FEATURED ARTISY: ALLY CRILLY

FEATURED ARTISY: ALLY CRILLY

Ally lives and works in Ridgway, Colorado. She grew up back East in New York. She loves art, mountains, her family, yoga, and figuring out how to be a human being. She works as an artist, yoga teacher, and free-lance graphic designer.

A note from the artist:

Painting is how I can best tell the truth. It is a messy unpredictable process for me.  When the flow is happening, I know I’m supposed to paint. When it’s not, it’s excruciating. I’m learning to paint regardless and wait for the moments that it makes sense in, and just ride the rest of them out. I’m also learning to do this in my life. Art has to surprise me in some way for it to interest me.

MOONS show is hanging at Telluride Arts Headquarters, December 2018/January 2019. The show was inspired by a painting she did for Little Red Riding Hood, Pink Moon.

We asked Ally to answer some questions:

Beach or mountains? both!

Film? Sound of Music

Currently reading? Becoming

Inspiration? moons

Color? red

Happy place? yoga mat

Daily ritual? coffee

Holiday tradition? pajamas all day

FEATURED ARTIST: TONY FINOCCHIO

FEATURED ARTIST: TONY FINOCCHIO

Tony fuses gold and silver in his jewelry. He mainly uses 18k, 22k gold and sterling silver. The fusing technique creates a beautiful organic texture as well as a beautiful contrast of colors. Tony is very excited to teach more jewelry making and metalsmithing classes at the AhHaa School in Telluride. He is currently taking jewelry and metals related classes and workshops in order to diversify his offerings. "I truly look forward to learning more myself and passing this on to students".

This month, Tony created a specific piece of jewelry for the Telluride Arts District. This piece is a silver representation of a beautiful window in the Transfer Warehouse that overlooks Mount Emma to the north.

We asked Tony to answer some questions:

First job? Usher at a movie theater. Does this job still exist? 

Time of Day? Morning, between 6:00 and 7:00 am. 

Musician? I own guitars and play them although I don't consider myself a musician yet.

Trip? Yes, I followed the Grateful Dead for ten years.

Telluride Tradition? Blues and Brews, it's a family thing.

Mountain? Alpine glow. 

Concert? Rush 1984, from that point I was hooked on live music.

Food? I love food. Always cook for yourself, family and friends any chance you get.

Project you’ve worked on? Re building some of the structures near Alta lakes sometime in the 90's.

Motto? I love the life I live and I'm gonna live the life I love.

FEATURED ARTIST: MALARIE CLARK

FEATURED ARTIST: MALARIE CLARK

Malarie Reising Clark moved to Telluride seven years ago to pursue the ski bum & barista lifestyle after college and gallery internships on the east coast. Her photography and art history degrees led her to the Telluride Gallery of Fine Art where she has recently become the Gallery Director. She enjoys analog photography, cooking, snowboarding with her husband and hanging out with her cats Pixel and Bits.

We asked Malarie a few questions:

1) Ice cream flavor?

Peanut butter and Nilla wafer shake from Cookout.


2) First job?

Photographer at the Biltmore Estate in Asheville, NC.


3) Favorite saying? / Motto?

"Photography is just light remembering itself."  -Jerry Ueslmann and "Machu Picchu" for good luck.


4) Performing artist?

Over the past year, Robert Plant and Minus the Bear take the cake. 


5) Happy place?

Whiteroom on chair 9, darkroom anywhere.


6) Favorite exhibit at Telluride Gallery of Fine Art to date?

R. Nelson Parrish's Light in the Canyon this past June is really close to me, he is an emerging sculpture artist whose work deserved a solo show. It was thoughtful, stunning and the response was fantastic.

Non-Objective last December was very special. It opened my eyes to the new type of curation we are diving into at the gallery. I felt like some of my personal long term goals were being realized as we were doing studio visits and interviews with those artists.

An all time big favorite is working with iconic photographers that I obsessed over in college; Jerry Uelsmann, Sandy Skoglund, Maggie Taylor, Lauren Greenfield, Ruth Bernhard, Dan Budnik, Paul Nicklen.


7) Telluride tradition?

Closing day craziness. Doing the pond skim is still a highlight of my Telluride career (I came out dry).


8) Describe your work as an artist

My photography work is film based. I shoot polaroids as a kind of sacred documentation of time and place, I think of it like anti-cell phone photography because I will only make one or two images at a location. I also shoot altered and manipulated landscapes on 35mm. These are all multiple exposures created in camera that, to me, are more immersive and capture the feeling of being in awe of a landscape... plus they are a little trippy and saturated with color.  


