Triptych Magazine | Fall 2018

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YAM STAFF Bryan W. Knicely Executive Director John Greenberger Finance & Administration Director Ryan Cremer Development Director Bob Durden Senior Curator Mary Serbe Education Director Amanda Daniel Assistant Curator Carrie Goe-Nettleton Museum Art Educator Chaz Riewaldt Preparator & Facilities Manager Diana Geiger Administrative Leadership Assistant James Dean Hickman Marketing & PR Coordinator Jennifer Parry Education Program Coordinator Jet Holoubek Reception Kelly Price Registrar Rick Bonogofsky Community & Volunteer Coordinator Sally McIntosh Adult Program Coordinator Shane de Leon Special Events & Facility Rental Coordinator Starlene Love Reception

Yellowstone Art Museum 401 North 27th Street Billings, MT 59101 (406) 256-6804 artinfo@artmuseum.org www.artmuseum.org

Cover Image: Jean-Michel Basquiat’s Flesh and Spirit, 1982-83, Š The Estate of Jean-Michel Basquiat / ADAGP, Paris / ARS, New York 2018

Welcome to our new membership magazine, YAM Triptych. We truly hope you enjoy the new layout and look along with the other changes we have been making to better serve our membership base and supporters. We thank you greatly! If you have not had the opportunity already, please stop in over the coming weeks to view our collection of special loans, in addition to our great exhibitions. We are fortunate to be able to mix the temporary loans with our planned exhibitions to bring you world class art in many forms. As we head into our fall line-up of events, be sure to renew your membership to be on the list to purchase members-only priced tickets for the upcoming Masquerade and Art Auction. We also have a surprise for the upcoming Art Auction by having two events, one during the opening reception followed by the Art Auction you have all loved to attend over the years. Stay tuned for that upcoming announcement. I continue to be amazed by the support of this great institution. I want to remind us all that together we will continue to build the best cultural asset in the region in partnership with our members, sponsors and patrons. If you are not a member, please join us on this extraordinary journey in order to bring world-class art to our region as we continue to enrich, educate, and inspire us all.

CURRENT EXHIBITIONS 3 UPCOMING EXHIBITIONS 7 SPECIAL EVENTS 10 EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMING 11 YAM NEWS/FEATURES 12 THANK YOU 15


YAM MASTERWORKS August 14 through November 25 in the Montana Gallery

In its ongoing pursuit of excellence and creating a place where visitors can challenge their perceptions and satisfy their curiosity, the Yellowstone Art Museum is pleased to announce the exclusive exhibition of five works by three of the most distinct and recognizable artists of the 20th century. The exhibition will run August 14 – November 25, 2018 ,and viewing is included in the price of admission to Montana’s largest contemporary art museum. The slate of special loans includes Hans Arp’s cast bronze sculpture Fleur dansante, Jean-Michel Basquiat’s monumental painting Flesh and Spirit, Joan Miró’s cast bronze sculpture Personnage, and his iconic painting Femme entendant de la musique. Many visitors will recognize all three of these masters who left there lasting impressions on Modernism and who continue to influence many of today’s most notable contemporary artists. Each work reinforces the others contribution to Surrealism and the evolution of visual language of the 20th century. Jean-Michel Basquiat’s painting © The Estate of Jean-Michel Basquiat / ADAGP, Paris / ARS, New York 2018 drew from the ideas of the prior generation represented by this group, and then took his urban, street based works to a whole other level of thinking as he was encouraged by Andy Warhol and some of the leading critics and collectors of the day. Basquiat aka SAMO created a wave and a rage for intuitive works that were informed by the streets, music, and other art forms. The YAM’s offering of Flesh and Spirit marks the first public exhibition of the painting since its original showing in 1983. These exclusive loans are sure to inspire all visitors regardless of their knowledge about the history of art in the 20th century. Visitors can also take advantage of viewing the museum’s other exhibitions, which continue to expand the visual conversation and the definitions of art in the 21st century. Visit the museum’s website for more information about current exhibitions and related programs. While you are there, you might choose to take in lunch with friends at Raven’s Café where you’ll find a relaxing atmosphere to discuss your visit to the YAM, Your Art Museum.

