Confetti background with blues, tans, and grays. On top is text that reads: 50 Years, 50 artists A celebration of the west
Blick Art materials logo
Logo for the MUD foundation

Marking Creative West’s (formerly WESTAF) 50th anniversary, 50 Years, 50 Artists: A Celebration of the West invited artists to explore the infinite threads of time. This exhibition dives into the echoes of memory, the pulse of the present, and visions of what lies ahead, offering a unique tapestry of perspectives on the passage of time. Through these 50 unique works, we celebrate the stories that have shaped our region and the ever-evolving spirit of the West.

Jury panel: Bassem Bejjani, Lisa Becker, Josh Blanchard, Justine Chapel, Ken Cho, Rebecca Dominguez, Karen Ewald, Kelsey Foster, Christian Gaines, Susan Garbett, Cameron Green, Ayanna Hwang, Paul Nguyen, Karmen Rossi, Natalie Scherlong, Natalie Villa

Special thanks to Justine Chapel, Aliah Chavez, Rebecca Dominguez, Christian Gaines, Paul Nguyen, Raquel Vasquez, Natalie Villa, MUD Foundation, and Blick Art Materials.

Coming Soon! Virtual 3-D Gallery
Brown and white cardboard/wooden boxes aligned on a white wall sparingly.

Photo Courtesy of Sawyer Rose

First Place Award

Sawyer Rose, CA | Artwork Title: Lauren | Visit Website

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Women shoulder a disproportionate amount of society’s unpaid labor hours in every country in the world. Time is money, as they say – and for women, those extra unpaid work hours represent a loss of opportunity, advancement, and independence.

My work on The Carrying Stones Project celebrates the strength of working women while shining a light on the systemic inequities that women face in the workplace, at home, and in their communities.

My large-scale sculpture artworks are time data visualizations of real women’s working lives. Women profiled are a mix of ages, ethnicities, sexual orientations, occupations, and socio-economic statuses.

First, project participants record their work hours, paid and unpaid, in a custom-built timekeeping app. Next, I translate each woman’s hours into a data visualization sculpture that lets viewers see the vast number of hours each woman logs at her paid work, her unpaid work, or volunteering.

Brownish painted background with blue cut outs in front. Cut outs are of women, Columbian figurines, cars, and on top of that is a man dressed in slacks and suspenders with a bandana and glasses.

Photo Courtesy of Sean Gruno

Second Place Award

Tony Ortega, CO | Artwork Title: Bonampak Cholo | Visit Website

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The pre-Columbian background designs reveal a timeline from the past to the present. The juxtaposing of the man in one woodblock and the female in the other demonstrate the intersecting of time periods in history that include pre-Columbian, colonial, Mexican revolution and present. My prints become part of the continued evolution of cultural, and history, mixing with indigenous and Spanish ancestry and with American culture.

The central figures spiritually, emotionally, and physically live between the clash of two cultures one Mexican and one American. They need to cross a border not the Mexican and U.S border but the border squash in between two cultures. Here in the southwest, the northern outpost of Latin American, lays their journey from south to north. They must deal with a dominant culture whose history is from east to west. In their journey, they must think from: Spanish to English, community to capitalism, family to individuality and back again.

Third Place Award

Lares Feliciano, CO | Artwork Title: Full Color Colorado | Visit Website

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Time is a central theme in my work – I am fascinated by the endless ways time affects the human experience. Why do the values of time seem to shift as we age, grieve, fall in love? Is memory time travel? Where do I go when I am dreaming? What is de-ja-vu? I believe that all of time exists at once – a beautiful ever-flowing of past, present, and future. And in the west time moves in wild, mysterious ways. The wind works slow, for centuries carving canyons and riverbeds. And simultaneously a dust devil will take out the seeds you just planted in an instant. You learn to be slow and steady. Quick and sharp. The works I have submitted to A Celebration of the West reflect various experiences of time in this bright and dusty corner of the country. Memory, geology, archives, and oral histories are all reflected in these works.

Colorful painting with 4 women staring toward the audience. One woman smiles in a water fountain as it shoots up. A woman stands in front jumping with her back arched smiling; a business woman in heels appears to walk in a rush; and an older woman with a glass sits at a table.

Photo Courtesy of Mahara Sinclaire

Mahara Sinclaire, CA | Artwork Title: Fountain | Visit Website

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“Fountain” was inspired by a child I saw enjoying the fountain. I was struck by the recollection of how thoroughly we enjoy being alive, truly living “in the moment”, when we are very new to the experience of life. The figure with the briefcase represents adulthood, when we are striving to “make it” in the society. The older figure looks wistfully back through time. The piece addresses psychological postures associated with the stages of life.

Sculpture with a yellow rectangle background with green circle and black spiraled metal coming from the center with a door know holder with no door knobs and red spirals at the bottom of the sculpture.

Photo Courtesy of Mehosh Photography

Adrienne De Guevara, CA | Artwork Title: Coiled Threshold | Visit Website

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My work is activated through the lens of expressionism and the passing of time as expressed in the natural entropy of objects draws me in. It is from this pull that I am attracted to discover how things – made by humans – take on a life after their intended use upon creation. Signs of wear of a given item tell a story of its past relationship to its user and how its makeup interacts with the elements over time, slowly returning to its most fundamental components as a matter of basic entropy. I investigate the passage of time through the deconstruction of discarded objects and their reconstruction into something new. The piece I have chosen to submit is called Coiled Threshold and it asks the viewer to decide whether or not to step through. It suggests imagining a potential future with an act of stepping through.

