Denton Arts & Jazz Festival 2010

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A DENTON RECORD-CHRONICLE GUIDE TO THE

Free Admission!

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Denton Record-Chronicle


02 Arts & Jazz

04 21 10

Mayor’s welcome Welcome to Denton! We are pleased that you have come to the premier arts and music festival in the Southwest. The Denton Arts and Jazz Festival occupies a unique place in the North Texas community. Begun over 25 years ago as a small, local event, it has grown to national status. Each year, some of the world’s top musicians headline the festival. Equally important, young musicians and performers from school and youth groups get a chance to show off their talents on one of six different stages that comprise the Denton Arts and Jazz Festival performance venues. Along with music, festival goers can see and shop for art and crafts as the festival draws artists and craftsmen from across the county. You can also choose from all kinds of food to satisfy your appetite - from cotton candy and kettle korn to Greek and Cajun dinners. Children will enjoy games and fun, as well as experience the joys of making their own art. This is a three-day event for the whole family. We are so glad you have come, and we will do everything we can to make your time here memorable and fun. Sincerely, Mayor Mark A. Burroughs

Denton Convention & Visitors Bureau welcomes festival goers Welcome to one of Denton’s most fabulous weekends of the year – the much anticipated Denton Arts & Jazz Festival! This weekend, thousands of visitors will be in Denton, merging together to be the largest event crowd of the year, at over 200,000 during three days. As a city, we are thrilled to showcase this event and our unique brand of music and art and fun. We are also eager to encourage visitors to experience the whole of Denton while you are here: stay

in our fine hotels; enjoy dining in any of our more than 200 restaurants; shop in one-of-a-kind retail hot spots; and visit our museums, art galleries, and attractions. The Denton Arts & Jazz Festival is just the beginning of a great adventure to discover Denton! Denton is very proud of its musical culture. Hundreds of artists of excellent caliber and quality have their roots in Denton’s thriving music scene. They are a major asset to our community and an

Free entertainment Free admission But no coolers, please! Because of the congestion around the Jazz Stage, no coolers will be allowed in the area during the festival. You may bring your coolers to other parts of the park. But, please, keep the festival free by supporting the food and beverage booths.

integral part of the Denton Arts & Jazz Festival. Since the festival is free, come and go all day and into the night between the festival, the downtown square, and the rest of our city full of delightful distractions and a vibrant nightlife. Experience all of Denton this weekend. Have a blast! Then come back again and again, because we’re this much fun all the time! Vice President Kim Phillips

Pets belong at home We love animals, but not at the festival. Because of the crowds, the kids and the congestion, the festival grounds are no place for pets. So, please, leave your pets at home for the day.

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03 Arts & Jazz

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Bringing Community Back to Banking Salutes the Denton Festival Foundation Top Hands Year after Year…You’re the BEST! Carol & Arvin Short (27)* Jo Ann Ballentine (26) Roni Beasley (26) Marsha & Lindsay Keffer (26) Emma Perry (26) John Beasley (25) Janette Haywood (25) Peggy Capps (24) Pat Saunders (24) Paul Haywood (23) Louise Alton (22) Jay Saunders (22) Nadine & Frank Halstead (21) Betty & Bill Neu (21) Charlene Greer (20) Steve Hindman (20)

Kit King (20) Patricia (Pat) Langa (20) Lynn Ebersole (19) Harold (Hal) Reed (19) Carol Ann (Ganzer) Connors (18) David W. Dailey (18) Jane and George Hopkins (18) Pat Reed (18) Murray Ricks (18) Doug Chadwick (17) Nancy and Terrell King (17) Jean Kingery (17) Don Langa (17) Kathy Orr (17) Patsy & Fred Patterson (17) Ema Ruth Russell (17)

Dick Shephard (17) Mary Kay Shephard (17) Steven Alspach (16) Euline & Horace Brock (16) Lee Capps (16) Nancy Chadwick (16) Arline & John Hargrove (16) Jackie Jackson (16) Lura Kendrick (16) Sarah & Troy Lagrone (16) Ruby & Bob Crouch (15) Kathleen Duffy (15) Greg Jackson (15) Pat Powers (15) Ingrid Scobie (15) Danny Brumley (14) * Years of Service as a Top Hand

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Denton Arts & Jazz Festival Featured Performance

Chick Corea Trio • 9:00pm

Denton Arts & Jazz Festival Featured Performance

Jimmie Vaughan w/ Lou Ann Barton • 9:00pm Sunday • April 25

Denton Arts & Jazz Festival Featured Performance

Brave Combo • 7:00pm

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04 Festival celebrates anniversary Arts & Jazz

04 21 10

To celebrate its anniversary, the Denton Festival Foundation donated a sculpture by Rosie Sandifer of Santa Fe to the City of Denton. Titled “O Be Joyful,” the work depicts two sisters dancing with outstretched arms. Courtesy photo

Thirty years ago a group of Denton residents established the Denton Festival Foundation, an organization to put on a fundraiser for the arts. They called the event Spring Fling, held it at the North Texas Fairgrounds and invited local artists and music groups to participate. Almost 10 years later, Carol Short envisioned a bigger, more important event. She went to the late Troy LaGrone, head of Ben E. Keith, and persuaded him to support her dream. She approached Ray Hair, president of the Dallas/Forth Worth Professional Musicians Association, asking that group to merge their JazzFest event with Spring Fling. The result of that merger in 1991 produced the first Denton Arts & Jazz Festival in what is now Quakertown Park. It had a budget of $56,000 and attracted about 12,000 people. “We were overwhelmed,” Short remembers with a smile. Today, the festival draws more than 200,000 people and its budget is a half million dollars. To celebrate its anniversary, the Denton Festival Foundation donated a sculpture by Rosie Sandifer of Santa Fe to the City of Denton. Titled “O Be Joyful,” the work depicts two sisters dancing with outstretched arms. “This speaks to the Denton Festival Foundation’s mission of producing a family event that is free and open to the public,” says Short. “Children are the future and the Denton Festival Foundation wants to recognize

our responsibility with the influences of art and music, not only during the festival weekend, but through art work that can be enjoyed all year long.” For musicians, Hair says, the festival has been a tremendous opportunity. “It has enabled us to bring in national talent that we would not have been able to do with the old venue.” He notes that almost all the national groups include a musician with ties to Denton or the University of North Texas. “The focus has been the dynamic talent that Denton, Texas, has produced over the past 50 years,” he says. Just as the budget and the audience have grown, so have the participants and the sponsors. In the beginning, there were three stages. This year, with the addition of the UNT Stage, there will be seven. “One of the reasons we’ve been able to grow is we’re receiving more sponsorship money and funds from the hotel/motel taxes. City officials realize we are a destination. And, every time a major sponsor comes in, it attracts other major sponsors,” says Short. Over the years, numerous nonprofit organizations have helped. Denton Benefit League, The Arts Guild, UNT Athletics, Denton Parks Foundation, Visual Arts Society of Texas, Denton Rotary South and the Denton County Art Education Association are only a few of the groups that turn out to help with the festival. Many other nonprofits have booths

to raise funds for their organizations. In addition, many businesses, especially sponsors, encourage their employees to become Top Hands and volunteer for the festival. Short gives a lot of credit to the City of Denton and the Parks Department for their support of the event. Those who attend the festival don’t see the immense amount of work that goes on behind the scenes, before, during and after, the festival. None of this would be possible without a dedicated board of directors and more than 300 members who give service hours. “It’s what people don’t see that makes it work,” Short says. As the bands play, guests at the Arts and Jazz Festival can indulge in an array of foods representing countries from around the globe. They will find gyros from Greece, Thai noodles, German sausage, tamales and nachos, Teriyaki chicken and, of course, good old American Corn Dogs. The sound of music will encourage guests to do some art shopping while they are at the festival. The variety of arts and crafts range from primitive painting to intricately stitched quilts, from metal sculpture to art glass, from jewelry to photography. For Short, the festival is “the culmination of everything in my background. It’s wonderful to be part of an event that gives artists the opportunity to show their talents. “Besides my family, it’s the most rewarding thing I’ve ever done. I’m passionate about it.”

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06 Arts & Jazz volunteers Arts & Jazz

04 21 10

keep festival running On the last weekend of April every year, hundreds of people show up at Quakertown Park to put in hours of hard labor. It’s well worth it, according to long-time Top Hand, Betty Neu. Betty, with husband Bill, has been a Top Hand for the Denton Arts & Jazz Festival since it began 20 years ago. She served on the board for a number of years and was chairman of the board. “It’s like another birthday. You celebrate every year. We wouldn’t miss it because it’s so much fun.” Pat Saunders, who heads up the volunteers in the information booths, has been working at the festival for more than 25 years. For her, the most fun is seeing old friends and acquaintances. “I guess what I like most about the festival is seeing people I usually don’t see the rest of the year,” she says. “It’s a chance to catch up with everyone.” And, of course, the music is great. “It’s a unique opportunity to hear excellent music.” Selling beer, making hot dogs, providing information, working with artists and musicians, these are only a few of the jobs Top Hands take on for festival weekend. “We couldn’t do this without them,” says Carrell Ann Simmons, Top Hands chairman for this year’s festival. “We certainly couldn’t keep the festival free without all our volunteers.” She has about 500 threehour volunteer shifts to fill, 1,500 man-hours of work. Even at minimum wage that’s more than $10,000. Membership in the Top Hands costs $15, and Simmons points out that those dues haven’t changed since the festival started in 1991. The Top Hands dues bring more than work, they bring a number of perks— food and drink coupons, a discount on T-shirts, access to the Woman’s Club Building, and, most important, a parking

pass. “It’s so much fun to volunteer,” she says. “A lot of groups want to work together, businesses, organizations or just a bunch of friends. We try to accommodate them as much as we can.” Betty has been involved with the festival in some capacity since the beginning. For several years, she worked with the artists who come in for the weekend. Over the years, she’s seen the art segment grow and get better. “The distance they drive is unbelievable. It’s amazing how they want to be a part of the festival. They always think the Top Hands are the greatest, and I’ve had so many tell me that it’s the best-run festival they’ve ever been to.”

