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Art at Grand Canyon
Celebration of Art - Main Page
Plein Air on the Rim
Schedule of Events
Contact Us about the Program
2011 Award Winners
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Plein Air on the Rim

Artists participated in a competition and quick draw on the South Rim.

Each artist submit one studio piece for the Grand Canyon Celebration of Art which will be exhibited and available for sale at Kolb Studio from September 17 to November 27, 2011 or you may contact Katy Locke for additional information: (928) 863-3894 or klocke@grandcanyon.org

  2011 Celebration of Art

 


 

2012 Plein Air on the Rim

Call for Entry for the 4th Annual Celebration of Art

 

Call for Entry - Information
Call for Entry - Application

 


Sponsors of the 2011 Event

Major support for the event is provided by our sponsors. We thank them for their generous contributions.

Brahma Sponsors:
Arizona Public Service
The Gumbo Foundation
Xanterra Parks & Resorts

Isis Sponsors:
Jack Dudley Memorial Fund

Juno Sponsors:
Arizona Biltmore, a Waldorf Astoria Hotel
Loven Contracting, Inc.
The Picerne Fine Art Collection, courtesy of Doreen, David and Danielle Picerne
Anonymous

Sponsor:
Zuckerman Family Foundation

 

 


 

2011 Grand Canyon Celebration of Art
Studio Work on Display at Kolb Studio
(listed alphabetically by artists last name)

2011 Celebration of Art
Zoroaster’s Serenade
2011, Oil on linen, 18 x 24 inches
$1,600
read artist's bio
view larger image


 
Joshua Been
"The oil paintings I create are one-of-a-kind pages in the visual journal of my life. By design, my paintings are best viewed from a little distance, while the brushwork and palette knife together create a textural variety that entices a closer look. It is the elegant randomness of form and light with which I dance."
2011 Celebration of Art
Still the Canyon of my Dreamscape
oil, 42x18.5
$4,500

read artist's bio
view larger image - top portion or bottom portion


 
Shonto Begay
2011 Celebration of Art
November Morning
Below Nankoweap, Mile 53

2011, Oil on panel, 30 x 40 inches
$4,500
- sold
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view larger image


 
Elizabeth Black
"The Grand Canyon is of special interest to me; it is my spirit guide. It has taught me to paint and to row big water in its depths. It introduced me to my husband and many lifelong friends. Over the years, the canyon has revealed great beauty and showed me how to endure and to see. It has taught me how to live lightly on the earth and to hold up half the sky."
2011 Celebration of Art
North Rim
2011, Oil on linen, 20 x 16 inches
$4,200 - sold
read artist's bio
view larger image


 
G. Russell Case
"The Grand Canyon, with its dramatic shadows and shapes, has drawn me for many years. Its appearance is always deep and endless, demanding my thoughts and gaze. When I stand on its rim, I am reminded of how tiny I am in the grand scheme of things."
2011 Celebration of Art
The Warmth of the Sun
2011, Acrylic on canvas, 50 x 22 inches
$5,650 - sold
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John D. Cogan
"Painting is storytelling without words. As an artist painting the Grand Canyon, my story begins with the fleeting beauty of God’s creation and my attempt to capture it on canvas. . . . Like any storyteller, I must capture the audience’s attention and then hold it while the story unfolds through the composition—which, as a painter, I tell through the values and hues I employ."
2011 Celebration of Art
Depths of Winter
2011, Oil, 24 x 24 inches
$2,900 - sold
read artist's bio
view larger image