Mixed Media tree with digital prints, paint, letters, and insect pins, all covered in purified beeswax. Artwork by Joy Broom.

Photo Courtesy of Joy Broom

Honorable Mention

Joy Broom, CA | Artwork Title: White Tree: Biological | Visit Website

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My work explores Memory, Identity and History, combining my drawings with shards of old family memorabilia. Layering elements of the natural sciences, Biology is a constant in the work as well. The very process of dismantling then reassembling bits of old albums, painting over and cutting up photos, losing specific identities, is in itself a reflection on the passage of time.

Trees and branching imply dualities; circulatory systems nod to family trees. The work still reflects Memory, History–and for the first time, my own Mortality. I’m now using what may be the not-so-reliable natural world to hang on for dear life.

I continue a decades-long exploration, having gratefully received a WESTAF/NEA Regional Fellowship for Visual Artists for Works on Paper in 1992.

Oil painting of six friends standing together with the planet Saturn in the background. Artwork by Gary Westford.

Photo Courtesy of Kelly James

Gary Westford, OR | Artwork Title: Intermission | Visit Website

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My large scale (5 x 6 ft) painting Intermission was completed during the worldwide Pandemic. It was a time of “intermission,” when we were sequestered from the events of our daily lives, and we longed for a return to community. The painting is based on a photograph of friends taken at the beach at night. They are enjoying being together. Three of them are engaged in laughter and conversation, unaware that behind them the beautiful planet Saturn looms close in the night sky. At the left, two friends have seen the planet, and stand in awe of its magnificence. At the right, another friend pauses quizzically, and he looks out at us while smoking a cigarette. His dog has seen us as well. The word INTERMISSION hovers in front of the group. All of them have taken time out for reflection and friendship, beneath a miraculous night sky. For them, time has stopped for the moment.

Acrylic painting of different shades of blue, creating a large 3D square.

Photo Courtesy of Ashley Ravidas

Ashley Ravidas, CA | Artwork Title: Running Out of Time | Visit Website

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These two pieces are part of a series titled swimming towards the light. Swimming towards the light is a representation of being too deep underwater. It’s dark, it’s cold, it’s quiet. Logically, your brain knows that it is ok, you will swim up and everything is fine. It is, however, still a fight against the urge to panic, the feelings of anxiety and stress that arise as time feels fleeting.

‘Running out of time’ represents the feeling of anxiety around time. As I move towards the surface of the water, will I have enough time and more broadly, am I using time wisely? Time is only a construct, it moves in or out and sometimes as a loop, and how does that impact where I am and what I am doing? If time is a construct, does it matter how much time I have left?

Mixed Media Collage of the Pacific Golden Plover.

Photo Courtesy of Star Padilla

Star Padilla, HI | Artwork Title: Kōlea Returns | Visit Website

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As a lifelong bird watcher, winged symbolism and imagery has always influenced my work. My series of collages called “NEST: Songs From My Window” is from direct observation, field sketches, audio research and plein-air drawings. This collection celebrates our small and vulnerable neighbors. I use upcycled materials showing the fragility of paper like the fragility of our ecosystem that must be protected, as all creatures deserve a NEST, a home. I’m highlighting 2 pieces which address time. The Kolea Bird (Golden Plover) travels thousands of miles every season from Alaska to Hawaii during the winter months, following an ancient route. The Tiger Swallowtail Butterfly I saw in Alaska this summer struck me as an impermanent miracle, a transformative beauty existing in one of the most harsh and rugged places on Earth. Both special animals are seasonal reminders of the changing months, weather and landscapes, their journey and colors testament to survival and resilience.

Fiber installation of variety of color threads connected to the walls and ceiling.

Photo Courtesy of Kevin Kim

Kum Ja Lee, OR | Artwork Title: Perception of Time and Space | Visit Website

Video Courtesy of Kevin Kim

Kum Ja Lee, OR | Artwork Title: Perception of Time and Space | Visit Website

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My work explores time’s visible and invisible patterns in nature and human experiences through Eastern and Western perspectives, utilizing the juxtaposition between traditional and contemporary methodologies to raise philosophical questions about time, being and becoming, seeing and unseeing, and the aesthetics of duality.

Using linear threads to connect, compile and create an immersive ethereal space, I approach my work as a metaphorical structure to explore the passage of time. This investigation provides viewers with a sense of possibility, spontaneity and physicality, visibility and invisibility through color gradation within the work representing the progression of time, while also reflecting on different concepts of time: Western time as linear, Eastern time as circular.

The color gradations and labor involved in my art reflect the role of time in nature, as seen in the cyclical pattern of day and night, and the changing of the seasons–all echoing deep time.

A woman's face can be seen behind an abstract painting.

Photo Courtesy of Mario Miguel Echevarria

Mario Miguel Echevarria, CO | Artwork Title: Momentary Fragment

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I was one of a handful of Artists invited to participate in the formative early stages of WESTAF/CAFE website decades ago. Changed my life! “Momentary Fragment” is a painting that references memory in that memory begins with perception, and then is encoded and stored using a combination of electricity and chemicals. I have always imagined the residue of memory/time to be like a perforated sieve, where short term memory filters out and long term memories become essential threads in the fabric of self. In this painting, the psyche of an individual is observing the transference of events and the memories are filtering, encoding and dispersing in real time.