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MONTANA TRIENNIAL

July 26 through October 14 in the Montana Gallery

The Montana Triennial was first organized and presented as a juried exhibition by the Missoula Art Museum in 2009 with subsequent exhibitions in 2012 and 2015. These exhibitions demonstrate the diverse and excellent array of artistic practice in Montana. The Yellowstone Art Museum, at the invitation of the Missoula Art Museum, will organize and present the fourth Triennial at the YAM, involving Nicole Herden, Curator of Art at the Boise Art Museum, as an independent juror. After receiving over 150 applications, 40 artists representing the vast scope of Montana visual arts were selected. The range of visual expression will run the gamut from traditional oil paintings to purely conceptuallybased artworks, and will showcase the differing but beautiful perspectives of Montana artists today.

MT TRIENNIAL SPONSORD BY LEAD SPONSORS John w. & Carol L.H. Green SUPPORTING SPONSORS Anonymous, Laurence & Ruth Martin, Deborah Anspach and Dr. John Hanson, Charles M. Bair Family Trust OPENING RECEPTION SPONSOR A&E Architects COMMUNITY SPONSORS Dr. William & Suzanne Smoot, Cenex Harvest States (CHS)

THE SURGING, THUNDERING HERD SPONSORED BY SPONSORED IN PART MAGDA LEAD SPONSOR: Anonymous SUPPORTING SPONSORS: Deborah Anspach and Dr. John Hanson, Charles M. Bair Family Trust

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THUNDERING HERD August 26 through October 14 in the Northwest Projects Gallery & the Bair Family Gallery

The Surging, Thundering Herd: Vintage Bison engravings, 17581910 is comprised of early artworks, drawn from the Lee Silliman Print Collection. The exhibit features an array of 51 original engravings depicting the iconic mammal of the American frontier West—the buffalo.

Indiens des Prairies Chassant le Bison, Frédéric Theodore Lix, 1892

The engravings, spanning 152 years of art history, were created by European artists who never saw the animal, and by artists who witnessed these massive beasts in the wild before their near extinction in the 1880s. The media include early copper plate engravings, wood engravings, chromolithographs, and early 1900s color lithographic postcards. Some images are beautifully hand-tinted. Many images were drawn from poplar 19th century American periodicals, such as Harper’s Weekly and Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, as well as from other lesser known American

and European publications. The prints are annotated with historical commentary. Prominent frontier painters whose derivative prints are featured in the exhibit include Frederic Remington, George Catlin, and Karl Bodmer. Many aspects of the bison story are illuminated in this exhibit: the animal in its wild state amongst its natural enemies; techniques for hunting the bison by Native Americans and whites; the centrality of buffalo in Native American culture; and the nearly total extermination of the bison in the late 1800s. Images and commentary unite to paint the story. Conjuring Back the Buffalo, Frederic Remington, 1892

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Boundless Visions features changing selections from the YAM’s permanent collections, which emphasize art from the mid-twentieth century to the present. This long-term exhibition is the only exhibition in Montana where you can learn the story of art in this region from its beginnings to the present day. Boundless Visions examines four key themes that draw the art of this region together: Understanding Place, Recognizing Connections, Tenacity, and Experiment. From the inspiring presence of the land to the connections between east and west or Native and non-Native, the exhibition goes to the core of what inspires artists in Montana. For any lifelong or multi-generational Montanan, the theme of tenacity will make immediate sense; it has characterized the people of this area and the artists who have chosen to make this place home. Related to this is a willingness to experiment, to try something new until success is attained. These ideas lie at the heart of the success of our region’s ranchers and business owners as well as artists and writers. Boundless Visions explores the changing nature and definition of art. Hands-on interactive units and video and audio elements provide a multi-sensory environment for those who may arrive with no prior experience in art. Interviews with artists, examinations of collectors and patrons who have made a difference, and facts about Montana’s unique status in the US are all featured. Loans from other museums and private collectors ensure that historic art completes the story.


