2016 Fall

Page 1

LLC

FALL 2016

LOCAL ARTIST SHARES AND INSPIRES By Patricia Sanders

always wanted to [create] a character that would live forever and ever, that everyone knows,” Patty Sjolin says. “I want it to give that feeling in your heart.” Sjolin is an artist who started out in a small town in Texas, but whose concepts have reached around the world and been loved by millions of young girls. During the 1990s, Sjolin worked at Lisa Frank Inc., one of the world’s most creative and successful design companies at the time, known internationally for its school supplies, toys, and clothing for girls with colorful, whimsical designs featuring cute animals. Sjolin came to Miami last March to be near her daughter, son and three grandchildren, and has been establishing a new career here as a painter and muralist. “Art has always been part of my life,” Sjolin says. She started drawing and painting when she was still a young child. “I drew all the time, all the time,” she recalls. In high school Sjolin was known for creating posters and signs for school activities. She left home at 18 and began to travel around the country looking for a new home. Unable to afford canvases, she painted on saw blades and giant catulpa leaves in Arkansas, rocks when she lived in Utah - whatever was at hand. When she found herself in Flagstaff after her truck broke down, she earned extra money painting murals all over the bar where she worked. A recent project, which sold almost immediately, were these fanciful roosters painted on tin.

The Promise of Taliesin Page 12

Michaele Cozzi

Artist Patty Sjolin, Continued on page 36

Page 7

GARY VESSELS: GLOBE-MIAMI'S COTTON MAN Story and photos by Patricia Sanders

If you've ever heard Gary Vessels talk about cotton, you know what a passion for your work sounds like. Vessels, who lives in Miami, is a cotton broker and has been in the cotton business for 44 years. He will tell you everything you could possibly want to know about cotton, from how Napoleon spurred the cotton industry in Western Europe to how many strands of lint there are in a cotton boll. Cotton Man, Continued on page 34

Antique Shops

BERNARD’S COFFEE STATION

TO MIAMI

Southeastern Arizona Behavioral

EH

as

kin

sR

d

TriCity Furniture e

Downtown Glob obe En ntra trance nce

St uma Yum

We W este ter n Repro Rep Re prog og gra raph ph hiic s

Area Walking Maps ro

Devereaux Street, Continued on page 37

HACKNEY

YES STERD DAY’S TR REAS SURES

60

NB

358 Devereaux is larger than it looks, with a downstairs and a garage. All of the five houses on Devereaux have clawfoot bathtubs and the original kitchen sinks.

JAMMERZ BAR

By Patricia Sanders

If you've lived in Globe a long time, you might remember when Joe Gundry owned the Texaco Service Station at the corner of Hill and Maple streets – in the 1950s and early 60s, it was a place where many of Globe's high school boys got their first job and learned about responsibility and customer service. The building on the corner of Maple and Devereaux, now known as the Tiger's Den, used to be Wyant's One Stop Food Market.

MCS SP PAD FORD

DRIFT INN INN SALOON

Bringing color and community to Globe

MCSPADDEN FORD

tor ic al eum

BROAD STREE EET

EL RANCHITO

ENTRANCE TO GLOBE DISTRICT OFF HWY 60

THE C CAT ATH ATHOU OUSEE

DeMarco’s DeMarc os

TRI CITTY FURNITTUREE

State S tate tatte e Farm Farm F. Sh F. S Shi hipl pley ey Chambe Chambe Cham mbe er of Com Comm ommer mmerrce

YU MA

The Renaissance on Devereaux Street

Page 23

Centerfold


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
2016 Fall by Globe Miami Times - Issuu