9) How did (question 8) start out?

Mostly nostalgia. I grew up around my mom always shooting film. I loved loading her cameras and waiting on film to be processed. In college when I studied photography, everyone had the newest and best digital cameras. I thought a lot of the work started to look the same. I got into medium format film, expired 35mm and buying vintage polaroid film on ebay. I liked the physicality of creating tangible images and the extra elements of craft that go into that. 


10) Most looking forward to?

Continuing to bring interesting, challenging, high caliber artwork into Telluride. Upholding Telluride Gallery's legacy while starting a new chapter. Playing with my Super 8 cameras. El Nino.

FEATURED ARTIST: MACY PRYOR

FEATURED ARTIST: MACY PRYOR

Macy's true love lies in craft. In creating small little sculptures out of leather and fabric that can be used as bags for everyday use. As she developed and cultivated her skill-set on each custom piece, she became more passionate about teaching and sharing her knowledge with others. In 2017, Macy teamed up with BeadWORKS, and traveled to Kenya to teach an entire leather curriculum to add high end beaded leather goods to their already established line of products. As the popularity of these new leather belts, dog collars and hat bands hit the market, she traveled back again in 2018 to add more products to the line. In February 2018, Crossbow Leather moved from Santa Barbara, to Macy's hometown, Telluride, and opened up Crossbow Leather on Main.  The shop offers a truly unique experience of retail in the front, and a workshop in the back. With all the production happening right there in the shop, you can experience the craft first hand, see products come to life, and meet the people hand crafting each piece.

We asked Macy to answer a few questions:

Winter or summer? at this moment- winter! I spent the past 4 years in Santa Barbara where it was hot & sunny beach weather nearly everyday, so I am looking forward to a solid winter (fingers crossed). 

Favorite thing to do in Telluride? just about everything... indoors.

Cats or dogs? WOOF!

Go to coffee order? Shot in the dark

Dream vacation? anywhere with market places I can shop textiles to put on my products. I love meeting and getting inspired by other artisans.  

First job? I worked on a converted pizza firetruck catering birthday parties and Bar Mitzvahs 

How did you get to where you are today? saying yes to things that scared the sh*t out of me.

Favorite part of your job? putting all orders aside, clearing my work bench, and prototyping a brand new product. When I finally get around to doing this, it is usually something I have been thinking about for months, so it is very exciting to make the time to just create whatever my heart desires.

Biggest inspiration? geometry? how things are built! how to put things together! measurements, angles, designs, patterns. I also love old stuff- vintage furniture and buildings. Back then there was such an emphasis on quality. Before things became mass produced. I'm happy the patterns of consumer culture have shifted back to caring about small batch production & shopping local.

FEATURED ARTIST: DON HANNAH

FEATURED ARTIST: DON HANNAH

Don first moved to Telluride in 1978 and became a Flying Epoxy Sister. He then moved to LA, inspired by the films at the Telluride Film Festival and the Second City Theater in Chicago while growing up. He received his SAG card as Surfer #2 in the 1984 film, “A Nightmare on Elm Street” and began working behind the camera that same year joining the DGA and directing Music Videos, Commercials, Documentaries and Narrative Shorts. He is the lead actor and Executive Producer of “The Landing”, a feature film releasing in theaters nationwide this month, and on Netflix, Amazon Prime and Netflix in October.

We asked Don to answer a few questions:

Favorite Book
It is so hard to name a favorite, so here are a few;
Fiction; The Dice Man by Luke Rhinehart / The Hawkline Monster: A Gothic Western by Richard Brautigan
Non-Fiction; The Night Country by Loren Eiseley
Poetry - The Complete Works of Edgar Allen Poe
 
Childhood memory
Summer - Riding on my fathers horse, Silver Loon.
Winter - The first time I went skiing at Wilmot mountain Wisconsin. Difficult to call it an actual mountain now…

Happy Place
Cold - Anywhere skiing.
Hot - Anywhere kiteboarding
Warm - Cruising on my Onewheel Skateboard...

Dream Car
1958 Porsche 550 Spyder.