JAMES

TODD: LOONEY TOONES

November 8 through January 6 in the Montana Gallery

James Todd: Looney Toones, presented by MAGDA, is organized by the Montana Museum of Art & Culture. On the occasion of his retirement from teaching at the University of Montana in 2000, James Todd’s mother paid him a visit bearing a collection of drawings he had made between the ages of five and eight. He had not seen the drawings in over 50 years. The fluid lines of his pencil drawings of American GIs returning from the war in Europe, knights in armor, and a visit to the dentist greeted the artist across decades and a lifetime of experience.

+ James Todd, 2018, presented by MAGDA

= James Todd, 2018, presented by MAGDA

James Todd, 2018, presented by MAGDA

In this exhibition and the accompanying catalog, James Todd has reinterpreted his childhood drawings through woodcut printing, the medium for which he is perhaps best known today. By his own description, he decided long ago not to confine his creative work to any particular approach or aesthetic philosophy. And by any measure, Looney Toones is the triumphant result of that decision, exemplifying Todd’s own definition of the Modern artist, “whose expression could grow and change along with the course of the artist’s life experiences and interests.” Looney Toones distills James Todd’s own insistence that no work of art can be adequately understood in isolation from the social and historical circumstances of its time. Each drawing accompanies a contemporary print that, while based closely on the original childhood drawings, embellishes them with bright, unmixed acrylics in vibrant combinations. Stippled or hatched areas of color in the figures frequently contrast with colors paired to create atmospheric backgrounds, saturating what was once a child’s vision with the mastery of the woodblock printer. Sometimes the child’s experience is re-imagined altogether through combined imagery. Through this aesthetic encounter with his long-forgotten past, Todd’s Looney Toones fuses the boy’s innocent vision with the acumen of the mature artist, sharpened by a lifetime of creative endeavor.

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MONTANA PEEPSHOW

November 8 through January 6 in the Northwest Projects Gallery

In a quirky fictitious account, Montana Peepshow, (presented by MAGDA,) imagines Queen Elizabeth I, in the spirit of the Age of Discovery, utilizing a time machine created by her personal alchemist, Dr. Dee, to visit Montana repeatedly, at varying time periods. The paintings in the exhibition cover episodes ranging Dr. Dee © Leslie Van Stavern Millar II, 2018 from The Corp of Discovery at Traveler’s Rest in 1805; Jeannette Rankin having tea at a Helena Hotel in the 1950s; with the 25th Infantry Black Bicycle Corp, Fort Missoula 1896; to Theodore Roosevelt’s speech on Higgins Avenue in Missoula in 1911. Millar is a descended from a line of artists and scientists. Following graduation from Mount Holyoke College, she pursued her interest in art making, incorporating a scientific, investigative approach. Leslie works in series, matching the technique – gouache painting, encaustic (beeswax on wood), a variety of photographic mediums, and printmaking – with a particular theme or concept. She also performs as “Science Woman,” her alter ego, which is indicative of her curious and inventive perceptions conveyed in her artwork. The exhibit consists of highly detailed gouache paintings on paper housed in wooden boxes, which are viewed individually. One looks through a small peephole while flicking a switch on the side of the box illuminating the interior. The interior is painted black, except for the painting, which stands out in brilliant illumination. The exhibit consists of free-standing boxes on tripod legs and two wall-mounted boxes. This method of presentation is a novelty, actively requiring the participation of the viewer and heightening the experience by concentrating their attention. Lolo © Leslie Van Stavern Millar II, 2018

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ELIZABETH DOVE November 8 through January 6 in the Bair Family Gallery

