8th in preparation for the opening of three new exhibitions. Beginning January 8th, the Main Gallery will feature "Paintings, Prints and Photographs by Anna Campbell Camp-bell BlissSculpture by Frank Riggs"; in the Up- s stairs Gallery, n' While Greed Ruled the Land" photographs photo-graphs by John Schaefer will be displayed; and in the Corridor Gallery, "Geometric "Geome-tric Anarchies" by Therese Schwartz will be featured. All exhibits will be on display through March 6th. Anna Campbell Bliss studied stu-died art and science at Wellesley College and received re-ceived a master's degree in architecture from Harvard University's Graduate School of Design. She is a frequent lecturer on color at universities universi-ties and for professional groups, most recently for the AIA convention in Hawaii. Mrs. Bliss serves nationally as chairman of the ASID Committee on Color and Light and as their delegate to the Inter-Society Color Council. Among her many awards for art and design was a grant from the Graham Foundation in 1980 to support sup-port her color research and experimentation. Her articles arti-cles and reviews have appeared in the AIA Journal; Color, Research & Application Applica-tion and other publications. Her work is included in the collection of: Metropolitan Museum, New York City; Art Institute of Chicago; Marriott Mar-riott Library, SLC; University of Minnesota, Minneapolis; Utah Museum of Fine Arts; Salt Lake Art Center; Miami Gallery, Tokyo; Utah State Collection and many more private and public collections. collec-tions. She has had one person shows at the Focus Gallery, San Diego Musuem V of Art; Atrium Gallery, SLC Library, University Gallery of Fine Art, Ohio State University, Columbus," Ohio; Lee Hall Gallery, Clemson University, Clemson, South Carolina; Department of Architecture, Yale University, Univer-sity, New Haven, Connecticut; Connecti-cut; Source Gallery, San Francisco; Utah Museum of Fine Arts ; L6weArt G alTeryT Syracuse, New York; and Suzanne Kohn Gallery, St. Paul, Minnesota. Frank Riggs is a graduate of Pratt Institute, New York, in Industrial Design. His experience includes designing design-ing and engineering furniture furni-ture for the Milo Baughman Design firm in Wellesley, Massachusetts. Mr. Riggs moved to Utah in 1969 when Milo Baughman was invited to set up an environmental design department at Brig-ham Brig-ham Young University, where Mr. Riggs subsequently subsequen-tly taught part-time. In 1972, he left Milo Baughman Design to continue teaching and pursue a new career in sculpture. He is represented by Creative Concepts Gallery, Gal-lery, New York; Carson-Sa-piro Gallery, Denver, Colorado; Colo-rado; and The Canyon Gallery, Alta, Utah. His work is included in the collections of Phillips Petroleum, Denver, Den-ver, Colorado; Bill Walters Development Corp., Denver; American Television & Communication, Com-munication, Denver; Utah State Retirement Board; Conant Associates, Interior Design, SLC; Weinstocks,: SLC; Salt Lake City Parks Department; Bonneville Bank, Provo; and Brigham Young University. The large sculpture on Exchange Place, SLC and the bicentennial bicenten-nial sculpture, Orem, are by Mr. Riggs. His work has been exhibited at the Inagu-ral Inagu-ral Exhibition of the Harrison Fine Arts Museum, Utah . State; University, Logan; v Photographs Make Up Section Of Exhibits Continued from Page 1B photographs by John Schae-fer, Schae-fer, artist-in-residence at the Salt Lake Art Center and director of the Children's Photographic Workshop. Mr. Schaefer is a graduate with honors from Notre Dame University, after which he studied photography photogra-phy with Henry Horenstein, Harvard University. He is the owner and manager of Utah , Photographic Production Produc-tion Studios, SLC, and was founder of the Children's Photographic Workshop. He wa an Artist-in-the-Schools with the Utah Arts Council on the Navajo Reservation and at Weber State College. Therese Schwartz is a visiting artist from New York City. Her exhibition, entitled "Geometric Anarchies" will be presented in the Corridor Gallery. Joanna Kyd states of Schwartz in an Arts Magazine article, 1978: "Hers is a world peopled... by the square. Schwartz play(s) with canvas, paper, light and color, with the square always in the leading role. " " My work' ' speaks for itself," writes Schwartz, 4 'but it will not elevate or instruct." A series of new works will be featured in "Geometric Anarchies." Ms. Schwartz will also be offering a workshop while she is in Salt Lake City. For information, contact the Salt Lake Art Center. The Salt Lake Art Center is open Tuesdays through Saturday, Sa-turday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Fridays and Symphony nights until 9 p.m., and Sundays from 1-5 p.m. Admission is $1.50 for adults, 75 cents for students. Senior citizens 'and children ' ' under ii'' accompanied by an J adult are free. |