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Arts & Jazz

04 21 10 Courtesy photo

The crowd enjoys the music at last year’s festival. Dixieland and big band. Latin heat and blues beat. Old favorites and new sounds. You’ll hear it all at the Denton Arts & Jazz Festival in Quakertown Park. The star of the music show is jazz, and the stars of jazz will appear on the Budweiser/Wells Fargo Jazz Stage. Friday, the Chick Corea Trio will close the evening, and Saturday will end with Jimmie Vaughan and Lou Ann Barton. Denton’s Brave Combo will close the festival on Sunday evening. Brave Combo Brave Combo’s Carl Finch often refers to the festival as Denton’s family reunion. “It has a life of its own,� he said. Brave Combo is on the road about a third of the year, performing in venues around the world. Finch says the Denton festival takes a back seat to none. “ It’s a top-notch event. The production people are the best to work with anywhere.� The technicians have made it possible to project music to the back of the audience, so that the sound isn’t soaked up by the hundreds of people in the audience. Finch particularly enjoys the back-stage arrangements. Unlike some venues, “Backstage is nicely set up, with a tent, refreshments and Porta Potties,� he says. Formed more than 30 years ago, Brave Combo has maintained its base in Denton, despite its worldwide audience and performances. Band members include: Finch, guitar, keyboard, accordion and vocals; Jeffrey Barnes, woodwinds, saxophone and vocals; Danny O’Brien, trumpet and vocals; Little Jack Melody, bass

guitar; and Arjuna Contreras, drums. Earning two Grammy awards and seven nominations, the combo’s style ranges from polka to pop, from Latin to classical. Chick Corea Trio The legendary Chick Corea will perform with his trio Friday night. The son of a jazz trumpet player, Corea grew up under the influence of jazz, as well as classical music. He started his professional career in the ‘60s in New York, working with such greats as Blue Mitchell, Herbie Mann and Stan Getz. In the late 60s he played with Miles Davis, and his solo style reflected an avant garde attitude. In 1970, when he formed his own group, Circle, with Dave Holland, he began to move into a jazz fusion style. In recent years, Corea has continued his jazz fusion work and in March received a Grammy, his 16th, for Five Peace Band, with Kenny Garrett, Christian McBride, John McLaughlin and Vinnie Colaiuta. He has also has explored his interest in classical music, both composing and performing. In fact, one of his planned projects is to record a piece of chamber music, a concerto for jazz quartet and orchestra. “I like to write music for orchestras,� he says, “and, I like playing with them because of the sensitivity of the sound they produce.� Another planned project is a collaboration with old friend Stanley Clarke, who appeared at the Arts & Jazz Festival last year. Corea says, for him, the venue is less important than

atmosphere of a concert. “I love small venues because they are intimate. But also, I like to play free concerts because you get to play to such a wide range of people. Really, I enjoy all kinds of different venues.� Jimmie Vaughan and Lou Ann Barton Two Texas blues greats, Jimmie Vaughan and Lou Ann Barton, will perform together Saturday night. It’s not the first pairing for Vaughan and Barton. In the ‘70s Barton performed with the Fabulous Thunderbirds, a group Vaughan formed to showcase modern blues music. A Dallas native, Vaughan began playing the guitar at age 13 and formed his first band, The Swinging Pendulum, at 15. The next year he joined The Chessmen and opened for the likes of Muddy Waters and Freddie King. This sparked an interest in blues music. When he formed Texas Storm in 1969, it was dedicated to reviving interest in the blues, and continued that idea with the Fabulous Thunderbirds, which he founded in the mid ‘70s. After his brother, Stevie Ray Vaughan, was killed in a helicopter crash, Vaughan withdrew from music until 1993, when Eric Clapton persuaded him open a series of concerts in London. Since then he has performed and recorded as a soloist. Barton was born in Fort Worth and has been in Austin since the early ‘70s. She worked with Stevie Ray Vaughan, first with Triple Threat Revue and later with Double Trouble. She has appeared several times on Austin City Limits.

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08 Dancers entertain at Arts & Jazz Festival Arts & Jazz

04 21 10

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Celtic dancers entertain at last year’s festival. From tiny pre-schoolers barely big enough to wobble onstage to a group of women well past retirement age, dance at the Denton Arts & Jazz Festival offers an incredible range of talent. There are Middle Eastern dancers with their exotic costumes and sinuous movements, exuberant tap dancers, ballerinas gliding gracefully across the stage, the dramatic steps of ballet folklorico, and the energetic patterns of Celtic dancers. Karen MacIntyre, who leads the Green Space Dancers and the North Central Texas College Dancers, says that Arts & Jazz Festival is the highlight of her dancers’ year. They love it because it’s a different kind of performance. “It’s such a casual, enthusiastic crowd, we’ve had kids from the audience try to get up on stage.” The Green Space dancers include all ages, from 4 to 64, MacIntyre says. About 30 of her students will be performing Sunday afternoon, including a children’s theater class that will do a little play. This is the first festival performance for the NCTC dancers, and their theme will be “Diversity in Dance.” “The

pieces we will be presenting will … include a rhythm-based work with live percussion accompaniment, a narrative poetry-dance fusion work, a dark and edgy dance theater piece to music from Requiem for a Dream,” MacIntyre says. They will perform Friday evening. In the 16th and 17th centuries, Celtic dancing was performed in ballrooms and in barns, according to June Skinner, a member of the Denton Celtic Dancers. “It’s a very old form of dancing that was disappearing in the early 20th century.” The Celtic dancers will perform on Saturday. Two Scottish women decided to save the art, according to Skinner, and collected and published many of the ancient dances. From their beginnings, Celtic dance societies spread from the British Isles across the Atlantic and elsewhere. “There are groups all over the world,” she said, adding that when she travels she will often seek out groups and dance with them. Celtic dance ranges from fast, exuberant reels and jigs to slower dances called strathspeys. They take the form of either line or square dancing,

with leading couples creating patterns including reels, circles and chains. The Arts & Jazz Festival is “our chance to put ourselves out there and show what we can do,” Skinner says. “It’s also a chance to contribute to the community by doing our performance.” Another ancient form of dance will be seen Sunday morning in the Tierra Mestiza Ballet Folklorico of Denton. A new group, Tierra Mestiza was founded by Osbaldo Munera, a dancer from Bogata, Colombia. The dance is recognized not only for the steps, called zapateados, but also for the colorful, ruffled and beribboned skirts of the female dancers and the slim trousers and flat black hats of the males. No stranger to Denton audiences, the Syncopated Ladies will take the stage Saturday afternoon. This group of senior dancers was formed in 2000 and has performed for special events, at retirement and nursing homes and for any number of organizations around Denton County. “We love the Arts & Jazz Festival,” says Jerrie Allen. “It and the State Fair are our biggest events every year.”

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09 Festival offers fun for kids of all ages paint,” she says, “the messier the better.” As they make art, the children will be entertained by magician and balloon sculptor Al Curlet and Joel Reese the singing cowboy. There will be almost as many children onstage as off, since so many young performers will be showing off their talents.

Courtesy photo

A clown presents a youngster with a balloon animal. The music, the fun, the entertainment at the Denton Arts & Jazz Festival is aimed at everyone—young, old and inbetween. The Arts & Jazz Festival at Quakertown Park this weekend will have kids romping from the Children’s Art Tent to an area full of games, from a singing cowboy to the Pied Piper of Percussion. The festival, a family event since it began as Spring Fling in the 1980s, always highlights both activities for children and performances by children. A special event at this year’s festival, Steve Gryb, known as the pied piper of percussion, will bring his percussion petting zoo to the park. “It’s all hands-on,” Gryb says, “that’s why I call it a petting zoo. I have a passion to educate, to stamp out musical illiteracy. Percussion is a great way to spark creativity … it opens the doors to the world of music.” A jazz educator and performer, Gryb says the light bulb went on when he passed out percussion instruments to students and got an incredible response. “I decided to design a program to involve everyone with percussion instruments,” he says. While Gryb says his program is for everyone—the young and the young at heart—it is especially appeal-

ing to the youngsters. He does about 150 shows a year and travels through 33 states from his base in Florida. In addition to the familiar percussion instruments, Gryb’s collection of more that 2,000 pieces includes some unusual instruments. The Wrenchophone is a variation of the xylophone with tuned wrenches, and the Glockenfish is a fish-shaped xylophone. The Clatterpillar is a set of dominos made to create rippling sounds, while the Spring Drum creates the sound of thunder. “I’m here to help children understand what percussion is all about. They can touch and play the instruments and ask all the questions they want.” The Children’s Art Tent has something new this year, according to Jane Ruestmann, who puts together the activities for the kids each year. Because birds are so popular these days, the children can do bird collages using tissue paper, printed papers and other recycled materials. “The kids are always excited,” Ruestmann says. “They get to do this just for fun and they love it.” She notes that the Denton schools have great art programs, but often there is an assignment involved. At the festival, the children do whatever they want. “They love the clay and the

This year, Evers, Ryan, Nelson, Houston, Rivera, Providence, McNair, Pecan Creek, Poloma Creek, Wilson and Ginnings elementary schools will have musical performances on Center Stage inside the Denton Senior Center. At the north end of the park, the Festival Stage will feature

young performers from such groups as the jazz bands from Crownover and Frisco middle schools and Ryan, Denton, Krum, Prosper, Argyle and Frisco high schools. There will be young dancers from a number of area dance companies and drill teams from Denton, Ryan and Argyle high schools.