Inspiration
"People ask what are my intentions with my films — my aims. It is a difficult and dangerous question, and I usually give an evasive answer: I try to tell the truth about the human condition, the truth as I see it. This answer seems to satisfy everyone, but it is not quite correct. I prefer to describe what I would like my aim to be. There is an old story of how the cathedral of Chartres was struck by lightning and burned to the ground. Then thousands of people came from all points of the compass, like a giant procession of ants, and together they began to rebuild the cathedral on its old site. They worked until the building was completed — master builders, artists, laborers, clowns, noblemen, priests, burghers. But they all remained anonymous, and no one knows to this day who built the cathedral of Chartres.
Regardless of my own beliefs and my own doubts, which are unimportant in this connection, it is my opinion that art lost its basic creative drive the moment it was separated from worship. It severed an umbilical cord and now lives its own sterile life, generating and degenerating itself. In former days the artist remained unknown and his work was to the glory of God. He lived and died without being more or less important than other artisans; 'eternal values,' 'immortality' and 'masterpiece' were terms not applicable in his case. The ability to create was a gift. In such a world flourished invulnerable assurance and natural humility. Today the individual has become the highest form and the greatest bane of artistic creation. 
The smallest wound or pain of the ego is examined under a microscope as if it were of eternal importance. The artist considers his isolation, his subjectivity, his individualism almost holy. Thus we finally gather in one large pen, where we stand and bleat about our loneliness without listening to each other and without realizing that we are smothering each other to death. The individualists stare into each other's eyes and yet deny the existence of each other. 
We walk in circles, so limited by our own anxieties that we can no longer distinguish between true and false, between the gangster's whim and the purest ideal. Thus if I am asked what I would like the general purpose of my films to be, I would reply that I want to be one of the artists in the cathedral on the great plain. I want to make a dragon's head, an angel, a devil — or perhaps a saint — out of stone. It does not matter which; it is the sense of satisfaction that counts.
Regardless of whether I believe or not, whether I am a Christian or not, I would play my part in the collective building of the cathedral”.
Ingmar Bergman 1918 - 2007

Memory on set
Watching Penny Allens’ performance as Mrs. White in my film “A Visit from the Sargent Major with Unintended Consequences”. Staggering. I wish I had shot the rehearsal, and from then on, I always have if possible.
 
Watching Snoop Dogg crush after getting my entire crew baked while directing him in a music video, then demanding 50k in cash when we rapped. Classic rap video move.
 
Motto
How 'bout a Sanskrit Proverb as a motto?
Look to this day,
For it is life,
The very life of life.
In its brief course lies all
The realities and verities of existence,
The bliss of growth,
The splendor of action,
The glory of power—
For yesterday is but a dream
And tomorrow is only a vision.
But today, well lived,
Makes every yesterday a dream of happiness
And every tomorrow a vision of hope.
Look well, therefore, to this day.
 
Secret talent
Hypnotic power over hiccups.

Best Advice: given/received
Show up on time.
Show up on time.
 
What's next?
I don't know the question, but sex is definitely the answer.
 
In Production;
Chinna and the Fruity Loopers - Documentary Feature
RockStars - Reality TV Series
 
In Development;
FUNK is a Four Letter WORD - Documentary Feature
Mary Celeste Move - SciFi Feature
Caribe - Feature

FEATURED ARTIST: EMILY SCOTT ROBINSON

FEATURED ARTIST: EMILY SCOTT ROBINSON

With her forthcoming album Traveling Mercies, Emily Scott Robinson offers a complex, thoughtful portrait of a real itinerant artist, one who carries the lessons of her past as she searches for a hopeful future. She and her husband live full time in a motorhome and spend long stretches on the road, turning chance encounters with strangers into stirring folk meditations on the human condition.

Though this is Robinson's first proper studio release (having already released a full-length album, Magnolia Queen, and a live EP), it's by no means her first introduction to the songwriting community. 

In 2015, she won American Songwriter's May/June lyric contest for Magnolia Queen cut "Marriage Ain't the End of Being Lonely." She followed that award with two more, notching a Kerrville New Folk Winner trophy in 2016 and a Wildflower Performing Songwriter Contest win in 2017. In an early nod to Traveling Mercies, AmericanaFest announced Robinson as an Official Showcasing Artist for the 2018 lineup in Nashville this September.

With Traveling Mercies, Robinson has announced herself as one of our important emerging voices in Americana and roots music. Beyond that, she's given us a beautiful album, a balm for trying times which shows, through intricately crafted melodies and hard-earned wisdom, that we all have the same struggles at our core, and there's no better time than now to take that to heart.

We asked Emily some questions:

Favorite ice cream?  Mint Chocolate Chip

First job?  Summer Camp Counselor -- I started singing and playing around campfires and learning Indigo Girls and Cat Stevens songs!