 
Bill Cramer
“Any landscape worth painting is more than the obvious visual elements. The push of an evening breeze, the feel of sun-baked sandstone, the scent of sagebrush, or the sound of a raven suddenly overhead are examples of the many unseen elements that inform my work. I’m satisfied when a painting is as rich as the landscape that inspired it.”
2011 Celebration of Art
Bat Dance at Hance
2011, Transparent watercolor, 18 x 24 inches
$2,050
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Robert Dalegowski
“This painting was in process in various sizes and designs for nearly thirty years. I created the original sketch and photo series at Hance Rapid in 1982, followed by a series of paintings from large to small, all discarded into a pile. These led to more sketches and finally the studio painting. The bats are western pipistrelles. The Grand Canyon Supergroup rock layers rise out of the gorge, showing the sedimentation layers as tilted relative to the more recent geology of Grand Canyon. Looming on the horizon is Escalante Butte, glowing in the evening twilight, and then the reflections that extend the light into poetry.”
2011 Celebration of Art
Clear Day on the Colorado
2011, Oil, 36 x 24 inches
$3,000 - sold
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view larger image


 
Cody DeLong
"Inspiration for Clear Day on the Colorado came from one of my annual rafting trips through the canyon. For the past few years, I’ve had the opportunity to lead weeklong river trips for artists. . . . It’s an amazing world down on the river: the canyon is especially inspiring from that vantage point. This painting portrays a place we stopped for lunch one day. The sun was high overhead, and the light poured in, making everything sparkle. I snapped a few great photos and painted this immediately upon returning home, with the trip fresh in my mind."
2011 Celebration of Art
Light on the Ledges –
Moran Point

2011, Oil, 28 x 22 inches
$5,100 - sold
read artist's bio
view larger image


 
Linda Glover Gooch
"The inspiration for Light on the Ledges –– Moran Point came from a trip during a series of storms passing through the canyon. Mother Nature delivered several days of spectacular episodes of clouds and rain, followed by light dancing across the canyon. They were storms that sent me running for cover, scenes that made me gaze in awe — that keep me coming back for more of this canyon’s beauty. With each trip I find myself anxious to arrive and slow to leave."
2011 Celebration of Art
Luminous
2011, Oil, 18 x 24 inches
$3,000
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view larger image


 
David Haskell
“To me, the Grand Canyon is the most inspirational, peaceful and sublime landscape in North America. I have been painting the canyon from river to rim for more than ten years and never tire of the endless variety of compositions, lighting and moods that continually challenge the artist’s skill. From the thundering rapids of the Inner Gorge to the utter silence of midday on a remote edge of the rim, the Grand Canyon never disappoints me. This is a sacred place.”
2011 Celebration of Art
Desert View
2011, Oil on canvas, 16 x 20 inches
$5,200 - sold
read artist's bio
view larger image


 
Gregory Hull
“It was a September day near the Desert View Watchtower; the summer moisture had turned the plateau green, and the rabbitbrush was in full glory. The Grand Canyon reminds me of my fragile existence and the great age of the earth. The challenge for me is to convey the vast landscape and atmosphere on a small rectangle of canvas.”
2011 Celebration of Art
Isis Temple
2010, oil on canvas, 12 x 16 inches
$2,900
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view larger image


 
Wm. Scott Jennings
“The canyon is at its most mystical in the early morning—quietly waking with those willing to make the effort and join it.” In the frosty morn Colors glow on ancient walls Another rebirth”
2011 Celebration of Art
A Grand Calm
2011, Oil on panel, 16 x 20 inches
$1,500 - sold
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view larger image


 
Michael Chesley Johnson
“The Grand Canyon is awesome, but for a painter, it can be intimidating. The first time I painted there, it was almost as if I had forgotten everything I knew about painting. But the canyon, like all of nature for me, weaves a spell of serenity and calm. Once I settle into my painting, it only takes a moment for the canyon’s magic to work. When that happens, everything I know about painting suddenly comes back to me. Then the canyon and I work together as partners.”
2011 Celebration of Art
Speechless
2011, Watercolor on panel, 16 x 20 inches
$1,650
read artist's bio
view larger image