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GAMES, ACTIVITIES, FOOD & BEVERAGES SECTION 2 - (SOUTH PARK) DFF 9 Denton Benefit League- Pizza Slices/Nachos Denton, TX DFF 10 Denton Festival Foundation- Beef Fajitas/Sausage & Kraut/Hotdogs/Pickles/Soft Drinks/Water Denton, TX DFF 12 Denton Festival Foundation - Coffee & Wine Denton, TX DFF 13 Denton Festival Foundation - Specialty Beers Denton, TX DFF 14 Denton Festival Foundation - Beer Denton, TX DFF 15 Denton Parks Foundation - Soft Drinks/Water Denton, TX DFF 16 UNT Athletic Department Beer/Wine/Soft Drinks/Water Denton, TX DFF 17 Greater Denton Sports Commission Beer/Wine/Soft Drinks/Water Denton, TX F-58 Conway Corndogs-Corn Dogs/Funnel Cakes/Lemonade Allen, TX F-59 Metzler’s BBQ- BBQ Sandwiches/Turkey Legs Denton, TX F-60 International Foods - Gyros/Eggrolls/Chicken Orlando, FL F-61 Baja Smoothies - Fruit Smoothies Nisswa, MN F-62 McKinney Food Service - Corn Dogs/Lemonade Hughes Springs, TX F-63 The Flamingo Grill- Philly Cheese Steak/Cuban Sandwiches/Limeade/Jalapeno Sausage Plano, TX F-64 Pierre’s Concession- Elephant Ears/Fries/Twisters/Fish Dodd City, TX F-65 Texas Woman’s University- Beef/Chicken/ F-66 Veggie Soft Tacos/Nachos/Chips & Dips Denton, TX F-67 Fun-tastic Concessions- Brisket & Pork Sandwiches/ Tropical Drinks/Hamburgers/Pig Wings Wichita, KS DFF 11 Denton Festival Foundation & Convention & Visitor Bureau - Information/Souvenirs Denton, TX G-52 KNTU FM 88.1 - Broadcasting Denton, TX G-53 Denton Fire Department - First Aid Denton, TX

CENTER SECTION F-51 Ye Olde Honeycorn - Kettle Corn Lewisville, TX F-52 T.C.’s Country Corn - Roasted Corn/ Baked Potatoes/Fruit Drink Kemp, TX F-53 Brown’s Concessions - Strawberry Crepes/Lemonade Paris, TX F-54 Rocky Mountain Nut Roasters - Cinnamon Roasted Nuts Manchester, TN F-55 Marble Slab Creamery - Ice Cream/Sundaes Brownies Dallas, TX F-56 Doc’s Catering & Grill - Wings/Rice/Lemonade Roanoke, TX G-49 Denton Public Libraries - Magazine Exchange Denton, TX G-50 Wells Fargo - Information Denton, TX G-51 Ben E. Keith Co. - Information/Merchandise Denton, TX

PARKING LOT DFF 7 Denton Festival Foundation - Beef Fajitas/Sausage & Kraut/Hotdogs/Pickles/Soft Drinks/Water Denton, TX DFF 8 Denton Festival Foundation - Beer & Wine Denton, TX F-46 City Federation of Women’s Clubs Baked Goods Denton, TX F-47 Miss Piggy’s - Meat Pies/Fries/Red Beans/Rice Sno Cones/Cotton Candy Bartonville, TX F-48 Fried What! - Fried Sweets/Veggies/Iced Tea Garland, TX F-49 Mexican Dave’s Grill & Catering Riblets/Cheesesteak/Tea Grapevine, TX F-50 Gyros Express - Greek Gyros/Lemonade Luck, WI

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Pat Johnson . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Doll Clothes

Pat’s Doll Creations

David Johns . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Wooden Toys

The Toycrafter

Raymond York . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jewelry

Jaded Jewelry

Lisa Taylor & Dietmar Gaul. . . . . . . Jewelry

Dallas, TX Haltom City, TX Denton, TX Berryville, AR Lewisville, TX Dallas, TX New Braunfels, TX Gardner, CO

Affordable Elegance

C-9 Our Daily Bread . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Photography/Watercolor Denton, TX C-10 Sam & Jocelyn Allgood . . . . . . . . . . Jewelry/Fossils Denton, TX C-11

Unburied Treasures

Victor Field . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Japanese Calligraphy

Patterson, CA

on Clothing

Ataraxia Designs

C-12 Linda Chidsey . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Blown Glass Accessories Highland Village, TX A Touch of Glass

C-13 Kathryn Boulet Hoffman . . . . . . . . . Jewelry The Art of Adornment

C-14 Nicole Pinsky . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Clothing Karmony

C-15 Shawn Zeigler . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jewelry Firefly Forge

C-16 John & Missy Dorsey . . . . . . . . . . . . Barrettes O-Dorsay, Inc.

C-17 Janice Torbett . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Hand Stitched Items Seven Sisters Stitching Sales

C-18 Chrissie Farrar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jewelry Star Dust & Imagination

C-19 Angela Mosera . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Recycled Art Homemade Purses & Jewelry Design

C-20 Cynthia Harkins. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Clothing/Crafts CLH Enterprises

C-21 Tai Duong . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Carved Wooden Sandals Vina Sandals

C-22 Loel Martin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Photography Loel Martin Photography

C-23 Linda Chrysler . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jewelry Jewelers on the Boulevard

C-24 Jane Smith . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Recycled Plastic Art Just Plain Jane

C-25 Eric Jeandemange. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Wood Roses & Pearls Zydoo

C-26 Travis & Jonnie Cozart. . . . . . . . . . . Wood Crafts Sandy Hill Woodworks

C-27 Carlo Guadagno & Ray Fitrano. . . . Soy Candles

Beadz N Banglez

C-30 Renee Mitchell. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Bath Products Abundantly Aromatic

C-31 Carol Bryan. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jewelry MuyiFabu

C-32 Terry Love . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Toothpick Clip Cowboy Toothpick Clips

C-33 Kelly Coronado . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Mixed Media

Doc Pock’s Harmonious Rocks

C-38 Lana Walker . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Glass Accessories C-39 Angels & Cowboys

King’s Crosses

C-42 Stacey Golden . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Tie Dyed Clothing Golden Designs

C-43 Bud & Dee Dee Patterson . . . . . . . . Wine Stoppers C-44 D-Patt Fine Wood Products C-45 Gary Considine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Leather Handbags Cowgirl Gear Co.

C-46 Maryon Hatter. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Handmade Hats C-47 The Hatters C-48 Vivian DeGarmo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Custom Frames Totally Irresistible Names & Frames

C-49 Charlotte Garrison & Rozella Bays Puppets & Halos Strings N Things

C-50 George Hookings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Pepper Grillers Chili Twisters Pepper Griller Plaza C-51 Linda Reese . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Clothing & Jewelry The Added Touch

C-52 Daniel Schemel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Wooden Watches Mistura Timepieces

Santa Fe, NM Denver, CO Leander, TX Sulphur Springs, TX Trinidad, CO Krum, TX Inola, OK Garland, TX Ellendale, MN Irving, TX

Tulsa, OK

C-62 Charles Raney . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Woodturning

Dallas, TX

C-63 Robert Lange . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Quick Cartoon Likenesses Oklahoma City, OK

Denver, CO Denton, TX Whittier, CA

Olivia’s Sterling Silver Jewelry

Dallas, TX Denton, TX Ada, OK Republic, MO Lake Dallas, TX Melissa, TX

Golden Triangle Woodturners Robert Lange Caricatures

Skokie, IL

C-64 Henry Zapata . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Embroidered Clothing C-65 Terranova Fine Arts C-66 Heba Ismail & Monika Paszkowiak Polish Pottery Green Goose C-67 Nigel Chicksen. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . African Art

Fort Worth, TX

C-68 Ashok Shrestha . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Nepalese & Tibetan Art

Littleton, CO

C-69 Scot Stamey . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Mayan Woven Hammocks Newton, NC

Oklahoma City, OK

C-70 Kathy Fields . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jewelry

Dublin, TX

C-71 Debra Thompson . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Windchimes