Currently reading? "Eudora Welty: A Biography" and Isabel Allende's "In the Midst of Winter"

What do you love most about Telluride? The creative community! Telluride Theater, Telluride Arts, Telluride Music Company (constantly drooling over guitars there) and my musician friends, the Ah Haa, Burlesque, the community of poets that Art Goodtimes and Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer nourish, Wilkinson Public Library, and the big-hearted and visionary people who live here! 

Spirit animal? Salmon.

Recent dream? I've been working on my new album release, so I keep having anxiety dreams about forgetting a deadline!

Who/what is your musical inspiration? My very first musical inspiration was Joni Mitchell. I was given her album "Blue" at age 16 and I felt like I'd discovered a new language. 

Favorite part about RV life? Exploring the beautiful and wild places of America

Favorite RV memory so far? Parking it on Sunshine Mesa and inviting our Telluride friends over for a dinner party and to watch the sunset over the Wilsons!

What’s next? The first single "Better With Time" from my new album drops on August 3rd! It's an homage to falling in love with my husband in Telluride. On August 17th, I'm a finalist in the Songwriter Showcase competition at Folks Fest put on by Planet Bluegrass! In September, I'm headed to Nashville to showcase my new album Traveling Mercies at AmericanaFest!

FEATURED ARTIST: COLIN SULLIVAN

FEATURED ARTIST: COLIN SULLIVAN

Colin holds a B.A. in theatre arts and a Master’s Degree from Fordham University in teaching.  He has trained as an actor in the Actor’s Theatre of Louisville’s professional apprenticeship program and the Michael Chekhov Institute for Theatre Studies. He moved to Telluride in 2008 and almost immediately discovered SquidShow Theatre’s unique brand of original theatre. Within a year, Sullivan was a full-fledged company actor and had taken over the Managing Director position, overseeing the fiscal management of the company. Upon the merger of the two companies in 2011, Colin was chosen by the board to lead the larger united Telluride Theatre organization as Executive Director. He also acts and is a lead instructor and developer of the company’s unique education programs.

We asked Colin to answer some questions. Get a glimpse of Colin in his answers below:

Ocean or mountains? Ocean

Sweet or salty? Sweet

Morning or evening? Evening

Person from history to be your imaginary friend? Hunter S. Thompson

One thing on a deserted island? Mountainbike 

Favorite Telluride tradition? Shakespeare in the Park! 

Inspiration? Personally, I’m inspired by ordinary everyday Americans, particularly immigrants, pushing back against their government and this recent rash of unconstitutional policy decisions. Professionally -  poetry and the role of songs in storytelling, particularly as it relates to our Shakespeare’s Pericles, which I’m currently directing. 

Something you could re-watch as if it were your first time: The Muppet Movie

Recent Dream? I had a dream I was performing in Macbeth and didn’t know any of my lines and had to improv everything. Orson Welles was directing and he was not pleased. It was terrifying. I have these dreams every time around this year. 

Happy place? In my new home in Placerville with my wife and young son, or on stage. 

FEATURED ARTIST: MOLLY PERRAULT

FEATURED ARTIST: MOLLY PERRAULT

Molly Perrault graduated from Louisiana State University, receiving a Bachelor of Fine Arts with a major in Digital Art as well as minors in Painting & Drawing and Art History. She took an extensive month-long printmaking study in Florence, Italy in 2013. In 2014/2015, she worked for Iron 27, creating graphics for a multi-platform video game: Heroes of Shadow Guard, a turn-based RPG game. After a series of fortunate happenings, Molly now resides in the mountains of Telluride, Colorado, being constantly inspired by the landscape and locale.

We asked Molly a couple of interview questions to better get to know her.

greatest fear?

Infinite boredom


greatest extravagance?

Probably the new pair of roller skates I just ordered. 


which talent would you most like to have?

Always remembering names.


most treasured possession?

Good memories.


spirit animal?

The majestic penguin.


favorite song?

“Bound for Glory” by Tedeschi Trucks Band or “Love You Madly” by Cake. Or the entire “Rent” soundtrack if I get to sing along. 


winter or summer?

Definitely summer


greatest regret?

I started playing the clarinet in grade school band - wish I had kept that up or taken the time to learn another instrument. 


motto?

There’s a line in the Bright Eye’s song, “At the Bottom of Everything” (another favorite): And into the caverns of tomorrow with just our flashlights and our love, we must plunge, we must plunge, we must plunge. Not sure if that totally qualifies as a motto, but I like it. 


greatest achievement?

Moving to Telluride! 