 
Raleigh Kinney
“Either traveling by raft or scouting the rim to paint, I find myself likening the emotional experience of exploring the Grand Canyon to the spiritual lift of entering a great cathedral, not wanting to speak for fear of breaking its sacred silence. It’s the sheer spectacle and challenge of interpreting the Grand Canyon with its constantly changing light that makes it one of the top painting experiences of my life as an artist.”
2011 Celebration of Art
Imminent Depth - sold
2010, Acrylic on canvas, 30 x 40 inches
$4,000
read artist's bio
view larger image


 
Susan J. Klein
“I am an American landscape painter. Recording and making memorable images of the landscape is what I do. It is important and traditional work. My deep love of and respect for place are reflected in my ongoing body of work. By keeping a fresh eye and using an experienced approach, I discover and select images from the landscape that engender strong feelings of awe and wonder, surprise and recognition.”
2011 Celebration of Art
Canyon Atmosphere
2011, Oil, 16 x 20 inches
$2,300
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Paul Kratter
“The strong graphic elements from Moran Point were the inspiration for this painting. The large, overlapping formations in the foreground help lead your eye through the piece. The softer, muted, distant forms add depth and atmosphere to enhance the drama.”
2011 Celebration of Art
Canyon Rocks
2011, Acrylic on canvas, 24 x 36 inches
$7,100
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view larger image


 
Merrill Mahaffey
“I observe the canyon from river level. The poetic rhythm of the upstream section, Marble Canyon, has taught me the rules of structure by erosion. At Nankoweap, thousands of feet of layers can be seen. Those forms are the harmonics of erosion. Below that point, one journeys into deeper levels of time . . . before organic life-forms existed. In recent years, this is where my painter’s mind has been concentrated. I use the study of light as my method of revealing the details.”
2011 Celebration of Art
Beckoning On
2010, oil, 40 x 30 inches
$15,000
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Joella Jean Mahoney
“I came to Arizona to paint in 1951. This landscape of seemingly endless space, color and sculpted canyons became the major subject matter for my lifetime of art-making. I experienced a landscape that nourished me with a heightened sense of being alive. “With my painting, I hope to share with the viewer my response of awe and wonder at this matchless landscape. I intend my paintings to honor the earth, in particular, the Colorado Plateau.”
2011 Celebration of Art
Sunrise at South Rim
2011, Oil on linen, 20 x 30 inches
$3,250
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view larger image


 
David W. Mayer
“My landscapes are all about the dramatic shapes, values, colors and light found in the American West. . . . Many of my paintings might best be described by the Italian term chiaroscuro, meaning with strong contrasts between light and dark, and usually bold contrasts affecting a whole composition. I work very hard to have clean colors and fresh, decisive brushwork and not overwork a passage or painting.”
2011 Celebration of Art
Harding Classic
2011, Oil on canvas, 28 x 24 inches
$22,000
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view larger image


 
P. A. Nisbet
“Along the river corridor [in the Grand Canyon], light plays its myriad games in changing weather. The painting is a classic composition of the downriver view near President Harding Rapid. After four days of rain on a wet and cold February trip, the clouds parted and let the sun in for the first time, revealing color-saturated walls and upper terraces graced with new snow. It was a somber yet heartening scene with the promise of warmer days to come.”
2011 Celebration of Art
Vintage Flyby
2011, Oil on canvas, 18 x 24 inches
$3,500 - sold
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view larger image


 
Michael Obermeyer
“Being a pilot, I’ve always had a great interest in flying, and once had the opportunity to fly inside the Grand Canyon. Last year I tried to re-create that somewhat by painting, en plein air, an airplane flying over the canyon. The aircraft I sought to paint was this vintage Ford Tri-Motor, still owned by Grand Canyon Airlines. After seeing the plane, I painted this timeless scene as she banks low over the South Rim in the late afternoon light.”
2011 Celebration of Art
Big Point from Toroweap
2011, Oil, 24 x 20 inches
$6,500 - sold
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view larger image