Austin, TX

C-72 Sleeping Lizzards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sari Skirts C-73 Robi Wichita. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Clothes

McKinney, TX San Antonio, TX

Discover Arts International

Gladstone, MO Lawton, OK Houston, TX Arlington, TX

Bajra, Inc

Yucatan Treasures Kathy Jewels

D & D Design

Exclusively 4 Babies & Mamas

Denton, TX Colleyville, TX

C-74 Krista Duell & Dan Howard. . . . . . . Tie Dye Clothing Vivid Earth Tie Dye Clothing

Dallas, TX

C-75 J & J (Erick Womack) . . . . . . . . . . . . Pork Rinds/Pickles C-76 Laura Womack . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Hair Accessories

Hurst, TX

C-77 Lawrence Crawford . . . . . . . . . . . . . Tie Dye Clothing

Spicewood, TX

C-78 Jon Ann Wells/Cathy Gaskin . . . . . Jewelry

San Antonio, TX

C-81 Craig Scotland . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Photography

Laura the Bow Lady Starbright Tie Dyes

analyn jewelry design Celtic Photography

Grapevine, TX

C-82 Follow the Dream . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Photography/Acrylics/ Oils/Jewelry (Senior Center – Indoors) C- 79 Frances Snider. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jewelry

New Braunfels, TX

C- 80 Erin Berger . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jewelry

C-34 Teresa Christy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jewelry Bedford, TX C-35 Gurly Gurly Unique Jewelry C-36 Michael Knox . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Candles & Bamboo Holders Irving, TX Bamboo Builders Supply

C-41 Glenn & Julie Pourteau . . . . . . . . . . Crosses & Angels

Plano, TX

Fayetteville, AR

Westworth Village, TX

Chloe Lane Studio

C-37 Robb Pocklington . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jewelry

ELZ Creations

C-53 Regina Jackson . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Clothing C-54 Sultry Touch Collection (North Park) C-55 Angela Sangmu . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Art from India C-56 Juliet’s Jewels C-57, 58 Charlotte Alvarez . . . . . . . . . . . . . Southwest Indian Jewelry C-59 Kevin & Deb Ledford . . . . . . . . . . . . Custom Name Frames C-60 The Name Frame Place C-61 Olivia Sanchez . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jewelry

KlapNKlip Soy Candles

C-28 Denton State Supported Living Center . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Pottery/Jewelry/Crafts C-29 Penny Brockie . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jewelry

C-40 Sharon Zabica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jewelry & Flip Flops

O’Fallon, MO Krum, TX Denton, TX Pilot Point, TX Paola, KS Yukon, OK Yukon, OK Sand Springs, TX Denton, TX Fort Worth, TX Denton, TX

Granbury, Texas

Magnetficent Jewelry

Dallas, Texas

Mama & Me Jewelry

SECTION 1 - (NORTH PARK) DFF 2 DFF 3A DFF 3B DFF 4

The Arts Guild - Pizza Slices/Soft Drinks/Water Denton, TX Denton Festival Foundation - Beer Denton, TX Denton Rotary South - Soft Drinks/Water Denton, TX Denton Festival Foundation - Sausage & Kraut/Hotdogs Denton, TX Pizza Slices/Pickles/Soft Drinks/Water DFF 5 Denton Festival Foundation - Beer & Wine Denton, TX DFF 18 Denton Festival Foundation - Ice Sales Denton, TX F-8 Olive Oil de Fino - Olive Oil Sherman, TX F-9 The Almond Roaster - Almonds/Pecans Livonia, MI F-10 Cooper Concessions - Lemonade May, TX F-11 Cooper Concessions - Ice Cream May, TX F-12 McAlister’s Deli - Cookies/Iced Tea Savannah, TX F-13 German Roasted Nuts - Cinnamon Roasted Nuts Haltom City, TX F-14 Granbury’s Best - Jams/Jellies/Jalapenos Granbury, TX F-15 International Foods - Gyros/Eggrolls/Chicken Orlando, FL F-16 Baja Smoothies - Fruit Smoothies Nisswa, MN F-17-18 McKinney Food Service - Corn Dogs/Funnel Cakes/Lemonade Hughes Springs, TX F-19 Hillbilly Kettle Korn - Kettle Korn Lavon, TX F-20 The Flamingo Grill - Philly Cheese Steak/Cuban Sandwiches Plano, TX Limeade/Jalapeno Sausage F-21 LoJoJo Concessions - Roasted Corn/French Fries/Hamburgers/Sno Cones Denton, TX F-22 The Lunch Bag - Cajun Chicken/Hot Wings/Boudain Balls/Iced Tea Houston, TX F-23 Nana’s Bananas - Chocolate Dipped Bananas & Cheesecake Lewisville, TX F-24 Pierre’s Concession - Butterfly Chips/Wraps/Onion Strings/Lemonade Dodd City, TX F-25 Harvest MCC - BBQ Sandwich/Iced Tea Ponder, TX F-26 Fletcher’s Corny Dogs - Corn Dogs/Lemonade/Iced Tea Flower Mound, TX F-27-28 International Foods - Gyros/Eggrolls/Chicken Orlando, FL F-29 O’stropical Sno - Shaved Ice Corinth, TX F-30 Carl’s Caribbean Soul - Jamaican Jerk Chicken/Potato Twisters Grand Prairie, TX

F-31 F-32 F-33 F-34 F-35 F-36 F-37 F-38 F-39 F-40 F-41 F-42 F-43 F-44-45 F-57 DFF DFF DFF 1 DFF 6 G-1 G-2-3 G-4 G-5 G-6 G-7 G-8 G-9 G-12 G-13

Mylestone Catering- Beef/Ribs/Turkey Sandwiches/ Potato Salad/Tea Little Elm, TX Versland Fresh Lemonade - Lemonade Arlington, TX Dippin Dots - Ice Cream Allen, TX Cross Timbers Catering - Beef Sandwiches/Fries/Tea Argyle, TX Taste “NC” Foods - Burgers & Smoothies Fairfield, TX Just Jay’s Tacos - Fried Tacos/Tostadas Irving, TX Dib’s BBQ - Pulled Pork/Slaw/Hushpuppies/Tea Sanger, TX A Taste of New Orleans - Jambalaya/Lobster Puffs/Alligator Pensacola, FL All That Chicken & Waffles - Chicken/Waffles/Fruit Fritters Humble, TX Repicci’s - Italian Ice Denton, TX Denton Kiwanis Club - Fish & Chips/Tea/Lemonade Denton, TX Holly’s BBQ - Turkey Legs/Ribs/Brisket Little Elm, TX R & R Concessions - Funnel Cakes/Lemonade/Fries Odessa, TX A La Carte - Quesadillas/Nachos/Gourmet Teas Granbury, TX Baja Smoothies - Fruit Smoothies Nisswa, MN Children’s Art Tent - Art Activities Denton, TX S.W.E.A.T. Team (Denton Bible Church) - Wood Building Tent Denton, TX Denton Festival FoundationFestival - Information/Souvenirs Denton, TX Denton Festival FoundationFestival - Information/Souvenirs Denton, TX GSS Lake Forest Village - Information Denton, TX St. Paul’s Lutheran Church - Baby Changing Station Denton, TX Denton Police Department - Safety Information Denton, TX City of Denton Recycling - Information Denton, TX Keep Denton Beautiful - Litter Free Promotions Denton, TX Denton Water Utilities - Information Denton, TX Denton Beneficial Reuse - Information Denton, TX Denton Municipal Electric - Information Denton, TX Lone Star Amusements - Super-Heroes Obstacle Course Grand Prairie, TX Lone Star Amusements - Mind Winder Grand Prairie, TX

G-14 G-15 G-16 G-17 G-18 G-19 G-20 G-21 G-22 G-23 G-24 G-25 G-26 G-27

Cooper Concessions - Climbing Rock May, TX Tanglewood Tumbleweed - Kiddie Ferris Wheel Amarillo, TX Cooper Concessions - Quad Power Jump May, TX UNT Student Pilot Assoc. - Information/Plane Display/Discovery Flights Denton, TX Lone Star Amusements - Hippo Slide Grand Prairie, TX Lone Star Amusements - Kiddie Airplane Grand Prairie, TX Lone Star Amusements - Obstacle Course Grand Prairie, TX Lone Star Amusements - Spider Man Slide Grand Prairie, TX Lone Star Amusements - Mega Obstacle Course Grand Prairie, TX Lone Star Amusements - Tiger Belly Bounce House Grand Prairie, TX Choo Choo Express - Kiddie Train Dallas, TX Empty Bowls of Denton - Information Denton, TX Denton County Transportation Authority - Information Lewisville, TX Judy Eubelacker - Airbrush Accessories Denton, TX Judy ‘n Company G-28 United States Army - Information/Recruiting Denton, TX G-29 North Texas Tollway Authority - Information Plano, TX G-30 Habitat for Humanity - Information Denton, TX G-33 Denton Festival Foundation Denton, TX G-34 Steve Gryb - Percussion Petting Zoo Miami, FL G-35 Denton Record Chronicle - Subscriptions/Activity Denton, TX G-36-37 Verizon FiOS - Information Dallas, TX G-38 Silverleaf Resorts - Information Carrollton, TX G-40-41 University of North Texas - UNT Merchandise Denton, TX G-42 Melonie Milne - Face & Body Painting Argyle, TX G-43 Southern Journeys - Information Frisco, TX G-46 Denton Fire Department - First Aid Denton, TX G-47 Denton Fire Department - Fire Trucks Denton, TX G-48 Denton Fire Department - First Aid Denton, TX