FEATURED ARTIST: COLLEEN THOMPSON

FEATURED ARTIST: COLLEEN THOMPSON

Colleen Thompson is a widely inspired Telluride, CO local who creates jewelry best described as "earthy elements combined with Southwest style”. The San Juan Mountains, dubbed the Range of Light by Muir, are rife with magical realism — Colleen harnesses this magic in her handmade pieces, using elements, ores, and stones found in within the region. Building and sculpting with crystals, recycled leather, sterling silver, feathers, fools gold, and bullets shot by real Colorado cowboys, Colleen imbues each item with the spirit of the colorful West. Her work allows anyone to carry a small piece of the San Juans with them wherever they go, embodying the whimsical energy of the mountains and shaping it into tangible, wearable art.

We asked Colleen to answer a couple of questions: See below


 Your idea of happiness


I’m living it. Making art for a living in the mountains. Being part of a community. Feeling valued and being surrounded by inspiring people! 

 

If not yourself, who would you be
 

myself. (see above)

 

Favorite color

silver

 

Winter or summer

I peak in the fall.

 

On what occasion do you lie

I’ve definitely been caught speaking confidently and making eye contact.. even when I have no idea what I’m talking about. I wouldnt say I lie, but my best/worst characteristic is blind self-confidence. 

 

Which words or phrases do you most overuse
 

There’s a running joke in my circle of friends… if you wan’t your phrase repeated, just say it to Colleen— she’ll make it popular. I like to think they mean it’s because I’m a trendsetter, but I have a sneaking suspicion that it’s simply because I’m often the loudest person in the room.

 

What is your greatest regret

Any time I didn't feel or express enough gratitude. 

 

Spirit animal

Treasure troll. Or maybe a Labrador Retriever. I’m friendly & loyal, but hyperactive and super annoying if I dont burn off enough energy.

 

Hunter or gatherer

I’m a hunter at my core, but I live to collaborate. Often that means turning the ego off and taking instruction from someone else. I’m happy to gather for the right cause. 

 

Most treasured possession

My hands. I know they aren't exactly a possession, but working with my hands makes me feel alive. I don’t know if I could do anything else. Working with silver is really hard on my hands, so I take good care of them. I think about how grateful I am for them every single day.

 

Pet peeve

I try really hard not to have pet peeves. If something bugs me, I make a serious effort to embrace it. I hated making rings for a solid year, forced myself to do it, and now they’re all I want to make. I guess my only pet peeve is poor work ethics. 

FEATURED ARTIST: CRAIG WASSERMAN

FEATURED ARTIST: CRAIG WASSERMAN

After growing up in St. Louis MO, Craig moved to Bethlehem, PA, then Fort Collins, Durango, Ignacio and then Telluride, CO. He taught art to middle and high school students for 20 years until he quit academic teaching last year. He recently opened The Drop Boardshop and Printlab in the Winter of 2018, as a response to 10 successful Summers running Telluride Skate Camp, the lack of a skate/snowboard shop and youth/community center in the region, and a strong urge to spread the love deeper and wider. He now teaches art and skateboarding at The Drop, tries his best to be a good husband and father, and works hard to become a better artist/snowboarder/skater/person every day.

Craig draws what he sees, which is heavily affected by how he feels. He loves to work with, but is scared of, color, because there is already so much to learn and do in black and white.  He loves Gustav Klimt, Egon Schiele, Kathe Kollwitz, Claude Monet, and Alphonse Mucha, as well as anyone who makes moving, honest art. Craig strongly believes that art will save the world… someday…maybe.

 

Your greatest extravagance?

Custom Footbeds

Your motto?

Good things happen to good people

Hunter or gatherer?

Hunt to gather

Best talent?

Breakdance backspin

Game show host voice

Drawing beautiful things creepy

Inspiration?

Gustav Klimt

5-Year olds who drop-in pool coping

Nature

Where would you most like to live?

Right here.  Right now.

Ski or snowboard?

Surf

Greatest achievement?

Playing a game of pingpong in front of the crowd as the co-keynote speaker at THS graduation. Designing and leading HS students on Experiential Education Expeditions to Mexico, Costa Rica, Peru, India, Vietnam, Cambodia, Thailand, France, Italy, Switzerland, Germany, Poland, Czech Republic, and Austria.

Winter or summer?

Winter.  Until the snow melts. Then Summer.

Favorite dream?

Standing on top of Kant Mak m with a foot of fresh snow…oh wait, that just happened!

 Current state of mind?

