button
button button button button button
     
Marie Watt

COMING SOON
Marie Watt: Blanket Stories
Artist Marie Watt explores social and cultural histories found in everyday objects, like reclaimed blankets. She uses found blankets to weave personal stories with great impact. With her fabric pieces she is a powerful voice in contemporary art.

Blanket Stories is sponsored in part by:
Smithsonian: National Museum of the American Indian, Mike and Jean Louise Thieme, Ron and Joan Harris,
and Nancy Resor.

 
Whodunit?

May 9, 2008
Whodunit?
The Second Anonymous Art Show and Sale

5:30 – 8:30pm | Drawing: 7:30pm
Unsigned - Unlabeled
One Price - One Size - One Night

Whodunit? is sponsored in part by:
Bank of Jackson Hole, Graham4. Karen and Dick Stewart, Prugh Real Estate, Wild Hands, Women’s Health Center of Jackson, and all of the kind participating artists


Smithsonian: National Museum of the American Indian

National Endowment for the Arts

Community Foundation of Jackson Hole

Wyoming Arts Council

Artspace Exhibitionists

Georgene and John Tozzi

Gerry and Imaging Spence

Cultural Council of Jackson Hole-Arts for All






line break
loft  
Tenuous Record

June 13 - July 31, 2008
Tenuous Record: Scuplture by Jenny Dowd
In a society overwhelmed with mass marketing, TV on demand and high speed internet connections, it can be easy to overlook our stable, constant information sources. Jenny K. Dowd’s collection of porcelain and fiber work asks that the viewer slow down and re-evaluate their perceptions through a subtle dialogue with an ancient resource: books.



 
loft  
pARTners

May 2 - June 6, 2008
pARTners Exhibition Arts and Learning
pARTners has been hard at work bringing project-based arts education to the students of Jackson Hole. Nearly 100 teachers have integrated pARTners projects into their classrooms this year reaching approximately three-fourths of the K-12 students in Jackson and at The Journeys School.


 
loft  
Sue Sommers

May 9 - June 13, 2008
Sue Sommers: Inspired By the Wind River Range
Landscape exists as an idea because human beings enter it, perceive it
and make it so; and make landscape a reality as flexible as imagination.