AZ -- Flagstaff -- Museum of Northern Arizona -- Exhibit: Artists at Glen Canyon and Lake Powell:
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Description of Pictures: Artists at Glen Canyon and Lake Powell
May 2022 - November 2022
This is the story of a place. It’s a place where millions of years of the earth’s development are openly revealed and where the hopes and aspirations of the human race have been inscribed for centuries. Located in canyon country along the Colorado River, Glen Canyon stretches down from southeastern Utah down northern Arizona, not far upriver from the more famous Grand Canyon. The canyon was carved into the rock of the Colorado Plateau by drops of water whose potential attracted the attention of the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation in the 1950s, when it was looking for a place to build a dam. Amidst much controversy, Glen Canyon Dam was completed in 1966 to generate hydroelectric power, thus submerging much of Glen Canyon under a reservoir called Lake Powell.
Using artifacts, photographs, paintings, writings, and archival material, the exhibition shares a long history of responses to Glen Canyon.
Among the artists whose work is included are Byron Wolfe and Mark Klett, Peter Goin, Greg Mac Gregor, Tad Nichols, Eliot Porter, Martin Stupich, Kathleen Velo, and Todd Webb. The exhibition articulates their individual responses to this special place while also touching on the shared experience of artists who traveled together and created collaborative projects, primarily books.
John Wesley Powell, who led expeditions through Glen Canyon in 1869 and 1871-72, wrote about his trip as a journey into “the great unknown.” Eliot Porter’s pivotal book The Place No One Knew: Glen Canyon on the Colorado, published in 1963 by the Sierra Club in protest of Glen Canyon Dam, is a central touchstone in the exhibition, itself inspiring and informing responses to Glen Canyon and Lake Powell. Floyd Dominy of the Bureau of Reclamation called the reservoir created by the dam “the Jewel of the Colorado,” while activist Edward Abbey proclaimed that “the collapse of Glen Canyon Dam is as inevitable as the rising of the moon, or the re ...More...
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MUSAGC_220715_074.JPG: Martin Stupich
Glen Canyon Dam, Arizona, view of one of ten penstock intakes on upstream face, 1992
MUSAGC_220715_078.JPG: Martin Stupich
Glen Canyon Dam, Arizona, view from downstream toward the dam, with canoeist and sandbar, 1992
MUSAGC_220715_082.JPG: Martin Stupich
Glen Canyon Dam, Arizona, downstream face, rising 60 stories above the Colorado, 1992
MUSAGC_220715_085.JPG: Martin Stupich
Glen Canyon Dam, Arizona, with the downstream west wall of the canyon, and steel arch bridge carrying US Highway 89, 1992
MUSAGC_220715_089.JPG: Martin Stupich
Glen Canyon Dam, Arizona, view from the west side, showing the downstream face of the dam, and the powerhouse below, 1992
MUSAGC_220715_093.JPG: Martin Stupich
MUSAGC_220715_096.JPG: Martin Stupich
Dam and Bridge at Glen Canyon near Page, Arizona, 1992
MUSAGC_220715_104.JPG: Tad Nichols
MUSAGC_220715_107.JPG: Tad Nichols
Glen Canyon Dam Construction Site, 1960
MUSAGC_220715_111.JPG: Katie Lee
MUSAGC_220715_113.JPG: Peter Goin
Dancing Light, Fiftymile Canyon, 2001
MUSAGC_220715_116.JPG: Peter Goin
Suspended and Sunken Boat, Ribbon Canyon, 2005
MUSAGC_220715_124.JPG: Peter Goin
View from a driftwood beach, farthest upriver point reachable by boat at Lake Powell in 2014, 2014
MUSAGC_220715_127.JPG: Peter Goin
Mirrored Low Water Landscape, Lake Canyon, 2013
MUSAGC_220715_133.JPG: Peter Goin
MUSAGC_220715_136.JPG: Edward Abbey
MUSAGC_220715_139.JPG: Tad Nichols
Signs at Hite: WARNING - Lake Powell is being filled - Do not leave equipment at lakeshore - No fuel or supplies from Hite to Glen Canyon Dam - 147 miles - Float trips are impossible, 1963
MUSAGC_220715_144.JPG: Peter Friederici
MUSAGC_220715_146.JPG: Tad Nichols
Cathedral in the Desert, 1955-1965
Wikipedia Description: Museum of Northern Arizona
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Museum of Northern Arizona is a museum in Flagstaff, Arizona, United States, that was established as a repository for Indigenous material and natural history specimens from the Colorado Plateau.
The museum was founded in 1928 by zoologist Dr. Harold S. Colton and artist Mary-Russell Ferrell Colton from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and is dedicated to preserving the history and cultures of northern Arizona and the Colorado Plateau.
History
"Someone ought to tell the world about it," wrote Harold Sellers Colton and Frank E. Baxter in a 1932 guide for the northern Arizona traveler. They eloquently described the wonders of the vast region—colors to delight the artist, Native American peoples to engage the anthropologist, traces of human occupation to occupy the archaeologist, an open textbook for the geologist, plants and wildlife to intrigue the biologist and botanist—in short, an area abundant with treasures to delight both scientist and visitor. The authors were reiterating what had already been stated—northern Arizona and the Colorado Plateau were definitely worth exploring.
Northern Arizona sits on part of the Colorado Plateau which extends over parts of four western states: Arizona, Utah, Colorado, and New Mexico. The section in northern Arizona features the towering volcano known as the San Francisco Peaks, the ever-changing palette of the Painted Desert, the unequaled Grand Canyon, beautiful Lake Powell, curious Petrified Forest, lush Oak Creek Canyon, bountiful Verde Valley, and the verdant White Mountains, just to name a few high-lights. Living amongst these physical marvels are the native peoples who, in the course of maintaining their cultural traditions, acknowledge and celebrate the natural wonders surrounding them. Elevations extend three miles vertically—from the 12,637 foot-high Humphrey's Peak of the San Francisco Peaks to the one-mile-deep Grand Canyon. In between are near ...More...
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