Stoked


FEATURED ARTIST: KORAL DELATIERRA

FEATURED ARTIST: KORAL DELATIERRA

Koral Delatierra is a California born / Colorado grown singer/songwriter, organic farmer, life coach, permaculture designer and activist.  Growing up in a conscious community and having been exposed to the majestic San Juans at a young age, Koral always had an appreciation and reverence for the wild. While at Humboldt State she became involved in the fight to prevent the extinction of one of the last remnants of the magnificent Redwood forest that once stretched 400 miles from southern Oregon to the Big Sur coast.  She went on to study organic farming and permaculture design and ended up living in South America for 5 years, making her way by selling her artwork and street performing while volunteering at farms and ecovillages across the continent. It was in 2010 that she moved back to the Western Slope to manage the fields and intern program at Shining Mountain Herbs in Ridgway. In 2014, she was approached by local musicians Tom Mann, Mikey G and Bassie to be a part of a new reggae project they were getting started. That project is now the 9 piece reggae band, NICENESS! Koral's lyrics are a reflection of the life she's created, embodying a message focused on love, personal responsibility, interdependence, and sustainability. Art in action! 

We asked Koral to respond to a couple questions: see her answers below.


Are you more of a hunter or a gatherer?


I can't say I am more one than the other. I know what I want and am not afraid to go after it. At the same time, I am not solely focused on the end goal but recognize the bounty that can be gathered during the hunt. Whether I'm on the hunt for an elk or a gig at Red Rocks, I'll be picking berries and enjoying building community while enriching my life playing music along the way. 

 

What inspires you?


Nature! Nature's diverse spectrum of life on Earth is infinite and perfect in its chaos, having a profound influence on all of us. Every sentient being on Earth deserves a healthy environment and the fundamental benefits that nature provides. The planet is rapidly changing, and for us to thrive, we need to act now to preserve not just the tangible benefits, but also the insight, inspiration, and awe by which nature transforms us all.

 

Who inspires you? 


Martin Luther King, Nelson Mandela, Rigoberta Menchú Tum, Malala Yousafzai and all people standing up with courage in the face of adversity.

 

What’s the craziest dare you ever took? 


When it comes to 'Truth or Dare' I've always been more of a Truth person. I've never been scared to reveal my truth, whereas the thought of doing something just 'cuz someone dared me to seems silly. I will say though, that when I was 15 and working as Junior Camp Counselor, the kids dared me to eat a raw crawfish and well... how could I turn down a dare from a dozen 6 and 7-year-olds? To this day, thinking back on their reaction tickles me. 

 

If you could blink your eyes and be in a favorite place right now, where would that place be?


Singing to a pod of dolphins playing in the wake of our sailboat, feet dangling from the bow, my lover at the helm, wind filling our sails and sunshine = heaven. 

Featured Artist: James Hayward

Featured Artist: James Hayward

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James Hayward made his Telluride debut in July 2017 with a solo exhibition at the Telluride Gallery of Fine Art, and currently curates group exhibitions. The California-based artist has been a force amongst the Post-war Minimalist Abstract Artists in the Los Angeles area for over 35 years. “Hayward’s command of paint, ranging from blissful spontaneity to profound control, separates him from artists who are lured into a signature style...He is a true independent, with his own fearless vision of the kinds of paintings he wants to make and see,” described art critic, Frances Colpitt. His works have been featured in numerous prestigious museums including the Los Angeles County Museum of Art; the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; the Denver Museum of Modern Art; the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and the Minneapolis Institute of Arts.

We asked Jimmy to answer a few questions, and his answers were as delightfully colorful and textured as his paintings. We're captivated by this man and his work, and hope you will be too. 


What color has the most meaning to you/your artwork?

As a young painter I would be chastised for, “Failing to control your palette.” I would tell them that I loved these weird muddy greys (made by combining opposites, like Egypt Violet and Sulphur Yellow and a little white). This is one of my favorite greys. This is a grey that is not a combination of black and white. A complicated grey. I love making greys out of 7 or 8 different colors, especially using colors like cobalt violet and cadmium yellow. Nobody, in their right mind combines these colors, so that when one does, one might reasonably deduce that this color has never been realized before, because no one is that dumb. Taking a bow.

When are you the most creative?

I love being by myself: alone without interruption. I feel free to do as I please. This is a fun place. 

Dogs or cats?

I am allergic to cats. I have always had dogs and usually more than one. I wrote a short story titled, “Allergic to her cat: addicted to her pussy”. It is unfinished as the relationship remains open ended.

What would your superpower be?

I would love the ability to shit in other peoples' pants. What fun that would be.

Take a guess... what were you doing 40 years ago today?
   