11 Arts & Jazz

04 21 10


12 Denton Arts & Jazz Festival - April 23, 24 & 25, 2010 13 COURTYARD STAGE

KNTU Radio 88.1

ROVING RIVER STAGE

Arts & Jazz

Univ. of North Texas

SHOWCASE STAGE

04 21 10

Colin Campbell Fusion/Funk Band

5

A Litter Free Event

University Dr. / HWY 380

QUAKERTOWN PARK

321 E. McKinney, Denton, TX FREE ADMISSION!

Hickory 3 ve ll A Be

Sycamore Eagle

Da

EVENT: Denton Arts & Jazz Festival ADMISSION: FREE ATTENDANCE: 200,000+ SITE: Quakertown Park (formerly Civic Center Park), 321 E. McKinney, Denton, TX 76201 MAILING ADDRESS: Denton Festival Foundation, P.O. Box 2104, Denton, TX 76202 DATE: Friday, April 23, 5 pm-11 pm; Saturday, April 24, 10 am-11 pm; Sunday, April 25, 11 am-9 pm PHONE: (940) 565-0931; FAX: (940) 566-7007; INTERNET: www.dentonjazzfest.com

Center for Visual Arts Bell & Mulberry

Mulberry

.

Austin

Locust

To Ft. Worth

2

lla

sD

r.

.

Quakertown Park

Texas Woman’s University

4

1

McKinney St.

Dr

Friday 5 p.m. - 11 p.m. Saturday, 10 a.m. - 11 p.m. Sunday 11 a.m. - 9 p.m.

Directions: From I-35E, North or South, go East on Hwy. 380. Exit 469 to Bell Ave. Go South on Bell to Festival grounds on right in Quakertown Park.

Courthouse Square

Selby House

or th

7 Stages of Continuous Music & Entertainment!

Historical Park of Denton County (Corner of Carroll & Sycamore)

5W

Center for Visual Arts Lot (Corner of Bell & Mulberry)

Carroll Blvd.

Courthouse Square 5

Bell

Withers St.

Civic Center (321 E. McKinney) Wells Fargo Bank Lot (Corner of Austin & Mulberry)

Ave.

Locust

Carroll Blvd.

= public parking within walking distance

I-35N to Okla.

TWU 6 TWU

Elm

No Coolers or Dogs

Brian Clancy Group

I-3

JAZZ STAGE

Budweiser

rt W

04 21 10

Wells Fargo/Budweiser

Fo

Arts & Jazz

I-35 To D E alla s


14

SENIOR CENTER CRAFTERS

OUTDOOR FINE ARTISTS O-1

Bill & Marion Graham . . . . . . . . . .Metal Art

Hardy, AR

O-30

Graham Metal Art

O-2

Jake Rhoads . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Tile Mosaics

O-3

04 21 10

O-5

Sarah Bunch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Jewelry

Marquette, KS

O-31

Stan Slater . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Wood Crafts

Fayetteville, AR

O-32

Austin, TX

O-33

Kanjana Stearns . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Clay Flowers

Denton, TX

O-34

Kris Kistner . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Photography

Choctaw, OK

O-35

Miki Oliver . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Stained Glass

Colleyville, TX

O-36

John Cox . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Fused Glass

Kaufman, TX

O-37

Susan Steblein . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Jewelry

Tulsa, OK

O-38

Gloria Shanahan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Pencil & Charcoal

Plano, TX

Cindy Liu . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Mixed Media Elizabeth Sullivan . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Watercolor Patrick Sullivan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Watercolor Tommy Thompson . . . . . . . . . . . . .Acrylics/Mixed Media

Shawnee, KS

Hanna De Volska . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Jewelry

O-41

Stephen Hall . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Photography Ken Carpenter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Jewelry

Elgin, TX Kyle, TX Fort Worth, TX Fort Worth, TX Beggs, OK Murchison, TX

Ken Carpenter Jewelry

O-19

Donato Gonzales . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Jewelry

Flower Mound, TX

2 Hawks

O-20

Suely Lohr . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Mosaic Art

Arygle, TX

Star Mosaics

O-21

Drew Mounce . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Acrylics

Manchaca, TX

Young Mounce Studios

O-22

Larry Tallent . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Jewelry

Norman, OK

Larry Tallent Jewelry

O-23, 24 Robert Powell . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Metal Art

Nacogdoches, TX

Metal Art Creations

O-25

Darren Heppel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Fused Glass Jewelry/Bowls

Dallas, Texas

Heppel Art Glass & Jewelry

O-26

Robert Hale . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Jewelry

North Branch, MN

Creations by Hand

O-27

Anne Vogt . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Jewelry

Estes Park, CO

Anne Vogt Jewelry

O-29

Allison Britt . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Jewelry

Fort Worth, TX Springfield, IL

Ernie Benton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Acrylics

Justin, TX Albuquerque, NM

Cathie Swearingen . . . . . . . . . . . .Pottery

Krum, TX Weatherford, TX

Unique Lee Pottery

Stephen Hall Photography

O-18

Marc & Wendy Zoschke . . . . . . . .Jewelry

Krystal Shelton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Pottery

La Mesa, CA

Amber Art

O-17

Vince McCall . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Photography

CAS Pottery

Thompson Fine Art

O-16

Smithville, TX

Wildlife & Nature Photography

Majestic Art

O-13 O-14 O-15

Russell Smith & Barbara Samuelson . . . . Jewelry

O-39, 40 Dan Caldemeyer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Photography

Gloria Shanahan Fine Art in Pencil

O-12

Arlington, TX

Strictly Earnest

Nature’s Finest Art

O-11

Marla Cook . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Gourd Sculptures

Vetro Caldo Designs

John Cox Artisan

O-10

Plano, TX

Artistic Solutions Ink

Natural Accents

O-9

Tony Holman . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Pottery

Scattered Light Jewelry

Kistner Photography

O-8

Moore, OK

Uncommon Vessels

All Clay

O-7

Louanne Duckworth . . . . . . . . . . . .Jewelry Holman Pottery

Wicked Stepsisters Jewelry

O-6

Phoenix, AZ

Louanne’s Fine Art Jewelry

Pendulum & Pen Ink

Lisa Brown/Haley Holmes . . . . . .Jewelry

Robert & Faye Boyce . . . . . . . . . . .Copper & Glass Sculpture Shooting Star

Rock Candy Jewelry

O-4

Austin, TX

Darren Minke Art

Mindful Mosaics

Arts & Jazz

Darren Minke . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Digital Art

O-42, 43 UNT Clay Guild . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Pottery O-44 Connie Nicholson . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Oils/Pastels O-45 Sandra Smith . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Jewelry

Denton, TX Lewisville, TX Arlington, Texas

Art Art Designs

O-46

Robert Hinton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Acrylics

Sioux Falls, SD

Nature’s Whisper

O-47

Debra & Dolton Roberts . . . . . . . .Metal Art

Capitan, NM

Circle D Metal Art

O-48

Delpfine Welch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Jewelry

Austin, TX

Delpfine Welch Designs

O-49

Carrie Torres . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Pottery

Lubbock, TX

Cabos

O-50

Ginger Peterson . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Beaded Tableware

Parker, CO

Artifex

O-51

Mary Carradine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Photography

Carrollton, TX

Mcdesignsart

O-52

Sean Corner . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Clay Sculpture

Wichita, KS

Sean Corner Sculptures

O-53, 54 John & Barb Burnett . . . . . . . . . . . .Pottery

Howard, CO

Burnett’s Pottery

O-55

Sue Rogers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Jewelry

Dallas, TX

SROriginals

O-56

Ronia Grillos/GarWatrous . . . . . . . Hats

Freedom, CA

Head ‘N Home

O-57

Susan Kennedy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Ceramics

Waco, TX

Niko Weissenberger

Hot Springs, AR

AEB Design

CIVIC CENTER FINE ARTISTS A-1

Larry Bridges . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Pen & Ink/Watercolor

Brownwood, TX

A-19

Larry Bridges Studio & Gallery

A-2

Lon Erwin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Wood Turned Bowls/Vases

Dewey, OK

A-20

Erwin Woodturning

A-3

Bobby Castlebury . . . . . . . . . . . . .Photography/Sculptures Dan Brown . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Watercolor

Brookston, TX

Jim & Susan Huckaby . . . . . . . . . .Pottery

Fort Worth, TX Sanger, TX

Small House Pottery

A-6

Leo Spriggs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Oils

Lewisville, TX

Serene Scapes

A-7

Yeongsin Song . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Oils/Acrylics

Denton, TX

Sysakys

A-8

Christie Wood . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Stained Glass

Denton, TX

Art Glass Ensembles

A-9

Stan & Connie Buss . . . . . . . . . . .Wood Kitchen Accessories

Elk City, OK

Sturdy Oak Wood Crafts

A-10

Steve Hawkins . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Metal Sculpture

