Sun Valley Gallery Association
GALLERY WALK EDITION G a l l e r y W a l k I s F r i d ay, D e c e m b e r 2 9 , 2 0 1 7
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Jeffrey Milstein, “Lockheed Martin F-22A Raptor,” archival inkjet print. Artwork courtesy of Gilman Contemporary
HERITAGE HALL REIMAGINED AS MESH GALLERY BY KELLY EISENBARGER
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ESH Gallery, named after a combination of its owners Kyle and Jeff Lubeck’s loyal canine companions, Merry and Shae, will conduct its first Gallery Walk
G A L L E RY WA L K
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as members of the Sun Valley Gallery Association this week. MESH is four years old but has only recently opened in the Heritage Hall space, in Ketchum. The Town Square location, in the recognizable former Saint Mary’s Church, was remodeled
by hand and heart by the Lubeck and Dies families, both longtime Valley residents. The architecture remains loyal to its Catholic-church heritage— exposed beams similar to what was present during PK’s Ski and Sports shop’s tenure. The orig-
inal Catholic church opened its doors in 1884, serving the community until the 1940s. After that, the space has been used as an art gallery and shops. Ketchum’s Heritage Corridor encompasses four blocks in Town Square. The surrounding
area has been upgraded for public use, with wider sidewalks, benches, trees and chess tables. The two families wanted to add Continued MESH GALLERY Page 2
TABLE OF CONTENTS Broschofsky Galleries..............................Page 6 Kneeland Gallery.....................................Page 7 Frederic Boloix Fine Arts.........................Page 7 MESH Gallery...........................................Pages 1, 2, 4 Friesen Gallery.........................................Pages 3, 4 Wood River Fine Arts...............................Page 6 Gail Severn Gallery..................................Page 5 TWS Features..........................................Pages 1, 4 Gilman Contemporary.............................Page 2
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MESH Gallery
• DECEMBER, 2017
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to the community element of Town Square and saw that adding a gallery space would bring more people to the area. The Lubecks and Dies have owned the Heritage Hall space for four years. After PK’s lease ran out, the Lubecks’ gallery project at the hall began. The gallery started with only Jeff Lubeck’s work. “It was just Jeff at the beginning and we joke that it was the ‘Jeff Give-It-Away Gallery’,” said Kyle Lubeck. Jeff has been a photographer his whole life, starting with pro sports and concerts. About 10 years ago, he changed his focus, with a passion to photograph the surrounding area. There are now five principal artists that MESH features; Jeff Lubeck, Kyle Lubeck, Ed Cannady, Tory Taglio and Claire Porter. These fine-art photographers bring a different perspective to the scenic photography they all explore. “We focus solely on photography, with prints mainly on canvas,” said Kyle Lubeck. “We do all our own printing and framing; our printer is mid-valley and, at an industrial size, we have a lot of flexibility of what we can print.” The Lubecks started printing for friends and families with fiber paper that needed to be framed. Kyle hated to give people a 30-inch-by-50-inch print and make them have to find such a unique, and expensive, frame. He aimed to learn how to print
MESH Gallery space has had a few homes before their dream location of Heritage Hall was fulfilled. Father and sons Kyle and Jeff Lubeck (pictured above) are happy to see the new location come to life. Photo courtesy of MESH Gallery
on canvas and stretch over the frames himself. The light-end product gives the work the ability to be an effortless gift that can be easily hung or shipped. With high-quality prints lining the moveable walls, the first impression is unique. “Oftentimes people come in and find it hard to believe that something isn’t a painting,” said
Kyle. The space will also be available for community events, with perfect acoustics for small bands and an open room for parties or meetings. MESH has recently completed the fourth printing of the gallery’s work, which will be available at this upcoming Gallery Walk.