I would have been married for the third time by then. I was madly in love on each and every occasion, but relationships are far more difficult than anyone imagines. I still believe in the specialness of marriage, but I’m now aware of the difficulties involved. Under the right circumstances, I would do it again.

The most unusual thing you've ever eaten?

That would be Sea Slugs, Jelly Fish or pussy.

As a kid, what did you want to be when you grew up?

I always wanted to be  Emiliano Zapata. Did you ever see “Viva Zapata”, directed by John Houston, screen play by John Steinbeck. It is a romantic masterpiece about the duties and obligations of an idealistic hero. It’s my favorite Marlon Brando flick. Loved it. I still live the fantasy of disappearing into the mountains on horseback.

If you had the opportunity to go to Mars, would you? Why/why not?

I have no desire to go anyplace that does not have an art museum. I travel to wander thru art museums. It is one of my favorite things in life.

New Year's resolution?

I am 74 years old and slowing down. I need more help and help costs money. So I resolve to slow down sufficiently to allow success to jump my ancient bones. And I think I may get married yet again. Salute!


FEATURED ARTIST: DAVID BYARS

FEATURED ARTIST: DAVID BYARS

David Garrett Byars is a former financial analyst who left his job in 2008 to pursue his, then nebulous, dreams. He is now a filmmaker living in Telluride, Colorado. Byars’ focuses on feature-length documentaries, but he also creates branded pieces as a freelance filmmaker. As part of Reel Thing Productions, he released the feature-length documentary Uranium Drive-In (Mountainfilm 2013). In 2013, he wrote and directed his first narrative short, Self Storage, which is a quirky dark comedy that follows a worker at a self-storage facility as he struggles to pay off the medical debt stemming from his unlucky brew of common cleaning agents. The result is a delicious brew of its own, filled with black humor, endearing characters, and smart storytelling. Byars coins it as “a story of conscience, existential dread and redemption.” Byars is the director of No Man's Land (Mountainfilm 2017), the incredibly candid film that follows the once-occupiers of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge. 

Favorite childhood movie?

 Karate Kid 2
 

 
Ghosts or aliens? 

Aliens, always aliens. 

 
Objectivity? Is it a thing?

No such thing. In practice or in concept. Impossible to separate our minds from the sum of our experiences.
 
 
Financial analyst to filmmaker? connection?

Glutton for punishment, high tolerance for rejection, and boyish good looks. And attention to detail. More generally, in finance and in film, you're really just trying to sell a good story.
 
 
Favorite director(s)?

Werner Herzog, Wes Anderson, Suzan Beraza.
 
 
Best advice you've received? Given?

Received: Understand people's problems rather than scrutinize their solutions.
Given: Always be yourself, unless you can be Batman. 
 


Who would play you in a film?

Fat David Spade or the lovechild of Zach Galifianakis and Matt McConaughey. Or Uncle Traveling Matt from Fraggle Rock. Shit, tough question.
 
 
What's so great about Telluride?

The self-celebratory atmosphere. ;) In all seriousness - the potential for active collaboration. Everyone in the arts in Telluride is so down to put in a tremendous amount of time and work into a collaborative effort. And it's world-class high-quality work.
 
 
What's next?

More movies! So many movies. A few feature docs in the works and a whole slew of ill-advised and costly fiction endeavors.

FEATURED ARTIST: MARGARET RINKEVICH

FEATURED ARTIST: MARGARET RINKEVICH

Margaret Rinkevich has been a resident of Telluride for 16 years. She holds a B.A. in Art History from the University of Arizona, where she specialized in the Italian Renaissance. She has been dedicated to the arts and has taught Art History to university students and museum docents. She is the author of several publications about tribal art and culture. In 2015, Margaret participated in Ah Haa School for the Arts: Second Annual Juried Exhibition of Regional Artists, BEST OF 2014 and contributed to The Telluride Painting School lecture series with a talk entitled, “Art of the ‘So What?!’: The History of Still Life Painting”.  In 2016 she was one of three jurors for the 3rd Annual Exhibition of Regional Artists. Her work hangs in numerous private collections throughout the US.

Who are some of the influences that most move you?

Joan Mitchell is a favorite.  She was an American Abstract Expressionist painter living just outside Paris, her painting style was very tumultuous and completely fearless.  Also, Richard Diebenkorn, a Bay Area painter who began as an Abstract Expressionist in the 40s and 50s, and, then, gave it up because he thought it was too easy.  He later returned to it and is probably most known for it, particularly his Ocean Park Series.

 

Do you paint from your dreams?