Oil painting of trees destroyed by a fire on a dark blue/gray background or sky.

Photo Courtesy of Matthew Felix Sun

Matthew Felix Sun, CA | Artwork Title: Morose | Visit Website

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I depict life frankly and critically, as visual surfaces and interior qualities. Instead of verisimilitude, I strive to discover and capture what is hidden, emphasizing the implicit and the unspoken. In recent years, I have moved away from purely representational work, leaning into shifts of pattern, color, tone, and shape. I tend toward a limited palette and record the world in a muted light; yet sometimes use more vibrant colors to express enhanced emotions, or allow more exuberant colors to generate a dimension of visual excitement, acknowledging that joy remains, however grim the world may be.

The two images I am submitting, Morose, and Torrent, examine the landscape of the West during a specific time frame – the torrent and the flooding, the wildfire and its aftermath of devastation and defiance, and explore the changes over a longer span, reflecting the transience of our environment, and the cyclical nature of the world, and the contradicting timelessness and eternity.

Fiber art made of wool that is mounted on buffalo rawhide with a cross like back piece.

Photo Courtesy of Katrina Ruhmland

Katrina Ruhmland, MT | Artwork Title: Garments of the Soul

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There is an element of wonderful surprise in creating a visual emotion, with my intense desire to connect time: past, present, and future. My inspirations stem from my core and researching the archaeology of my European and Scandinavian ancestry. My DNA lineage connects me to the space of my ancestors, their survival through time, to my place in the current world. “Garment Of The Soul” stemmed from the preserved fabrics found in bogs, and the historic record that moved from leather, to plant fiber, to domesticated animals. I was extremely inspired to create a basic shirt that was my own, from pre-Christian times, with movement from the previous processes.

Public art, metal formed in ram horns coming from the ground in front of a mountain background.

Photo Courtesy of Jessica Bodner

Honorable Mention

Jessica Bodner, MT | Artwork Title: Golden Ramhorns | Visit Website

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These pieces are drawn from studies of Archaeological artifacts, symbolism in nature and sacred geometry. Honoring the connection between our historical heritage and today’s reality, to remember a long-gone era when people and nature existed in harmony. Metal is twisted and hewn to create woven thickets where light and shadow pass through, creating an interplay between the natural backdrop, the changing seasons and direction of the sun, giving the pieces a mood that is dictated by the weather, seasons and time of day. 50 years 50 Artists resonates with me as a 52 year old professional artist for over 30 years, who has used the CaFÉ service since its online inception many years ago. I am thankful for the many public art commissions, connections and exhibitions I have been selected for because of the CaFÉ.

Mixed media artwork with a black-chalkboard like background with children drawings with a barefoot white child walking from the barod and a fox and snake outside of the frame looking at the boy.

Photo Courtesy of Sarah Tenney

Sarah Tenney, CO | Artwork Title: He Carried His Mother’s Burdens, but to Him They Were Light | Visit Website

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Time is the greatest limit in life and yet all we have is the present moment. I create pieces where the characters are in the moment, oblivious to the passage of time, or lost in dreams, outside the confines of the ticking clock. Fear and anxiety can create a false sense of urgency, so I paint stories that transform intense feelings and make scary times manageable. My work simplifies life’s complications. Influenced by myths, these cutouts and dioramas illustrate animals and exuberant children in dreamy settings and address timeless existential concerns with a child’s curiosity: asking intense questions, then cheerfully skipping away. Drawing from personal experience in motherhood, my art highlights the ability to find peace and intricacy of joy in hard times.

Soft Pastel artwork of Native American elder profile in mostly browns, blacks, and tans.

Photo Courtesy of John Evans

John Evans, MT | Artwork Title: The Elder

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Time and aging are often regarded as a force which imparts a defined character and inner story in the human face. Often, visual cues of wisdom and integrity are present. Depicting personality in a subject can be daunting, and always requires careful study of subtleties to effect the desired result. The Elder is a play on light, the passage of time, and its effects on the human face.

Sculpture of woman's head in green with teal hair wearing a crown with a display of a butterfly's metamorphosis.

Photo Courtesy of Eric Stoner

Honorable Mention

Brent Walker, CA | Artwork Title: Queen Hattie Monarch | Visit Website

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With this piece, I incorporated the life cycle of the Monarch butterfly in its 3 distinct stages of caterpillar, chrysalis, and the fully formed adult. Metamorphosis, rebirth, and renewal are common ideas conjured initially when thinking of the Monarch through her stages of life. But this transition, although fascinating, can be taken for granted much like the passage of time. In a way, the life of the monarch represents 3 distinct moments in time: the past, the present, and the future. Although change is the most obvious meaning when considering the butterfly, this change cannot happen without the inevitability of time. It is a necessary ingredient to all life, not just the Monarch. In all of her regality, the Monarch shows us that even as we grow, age, and pass on, each stage of life and each passing moment can be its own source of beauty and wonder all its own. Without the reliability of time, the stages before, presently, and after would not be as captivating and extraordinary.

Aluminum in an infinity shape with a circular object toward the front with two pieces to the side.

