Heraldnet.com
THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2008 8:56 pm
LocalNorthwestNation & WorldPoliticsSpecial ReportsPhotosColumnistsMultimedia 
Your town news
 
WEEK IN REVIEW
Wednesday


Friends plan auction, hope to save woman's home
Man blackmailed ex-girlfriend with nude picture...
Traffic deaths decline in Washington
Tuesday


Sauk River will run its course again
Heroin blamed in Mukilteo teen's death
Monroe motorcyclist dies in U.S. 2 crash
Monday


Suspects in Monroe burglary found sleeping on b...
Sounder fills up with new riders
Look for Camano Island actress, 16, on Broadway
Sunday


A life interrupted
Everett composting company ordered to track dow...
WASL questions dominate at forum
Saturday


Marysville teen to race as Olympian for the Mar...
Teen burglar can't run forever, police say
New branch campus in Snohomish County doesn't a...
Friday


Vandals cause $12,000 damage at Evergreen Cemet...
Everett's study on Paine Field air service chan...
Two jailed suspects may be involved in dozens o...
Thursday


Cheers, fears as AM radio towers rise in Snohomish
Study backs Paine Field passenger service
How county residents are dealing with the economy
 

ADVERTISEMENT

Travel   Print This Article  Email This Page  Subscribe Now! facebook digg reddit del.icio.us fark stumble

Carolyn Cole, Los Angeles Times  (click to enlarge)
Bales of hay dot the landscape along I-90 between Billings and Bozeman, Mont.
Carolyn Cole, The Los Angeles Times  (click to enlarge)
A bronze cowboy sculpture by J.C. Dye is priced at nearly $13,000 at Tierney Fine Art in Bozeman, Mont. Curtis Tierney, left, speaks with a customer at the gallery.
Carolyn Cole, The Los Angeles Times  (click to enlarge)
A scene of the Yellowstone River opens up on the drive between Billings and Bozeman, Montana.
Carolyn Cole, The Los Angeles Times  (click to enlarge)
Artist Terry Karson salvages items from the trash to use for his art. He works at his home studio, which he helped build.
Carolyn Cole, The Los Angeles Times  (click to enlarge)
East Main Street in downtown Bozeman has many art galleries among the local watering spots.
Carolyn Cole, The Los Angeles Times  (click to enlarge)
Artist Sara Mast uses layers of wax in her work, some of which looks like cryptic maps.
 
ADVERTISEMENT

 
 
CONTACT THE HERALD
Melanie Munk, Features Editor
munk@heraldnet.com
 
Published: Sunday, May 4, 2008

Artists flourish in the Big Sky Country

My travels have taken me to many striking landscapes: the tangled marshes of South Carolina's barrier islands, the red-rock canyons of southwest Utah, a bare expanse of Nevada desert framed by a purple sunset. But nowhere have I had such a strong impulse to capture the scenery -- to take it home with me -- as I did on a recent trip to southern Montana.

As I drove west to Bozeman, the sky opened up and seemed to unfold until the pale blue stretched forever. Farmland rolled out alongside the interstate, dotted at tidy intervals with big, round bales of hay. Knife-edged mountains to the north glowed under a fresh drape of snow, while to the south, gentler hills rose and fell in shades of brown.

A thick cloud would cross the mountains, and the luminous scene would turn sharply foreboding. Another gust of wind would send lacy puffs drifting overhead, and the same land would look invitingly mysterious, full of shadowed, secret nooks.

I dreamed of finding a piece of art that would capture the way this landscape constantly changed, the wild sense of possibility it evoked.

When I got to Bozeman, I started browsing the galleries.

The town, founded in 1864, is charming. Main Street is lined with meticulously restored turn-of-the-last-century buildings. It's made for strolling -- and shoppers and diners of every budget can find something to their liking.

There are college hangouts -- an Internet cafe, a pizza joint -- and high-concept restaurants such as the popular Plonk, which offers up pricey twists on traditional food, such as a crayfish waffle with key-lime remoulade and a buffalo burger with Gorgonzola dolce spread.

An Army-Navy store sells hunting and fishing gear; a few blocks down, a gourmet fish shop offers sushi-grade salmon (removed from the ocean just 36 hours ago, the clerk assures). There's a toy store on Main Street and a cobbler who peddles handmade elk-skin boots for $240 a pair. And there are at least 10 galleries.

The galleries offer art of many mediums: oil and watercolor painting, pottery, etching, sculpture, photography. But wander in and out of several of the galleries in an afternoon, and the many offerings soon seem to blend together.