Elizabeth Dove: It Started with Aardvark, presented by MAGDA, is comprised of a series of 26 screen-prints, one for each letter of the alphabet that includes every illustration from the dictionary, with images organized by letter. They do not portray the 3,100 dictionary illustrations as separate images as they represented in the dictionary volume. Instead, they are overlapped in successive layers printed one on top of another so they co-exist as one merged graphic icon, a hybrid of all visual knowledge. Elizabeth Dove, 2018, Presented by MAGDA

Each heavily layered print becomes a gestural, somewhat haunted composite which is both legible and chaotic—a dense logo of information. On average, each print has more than 100 layers, with some letters having more illustrations. This colossal act of manual labor helps to form the conceptual basis of the project and is integral to the meaning of the completed artwork. Exclusively using illustrations appropriated from a canonical cultural framework shared between the artist and viewer (the dictionary) quickly suggests the artwork is engaging in a conversation about meaning. The action of making is almost a performance that remains embodied in the work as a ritual dedicated to the beauty of deciphering deeper knowledge and aesthetic presence. Due to the successive layers, the prints are textural as the ink is built one layer upon another, thus redefining the original illustrations as both two and three dimensional. Elizabeth Dove, 2018, Presented by MAGDA

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EVENTS 9-6

[6:30pm-7:30pm] LEE SILLIMAN LECTURE // Lee Silliman is a retired educator and museum professional living in Missoula, Montana. Since early childhood, he has nurtured a strong interest in the art and history of the frontier American West. His interests have spawned many articles and the editing of five books. He has presented conference lectures, taught workshops, and led four educational group tours. Since 1988, Silliman has assembled and circulated numerous fine art exhibits which have been displayed in one hundred venues throughout Montana and ten other states.

9-7 9-8 9-16 9-20 10-5 10-11 10-13 10-27

[4pm-10pm] JAM AT THE YAM FREE ADMISSION // Free parking, and a free drink for new or renewing members. Great music: 5pm - Merica Strata, 6pm - Cloudflowers, 7pm - Jeffrey Ford Great Food: Santanah’s For any other questions, contact events@artmuseum.org

[9am-10am] YOGA AT THE YAM // A restorative yoga class focused on the basics of body, mind, and breath led by YungBen Yelvington. This is a perfect class for first timers, active recovery and people looking to strengthen their foundations. The class price includes full museum admission. Walk-ins welcome but you can register and pay in advance by calling the museum front desk at (406) 256-6804. For any other questions, contact events@artmuseum.org [10am–3pm] 9TH ANNUAL BRIDAL FAIR // Admission is free! We will showcase local and regional exhibitors, including photographers, wedding planners, venue locations, and more. Raven’s Café d’Art will be open from 10 a.m.–2 p.m. with a special brunch menu. Brides-to-be can register to win a free facility rental for their wedding and/or reception at the Yellowstone Art Museum, along with lots of other prizes from our exhibitors. Pre-register online at www.artmuseum.org or events@artmuseum.org [6:30pm-7:30pm] ROBERT HARRISON TALK // A talk by Helena-based Triennial artist, Robert Harrison from 6:30-7:30 p.m. at the YAM. He will discuss his artistic process and his history with the Montana Triennial. This event is free for members or included with regular admission price.

[4:30pm-8:30pm] ARTWALK - THE INKRONISTIC // A classy Steampunk TATTOO SILENT AUCTION! First event of it’s kind, worldwide. Original designs by Josh Carter and April Dawn of Inkronicity Tattoo. Over a decade experience each! Introducing Jason Jam as our newest addition! Music from Mandie Castro, Onsense and Hubba Hubba, Flow artists and AlternaCirque Aerialists, fractal projections and more! [6:30pm-7:30pm] JODI LIGHTNER TALK // Triennial artist and MSUB Professor, Jodi Lightner will discuss her work in the exhibition and her creative inspirations. This event is free for members or included with regular admission price.