Photo Courtesy of Mark Zirinsky

Mark Zirinsky, CO | Artwork Title: Time 4 | Visit Website

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About 7 years I found myself, unintentionally, making a series of sculptures showing the human life cycle. I say ‘unintentionally; as the pieces were thought of, and created, out of sequence. Some of the titles, man and woman, zygote, birth, mother and children, the teenage years. Then, I found myself making a design, without an articulated title. After 6 weeks of looking at it on the fireplace mantle, I realized that I had articulated, in metal, the concept: time. The last phase of the life cycle. That was 2015; I revisited the concept a few months ago (2024) with newer tooling and some improved techniques. The piece has the same title: “Time” 4.

Large sculpture made up of objects around the house like iron plates, spatulas, etc. in the shape of an indigenous warrior.

Photo Courtesy of Jimmy Descant

Honorable Mention

Jimmy Descant, AZ | Artwork Title: “Chief 4’s Of 8’s” The Great Cheyenne Dog Soldier | Visit Website

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As a Severe ReConstructivist, I am a self taught found object sculptor of 28 years, with extensive experience in large scale public art installations, on loan programs, and public and private collections – in a style I call ‘Western Futurism’. I grew up in New Orleans, Colorado 12 years, and have lived and created in Tucson, AZ for 6 years. The parts found at thrift stores, trash nights, and flea markets from the Golden Age of American manufacturing contrasts the effects on the cultures, environment, and hardships of Western expansion on the Indigenous Peoples, creating my version of the West in environmental, socio-political current events, and western story telling imagery. I find parts that have never seen each other that mesh naturally and form my style, in a contemporary commentary sending a message about the past, present, and future. Recycling is a major key, finding the raw materials by hunt and instinct, acquiring the vintage and beautiful in out of the way places.

Photo & Video Courtesy of Rancho Thatchmo

Delbert Anderson, NM | Artwork Title: 1,674 Days | Visit Website

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I feel time that has already passed contains healing power. Perhaps in WESTAF’s case it was the people who dedicated their lives to WESTAF’s mission which pushed WESTAF to new heights and success. A celebration occurred on the 50th year for WESTAF, in my piece, artists will focus, respect and honor The Long Walk for 1,674 Days.

“The Long Walk: 1,674 Days” is a powerful tribute to the Navajo people’s resilience during their forced relocation from 1863 to 1868. This unique durational composition, performed over 1,674 days, symbolizes the exact duration of the Navajo Long Walk, honoring the memory and spirit of those who endured the journey. Durational music is an unorthodox category of musical composition and performance that emphasizes the temporal dimension of sound, extending over long periods, 1,674 days, in the case of The Long Walk. The approach challenges the traditional concepts of time and structure in music, focusing instead on the experience of performers and audiences.

Sheet music that shows the notation of the song, The Long Walk, 1,674 Days.

Delbert Anderson, NM | Artwork Title: The Long Walk Notation | Visit Website

Handwoven fiber tapestry depicting the northern CA coastline.

Photo Courtesy of Don Felton

Deborah Corsini, CA | Artwork Title: Strata | Visit Website

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This eccentric weave tapestry depicts the rugged beauty of the northern CA coastline and contrasts the solid earth with the ethereal sky above. It is a landscape of both time and movement and reminds us that nature’s ever changing presence is a calming force in our troubled world. Strata are geological marks barring witness to the earth’s millenniums. By contrast, we mortals, reside here for a moment in time. As we reflect on the awe-inspiring wonder and majesty of our planet and the passage of epochs of time might we also we learn to care for and live more gently in our earthly home?

White pigment ink around the edges of the black clayboard background with an open space in the middle.

Photo Courtesy of Rafael Soldi

Mary Ann Peters, WA | Artwork Title: This Trembling Turf (The Hollow) | Visit Website

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My submissions are from my series titled “this trembling turf”, a suite of 10 large scale drawings that imagine compacted and agitated landscapes, each a depository for histories struck from or ignored within the cultural record. After researching how forensic archaeologists use sonar devices to locate buried objects, the drawings have a discreet pulse where discovery is possible, except for one where there is a hollow that opens indefinitely. Time in my drawings is land locked, a subterranean steward of missing information.

Hourglass bolo tie made of scolecite, topaz, silver, brass, lamination, and leather.

Photo Courtesy of Rachel Hawkinson

Rachel Hawkinson, WY | Artwork Title: Hourglass Bolo | Visit Website

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Over millions of years the western landscape has gradually evolved to show a glimpse of our geological history. Like the slow churn of geographic time, traditional metal smithing refines stones, metal and other raw materials with heat, pressure and abrasion to define who we are in the time that we are in.

Just as separate elements bind into precious and semi-precious stones over ages, staples of western wear have evolved. Cowboy hats, boots, jeans, buckles and bolos are among the most iconic facets of western life and work wear. While these are functional items of clothing, the aesthetics of western fashion have shifted over time to become talismans of personal style that embody the spirit of the west. An adventurous, honest, hard-working grit that’s hard to find anywhere else.

Modern design allows artists to use physical pieces of our geological past to break the mold of western fashion trends while preserving the memory of our shared heritage.

Mixed media artwork created with oil and cold wax. Scraps of paper hand-sewn into pockets.