AIRCRAFT & AERIAL PHOTOGRAPHY
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Gilman Contemporary
ilman Contemporary presents Jeffrey Milstein’s aircraft and aerial photographs for the first time in Sun Valley. In his Aircraft series, recently exhibited at the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum, in Washington, D.C., Milstein captures these mechanical beasts from below, as they descend and are exactly perpendicular to the camera’s frame. Through his use of symmetry and a white background, he is able to reveal the complexity and beauty of these machines. In his most recent aerial series, Milstein looks at Los Angeles and New York from above. Leaning out of helicopters, he captures stunning bird’s-eye shots of the cities’ landmarks, revealing striking patterns from a point of view rarely seen. LA/NY explores the differing architecture of LA and NY and the ways this has influenced our relationship to our environment and how our environment has influenced industrial and residential development. Originally working as an architect, Milstein has always had an eye for the way humanity influences, and is influenced by, our creations. Much like the industrial portraits of the late conceptu- Jeffrey Milstein, “LA 43, Getty Museum,” archival inkjet print. al photographers Bernd and Hilla Bech- Artwork courtesy of Gilman Contemporary er, Milstein’s work points our attention to the complex beauty of what industry has created. The gallery will also be exhibiting new paintings by James Austin Murray and James Verbicky. Murray’s pure black paintings ripple and pulse, creating the illusion of movement. Using unadulterated ivory black oil paint, Murray’s work betrays its flat surface with the movement that he instills into the paint. Verbicky’s “media paintings” are large, sculptural assemblages of Baltic birch wood covered in vintage advertisements and imagery from magazines. The end result is a suggestive image that serves as a reminder of media’s influence.
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‘BEGINNING WITH ABSENCE’ & ‘NEW WORKS’
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Friesen Gallery
reception for the artists will take place at the gallery on December 29 from 5-8 p.m. This exhibition will be on view through January 22.
Friesen Gallery is thrilled to announce new representation by Fei Disbrow in a debut exhibition, “Beginning with Absence.” Disbrow’s mixed-media works employ architectural preciseness and economy of visual language to achieve perfectly balanced compositions. Friesen Gallery is also featuring new works by Barbara Vaughn. Fascinated by water’s ability to both reflect and distort, Vaughn’s photographs capture the kaleidoscopic world invisible to the naked eye yet revealed by the snap of a shutter. Additional artists on view include new works by Lloyd Martin, Nicole Chesney, Tom Lieber, Anna Skibska, and Phranc. Exhibiting exclusively contemporary artists, Friesen Gallery is dedicated to pushing their personal limits in order to achieve intelligent and intriguing results. An opening reception will take place during Gallery Walk on Friday, December 29 from 5-8 pm. Fei Disbrow and Barbara Vaughn will be in attendance. Gallery hours are Monday-Friday from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. and Saturday-Sunday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. For more information, please contact Friesen Gallery at friesen@friesengallery.com or (208) 726-4174.
Fei Disbrow, “Glacial Remnants,” mixed media, 20 inches by 15 inches. Artwork courtesy of Friesen Gallery
Fei Disbrow, “In Absentia,” mixed media, 50 inches by 35.5 inches. Artwork courtesy of Friesen Gallery
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‘BEGINNING W
Fei Disbrow’s debut
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BY YANNA LANTZ
ophisticated multimedia artist Fei Disbrow will make her debut at Friesen Gallery with “Beginning with Absence.” A process-oriented artist, Disbrow’s works explore object and void, how absence recalls presence and how imagination fills voids. Conceptually, Disbrow explores the transitory nature of existence. “I love the concept of ‘Beginning with Absence,’” Lauri Bunting, exhibition producer, said. Bunting holds a degree in art history from the University of Colorado and was a former curator at Maxwell Galleries in San Francisco. “Beginning with Absence” marks her first producer role at Friesen Gallery. “It’s really this idea that absence recalls presence,” Bunting continued. “Sometimes, even presence can recall absence. When we are looking at her works, there’s this sense that things are emerging and disappearing and there’s even an emptiness in some of her works. In her three-dimensional works, the void becomes the subject, and the imagination fills the void.” From early childhood, Disbrow identified herself as a “maker” rather than an artist. She created things outside of the artistic norm, beyond the elements that traditionally define artistic skill, such as proficiency in drawing and painting. “When she identifies herself as an artist, that goes right into her mind and inhibits her creativity,” said Bunting. “When she’s in her