Heath, TX

Hawkins Metal Works

A-11

Dalton Poole . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Pottery

Tecumseh, OK

Good Earth Pottery

A-12

Tom Retz . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Blown Glass

Wichita, KS

Retz Glass

A-13

Britt & Melinda Volker . . . . . . . . .Photography

Wylie, TX

Volker Images

A-14

Monica Fallini . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Oils/Acrylics

Naples, TX

MF Fine Art

A-15

Richard Lindsay . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Jewelry

Santa Fe, NM

Richard Lindsay Designs

A-16

Bill Scott . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Watercolor

San Antonio, TX

Bill Scott, Artist of Nature

A-17

Alfred Lee . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Paper & Nature Sculptures

Houston, TX

Alfred Lee Gallery of Houston

A-18

Pauline & Brian Vaughn . . . . . . . .Fused Glass Tortolita Creations

Paula Cadle . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Pottery

Arlington, TX

A-21

Brad Foster . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Pen & Ink

Irving, TX

Jabberwocky Graphix

Dan Brown Art of Texas

A-5

Austin, TX

Buy My Pottery

Castlebury Wildlife Art

A-4

William Stidham . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Watercolor William K Stidham – Art

Manana, AZ

A-22 A-23

Frank Sowells, Jr. . . . . . . . . . . . . .Oils/Acrylics/Watercolor Susan Best . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Acrylic Collage

Kaufman, TX Fischer, TX

Susan Best Mixed Media

A-24

Jan Byron . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Mixed Media Figures

Tecumseh, OK

At Home & Abroad

A-25

Todd Adams . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Photography

Flower Mound, TX

Todd’s Photography

A-26 A-27

Jo Edwards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Oils Betsy Bracken/Tom Lethco . . . .Jewelry

Rosenberg, TX Arboles, CO

2 B Jewelry

A-28

David Broussard . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Steel Sculpture

Dallas, Texas

Jeweled Steel by Broussard

A-29

Paula Hill . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Pastels

Grand Prairie, TX

Pastels by Paula

A-30

Natasha Mylius . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Oils

Round Rock, TX

Natasha Mylius Fine Art

A-31

Leigh Navarro . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Jewelry

Austin, TX

Leighelena

A-32

Jackie Buffington . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Watercolor

Burleson, TX

His Wings

A-33

Michael Stipek . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Photography

Denver, CO

Afterimage

A-34 A-35 A-36

Denise Kollaritsch . . . . . . . . . . . . .Fused Glass Jewelry/Plates

Nacogdoches, TX

The Blue Lizard

John English . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Photography

Abilene, TX

English’s Photography

A-37

Mark Jimenez . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Jewelry

Albuquerque, NM

Silver Mountain Designs

A-38

Visual Arts Society of Texas . . .Hosts & Hostesses

Denton, TX

1. Joyce Ashcraft 2. Bettie Ford 3. Barbara Crowell 4. Delores Daniels 5. Hanci Tollefson 6. Shelly Kristick 7. Jane Lantrip 8. Helen Smith 9. Lois Small 10. Dorothy Brown 11. Willie Veroche 12. MaryNell Kaufman


15

Nature photographer will return to Denton

Arts & Jazz

04 21 10

SETTING THE COURSE SETTING THE COURSE SETTING THE COURSE W E’LL G ET Y OU T HERE

Courtesy photo

English shot this photo at Saguaro National Monument. If you think of a photographer as someone who works in the comfort of an air-conditioned studio, never lifting a finger except to push the shutter, think again. Wildlife and nature photographer John English regularly tramps through wild country to capture the dramatic images he produces. “I once spent 13 hours in a blind waiting to get a picture,” he says. He travels throughout the West finding birds, animals, plants and landscapes to photograph. English’s interest in art comes from one of his ancestors, Julian Onderdonk, known as the bluebonnet painter of Texas. “In the early ‘80s, I had a photography business, weddings and portraits. Then, my interest gravitated to wildlife and nature. I enjoy the scenics, bird and all kinds of wildlife.” He doesn’t just ramble around snapping pictures. He always has a plan. “I do a lot of research on the area I’m planning to visit, books, magazines, the internet. I plan the trip, but

I’m flexible. GPS is a real asset. The program I have can pull up hotels, so I can book my reservation for the evening. Technology has definitely made my life easier.” He travels all over Texas and Oklahoma showing and selling his work at festivals. “It’s a lot of work, but I enjoy it. My wife doesn’t go on the shooting trips, but she does travel to the shows and helps with selling. We look forward to the shows. Over the years, we’ve made friends with other artists and repeat customers. It’s good to see them.” He says he particularly enjoys the Denton festival because the sales are good, the show is well run and he enjoys the music. “The volunteers are terrific,” he says. “I always thank them for their efforts. For English, his photography is much more than a way to make a living. I love to share the beauty of nature and wild places through photographs. And, it’s gratifying to see the number of people who buy the very things I enjoy most.”

NORTHSTAR BANK OF TEXAS Proudly Supports

The Denton Arts & Jazz Festival Thank You to all of the organizers, participants, sponsors, artists & performers for all of your hard work in making this festival such a wonderful addition to life in Denton, Texas! DENTON - CORPORATE 400 N. Carroll Blvd. 940.591.1200

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16 Seventh stage added to festival Arts & Jazz

Let Your Neighbor Cut Your Hair.

04 21 10

717 I-35 E. South (940) 565-6487

832 W. University (940) 383-4356

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Still ready to play? Hungry? JazzFest closes at 11pm but...

Courtesy photo

Dancers perform on the Festival Stage during last year’s event. University of North Texas musicians have played a big part in the Denton Arts & Jazz Festival since its beginning. But now, they will play an even bigger part. This year, the event adds a seventh stage to Quakertown Park, the University of North Texas Showcase Stage. “It gives us a chance to show more of jazz groups than we have in the past,” said Jay Saunders, a UNT faculty member. “Where we used to have, at most, five or six hours, now, we have the whole weekend. We can showcase some of the smaller groups and some of the vocal soloists.” It also provides an opportunity for audiences to see what Saunders calls “ethno musicology,” or world music from the university–mariachi music, along with the UNT Steel Drum Band and the African Drumming and Dance Group. Specialty groups such as Colin Campbell’s fusion/funk band, the U-Tubes Trombone Ensemble and the Zebras Keyboard Ensemble, which will highlight the music of guitarist Pat Metheny, will play during the weekend.

All the various groups will be selling CDs of their music during the festival. True jazz buffs will gather in front of the Jazz Stage in the area behind City Hall. The coolest jazz, the brightest stars, will perform. Headliners are Chick Corea, Jimmie Vaughan, Lou Ann Barton and Denton’s own Grammy-winning Brave Combo. In between, guests can enjoy such groups as Fingerprints, the UNT One O’Clock Lab Band, and a tribute to Duke Ellington with Dave Zoller. The KNTU Roving River Stage, will be just that, roving groups that will provide music around the park. Baloney Moon, Sweetwater Jazz Quartet, and the Chisholm Trail Cowboys, with be a few of the mobile musicians. An eclectic mix of blues and more can be heard on the Budweiser Courtyard Stage in front of City Hall. From the Caribbean beat of the Panhandlers’ Steel Drum Band to the mournful wail of Upallnight Blues Band, from the familiar rock of Rivers West to the entertaining tones of Fortified Fun, the Courtyard

Stage offers a wide variety of sounds. Dancers of all ages perform on the Festival Stage, sponsored by the Denton Record Chronicle. Tiny ballerinas share time with the rhythmic dancers from elementary schools. Middle school and high school dance/drill teams strut their stuff, along with dancers from studios and conservatories across North Texas. And, the senior crowd won’t be outdone, as they take stage in groups specializing in tap or modern jazz dancing. Target’s Center Stage, inside the Senior Center, provides the venue for many of the community and school musical groups. Choirs and choruses from schools across the county, as well as community jazz groups, bell bands and other musical ensembles will perform on this stage. On the north side of the park, the Wells Fargo Celebration Stage will feature local groups including the North Central Texas College Jazz Band, the First United Methodist Church Big Band and several area high school bands.

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Glass artists show their talents Each year, Denton artist Christie Wood creates one big show piece for the festival. This year, it is an Art Deco interpretation of a lotus flower.

17

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Arts & Jazz

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04 21 10

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Today, Brian says he has trended away from the larger pieces because of the economy. “We produce functional art with vibrant colors and keep the price in a range we know people can afford.”

Industrial

always made art. Before she began The Blue Lizard, her dichroic glass jewelry company, she worked with pottery and painting. “The glass is more challenging,” she says. “It’s not as forgiving as painting or pottery, and the colors are so exciting. Kollaritsch, who lives in Nacogdoches, does from six to nine shows each year, three or four in the spring and three or four in the fall. “The excitement of being around people drives me. You get to know your customers, and some have become really good friends.” Tortolita Creations The functionality of glass is what appealed to Brian Vaughn, who with his wife Pauline has Tortolita Creations. “ That’s what excited me. Most everything we make is usable.” Usable it might be, but the spare elegance of Tortolita Creations bowls and plates belie their pedestrian background. Using vivid colors in unusual combinations, the pieces have a contemporary feel, a geometric look. “Pauline has the greatest color sense,” Vaughn says, “and she’s very fast. She does most of the smaller pieces.” Pauline is responsible for getting the couple into glass. About seven years ago, she took a course at a community college in Tucson and three days later, called Brian to come pick her up. She’d bought a kiln. Brian had taken a hiatus from work to build the couple’s home. “I thought, ‘If I learn to cut glass, I won’t have to go out in this 110-degree heat.” That started the business.