No, I’m far too cerebral for that.  Though there is something of an intrapersonal element to Abstract Expressionist art, I prefer to approach a canvas with no preconceptions.  The evolution (and its inherent struggle) is the best part.  I love the physical act of painting.  It has been said that Abstract Expressionist painters do not paint pictures but rather an event.  I agree.

 

What was an epiphanal moment in your life?

For the BLUE series it was when, while reading, I stumbled across a passage about pearls.  Pearls in antiquity were called margarites.  The most highly-prized pearls were found in mollusks with blue interiors.  While I was already developing a deep affection for the color, I feel in love with the concept that the origin of my name was mantled in it as well. 

 

Are politics important to you and does it work its way into your art?  

I love politics and I’m a complete news junkie but I don’t paint from this space.

 

What're your favorite things about living in the mountains? 

Their steadfastness and their unpredictability.  They are the constant in our lives here, they are there when we wake up and when we go to sleep.  Yet, they control the weather, they are a catalysts for our local patterns and we never know exactly what atmospheric conditions will occur.  The evolution is the best part.

 

FEATURED ARTIST: ART GOODTIMES

FEATURED ARTIST: ART GOODTIMES

Longtime local, Art Goodtimes, has been a staple in the Telluride community not only as a former County Commissioner for San Miguel County but as a poet and writer. Art serves as the Master of Ceremonies and poet laureate of the Telluride Mushroom Festival. Additionally, Art is the Founder and Director of Talking Gourds. In 2010, he was named the first Western Slope Poet Laureate at the first annual Karen Chamberlain Poetry Festival in Carbondale. Art's multitude of literary accomplishments also includes longtime journalist and editor for Telluride Watch and Cortez’s Four Corners Free Press, as well as poetry editor of several publications, including Fungi magazine, Mountain Gazette, Wild Earth, and more. 

FEATURED ARTIST: VALERIE MADONIA

FEATURED ARTIST: VALERIE MADONIA

Valerie Madonia has lived her life through dance. At four years old she began ballet lessons, which eventually led to a 20-year professional dancing career. She has been a part of noble dance companies such as the National Ballet of Canada, the American Ballet Theatre, and the Joffrey Ballet, and performed throughout the Rocky Mountains + Southwestern Colorado with her own project based company, Alpine Dance. She has appeared in six PBS Dance in America Specials and is featured in four dance books.

FEATURED ARTIST: ANTON VIDITZ-WARD

FEATURED ARTIST: ANTON VIDITZ-WARD

Anton Viditz-Ward has been a Telluride resident for over 20 years. A welder by trade he is also a trained architect and artist. He is the founder and manager of Deep Creek Experimental, an artist collective operating out of a decommissioned limestone mine just outside of town. He has brought to life this giant hole in the earth repurposing it for storage, studios, and event space. Here he works on his steel-welded, human-powered, kinetic sculptures and other projects.

FEATURED ARTIST: ABBY FOX

FEATURED ARTIST: ABBY FOX

Abby Fox is a Colorado native who earned a BFA in printmaking and BA in Spanish at Colorado State University.  After graduating, she taught art, ate papusas, and climbed volcanoes in Latin America for 18 months, before landing in Telluride.  In her eight years here, she has taught art and Spanish to a variety of ages, and currently teaches at Telluride Mountain School.  Abby is also studying at Western Colorado State University, and will graduate in 2018 with a Master of Arts in Education.  She prioritizes printmaking and backpacking in her free time, and completed a solo thru-hike of the 500-mile Colorado trail last summer. 

FEATURED ARTIST: CRAIG CHILDS

FEATURED ARTIST: CRAIG CHILDS

Craig Childs is an author, performer, traveler, and science writer. He received his minor in Women's Studies from the University of Colorado, along with a less useful but appreciated major in Journalism. His masters degree is in Desert Studies from Prescott College, Arizona, where he remains the only student to have received that particular degree. He has written more than a dozen books in the walker writer tradition, his style narrative, the topics scientific and adventurous. He currently lives outside of Norwood. 

FEATURED ARTIST: GRETA NEUMANN

FEATURED ARTIST: GRETA NEUMANN

Greta Neumann originally grew up near Chicago, IL. She received her BFA in sculptural ceramics from the University of South Florida in 2006. She spent time after graduation teaching children's art classes in Western North Carolina as well as learning the craft of throwing pottery. She uses techniques such as slip-casting and paper-clay sculpting, and themes from nature are widely present. Prior to moving to Telluride in 2012 she spent four years living in Argentina and Europe. She currently teaches ceramics at Ah Haa School for the Arts.