Fei Disbrow’s “The Blues,” mixed media, 30 inches by 23 inches 2017. Photo courtesy of Fei Disbrow
‘making’ mode, she doesn’t have anything she’s trying to achieve— yet her best works come out of that mindset.” “My interdisciplinary practice is rooted in process,” Disbrow said. “Though formally aware, my work is developed in a process-driven
manner, using additive and subtractive methods. Mutation is key to both my process methodology and my conceptual framework. I select familiar materials and techniques and adapt and modify them in my practice… Involved in that manipulation is the deliberate use of the
UPCOMING IN 2018
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MESH Gallery
ESH Gallery is looking forward to 2018 with all the possibilities that the new year holds. As a new member of the Sun Valley Gallery Association, we are excited about our continuing involvement in promoting artists and their artworks within our community. MESH Gallery is introducing two new featured artists, Claire Porter and Evelyn Phillips. Porter will be displaying a variety of unique equestrian artworks. MESH will be featuring Phillips’ original maps and watercolors. As part of MESH’s commitment to exhibiting special works by local artists, Poppies for Patriots, an abstract artwork of an American flag illuminated in glass poppies by artists William S. Potter and Dan Gaumer, premiers at MESH Gallery at Heritage Hall during Gallery Walk on Friday, Dec. 29, from 5-9 p.m. Potter, Gaumer and MESH will donate all proceeds of the sale to Higher Ground. MESH continues to feature new and original works from Jeffrey Lubeck, Ed Cannady, Tory Taglio and Kyle Lubeck. These new works come in all forms, including originals, limited editions, art books and prints. Special exhibits from each of the featured artists will also be displayed as we dive deeper into the exploration of the surrounding environment that we are thankful enough to call home. “Castle Skier,” Ed Cannady. Photo courtesy of MESH Gallery
GALLERY WALK EDITION
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DAV I D D E V I L L I E R
t at Friesen Gallery void and establishment of negative space. The resulting voids operate as anthropomorphized, abstracted residue that implies a corporeal presence.” Being a process-oriented artist, there is a parallel between Disbrow as an athlete and as an artist. A former elite cross-country ski racer, Disbrow loved the process of training. “When she would train, she said she was in the ‘flow’—this place that really took her beyond the thinking mind and she was just being,” Bunting said. “And, as an artist, she describes that same sensation of being in the flow and letting the process overtake her so she can create from a place that is from beyond intellect.” Disbrow’s own injuries as an athlete made her better understand the human body and its individual parts, so many of the forms and shapes in her work emulate that. “She is pulling parts out of the whole, mutating them and putting them into her works—as our own bodies mutate and shift over time,” Bunting said. One of Bunting’s favorite Disbrow pieces is “The Blues.” “I see a face in ‘The Blues,’ and the piece has a bunch of personality,” she said. “There’s a little dry humor in it, almost as if it is a cartoon character. Yet, as the same time, there’s something really sophisticated about it in the way she has worked with these different shapes and constructed them into this piece. I like the juxtaposition of the humor and the elegant presentation of form.”
PAMELA DETUNCQ
Fei Disbrow’s “Sheathed Absence 02,” mixed media, 57 inches by 13 inches by 7 inches (steel base: 12 inches by 6 1/8 inches) 2016. Photo courtesy of Fei Disbrow
See the debut of Fei Disbrow at Friesen Gallery during Gallery Walk and meet the artist at an opening reception from 5-8 p.m. Friday, Dec. 29. Friesen Gallery is located
at 320 1st Avenue North at Sun Valley Road in Ketchum. Visit friesengallery.com or call (208) 726-4174 to learn more.
LAYERED DREAMS, PRESERVING THE EPHEMERAL & 2018
A RT I S T C H AT S
DECEMBER 30th • 10:00 AM
Gail Severn Gallery
David deVillier ‘Mind Gardens and Women Who Know’ One of Sun Valley’s favorite artists and teachers, David deVillier returns with a new exhibition about layered dreams, relationships, desires, seductions. The works gestate, grow, evolve, reflect, and affect the psychological world rolling inside of our human heads. On the path of the title of the show, “Women Who Know,” deVillier continues to be affected by ongoing discussions related to political, social, and gender issues. deVillier continues his virtuoso use of color and surface techniques along with his whimsical sculptural interpretations of the human form. Exhibiting with the Gail Severn Gallery since the mid ’90s, this newest body of work adds to his consistent narratives and is sure to thrill his loyal followers.