[9am-10am] YOGA AT THE YAM // A restorative yoga class focused on the basics of body, mind, and breath led by YungBen Yelvington. This is a perfect class for first timers, active recovery and people looking to strengthen their foundations. The class price includes full museum admission. Walk-ins welcome but you can register and pay in advance by calling the museum front desk at (406) 256-6804. For any other questions, contact events@artmuseum.org [7pm-11pm] MASQUERADE AT THE YAM // Get ready for an out-of-Billings experience at the Masquerade party all in the Museum. Palm readers, Arial acts and so much more… Saterday night, Octobe 27th, Ages 21 and over. During the last three years, the event has sold out well over a month in advance, at the YAM! Aerialist pouring drinks, Alterna Cirque performances and the classiest costume and dance and we expect tickets to be in even higher demand this year! $35 for members and $50 for Not-Yet Members at the Muesuem’s front desk or online at artmuseum.org

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[9am-10am] YOGA AT THE YAM // A restorative yoga class focused on the basics of body, mind, and breath led by YungBen Yelvington. This is a perfect class for first timers, active recovery and people looking to strengthen their foundations. The class price includes full museum admission. Walk-ins welcome but you can register and pay in advance by calling the museum front desk at (406) 256-6804. For any other questions, contact events@artmuseum.org

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[10am-5pm] NATIVE AMERICAN HERITAGE FREE DAY // Free admission all day in honor of Native American Heritage Day. (Closing at 5 pm.)


Remember! Educator Free days

October 18 & 19

Education

Adult education

Cooking classes

Register online at www.artmuseum.org or at the YAM front desk

Register online at www.artmuseum.org

Crossing Media: Art of the Mix Brooke Atherton // 9-15-18 AND 9-16-18 // 10am-4pm // 12 spaces $100 Members $125 Not-Yet Members $25 Supply fee

COOKING WITH KIDS (ages 10-14)

Mask-Making Glenda Brauneis // 10-6-18 // 9:30am-12:30pm or 1:30pm-4:30pm // 20 spaces $30 Members $40 Not-Yet Members $10 Supply fee

EASY APPETIZERS AND COCKTAILS

Two day workshop focusing on the stories you tell and how to tell them by using layers, collage and stitching to add color, texture, and personal meaning to fabric, paper, and found objects. Brooke Atherton is a multi-media and fabric artist who will be exhibiting during the Montana Triennial Exhibit. She has participated in the Art Auction since 2011 and is a former Artist-in-Residence at the YAM.

Remember when you were a kid and you’d jump right into an art project? No rules, no requirements, just you and your imagination? Let’s spend a couple of hours reminding ourselves about the joy of creating something for the sheer joy of it. We will make amazing masks for Masquerade, laugh, and I will bring desserts. Glenda has over 20 years of experience designing and creating costuming for clients and theaters nationwide.

Tea With the Queen (special event) Leslie Van Stavern Millar II // 11-9-18 // 2pm-4pm // 42 spaces  $25 Members $35 Not yet members

Enjoy our exhibition Montana Peep Show and have tea with the Queen aka exhibiting artist, Leslie Van Stavern Millar II. In her exhibition, Millar depicts the Queen of England time-traveling to Montana to visit different historical events. A performance artist, Millar will join you for tea and answer your questions about the exhibition from the perspective of the Queen. So put on your finest hat and join us for this special one-time event. Following her gallery talk, tea will be served along with three courses including sandwiches, scones and jam, and desserts.

Papermaking: From Pulp and Plants to Paper Barb Garritson // 11-17-18 // 10am-4pm // 12 spaces $60 Members $80 Not-Yet Members $25 Supply fee

Participants will be producing several pieces of paper made with recycled paper pulp and plant fibers. We will then embed and emboss the paper. Retired after teaching 30 years, Barb now is focusing on the fiber arts. She sews, weaves fabric, spins wool and makes paper out of plant and animal fibers.

9-22-18 // 10am-2pm // 14 spaces

$35 Members $45 Not-Yet Members (Includes adult and child admission, additional adults $10) Learn to prepare a complete meal for the family. Lunch served for adult partner at 1:00 pm. Includes a dessert to make together and a recipe book.