The theme of most works on display could best be described as heroic Old West: giant paintings of stampeding horses, leaping trout, log cabins covered in snow. American Indians, decked out in feathers. Cattle. Sunsets. And, of course, the rugged cowboy: taming a bucking bronco, leaning against a fence, squinting into the sun.

Much of this art, in the style of the late Charles M. Russell, is quite well done; some pieces command top dollar. A bronze cowboy sculpture by real-life cowboy J.C. Dye was priced at nearly $13,000 when I visited last fall; a Mimi Grant oil painting of bear cubs sniffing the spring air was offered for $11,000.

Tourists gravitate toward this Old West art, much of it produced by artists who live in the area at least part time.

Eager to check out a more contemporary take on the Montana landscape, I arranged to visit the Bozeman studios of a husband-and-wife team, Terry Karson and Sara Mast.

At first glance, their art seems well removed from the beauty of Big Sky Country.

Karson works with -- well, to put it bluntly, junk. His studio is filled with empty boxes that his friends have salvaged from their trash cans: Pillsbury Fudge Supreme Brownies, Orville Redenbacher popcorn, Marie Callender's chicken pot pies.

Much of his work involves creating insects from this garbage: He cuts butterfly shapes from brownie boxes or creates silvery larvae from rolled-up slivers of potato-chip bags -- and then pins these trash creatures onto a black background, as for an entomology exhibit.

For another series, Karson cuts the logo from a discarded box into thin rectangles, sands them down until they look like ancient tiles, then reassembles them in a mixed-up order, so the brand name is only barely decipherable.

Karson's been doing this type of work for more than a decade; it grows out of his frustration at what he perceives as a squandering of Montana's environmental treasures. The more he looks out his picture windows at development in the mountains, at the mounds of garbage his neighbors put on the curb, the more his passion for this work grows; he feels compelled to reuse and recycle trash to make a statement about consumerism, materialism and what he sees as pending ecological disaster.

"In the future," he says, "collections of cardboard butterflies may be all we have left."

His wife takes her love of Montana in quite a different direction. Mast draws on the view from her studio skylights to create canvases layered with old star charts, gritty red soil and filmy beeswax -- melted, spread across the canvas, then scratched and pressed and painted.

Her wax paintings -- the technique is called "encaustic" -- look like cryptic maps, with bits of a street grid here, a fragment of a constellation there, a splintered word in a foreign language, like a signpost to an ancient ruin. The colors are muted -- browns, blacks, whites, rust-reds -- like the hills she sees from her window from late fall through early spring.

"This is all inspired by being here," Mast says.

"Our work is about the West," Karson adds. "It's just a new way of looking at it."

A short walk from Bozeman's downtown, I found a hidden haven for contemporary arts in the Emerson Center for the Arts & Culture.

A blocky brick schoolhouse built in 1918, the Emerson has been converted to a cultural center full of galleries and studios; it also houses a cafe and a small art-house movie theater.

In the lobby, I paused to listen to artist Craig van den Bosch introduce a class of grade-school students to his latest installation, a series of brightly colored acrylic panels that represent human DNA, deconstructed to show the influence of media, technology and the rest of the modern world.

Upstairs, I bumped into Dana Aaberg, who was addressing a stack of postcard invitations to his new show at the Danforth Gallery in Livingston. Aaberg uses studio space in the Emerson to paint richly colored works, some abstract, others realistic, like his painting of a wild river tumbling through the Montana woods.

Unlike the images in the Main Street galleries, many of the contemporary paintings I discovered felt alive with the energy of Big Sky country. But none could capture the way I had felt driving west along those endlessly changing mountains, under the huge canvas of baby blue.






1. Man blackmailed ex-girlfriend with nude pictures, police say
2. Snohomish motorcyclist dies in collision with pickup
3. Police looking for man who held up Everett pharmacy
4. Friends plan auction, hope to save woman's home
5. Sheriff warns of Camano Island burglar
6. Arlington private school principal charged with child rape
7. 400 open houses across the county this weekend
8. Man guilty for posing as trooper
9. Cama Beach cabins a quiet, cozy delight
10. LITTLE LEAGUE: Mill Creek reaches state semifinals
Enterprise Newspaper Snohomish County Business Journal
A matter of faith
A Seattle SuperSonics' original: Henry Akin
Late rally, trick play get Vikings victory
Mill Creek advance to finals Team rallies to beat Bainbridge Island 4-3
Try for Olympics highlights Games' debut
Proper ball position important to set up
Sports Briefs
Richmond Little League at state majors tournament
Fewer sports fields could go into Hamlin Park
The Enterprise Online Newspaper

TODAY'S TOP JOBS
 View All Top Jobs 
Top Cars
Top Homes



ADVERTISEMENT