Photo Courtesy of Brian Birlauf

Honorable Mention

Julia Martin, CO | Artwork Title: I Plowed My Life This Way | Visit Website

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My work logs time at multiple levels. First, I begin the day with writing, painting, and drawing on scraps. I weather these papers in my pockets before stitching them closed to end the day. I later sew each note on a gridded ground of oil and cold wax. Some writing is visible, while most is not. These notes chronicle my time, identity, and effort while exploring what we carry that remains private and concealed in an age of posting and sharing. Second, I use traditionally overlooked techniques such as quilting and sewing to highlight my familial artistic lineage that was historically dismissed in fine art circles as craft or women’s work but is now gaining momentum. Third, the background obscures the notes and threadwork until closer to the surface, where the detail and process almost overwhelm, honoring perceptions of women’s work and their unseen labor over time. Last, the piece is steeped in time by the effort it takes to stitch each note individually and then onto the larger grid.

Painting of flowers and plants found in the Mojave Desert in the center of the canvas resembling a river surrounded by tan.

Photo Courtesy of Meghan Dragon

Meghan Dragon, NV | Artwork Title: Red Rock Rhythm | Visit Website

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My artwork connects to the present moment, both in the act of creating the work and the motifs portrayed. I believe that in every moment, between every breath, there is a tangible opportunity to pause and connect with our surroundings. Studying the intricate patterns and textures of nature on hikes around the Mojave Desert before creating a piece brings me into the present moment. The act of creating combinations of flora and fauna through an intuitive free flow of paint and line-work evokes a sense of oneness and connection with the here and now as well. My work not only honors this appreciation of time, but also the beauty of the Nevada Desert.

Painting of a dark blue sky with a pink cowboy and his blue horse on the open range.

Photo Courtesy of Earl Chuvarsky

Earl Chuvarsky, CO | Artwork Title: Open Range | Visit Website

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As a 5th generation Coloradan my artwork connects to the concept of time by bridging the old west with the new. With bold colors and surreal juxtapositions, I aim to evoke a sense of wonder and curiosity, inviting viewers to reconsider their perceptions of history and tradition. By blending elements of pop culture with iconic western motifs, I seeks to create a visual language that speaks to the enduring spirit of the west while embracing the complexities of modern life.

Black and white photograph of an older man and woman dancing in front of a clock.

Photo Courtesy of Diane Bush

Diane Bush, NV | Artwork Title: Red Rock Rhythm | Visit Website

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I don’t think this image needs any explanation, do you?

Photo dye sublimation of an outdoor arch during the winter. The leaves have died and there is snow on the ground. In the center, there is an image of the same arch during spring with full green leaves.

Photo Courtesy of Ellen Jantzen

Ellen Jantzen, NM | Artwork Title: Influencing Memory | Visit Website

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Unity of Time and Place

Some say, all time exists at once; the indefinite continued progress of existence and events in the past, present, and future are regarded as a whole. As always, I am vastly interested in reality… so this cohesion is mesmerizing to me. After spending the last several years immersed in the past I am ready to embrace the future. But as I set out, the past is with me, transformed. All the losses are still there but there is a brightness forming that allows me to see the entirety, the unity of time and place.

Photograph of a silhouette person in oranges, purples in front of light orange and browns with different textures.

Photo Courtesy of Barbara Bordnick

Jack Bordnick, NM | Artwork Title: Me and My Shadow Series | Visit Website

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My sculptural and digital photography imagery is a reflection of my past and present forces and the imagination of my life’s stories. They represent an evolutionary process of these ideas and how that all of life’s forces are interconnected, embraced and expressed thru creative art forms.

My works represent what I have accomplished with this art form. I call it my quantum and metaphoric moment, the changing from one form to another over time. They express and implement my thoughts and feelings, regarding taking risks, without any guarantee of their success and to be reflected in these present works, is my goal.

The predominate imagery deals mostly with faces of both living and non-living beings and things. They are expressed in these many forms and images and do speak to us in their own languages.

Watercolor painting with black background, white flowers coming from the corner leading to a figure of a women in green with smaller people dancing around her.

Photo Courtesy of Kayla Oshiro

Honorable Mention

Kayla Oshiro, HI | Artwork Title: Kin

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With the passage of time, I reconnect with my inner child and challenge rigid notions of a ‘correct’ way to feel, think, and behave. For much of my life, I felt constrained by the fear of being seen as too emotional, passionate, or sensitive. I often suppressed my feelings to be a ‘good’ daughter and student, tying my self-worth so closely to performance that the stress led to the darkest period of my life. My art marks the beginning of a journey to let go of those constraints and embrace a more authentic self. Through free-flowing watercolor, I release pent-up emotions. As the watercolor dries, the blotches evolve into a canvas where I uncover shapes, figures, and hidden meanings within the chaos. By relinquishing control, I nurture an urge to imagine again. I hope each piece invites viewers to honor their emotions and recognize that their worth lies not in being ‘good’ or ‘correct,’ but in embracing their humanity and connection with others.

Honorable Mention

Jane Ireijo, HI | Artwork Title: Vanishing Pueo | Visit Website

Woman with sponge in hand wiping across a mural of an owl.

Video & Photo Courtesy of Lance Roylo

Honorable Mention

Jane Ireijo, HI | Artwork Title: Vanishing Pueo | Visit Website

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Vanishing Murals: A Reflection on Time and Impermanence

My vanishing murals explore the delicate balance between creation and destruction, permanence and ephemerality, reflecting the transitory nature of time. In creating these murals, I use natural, foraged materials like wildfire charcoal, earth, and water, infusing the art with elements of the environment that are themselves subject to change. Each mural is designed to disappear, washed away by water, allowing the elements to reclaim the artwork and complete the cycle of impermanence.