Locust

We drink from it. We look through it. We store things in it. We take it for granted. But, in the hands of an artist, it becomes a thing of beauty. Growing in popularity, art glass shows up in galleries across the country as works of art. Over the past few years, a growing number of glass artists are showing their talents at the Denton Arts & Jazz Festival. From hand-fused glass beads no bigger than your thumbnail to doors and windows, these artists take an everyday material and turn it into something enchanting. Art Glass Ensembles Denton artist Christie Wood works on a big scale, creating windows and doors in intricate patterns of stained and beveled glass. “I love the way the art work changes depending on the lighting … the time of year, the time of day, the cloud cover … it goes beyond what you have planned.” Starting as a hobbyist, she quit her day job in 1995 and established Art Glass Ensembles. Since, she’s created windows, doors and panels for both residences and businesses. “The enjoyment factor is tremendous,” she says of the Arts & Jazz Festival. “The organization is wonderful and the people are great. I can’t say a make a lot of money, I look at it as an advertising venue, and people do remember and call me later when they are ready for a piece.” Each year, Wood creates one big show piece for the festival. This year, it is an Art Deco interpretation of a lotus flower. The Blue Lizard Denise Kollaritsch has

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18 Festival in photographs Arts & Jazz

04 21 10

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One Look and You’ll See the Difference; One Visit and You’ll Experience the Difference. Festival attendees will be treated to a wide variety of dance styles as well as an array of tasty treats. There’s plenty of entertainment for kids of all ages.

Our residents enjoy clean, modern and well designed living quarters, making a feel of home.

Our dining area is spacious, beautiful and enjoyed by all our residents.

Courtesy photos

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19

Festival food major draw

Arts & Jazz

04 21 10 24 Hours

(940) 387-6589 Courtesty photo

There’s something for everyone to enjoy, including mouth-watering fajitas.

ing the year, have the routine down to a science. And, for many of them, it’s a part-time avocation that they enjoy.

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Get Your Smile Back

Savor the flavor You may eat health foods and vegetables, lean chicken and cottage cheese the rest of the year, but at the Denton Arts & Jazz Festival, it’s hard to resist the tempting aromas and exciting tastes of true junk food. From a spicy fajita to a cream-topped Belgian waffle, from roasted corn dripping melted butter to sugar-coated funnel cakes, all those scrumptious foods are within reach. As you stroll the grounds of Quakertown Park, take a gustatory tour across the country and around the world. There are Philly steak sandwiches and deep South barbecue, the Louisiana flavors of jambalaya and Cajun chicken, and the allAmerican hamburger and hot dog. Mexico is represented in fajitas, tacos, nachos and quesadillas, while Greece makes an appearance in gyros. You’ll find Jamaican jerked chicken, German sausage and kraut, Cuban sandwiches and Chinese egg rolls. The vendors, many of whom travel from show to show dur-

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EXTRACTIONS Jim Mazer, who roasts almonds and pecans according to an old German recipe, is a winter Texan from Michigan. He loves traveling from the Poteet Strawberry Festival to the Rabbit Festival in Copperas Cove, from the Sandfest in Port Aransas to the German Fest in Wiemar. “We have so much fun down here. We see a good part of the country and meet such interesting people.”

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20 Arts & Jazz

04 21 10

Hot Cats Jam

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BONDURIS MUSIC Courtesy photo

Fort Worth artist Tommy Thompson has been creating art for the Denton Arts & Jazz Festival for the past several years. His whimsical paintings of musical cats appear on all the festival’s printed materials, including the souvenir T-shirts sold at the festival. This year’s painting is titled “Hot Cats Jam.”

Teaching Denton’s Future Stars for Over 20 Years!

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The festival draws more than 200,000 people and its budget is a half million dollars.

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21

Leave Fido at home Over 20 years, audiences at the Denton Arts & Jazz Festival have grown tremendously. The crowds are enormous—more than 200,000 over the weekend. So, the festival organizers ask that you leave your dog and your cooler at home. We all love dogs, but in such crowded conditions, Fido can be frightened, and can frighten

others. The park, with its thousands of people, is no place for dogs during the festival. You can help keep the festival free by leaving your coolers at home. There is no admission charge to the park grounds, no charge for the top-notch entertainment. Your purchase of beverages and food from the foundation booths helps support the festival.

Arts & Jazz

04 21 10

Music scholarship presented Music saturates the Denton Arts & Jazz Festival weekend. It’s everywhere—throughout the grounds, surrounding the artists, enveloping the vendor booths. So, it’s only fitting that the Denton Festival Foundation contributes to music.

The foundation, which produces the festival each year, has contributed to the North Texas Jay Saunders Jazz Scholarship. This year, John Northey, a freshman trumpet player from Seattle, Washington, won the scholarship.

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Courtesy photo

Over the past few years, a growing number of glass artists are showing their talents at the Denton Arts & Jazz Festival. From hand-fused glass beads no bigger than your thumbnail to doors and windows, these artists take an everyday material and turn it into something enchanting.

DU


22 Arts & Jazz

04 21 10

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The Denton Arts & Jazz Festival wishes to thank the following

2010 Sponsors and Members

~ PRESENTING ($50,000+)

PRODUCER ($1,000+)

City of Denton

Denton City Federation of Women’s Clubs Jim McNatt Auto Group Emma & Jim Perry Ramey & King Insurance J. Newton Rayzor Foundation Reddy Ice Bill Utter Ford

~ ENDOWMENT ($40,000+) Denton Record-Chronicle

~ STAR ($30,000+) Budweiser Wells Fargo

PATRON ($500+)

Dallas/Fort Worth Musicians Union Denton Benefit League Denton Convention & Visitor Bureau Target Texas Woman’s University The Dallas Morning News University of North Texas WFAA TV

Black Oak Christopher Bancroft Operations DeBerry Funeral Directors Denton Anesthesiology Associates, P.A. Fallmeadow Apartments Foster’s Western Wear Elisabeth & Alonzo Jamison Mayor Pro Tem Pete Kamp Ann & Ken Newman Meridian Bank of Texas Solemar Springbok Academy The Crouch Group WheelerPress

~ SUSTAINING ($5,000+)

SUPPORTING ($250+)

Charter Communications Greater Denton Arts Council/ The Arts Guild Texas Commission on the Arts Verizon FiOS

Adams Exterminating Co. Anderson, Spector & Co Geri & John Aschenbrenner Banter BCI Mechanical Roni & John Beasley Euline & Horace Brock Mayor Mark Burroughs Carino’s Italian Kitchen – Denton Nancy & Doug Chadwick Steve Coburn, DDS Courthouse Collection Linda Creagh Denton Depot Denton Water Utilities Ehrhart’s Jewelers Jim Engelbrecht, City Council Member Frenchy’s Lawn & Tree Service J. E. Fritz Insurance General Telemarketing International, Inc. Mike Gregory/Gregory Family Law, PC Evelyn & Ray Hair Hayes, Berry, White & Vanzant Charlye Heggins, City Council Member Kimberly Karl & Stan Haddock

~ BENEFACTOR ($20,000+) KNTU FM Radio 88.1

~ ADVOCATE ($10,000+)

~ HEADLINER ($3,000+) Access 1st Capital Bank Baja Smoothies Coca Cola First United Bank (Denton & Krum) NorthStar Bank Sandone Productions Southern Journeys Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital Denton

~ MAJOR ($2,000+) Cooper’s Copies & Printing Denton Municipal Electric Little Guys Movers Silverleaf Resorts Southwest Spirit Magazine 2010 Active Top Hands

Adams, Jamie Alexander, John Alexander, Shelley Aschenbrenner, Geri* Aschenbrenner, John Ashbaugh, Mike Atkins, Tom Atkinson, Gina Ballantine, Jo Ann Barkley, Dolores Barnes, Claralynn Barton, Dixie Batchelder, Paul Beale, Cindy Beasley, John Beasley, Roni Bennington, Andrea Benskin, Linda* Benskin, Lisa* Birden, Mary Bishop, Ricky Borders, Maggie Borders, Monte Boston, Dave Boston, Jayne Brady, Rhonda Branum, Kay Briggs, Diane Briggs, Gordon Brown, Craig Brown, Nicole* Brumley, Danny Burkett, Jon* Burleson, Bruce Burleson, Rita Burtch, Cynthia

Burtch, Rod Byrd, Janette Cannon, Mike Cannon, Shelly Capps, Peggy Carter, Molly Cathro, Kim Chadwick, Doug Chadwick, Nancy Cline, Lauren Cline, Matt Coker, Ed Collins, Carol* Combs, Charles Connors, Carol Ann Cook, Carla Copeland, Whitney Cosimo, Barney Cox, Roger Crowder, Justin Dailey, David Dalton, Elaine Dane, Kay Davis, Carol Dean, Derek Dickenson, Hank Dickson, Jan Dickson, Ken Donoho, Glenda Duffy, Kathleen Dunn, Larry Sue Dziuk, Janice Ehrhart, Jennifer Elliot, Linda Elliot, Tom Evans, Gareth

