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Pastels make for appealing exhibit

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Public Notices

Orchard Road closure a ects gallery access

BY SONYA ELLINGBOE SELLINGBOE@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

A catalog note in the current catalog of the 19th Mile High International Pastel Exhibition says that there were 328 entries received for this semi-annual exhibit and 84 were selected by juror Aaron Schuerr for this show, which runs until July 1 at e paintings in this appealing exhibit lean strongly toward landscapes, but there also is still life — look for Mary Cassidy’s “Color of Nature,” freshly dug carrots and radishes — and the winning piece: “Peek-a-Boo” by Je Slemons of

Curtis Center for the Arts, 2349 E. Orchard Road, Greenwood Village. (Note: Orchard is blocked west of the Curtis Center and we had to drive over to University and approach it from that direction. e center is at the northwest corner of Orchard and University.)

Greeley, featuring a very inviting chocolate glazed doughnut, with the rst bite already gone from it! e Award of Excellence from Terry Ludwig Pastels went to Stacy Roberts’ “Just Before the Morning,” with a gray wolf looking back at the foothills landscape it had been visiting ... the viewer thinks there’s some sort of story there ... perhaps something had been especially tasty!

First place was awarded to Yidan Guo’s “Immigrant Women Series — Self Portrait,” with dramatic lighting on the face, colorful clothing and a hazy background. Guo also has an appealing portrait of “Dee” in the same Immigrant Women Series. A dinner party is planned, it seems, in Leslie Trujillo-Batts’ “Black Tie A air,” with a stemmed silver bowl and tray o ering beautifully colored fruits: grapes, pear, berries, plums ... and a silver, bone-handled fruit knife, like my grandmother would serve after dinner with pears. Big skies appear in all sorts of weather: behind a snowy peak, in a

SEE PASTELS, P22

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