Silk screens and satire, streetscapes and smoke
Here are some of the other highlights you can see on Wednesday’s free Gallery Walk around Ketchum:
Broschofsky Galleries, 360 East Ave., will feature a “Best of the West” show, with works by Russell Chatham, Michael Coleman, Brandon Cook, Edward Curtis, J.C. Dye, Glen Edwards, Jan Grotenbreg, Tom Howard, William Matthews, Gordon McConnell, Theodore Villa and Andy Warhol.
Gallery DeNovo, 320 First Ave. N. , will premiere an exhibition titled “The Art of the Print.” It features artists’ prints on paper and compares print-making techniques including monoprints, silk screen, etching, aquatints and lithographs. The exhibition will feature international artists Yehouda Chaki, Agusti Puig, Manuel Lau, Cynthia Fusillo, Rein de Lege and James Rosenquist, Antonio Lorenzo, Jose Luis Quevas, Christopher Brown, Cole Morgan, Jim Dine and Johnny Friedlander.
Will Caldwell Gallery, 400 Sun Valley Road, is celebrating this Gallery Walk in a new location. The Ketchum artist is known for his vivid depictions of Idaho landscapes and South American streetscapes.
Gail Severn Gallery, 400 First Ave. N., will feature the detailed mixed media paintings of American-born Belgian artist Cole Morgan, who creates a visual language of bright colors, mysterious handwritten scrawl, scratches and strange characters with formalist, abstract compositions.
The gallery also will feature Ketchum artist David deVillier’s whimsical images of women, birds and musical influence framed in bold steel frames that deVillier has welded.
And it will feature a group contemporary show with works by Kris Cox, Raphaelle Goethals, Hung Liu, Squeak Carnwatch, Jun Kaneko, Valerie Hammond, Judith Kinder, Deborah Oropallo, Christopher Reilly, Woods Davy, Julie Speidel, Bean Finneran, Andrew Harper and Mario Reis.
The Sun Valley Center for the Arts, 191 Fifth St. E., is featuring “Outside In: Indian Art Abroad.” The exhibit includes photographs that defy stereotypes about Indian residents of the U.S., and satirical, costumed self-portraits paired with reproductions of 19th and early 20th century portraits of American Indians. It also includes a small exhibition organized by the Pacific Asia Museum that focuses on the Hindu deity Ganesha.
Kneeland Gallery, 271 First Ave. N., will feature an exhibition of landscapes by Steven Lee Adams, Andrzej Skorut and Robert Moore titled “Perceptions of Place.”
Gilman Contemporary, 661 Sun Valley Road, is presenting “Smoke and Mirrors: The Magic of Photography.” The exhibition will feature works by photographers William Klein, Melvin Sokolsky, Chris Jordan, Julie Blackmon, Laurie Victor Kay and Jeri Eisenberg.
Lynn Toneri-R.C. Hink Gallery, 400 Sun Valley Road, will present an eclectic mix of landscape and wildlife watercolors by Toneri, as well as Hink’s hats, boots, barstools, armoires, lamps and wildlife sculptures carved in wood. Also available: hand-crafted jewelry, sculptures and raku.
Stoecklein Gallery, 151 Main St., features Western antiques and fine art images depicting cowboys and cowgirls.
Blagojce Fine Art Gallery, which just opened at 680 Sun Valley Road in the Walnut Avenue Mall, features frescoes and fine art by Macedonian artist Stojanovski Blagojce.
— Karen Bossick
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