11-3-18 // 1pm-4pm // 20 spaces

$35 Members $45 Not-Yet Members Planning a holiday soirée including table setup and easy to do food and drink. Includes recipe booklet and taste testing.

art classes of kids Registration opens one week prior to class, please call Jennifer Parry at (406) 256-6804 x 232 to register.

Tri Try Again

10-13-18 // 10am-12pm

$8 Members $10 Not-Yet Members Write, illustrate, and paint your Montana story, based on the Montana Triennial exhibition. Please call Jennifer Parry to register at 406-256-6804 x232. Registration opens one week before the event.

Looney You

11-11-18 // 10am-12pm

$8 Members $10 Not-Yet Members Use pencil, sharpie marker, and watercolors to depict a favorite dream or story in a style inspired by James Todd’s Looney Toones.

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BOB RICKELS This year’s Docent of the Year award is a little extraordinary. Bob Rickels is our Docent of the Year, which is an award he has received in the past. This time, we would like to highlight his tenure as a docent and the tremendous impact he has made on children, the docents, and the YAM. Over the past 19 years, Bob was very involved with our Art Suitcase program that brings art into Billings Public School classrooms. He also gave excellent tours of the Museum. When I asked other docents about him, they did not hesitate to rave about Bob as a docent and a person. I think of him as a “celebrity docent” because when he stops by at certain docent meetings or events, his presence is an injection of excitement. Our docents hang on his every, well-thought-out word. Bob brought his background in art to his work as a docent. He also studied with Peter Voulkos and was able to introduce visitors to the impact of Voulkos’ and Rudy Autio’s ceramic work on the art world. My predecessor, Linda Ewert, noted that she could not have built the YAM’s art education programming without Bob Rickels. He was always here and “believed in the power of art and of teaching it to children.” Engaging people with art is reliant on being able to connect with children and adults. Bob has been described as having a gentle, kind way of relating to everyone. He is a well-educated, insightful, and dapper man. Bob, in addition to this award, we would also like to give you a Lifetime Membership to the Museum. Thank you for your time, commitment, passion, and for making the YAM a place that people want to visit again and again.

- Mary Serbe, Director of Education

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ANNUAL AWARDS At its annual members’ meeting on Thursday, July 26, 2018, the President of the Yellowstone Art Museum’s Board of Trustees was pleased to bestow the annual Awards for Service to the Arts. Given out since 2001, these awards recognize outstanding service from philanthropists, artists, volunteers, and educators to the YAM and the art community. In most cases, awardees have given prominent support over a number of years. The 2018 awardees are:

PHILANTHROPIST OF THE YEAR DOCENT OF THE YEAR Deborah Anspach & Dr. John Hanson Bob Rickels FOUNDATION PHILANTHROPIST OF THE YEAR EDUCATOR OF THE YEAR Audia Group, LLC Kayla Bettise ARTIST OF THE YEAR VOLUNTEER OF THE YEAR Robin Earles Michelle Foy

2018-2019 BOARD OF TRUSTEES We are proud to introduce our new and continuing board of trustees and give our sincerest thanks to retiring members, Ellen Alweis, Kris Carpenter, David Hummel, Bill Lucas, and Carol Spielman for their years of service. OFFICERS Paul Cox: President Kim Olsen: Vice-President Steve Tostenrud: Treasurer Diana Geiger: Secretary Kevin Stenberg: Immediate Past President TRUSTEES EMERITUS Carol L. H. Green Randy Jacobs Gareld Krieg Ted Lovec Larry Martin NEWLY ELECTED TRUSTEES Lynnette Jensen Julie Linderman Gordon McConnell 14

OTHER CONTINUING TRUSTEES Deborah Anspach Rafael Archilla Tari Broderick Dan Burkhart Juni Clark Pete Habein Christopher Jessup Carolyn Pease-Lopez Trish Matteson Dr. Robert Merchant Gary Oakland Kim Olsen Sharon Peterson Deborah Potter Dr. Donald Roberts Renée Tafoya Jeremiah Young


