GOOD ‘N PLENTY: Announcing SMoCA’s Artist Grant Finalists of 2012

Last summer, the creative and quirky minds at Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Art created a grant that’s community generated and in support of “innovative art makers, wise-crackers and trailblazers based in Arizona.” From a number of submissions from artists throughout Phoenix, six proposals from the local arts community have been…

Pantone Announces 2013 Color of the Year, Emerald Green

Let’s hear it for 17-5641, Emerald Green “The 2012 color of the year, PANTONE 17-1463 Tangerine Tango, a spirited reddish orange, provided the energy boost we needed to recharge and move forward,” writes Leatrice Eiseman, executive director of the Pantone Color Institute. “Emerald, a vivid verdant green, enhances our sense…

Bucky Miller’s Destroyer at the Night Gallery

Bucky Miller’s photographs are deceptively simple. Destroyer, Miller’s most recent exhibition, is a collection of pieces from the past year that have a quiet but powerful presence. The show is as much about the sequencing and arrangement of the works as it is about the photos individually. The associations and…

A Look at the Life and Controversial Work of Landscape Architect Bill Tonnesen

Bill Tonnesen’s work is recognizable. The Phoenix-based landscape architect constructs large, often-grotesque human sculptures (most are covered in white or metallic hues) and compulsively organized habitats for residential and commercial projects throughout Phoenix. This week, Phoenix New Times contributor and author of our running column, Surreal Estate, Robrt Pela takes…

Five Exhibitions to Check out During November’s Third Friday

Be it a ​First Friday or a Third Friday — we’re just excited about having an excuse (not that we need one) to see some great art exhibitions. And you better believe that we’re making the loop and stopping by these five. 5. “Sue Chenoweth: Real and Applied” @ Modified…

Seven Art Lessons Learned From Georgia O’Keeffe

Georgia O’Keefe was an american painter who was part of a movement that paved the way for women in the fine arts. She was known for her large-scale paintings of flowers, and while she worked mainly in Northern New Mexico, her work is currently displayed around the world (including Phoenix…

Heard Museum Explores the Legacy of Code Talkers

Every year on the weekend before Thanksgiving, my hometown of Winslow hosts a Christmas parade featuring traditions of northern Arizona cultures. With tribal princesses from Navajo chapter houses, local civic organizations, Hopi hoop dancers, and pieces of hard candy thrown to kids who watch from the curb, there has always…