Time is central to my work—both in the moment of creation and in its inevitable dissolution. These murals are a meditation on the passing of time, evoking the fragile beauty of nature and the impermanence of our own human experiences. The vanishing process, inspired by the Tibetan Buddhist tradition of sand mandalas, serves as a reminder that time is fluid, and all things, no matter how beautiful or monumental, eventually fade.

Graphite, ink, and acrylic artwork showing a factory with army, cigarettes, and pop culture references in cartoon style.

Video & Photo Courtesy of Push Dot Studios Portland, OR

Roger Kukes, OR | Artwork Title: Hanford #5: Smokers

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For me “celebrating the West “ invites zeroing in on particular events or stories with utmost graphic specificity. Some of those great American Western stories are past, some present. I experience time as fluid in my western paintings. Past can impinge on the present; the present can penetrate the past.

The 19th C. ethos of “Manifest Destiny” dominated the shaping of the American west. My painting from the series “Theater of the Land: Cavalry and Crow.” tells a series of overlapping stories from that time. The history of the Hanford Nuclear Reservation is another epic western story. Hanford symbolizes the formidable military challenge (and ethical conundrum) faced by the American government and the scientific community in the 1940s: how to meet the threat of Nazi Germany’s rumored building of an Atomic bomb. Hanford produced not only the plutonium used in the bomb dropped over Nagasaki Japan in August,1945 bringing World War II to an end.

Painting of cherished mementos, including old ticket stubs, a letter, photos.

Video & Photo Courtesy of Cassandra Chalfant

Cassandra Chalfant, CO | Artwork Title: Objects in Space | Visit Website

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My work delves into the ways we experience our most personal images. How do we hold them, alter them, imagine or escape them? Why do we revisit them over and over again? I explore my own memories and the collective memories of my family, and look toward the possibilities of the future.

With heavy influence from photography, I point to the role of image as storyteller, collector, historian, and deceiver. The change in recent history of the photographic image and its exponential influence on our perceptions shapes how we perceive the past. Through looking at old photographs or childhood toys, I ask the viewer to determine why we recall and what we learn from collecting the past. Recollection is a key facet of these pieces, noting repeatedly that memory is sacred but malleable, influenced by context, experience, and time. Each time we remember, something is altered or something new is gleaned. It is crucial that we are discerning with our nostalgia.

Sculpture, Videography, Editing, Sound Design: Magda Gluszek; Sound Design: Ryan Orr

Magda Gluszek, AZ | Artwork Title: Recovery of the Unrecoverable | Visit Website

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My latest body of work responds to the concept of time through the creation of ephemeral artworks that are documented photographically and with time based media (video). I create sculptures from clay that are recycled, rather than fired in a kiln. Abandoning the concept of permanence in the physical objects I create has allowed me to let go of my attachment to them and accept their fragility and inevitable change. It has also led to a greater sense of freedom in how I combine clay with impermanent materials as well as where and how I document these pieces. Taking these works out into the natural environments that inspired them adds a new dimension to how they can be presented. Elements like time, sound, and light have been playing a greater role in my aesthetic process. These ephemeral artworks are part of an on-going experiment that asks me to reconsider a material I have worked with for decades within an ever-changing landscape.

Found street signs that have been cut and manipulated into a rectangle with yellow on top, orange in the middle, and green at the bottom.

Photo Courtesy of Mike Conti

Sheila Wyne, AK | Artwork Title: The Strata Series #4 | Visit Website

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One major branch of semiotics defines the sign as a triadic relation. It is “something that stands for something, to someone in some capacity.” A sign can be a symbol, an indicator, an individual.

Exploring a material with this much direct metaphorical gravitas is a rare opportunity for a visual artist. I was first inspired to begin puzzling out a way to render, conceptually, the ephemeral nature of human civilization while pondering the geologic strata of the Grand Canyon as I floated down the Colorado River.

The rest of the journey unfolded in my Alaska studio. This work takes the long geological view where the pressure of time takes our meanings, our intentions and alters them into something indecipherable but still has an echo of our wants, needs and goals.

This series is not about looking back but instead, looking forward. What will we leave behind? What will be found in our geological strata?

The Strata Series is a marker of our time spent here on this planet.

Painting with red, yellow, and orange background with a figure standing at the edge.

Video & Photo Courtesy of Counsel Langley

Counsel Langley, AK | Artwork Title: At The Edge of All We Have Built | Visit Website

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The exploration of time is a thread that runs through all of my work. Reaching far into the past, gazing deep into the future, attempting to capture now, and playing at crashing these distinctions into one. All the while seeking glimpses of the eternal.

Nowhere is this thread more directly depicted than in my series entitled At the Edge of All We Have Built. Here I am looking at these two concepts of time: One, chronos, which refers to seconds and minutes—it’s what we use when we say the meeting begins at 11:00am or the movie starts at 7:30pm. The other is kairos. The definition of kairos is “a time when conditions are right for the accomplishment of a crucial action; the opportune and decisive moment.”

Kairos time is where all the characters in this series find themselves, a time of shifting into direct awareness of that which is bigger than themselves that produces solemn awe—signaling that the “conditions are right,” that this is “the opportune and decisive moment.”

Ceramic-porcelain canteen with leaf-like designs.

Photo Courtesy of Robert Snyder

Robert Snyder, AZ | Artwork Title: Silver Collar | Visit Website

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A new way to carry water. Without the saddlebag.