Pamela DeTuncq ‘Fauna Mori’ “Fauna Mori” provides an irreverent look at the fleeting nature of life through the ancient art of taxidermy. “Drawn from the medieval theory of memento mori, vintage tapestries serve as remembered experiences and highlight the futility and vanity of preserving the ephemeral. “As a visual artist, I express my
worldview through the creation of objects, bringing my personal observations into three dimensions.” In DeTuncq’s first exhibition at the gallery, she examines various deer forms in a multitude of scale with lush, fun and visceral tapestry and needlepoint surfaces. Images ranging from winter wonderlands, florals and traditional patterns and historical art references blend one into the other with her skilled handwork. ‘Preview 2018’ A major group exhibition will showcase a wide range of the gallery’s internationally recognized and emerging artists. These artists will all have exhibitions at the gallery in 2018. Featuring painters Victoria Adams, Linda Christensen, James Cook, Michael Gregory, Hung Liu, Alyssa Monks, Kathy Moss, Ed Musante, Marcia Myers, Don Nice, Rana Rochat, Anne Siems, Allison Stewart, Inez Storer and Theodore Waddell, along with sculptors Margaret Keelan, Morgan Brig, Lisa Kokin, Jane Rosen, Julie Speidel, and Deloss Webber. Artist Chats with David deVilli-
David deVillier, “The Red Reveal,” oil on wood panel, 8 inches by 11.75 inches by 1.75 inches. Artwork courtesy of Gail Severn Gallery
Pamela DeTuncq, “No Place Like er and Pamela DeTuncg will take Home,” vintage tapestries, antlers, place at 10 a.m. on Saturday, Dec. buck tail, leather, glass, foam, 64 inches by 57 inches by 27 inches. Artwork 30. courtesy of Gail Severn Gallery
PREVIEW 2018 Victoria Adams • Morgan Brig • Linda Christensen James Cook • Michael Gregor y • Margaret Keelan Lisa Kokin • Hung Liu • Laura McPhee • Alyssa Monks Kathy Moss • Ed Musante • Marcia Myers • Don Nice Rana Rochat • Jane Rosen • Anne Siems Julie Speidel Allison Stewar t • Inez Storer Deloss Webber • Theodore Waddell
C E L E B R AT I N G 4 1 Y E A R S
GAIL SEVERN GALLERY 400 First Avenue North • PO Box 1679 • Ketchum, ID 83340 • 208.726.5079 info@gailseverngallery.com • www.gailseverngallery.com
O P E N S E V E N D AY S A W E E K
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NEW WORKS BY G. RUSSELL CASE
G. Russell Case
Wood River Fine Arts
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G. Russell Case
“Phantom Hill Autumn”
Oil on board
24” high X 36” wide
Wood River Serenade
ood River Fine Arts will host a one-man show for G. Russell Case, “Wood River Serenade – New Works from the Wood River Valley.” The show opens with an Artist’s Reception from 5-8 p.m. on Friday, Dec. 29, 2017 during the Sun Valley Gallery Association Art Walk. The show will feature paintings from the artist’s many trips to the Ketchum/Sun Valley area over the past three years. Russell Case’s love for the landscape of southern Idaho is apparent in this new show. He truly captures the essence of the places that draw visitors to the Valley from around the world. The event will also showcase works by the artist of the Canyonlands of southern Utah and Arizona. Case’s work has been featured at such prestigious national mu-
seum exhibitions as Prix de West Show at the National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma City, the Coors Western Art Show in Denver, Colorado, and the Quest for the West Show at the Eiteljorg Museum in Indianapolis, Indiana. This past year, the artist was featured in a group exhibition, Painting Red Rocks Country, Past and Present, at the Booth Western Art Museum in Cartersville, Georgia. The show included paintings by six artists, including the works of California Impressionist greats Edgar Payne and Maynard Dixon. For more information, call (208)928-7728 or visit www.woodriverfinearts.com. Wood River Fine Arts Is located at 360 East Avenue, Ketchum (The Courtyard Building).