 
Ron Rencher
“Toroweap is located at Tuweep, a remote section of Grand Canyon’s North Rim. The painting shows Big Point, which seems to stand guard over the canyon below, as the Colorado River courses its way through the Redwall Limestone and the other geologic layers. . . . I have only been on two painting trips to Toroweap, but I no doubt will be lured back by its seductive beauty.”
2011 Celebration of Art
Descending
2011, Oil, 18 x 24 inches
$2,600 - sold
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Dave Santillanes
“Capturing the essence of a landscape involves a realistic rendering of color, light and atmosphere. This requires direct observation and is why most of my paintings begin in the field with a plein air study. But observing the physical aspects of nature isn’t the only reason I paint outdoors; for me, the sensory experience of being there is just as important. What better way to get to know a place intimately than to sit for a couple of hours and contemplate it while painting?”
2011 Celebration of Art
Clear Path to Awe
2011, Oil, 48 x 30 inches
$4,300 - sold
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view larger image


 
Serena Supplee
“While visiting Phantom Ranch I walk up, up the Clear Creek Trail to an overlook. The turquoise ribbon of river whispers sweetness flowing below me. I follow it through the canyon, expanding across the Tonto Platform. I am opening to a full Grand Canyon panorama, which is always awe inspiring—awe that keeps me alive.”
2011 Celebration of Art
Sunset at Yaki Point
2011, Oil on linen panel, 12 x 24 inches
$2,800
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view larger image


 
Williamson Tapia
“When we see the Grand Canyon from the Rim Trail, it is presented in a wide format . . . and so I often find that my definitive plein air studies begin to take on an increasingly panoramic dimension. Of course, the full impact of the canyon is an assault upon all the senses at once, and it is that dimension that makes an indelible mark upon the human psyche that is not easily forgotten . . . even in one’s lifetime.”
2011 Celebration of Art
First Light – February
2011, Oil on linen/board, 18 x 24 inches
$4,500
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view larger image


 
Linda Tippetts
“I traveled to Grand Canyon in February of this year to paint some plein air pieces. To my great delight, on the first early morning there was fresh snow on the rim. I watched as the sun rose and hit the North Rim, leaving the mystery of the canyon in shadows. The scene was crowned with wispy, drifting clouds rimmed with pink light. . . . I painted other works from that trip, but the subtle awakening of the canyon kept drawing me to paint First Light – February.”
2011 Celebration of Art
September Morning at Yaki Point
oil, 18x18
$12,500
- sold
read artist's bio
view larger image


 
Curt Walters
2011 Celebration of Art
Storm, Mist & Light
2011, Oil, 24 x 20 inches
$4,500
read artist's bio
view larger image


 
Mark Webber
“No matter how skillfully and beautifully I or any of us render [the Grand Canyon’s] wonders, we always come up woefully short. Words, photographs and art all fail to project the frightening scale and majesty of this corner of God’s creation. We are left to hint and pick at the edges. Hopefully, our best efforts serve as an invitation for people to come stand on the rim, awed, humbled and tingling with excitement to start exploring the canyon.”
2011 Celebration of Art
Enjoying the View
2011, Scratchboard/watercolor, 18 x 24 inches
$3,800 - sold
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Rick Wheeler
“My interest in drawing led me to the medium of scratchboard several years ago. Once I learned the scratchboard surface is also suitable for painting, I was hooked. As a result, I have used scratchboard in combination with water-based media such as watercolor, inks and acrylics, as well as traditional oil paint. It’s experimenting with the mixing of these media and being able to combine drawing with painting that appeal to me most.”
2011 Celebration of Art
Afternoon Shadows
2011, Oil on linen panel, 20 x 16 inches
$3,000
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view larger image

 
Jim Wodark
“I wish for my paintings to be an expression of what I see as beautiful and inspiring. I also want to create great paintings that make a difference in people’s lives. These are the reasons that I enjoy entering painting events. I love to compete, and it also is a gauge of the impact my art is making. Every day I look forward to what I will paint next.”

 

 

 

 

 


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