Living in Arizona there’s a real sense of our past. Our time in the West. Frontier culture. Cowboy hats. Boots. Rodeos. Horses. Saddles. And yes, canteens. Old canteens are found in antique stores, thrift shops and auctions. They’re used as ornaments in restaurants, hotels and in homes. Canteens are a reminder of how precious water is in Arizona. What water means to survival and the environment. In the past and for the future.

So, to acknowledge our culture, I’ve created my image of the modern canteen. They capture the essence of the state’s frontier and renegade heritage. You certainly won’t see them in a saddlebag, on the range or around a campfire. Welcome to the new west.

Canteens are wheel-thrown and hand-built porcelain. They are fired to cone 5. Some are luster fired with gold, silver, Mother-of-Pearl and bronze lusters.

Orange, red star background with two male cowboys drinking alcohol at a table in black and white.

Photo Courtesy of Library of Congress

Kate Oltmann, MT | Artwork Title: Straight Shooter | Visit Website

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My artwork captures the enduring spirit of the American West, weaving together stories of resilience, community and the passage of time. Capturing moments of tension and triumph through drawing and highlighted by bold painted quilt patterns, my work operates as a metaphor for the challenges and opportunities that have shaped both the land and its people over generations. As the great-great granddaughter of true pioneers who helped in the building of the bridges and rangers cabins in Glacier National Park, I seek to honor the history of the west while acknowledging the ongoing transformation of this iconic region. Through graphic patterns and dynamic portrayals of ranchers and farmers of my town, my work invites viewers to contemplate their own connection to the land and the passage of time, encouraging a deeper appreciation for the West’s enduring legacy.

Black, white, and red glass seed bead weaving in varying rows.

Photo Courtesy of Shannon Guzzo

Shannon Guzzo, HI | Artwork Title: Newspaper

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The title is “Newspaper”. This is a Hypar Blanket of over 55,000 glass seed beads. The timelessness of humor! “Newspaper” honors the vintage riddle “what is black and white and read all over?” When on display at galleries or at air fairs, every generation of visitor knows this riddle and recites it without prompting. And humor in the design! My rules were simple: every Hypar (warped square) must have black and white rows of varying lengths and widths, and every Hypar must have at least one red bead. Viewers have fun finding the Hypar that is hiding just one red bead!

Photograph of man daydreaming while watching TV with colorful male doodle drawn characters in the background and male, clown-like TV characters.

Photo Courtesy of David Brothers

David Brothers, UT | Artwork Title: Watching TV | Visit Website

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We all know what time is and how easily it can slip away. The following images serve as visual reminders of time – forgotten memories, or the slow erosion of presence.

Oil painting of a young girl holding a teacup and gazing out of a window. Trees and plants can be seen out the window.

Photo Courtesy of Mina Ferrante

Mina Ferrante, CA | Artwork Title: Day Dream | Visit Website

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I am an artist fascinated by art history. Time, whether seen as an eternity or a fleeting moment, inspired me to create “Passage of Time: The Evolution of Art and Technology Through the Ages,” a project documenting this process.

This series of portraits transitions from youth to old age, arranged left to right. As the heads turn, the faces age, representing the passage of time. Each portrait reflects a significant artistic movement, spanning from ancient history to today, and symbolizes global humanity by incorporating diverse ethnicities and races. The chosen ethnicities reflect each period’s art movements, historical context, and technological advancements.

Behind these portraits, a background panel illustrates the evolution of technology from ancient times to the modern day. What’s fascinating is that this evolution of technology occurred alongside the progression of art, showing the interconnectedness of these two fields and how they have influenced each other over time.

Mixed media piece with found gold objects (doll, slinky, coins, lightbulb, etc.) around the house leading to the center where a large gold nugget with pickaxe

Photo Courtesy of Stefan Begej

Stefan Begej, CO | Artwork Title: Eureka! | Visit Website

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“Eureka!” is a mixed media wall sculpture containing a large collection of found objects and materials, and seeks to simultaneously represent two elements of Time – the instantaneous moment of a singular event, and also the subsequent evolution of events stemming from that initial moment. The vehicle used for this representation of Time is gold, an elemental metal ubiquitous in human history and affairs. The center area of “Eureka!” represents that instantaneous moment of Time when a prospector’s hammer exposes a flash of color within the cracks of a fractured rock, accompanied by dumbstruck excitement and the exclamation of the namesake word. Outward from the rock, the flow of Time is represented by the various sprays of gold objects emanating from each crack. These gradually transform from raw flakes and particles created at inception into a vast outward collection of technological and cultural objects, each evolving over Time and serving as continued testimony to human creativity.

Wide photo of double exposure with a silhouette of aperson walking through a door in light blue with another layer of a silhouette person looking toward the door with a red and yellow shadow lines.

Photo Courtesy of Wen-Heng Lin

Wen-Hang Lin, AZ | Artwork Title: Blue Shadow Behind Everything Dazzling | Visit Website

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In The Riff of Silence, I explore time as a layered and fluid experience, where past and present intersect through double-exposure photography. By overlaying two unrelated moments onto a single frame, I create a visual dialogue between distinct points in time, challenging the linear understanding of time’s progression.

Chance and serendipity play a key role in my process, merging moments into abstract spaces that invite viewers to contemplate how time overlaps and influences perception. These images reveal the fluidity of time, transforming ordinary street scenes into stages where time itself becomes a performance, unfolding through layers of memory and observation.