Wood River Fine Arts is pleased to host a reception for the artist December 29, 2017 | 5:00 - 8:00 PM
360 East Avenue, In The Courtyard | Ketchum 208.928.7728 | www.woodriverfinearts.com
G. Russell Case, “Boulder Peak.” Artwork courtesy of WRFA
BEST OF THE WEST
KEN PELOKE
Fancy
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Broschofsky Galleries
roschofsky Galleries features Best of the West, a group show of artists with an array of subjects and interpretations of the American West, historical through contemporary. The series showcases quietly contemplative and poetic paintings by Russell Chatham, Michael Coleman’s paintings and sculpture, and Ewoud de Groot’s paintings of wildlife in abstract and magical realism settings. The series also features Andy Warhol’s Cowboys and Indians portfolio and Russell Young’s iconic screenprints finished with glittery diamond dust. Theodore Villa’s vibrant, colorful watercolor images portray images from his Native American heritage, while equine subjects are
Ewoud de Groot, “Snowy Owl,” oil, 44 inches x 44 inches
shown in Ken Peloke’s magnificent large-scale mixed-media paintings. Other artists include Edward S. Curtis, Billy Schenck, Gordon McConnell, and Jan Grotenbreg.
Mixed Media 72” x 60”
Also, Best of the West, works by gallery artists: Russell Chatham, Michael Coleman, Edward Curtis, Rudi Broschofsky, Russell Young, Billy Schenck, Ken Peloke, Theodore Villa, Andy Warhol and more. 360 East Ave. Ketchum, ID 208.726.4950 www.brogallery.com Russell Chatham, “Heart of Winter,” oil, 30 inches x 36 inches
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“GOING PLACES”
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• DECEMBER, 2017
Jean Richardson and Caleb Meyer Artists’ Reception: Friday, December 29, 5-8 p.m. Exhibition: December 20-January 25
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hen asked about her fascination with the horse as subject matter, Jean Richardson often describes how, on many levels, the image is ideal for her true subjects; namely, motion and energy. Her large-scale acrylic-on-canvas paintings take the image of a horse and use it as metaphor for the human spirit as she sees it—unbridled, striving, restless, and sometimes heroic. Her use of paint reflects this spiritual connection with her subject through movement, form and vivid color. Caleb Meyer served a two-year apprenticeship under nationally recognized artist Robert Moore followed by an art teaching career. Now an established artist in his own right, Meyer provides his viewers with a fresh look at nature by means of thick paint, vibrant color and unique composition. Meyer is equally at home painting city scenes or rolling landscapes, and in this exhibition viewers will be treated to paintings of a number of iconic local Ketchum landmarks. This is plein-air painter Eric Jacobsen’s debut exhibition at Kneeland Gallery, but he is widely appreciated by fellow painters and collectors alike. Growing up in New England, Jacobsen feels a kinship with the maritime and landscape artists of his hometown, yet it is the Northwest he now calls home. A plein-air painter in the purist sense, Jacobsen paints almost exclusively in the outdoors, commenting that, “I want to be right there, interacting with the scene… I don’t want any rehearsals in my life.” All artists will be in attendance at the opening reception.
Jean Richardson, “Princeling”, acrylic on canvas, 60” x 40”
JEAN RICHARDSON, CALEB MEYER, ERIC JACOBSEN ARTIST’S RECEPTION: Friday December 29th, 5-8pm 271 First Ave N, Ketchum, ID 83340 • PO Box 2070, Sun Valley, ID 83353 • 208.726.5512 email: art@kneelandgallery.com • website: www.kneelandgallery.com
Eric Jacobsen, “Sunny Day in Winter”, oil on canvas, 16” x 24”
‘THE ART OF THE PORTRAIT’
FREDERIC BOLOIX FINE ARTS
Frederic Boloix Fine Arts
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rederic Boloix Fine Arts will be presenting a show titled “The Art of the Portrait,” featuring portraiture spanning over 120 years. Artists shown: Post-Impressionist Édouard Vuillard, Modernist Emile Lahner, contemporary Austrian artist Martin C. Herbst, Spanish artist Salustiano and Andy Warhol, among others. Our opening will also feature local jazz pianist Alan Pennay. Please join us for a glass of bubbly, fine art and a little jazz to celebrate the New Year!