Evans, Peggy Fallin, Lisa Farquhar, Randee Ferring, Elizabeth Ferring, Reid Fickey, Sue Fitzmorris, Lauren Fleury, Carlos Folse, Carolene Foster, Byrne Foster, Chance Foster, Mark* Foster, Sidd Fraga, Michael* Frederick, Jenny Frederick, Larry Fudge, Kenny Gold, Carolyn* Gold, Curtis Gold, Misty Gosdin, David Green, Dennis Greenlaw, Jean Gross, Jennifer Harrell, Nolene Hawkins, Theresa Hawley, Chris* Haywood, Janette* Hensen, Tamara Hill, Julie Hill, Sondra Hillman, Jan Hindman, Kathy Hindman, Steve Hofherr, Chris Holt, Judd

Lori & Rod McLain Marsh, Paine, Waddill, PC Sherri & Tom Niesen Shea & Wes Patterson Joe Mulroy, City Council Member Neu Pharmacy Diane & Murray Ricks Bette & Bob Sherman Carol & Arvin Short Simmons Floor Covering Southridge Family Medicine

CONTRIBUTING ($100+) AAA Fire Safety Steven Alspach, DDS Thad Bonduris Judy & Lorn Bortnem Briscoe Alignment & Tire Nicole & Craig Brown Peggy & Lee Capps Christian Brothers Automotive Carol Ann Conners Fern Bugg & Ron Dye Carol’s Custom Draperies & Interiors Sharon Casey MD Coffey, Stout & Peace LLP Linda Polo & Charles Combs Crouch Realty Myra Crownover Delva & Marc Culp Denton Community Theatre Missy & Hank Dickenson Kathleen Duffy Jo Ann & Jim Engelbrecht Gaylen Fickey, DDS Michael Fraga Jenny & Larry Frederick Gohlke Building Products Carolyn & Curtis Gold Gail & Finley Graves Dalton Gregory, City Council Member Lareen & Fred Hamilton Janette & Paul Haywood Kathleen & Steve Hindman Peter & Grace Holland Sharon Titterington & Glenn Householder Melinda & James King Susan Curry-Langston Jo Lucas Peter McCleskey Lynn McCreary & Shannon Williams

Holt, Suzy Horn, Jim Horn, Mary Householder, Glenn Householder, Sharon* Howard, Stephen Howell, Jayne Howell, Lee Hyatt, Carol Hyatt, John Ismert, Eleanor Ivory, Jennifer Ivory, Russell Jackson, Dan Jackson, Greg Jackson, Jackie Johnson, Kay Jones, Cooper Jonish, Jeri Jonish, Jim Jordan, Brenda Kamp, Pete Kashka, Maisie Keffer, Lindsay Keffer, Marsha Kelley, James Kelley, Paula Kelly, Pete Kelly, Tom Kennedy, Devin Kennedy, Sue Kimmey, Nanci Kimmey, Ralph King, James King, Jeff King, Kit

King, Melinda* Kirk, David Kish, Larry Kremer, Sharon Lambert, Vic Langa, Don Langa, Pat Langston, Susan C.* Lechler, Kevin* Love, Queenie Lucas, Jo Marcello, Mary Marcello, Ron Matthews, Angie Matthews, Dyann Mauk, Kenny* Mauk, Sandra McCarty, Charles McCleskey, Pete McLain, Lori* Meador, Delaney Milberger, Allen Milberger, Angela Miller, Lindsey Miller, Lisa* Miller, Stan Millichamp, Nancy Monroe, Elizabeth Monroe, Larry Montgomery, Bob Morris, Joe Moses, Bob Mullenweg, Betty Nelson, Jackie Neu, Tammy Nobles, Marlene Nobles, Terry*

Mandy McKinley Evelyn & Jack Miller John H. Miller, Jr. Lisa & Stan Miller Kit King & Bob Montgomery Joe Morris & James Kelley Mulkey-Mason Funeral Homes Marlene & Terry Nobles Nu Art Printing Shirley Ottman Debbie & Hank Paine Paradise Liquors & Foods Patsy & Fred Patterson Rama Pfaffly Norman Pomerance, DDS Barbara & Phil Philips Premier Sales Group Property Search Associates Helene & Kent Ramey Chuck Remley Carol Ridens & Frank Atkins Caryn & Clay Riggs Joanne & Jim Riggs Sandra & Randy Robinson Carol & David Rowley Betty & Joe Roy Jane Ruestmann Brian Rutland Pat & Jay Saunders Liz Seibt & Gerald Young Joy & John Siegmund Glenda Brock & Gerald Simmons Earl Sharp Janet & John Shelton Carrell Ann & Stan Simmons Jean & David Stanley Systeem Medical Information Systems Thomas’ Ethan Allen Interiors Sue & Jack Thomson Mary Denny & Norm Tolpo Debbie & David Vanderlaan Paul Voertman Chris Watts, City Council Member Sonya & Henry Whiddon Diana & Larry Whitlock Wood, Thacker & Weatherly Mary Whisenant Darlene & Mike Whitten Terry & Bob Widmer Rick Woolfolk Yarbrough’s Professional Pharmacy Orr, Kathy Pace, Marcy Paine, Debbie* Paine, Hank Parker, Larry* Parker, Tonya Patterson, Shea* Patterson, Wes Pavelka, Jim Pavelka, Sallie Peace, Kelly Perry, Emma* Pfaffly, Rama* Phillips, Matt Pierce, David Pierson, Patrick Pinson, Joe Pinson, Sara Pistulka, Sandra Polo, Linda Printz, Julia Ramey, Helene Ramey, Kent Ramey, Seth Reed, Hal Reed, Pat Remley, Chuck* Remley, Mike Richards, Emily Ricks, Diane Ricks, Murray* Riggs, Clay* Riggs, Edene* Roberts, Trae Roebken, Bill Rogers, Dale Rogers, Jean Ellen

23

FRIEND ($50+)

Arts & Jazz

Alley Katz Bail Bonds Ananas Home Furnishings Karen & Ray Baker Linda Benskin Lisa Benskin Glenn Bull Jon Burkett Georgianne Burlage Chris & Terri Castaneda Nancy & Jim Cinnater Doreen & Jim Collin Kay Copeland Barney Cosimo Kim & Matt Cupit D.O.M. Fight Gear Dan’s Silverleaf Meredith Denton Jan & Ken Dickson Eagleton Photography Fremaux’s Metropolitan Catering Patrice Frisby Griffin Quality Hair Care H-3 Residential Janna & Chris Hawley Sue & Henry Hays Jane & George Hopkins Hutcherson Corporation Brenda & Phil Jordan Nancy & Terrell King Kevin Lechler Beth Lewis Lanette & Charles McCarty Kenny Mauk Tammy Neu Charldean Newell Outback Hair Carol Phillips Glynnis & Doss Phillips Pilot Point Wood Designs Chris & Todd Price Donna Ramsey Red Door Operations Rich Tone Chorus Edene & Charles Riggs Denise Clyne-Ruch Phil Schenk Cindy Schleinat Debbie Shepherd Howard Smith Springer & Lyle Lynn & Terry Thompson Tri-Tex Cabinets

Rouse, Helene Roy, Betty Roy, Joe Ruch, Denise Clyne* Ruestmann, Jane* Ruggini, Amy Rundus, Kristi Rutland, Brian* Sandelin, Bruce Sandelin, Karen Sanders, Kelly Saunders, Jay Saunders, Pat* Seibt, Betty Kay Seibt, John Seibt, Liz* Seifert, Susan Shepherd, Debbie Sherman, Jud Sherman, Pat Shinpaugh, Tarah Short, Arvin Short, Carol* Siegmund, John Siegmund, Joy* Simmons, Carrell Ann* Simmons, Stan Sims, Debbie Smalley, Jaci Smith, Judy Smith, Mike Smith, Vicki Stanley, David Stanley, Jean* Stevens, Sara Ann Stewart, Jason Stewart, Kristin

04 21 10

Strecher, Phaedra Sutherland, Brian Swenson, Kayla Thames, Jackie Thornton, Alan Tieman, Kay Trigubetz, Linda Tse, Darius Turner, Forest Vickery, Gary Vogt, Janet Ward, Diana Weatherly, Grace Weldon, Mike Weldon, Stacy Whitworth, Rashynda Wilkins, Jesse Williams, Larry Wineski, James Wright, George Wright, Patti Young, Gerald * Denotes Board Members

2010 Supporting Top Hands Casey, David Ebersole, Lynn Hargrove, Arline & John Heath, Pat Jamison, Alonzo Kingery, Jean Merritt, Marcia Steger, Linda Taboada, Erwin Whisenant, Mary DU


24 Arts & Jazz

04 21 10

Music joins us together

Whether it’s a solo performance or voices joined in song, music is a powerful form of expression. It’s an experience we can all share. We’re glad to celebrate the Denton Arts and Jazz Festival. We have over 135 locations in the DFW Metroplex to serve you.

wellsfargo.com © 2010 Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. All rights reserved. Member FDIC. (128134_15840) DU


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