My work connects to the exhibition’s theme by reflecting time as a fusion of experiences—blurring the boundaries between past, present, and future, and offering a new way to interpret the passage of time.

Photo Courtesy of Navid Baraty

Honorable Mention

Navid Baraty, WA | Artwork Title: Motion of the Night Sky Over Area 51 | Visit Website

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In my star trail videos, I combine hundreds of 30-second exposures of the night sky to create a continuous sequence that reveals the motion of the stars. This process transforms stillness into motion, illustrating the concept of time in a way that we can’t see with our naked eye. Each exposure captures a fragment of time, but when combined, they show the continuous motion of the Earth’s rotation. By showing how the stars trace their paths across the sky, my work depicts the passage of time and shows how countless small moments come together to create something much larger.

Multi-colored, mixed media collage with the head and torso of a person and text that reads

Photo Courtesy of Michael Paulson

Bob Allen, AZ | Artwork Title: For the Time Being | Visit Website

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During the pandemic, I had a solo show and created on canvas an actual TIME BEING – curious soul geared-up and ready whatever is to come. The ‘being’ is made up of timely images and facsimiles of time pieces and timekeeping apparatus and is surrounded by various motherboards and dials. The solo exhibit and this piece were both titled FOR THE TIME BEING. LOOKING @ THE BIG SLIDE is rooted in the passage of time and the aging process. There are many witnesses ‘eyeing’ the action. The ‘big slide’ refers to what starts happening to the body as we age but also refers to a favorite amusement park ride from back-in-the-day, a harrowing adventure where one was wrapped in burlap and pushed out & down onto a slide and into the unknown (not unlike getting old).

A pigment ink print of tree stumps with full sized trees in the hills in the background.

Photo Courtesy of Hal Gage

Honorable Mention

Hal Gage, AK | Artwork Title: Stumps, Alder Lake Park, Nisqually River Dam, Washington | Visit Website

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Glaciers, the water reservoirs of the planet, have been building and flowing for eons. Their accumulation and movements are not easily seen in a human lifetime. We can only see the state they are in now. However, we know that glaciers have had a long and storied evolution—an evolution that speaks to our own fate on this planet. Today, I encounter glaciers in their decline: pooling water in ice punch bowls, glistening hills of melting scalloped ice, and terminal moraines with sheets of intricately patterned silt run-off. It makes me wonder what life will be like once they are gone.

Man’s direct impact on the land is evident. The landscape of the Americas has few forests unaffected by change caused by the hand of man. For better or worse, and always for our short term benefit, we have shaped the natural landscape to fit our needs and desires. Damage once hidden, when revealed, shows our seedy underbelly.

Oil and enamel couplet paintings.Blue background with scrambled clock background, suggesting two different time zones.

Photo Courtesy of James Hart

Patrick Harris, NM | Artwork Title: Mountain & Pacific Time | Visit Website

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This image is a couplet: 2 paintings that go together. The one on the left is MST (Mountain Standard Time). The one on the right is PST (Pacific Standard Time). Separately, each is a diptych measuring 84″ x 60″. Even though the ‘clocks’ are scrambled, the hands on the clock faces roll back one hour from Mountain time to Pacific time. Also, I have another couplet – same size – of EST & CST.

Oil painting in black and white of a lonely bench near a body of water in front of a forrest with fog.

Photo Courtesy of Dean Wilson

Dean Wilson, OR | Artwork Title: Quiet Time

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Time seems to either be quiet and still, or fast and coming at you from all angles. I tried to capture this with my photographs.

Oil painting of the summer wheat harvest at Zuni. The wheat field is bright orange and two farmers are shown harvesting the what. The Pueblo can be seen in the background.

Photo Courtesy of Don Bailey

Honorable Mention

Don Bailey, OR | Artwork Title: Rain at Zuni | Visit Website

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In my native Hoopa language, kiwhliw means “he who paints.” First and foremost, I am a painter. I create complex, richly colorful compositions. I am also Native American, born on the Hoopa Valley Reservation in Northern California. Indian Country, where the past is always present, is where my art begins. I draw inspiration from the land of our ancestors and often begin a painting by referencing a photograph I took while visiting places such as the Columbia River Gorge and Pueblos of New Mexico. I also reference photographs taken in the 19th and early 20th centuries by those who believed they were documenting a “vanishing race” or landscape that would soon be “tamed.” From these images I begin the process of painting our ancestors so today people will know our past and tell our stories in the future.

Oil panting of an empty street under an overpass with a single wooden chair and graffiti on the overpass that reads:

Photo Courtesy of David Carmack Lewis

David Carmack Lewis, OR | Artwork Title: Ghost | Visit Website

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My paintings are deeply rooted in landscape, representing real places, often drawn in my sketchbook around Oregon. These are then reimagined in the studio as night scenes, lit up in my imagination like a stage. Other unexpected elements prompt the deeply human instinct to tell a story. And time is the crucial aspect of storytelling. Chronos is the Greek word for chronological time. Kairos is also a Greek word for time, but for the crucial moment when fates shift and are decided. The past is a haunting presence in my work, but the future looms expectantly, about to be revealed. I grew up fascinated by ghost stories, folk tales and myth. As an adult I still love blurring lines between fact and fiction, obsessing over place, personal narratives, and the power of metaphor to elicit unsuspected meaning.