|
|
The
Community Fine Arts Center in |
|
|
test |
|
|
We are a non-profit
multi-arts center begun in 1966 by a local science teacher with a great love
for art and a vision for his school and community. Its beginning started much
earlier -- 1939 -- when the first painting was purchased to hang in the
local high school. In the summer months, Mr. Elmer Halseth would travel |
|
|
|
|
Shack Alley, by Henrietta Wood, became the nucleus for the permanent collection that now makes its home in the Community Fine Arts Center. Mr. Halseth became the first director of the Center as well as a State Representative and was a supporter of the arts until his death in 1991. |
||
|
|
test |
||
|
|
The |
||
|
|
test |
||
|
|
|
The Community Fine Arts Center features a changing exhibition schedule of local, regional, and national painters, sculptors, printers, photographers, and craft artists. National traveling exhibitions are also on the calendar, offering traditional and non-traditional displays of contemporary art in America. |
|
|
|
test |
||
|
|
In addition to its art exhibitions, the center has gained notoriety as a cultural leader in Southwest Wyoming. It provides a way for children and adults to witness and participate in the performing arts, presenting as many as six venues per year. Symphony, ballet, dramatic and children’s theater, jazz, classical, pop and ethnic music and opera are featured in an impressive yearly schedule of events. |
||
|
|
test |
||
|
|
The CFAC was instrumental in starting an annual Cowboy Poet and Music Festival held for several years ago in collaboration with the Sweetwater County Events Complex. The Center has proudly hosted such groups as the Utah Symphony, the Arvada Center of the Performing Arts, Diane Witherspoon Jazz Quintet, the David Taylor Dance Theater, the Utah and Jeoffrey Ballets, the Utah Opera and the Basque Ballet of Spain. With each guest’s performance, master workshops for local dancers, singers, musicians, and actors are sponsored by the center, expanding the outreach of this southwestern Wyoming home of the arts. |
||
|
|
Test |
||
|
|
The Community Fine Arts Center serves as a meeting place for cultural and civic groups and offers lectures, demonstrations, and workshops in the visual arts. It celebrates Youth Arts Month each area with displays of artwork from the area schools. A summer "ArtCamp" for ages 10-14 leads students to discover their own creative talents in drawing, painting, sculpture and crafts. |
||
|
|
Test |
||
|
|
Rock Springs has been home
to as many as 56 different nationalities in its history and is a “melting
pot” of cultural diversity. Each year the Community Fine Arts Center welcomes
more than 6,000 guests. Visitors from all 50 states and many foreign
countries have discovered the Wyoming arts surprise in Southwest Wyoming and
have been delighted and enriched by |
||
|
|
Test |
||
|
|
Thank you for visiting the Community Fine Arts Center Web Site -- a cultural oasis in southwest Wyoming. We are handicapped accessible and are happy to arrange free individual or group tours. There is no admission charge to the Fine Arts Center. We are open Monday through Thursday, |
||
|
|||