THANK YOU

We would like to give our sincerest thanks to all of our business and personal members at or above the Donor Level*, your continuing support makes this magazine possible. LIFETIME MEMBERS Linda Ewert Robert & LaDonna Fehlberg Karen A. Ferguson Donna M. Forbes Susan Scott Heyneman Jet Holoubek William I. Koch Terry Melton Christene Meyers Neltje Bob & Thelma Rickels Joseph S. Sample Jackie Tucker Mary Kay & Dean Wilcox BUSINESS FOUNDER’S CIRCLE Hilltop Inn Riversage Billings Inn DIRECTOR’S CIRCLE John W. & Carol L.H. Green Gordon McConnell & Betty Loos Linda & Bob Merchant Gary & Melissa Oakland BUSINESS BENEFACTOR CIRCLE Stockman Bank BENEFACTOR CIRCLE Rich & Sally Hall Deborah Anspach & Dr. John Hanson Randy & Cheryl Bentley Dr. James Guyer & Jeanie Mentikov Randy & Stacey Jacobs Gareld & Barbara Krieg Tim & Trish Matteson Dr. Walter & Mary Peet

BUSINESS CONTRIBUTORS O2 Architects, PC Sanctuary Spa & Salon Underriner Motors CONTRIBUTORS Don & Ellen Alweis Janet Carpenter Dr. Doug & Karla Carr Patrick & Carla Cobb Christopher Jessup Michael & Karen Fried Dona & Paul Hagen Charles Hingle & Susan Ogden David & Cynthia Hummel Jon Lodge & Jane Waggoner Deschner Bill & Beverly Ryan Robert & Nancy Schultz Linda Shelhamer & Stephen Haraden Susan Shelhamer Kevin Stenberg & Vicki Copeland Susan Sullivan & Steve Zabawa Patricia & Richard Vettel-Becker Ron & Amy Yates Linda J. Snider Bruce & Lynette Jensen Julie & Leif Linderman Tom Singer & Evey LaMont BUSINESS DONORS Archi Cochrane Ford Crowley Fleck Attorneys, PLLP Ferro, Willet & Thompson, CPAs Hanson Chemical Hardy Construction Company Mountain Plains Equity Group

Rector Orthodontics Schutz Foss Architects Teresa Donato Counseling Service Uberbrew DONORS Donald & Judy Allen Dr. Bruce & Susan Barrow Annette Behm Tari & Randy Broderick Gilbert Burdett Dr. John & Patricia Burg Mary Lee & Marty Connell Sherri Cornett & Steve Kriner Dr. Gordon & Dodie Cox Mary Lee & David Darby Tom & Joell Doneker John & Bess Fredlund Steve Gardner Rita Heizer Donald & Georgia Hicks David & Maggy Hiltner Carole & Everett Jones Stephen & Marilyn Kramer Ted & Bess Lovec Myrna & Craig Martinson Jean McNally Davi Nelson Carla & Jim O’Rorke Donna & Ken Rambold Laurie & Kevin Riley Elizabeth Scanlin & Jeff Anderson John & Karen Shelhamer Eric & Laura Simonsen Barb Skelton & Paul Gatzemeier William & Suzanne Smoot Steve & Pauline Tostenrud Jeanne Widdicombe *As of 8-28-18

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Non-Profit Organization US Postage Paid Billings, MT Permit No. 88

401 North 27th Street, Billings, MT 59101 406-256-6804 • www.artmuseum.org

Monday – Closed Tuesday – 10am to 5pm Wednesday – 10am to 5pm Thursday – 10am to 8pm Friday – 10am to 5pm Saturday – 10am to 5pm Sunday – 10am to 5pm Members – Free Adults (age 18+) – $15 Students (all ages) – $6 Youth (6-18) – $6 Children (under 6) – Free

Handicap accessible facility

Free parking


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