Salustiano “As if Time Stood Still” - Acrylic on canvas stretched over board
Open for Gallery Walk - Friday December 29th, 5-8pm
THE ART OF THE PORTRAIT Featuring works by SALUSTIANO, ANDY WARHOL, MARTIN C. HERBST AND EMILE LAHNER We are honored to feature jazz pianist Alan Pennay 6-8 PM. We are located in the atrium of the Galleria Building on Leadville and Fourth in Ketchum.
Andy Warhol, “Vote McGovern,” screen print on paper, 1972 edition of 250, signed on verso. Artwork courtesy of Frederic Boloix Fine Arts
351 Leadville Ave. in Ketchum Tel. 208.726.8810 Frederic@Boloix.com
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sun valley gallery association
• DECEMBER, 2017
GALLERY WALK Downtown Ketchum
Downtown Ketchum
Highway 75 to Stanley
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to Baldy
Second Street
6 Second Street
First Street Ski & Heritage Museum
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MAIN STREET MAIN STREET
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River Street
Spruce Avenue
Walnut Avenue Community Librar y
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SUN VALLEY ROAD 3
First Street
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Fourth Street Heritage Corridor Art Walk to Sun Valley
Fourth Street
to Baldy
WEST
Ketchum Town Plaza Giacobbi Square & Visitor’s Center
4 WEST
East Avenue
Fourth Street Heritage Corridor Art Walk
Fifth Street
Post Office
Community Librar y
Ore Wagon Museum
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Fourth Street
Ore Wagon Museum
Spruce Avenue
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Giacobbi Square
Walnut Avenue
Second Avenue
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Leadville Avenue
Sixth Street
Post Office
NORTH
Washington Avenue
Fifth Street
Highway 75 to Stanley
Warm Springs Road
First Avenue
Second Avenue
Sixth Street
Leadville Avenue
Washington Avenue
First Avenue
Downtown Ketchum
East Avenue
NORTH
Warm Springs Road
Ketchum Town Plaza & Visitor’s Center
SUN VALLEY ROAD
1,8
EAST
5 to Sun Valley
EAST
Ski & Heritage Museum
River Street
SOUTH
SOUTH
Highway 75 to Hailey
© sun valley gallery association
Highway 75 to Hailey
1. Broschofsky Galleries 1. Broschofsky 360 East AvenueGalleries East Avenue 1.360Broschofsky Galleries
2. Frederic Boloix Fine Arts 360 East Avenue 2. Frederic Boloix Fine Arts
© sun valley gallery association
5. Gilman Contemporary 6. Kneeland Gallery 661 Sun Valley Road 271 First Avenue North
5. Gilman Contemporary
6.661Kneeland Gallery Sun Valley Road 7. MESH Gallery
351Leadville Leadville Avenue, Galleria Building 351 Avenue, TheThe Galleria Building
2. Frederic Boloix Fine Arts
271Street First Avenue North 420 Fourth East
6. Kneeland Gallery
3. Gallery Valley Center for the 3. Friesen Friesen Gallery 7.271 Sun Valley Center forArts the Arts 351 Leadville Avenue, The Galleria Building 8. Sun First Avenue North 320 Avenue North 320First First Avenue North
3. Friesen Gallery
4. Gail Severn Gallery 320 First Avenue North 4. 400 Gail Gallery FirstSevern Avenue North 400 First Avenue North
Gail Severn Gallery 5. 4.Gilman Contemporary Avenue 661400 SunFirst Valley Road North
191 Fifth191 Street East Fifth Street East
7. Sun Valley Center for the Arts
9. Wood River Fine Arts 191 Fifth Street East Fine Arts River 3608. EastWood Avenue(The Courtyard) 360 East Avenue 8. Wood River Fine Arts 360 East Avenue