JH Public Art 2024 Impact Report

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Community as Canvas, Creativity as Catalyst.

Mission

2024 Staff

2024 Board

JH Public Art forges partnerships for the integration of art into any environment, to inspire lasting cultural, educational, and economic benefits.

Carrie Geraci | Executive Director

Robin Cameron | Project Manager

Susan Durfee | Grant Writer

Kate Vranac I Marketing

Kea Molnar, Chair

R. Jason Snider, Vice Chair

Chris Ludwig, Treasurer

Kristin Revill, Secretary

Alexis Dittmer

Ali Egan

Sarah Fischel

Sally Maca

John Stricklin

Public Art Task Force

Tammi Hanawalt, National Museum of Wildlife Art

Katy Ann Fox, Artist, Gallery Owner

Morgan Jaouen, History Jackson Hole

Chris Ludwig, Two Ocean Builders

Stephanie Wright, CLB Architects

James Ablondi, Prospect Studio

Charlie Hagen, Epsilon Technology

COVER IMAGE: Damma Newadaygwap Gay Nasoowazeet; Never Forget Our Language by Nanibah Chacon

Producing bold, significant artworks that transform community spaces requires substantial investment of time and capital several years in advance.

Become a visionary investor in JH Public Art today!

The Catalyst Fund gives JH Public Art a competitive edge to engage with exceptional public art opportunities when they arise, to match funding to close a budgetary gap, or build capacity at a pivotal moment. Importantly, the Catalyst Fund helps JH Public Art commission world-renowned artists of the highest caliber to ensure our permanent collection of public art honors history, inspires reflection, fosters dialogue, and connects us with diverse cultures.

Thank you to the founding investors that launched the Catalyst Fund in 2023.

LandSignals

Jackson Hole Public Art produced LandSignals to envision a future that more authentically includes Indigenous voices and traditional ecological knowledge to help us better steward the natural resources and cultural heritage of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem. Four Indigenous artists from around the country were commissioned to install new work at the Center for the Arts, Russ Garaman Park, the Jackson Hole History Museum, and the Greater Yellowstone Visitor Center at the Elk Refuge.

LandSignals is funded in part with a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts and with generous support from Mary Armour, Agnes Bourne, Petria and Scott Fossel, Leslye and

David Hardie, Kate Jensen, Carrie F. Kirkpatrick DA Fund of CFJH, Marshall and Veronique Parke, Katrina and Brandon Ryan, Christy Walton, Community Foundation of Jackson Hole, US Bank, History Jackson Hole, Center for the Arts, Wyoming Arts Council, Wyoming Cultural Trust Fund, Wyoming Humanities, Wyoming Wilderness Association, National Elk Refuge, The Nature Conservancy, Grand Teton Association, Friends of the Bridger-Teton, JH Travel and Tourism Board, Jackson Hole Land Trust, Charter Communications and Ovation TV, Teton Recreation District, Fighting Bear Antiques, The Alpine House, Mountain Modern, Outpost, Town Square Inns, and Snake River Brewing.

Nanibah Chacon

(Diné [Navajo] and Chicana Artist) (United States, b. 1980)

Title: Damma Newadaygwap Gay

Nasoowazeet; Never Forget Our Language

Materials: Professional-grade Acrylic Paint on Aluminum Panel

On view now at History Jackson Hole

Nanibah’s mural serves as a conceptual billboard, reclaiming space for the Shoshone people, whose ancestors called this region home. The number of Eastern Shoshone language speakers continues to decrease dramatically. This mural illuminates the challenges

of developing a written language for people who have historically relied on oral traditions. It acknowledges the colonial violence of forced English language learning and the delicate balance of working with community members to create a space for meaningful dialogue about language preservation. As the Eastern Shoshone community faces a critical juncture in its linguistic history, this mural serves as a powerful reminder of the importance of honoring and revitalizing its ancestral language.

FEATURED 2024 PROJECT: LANDSIGNALS

Ben Pease

(Crow/ Northern Cheyenne) (United States, b. 1989)

Title: Reimagining Connections 2024

Materials: 3M Vinyl on Aluminum Panel, Reproduction of Original Acrylic on Canvas

Funded by: National Endowment for the Arts, Grand Teton Association, Wyoming Wilderness Association, The Nature Conservancy Wyoming, Wyoming Arts Council, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Friends of the Bridger Teton

On view now at the Greater Yellowstone Visitor Center

Ben Pease’s mural invites us to rethink our understanding of wilderness. Rather than viewing it as an untouched, isolated place, we celebrate it as a living, evolving space deeply

that Indigenous peoples—such as the Shoshone-Bannock, Crow, and many other nations—have nurtured with these lands for generations.

Acknowledging the historical displacement and disruption of Indigenous stewardship, we hope to inspire a renewed perspective on engaging with the natural world and our shared connections. We envision a future where Indigenous communities reclaim their roles as caretakers of their ancestral lands, collaborating to restore balance and stewardship. Embracing co-management honors traditional ecological knowledge and promotes sustainable practices that benefit all. By integrating Indigenous leadership into the stewardship of wilderness, we

Marlena Myles

(Spirit Lake Dakota/Mohegan/Muscogee)

Title: Whirlwind’s Guidance

Augmented Reality Art Installation

Locations: Russ Garaman Park and Center for the Arts Park

On view through the summer of 2025

Marlena’s artwork invites the viewer to step into an immersive journey where the spirit of Whirlwind weaves a thread that connects all life on earth, guided by Indigenous wisdom.

AS YOU WALK AMONG THE SWAYING GRASS & RUSTLING LEAVES, WHIRLWIND’S VOICE REVEALS THE PLANT NATION AS OUR TEACHERS.

Through augmented reality, the viewer encounters each plant’s spirit and learns its traditional Indigenous name, carrying ancestral knowledge and spiritual reverence. This living tapestry invites you to understand that we are not separate from nature but an integral part of its sacred balance, guided by the teachings of those who have lived in harmony with Grandmother Earth for generations. Embrace this connection to envision a future where harmony, sustainability, and Indigenous knowledge shape the path forward.

FEATURED 2024 PROJECT: LANDSIGNALS

Rachel Olivia Berg

(Mnicoujou Lakota, Mexican, and German lineages) (United States, b. 1982)

Title: Listening to Inyan

Materials: Pal Tiya Clay, Braided Fishing Line, Fishing Swivels, Cotton Fabric, Thread, Net, and Metal Hoop

On view through May 2025 at the Center for the Arts

Listening to Inyan centers the Teton Mountain Range of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem (GYE) and Indigenous perspectives on ecological stewardship. Berg’s site-specific, threedimensional exhibition comes face to face with humankind’s relationship

to the changing landscape. Focusing on the Snake River as the essential life force of the locale, the sculpture represents 365 cast stones from the Snake River each with a unique species of being that live within the GYE printed using the cyanotype (sunprint) process. Berg calls upon Lakota symbols, stone, and the sacred color blue to reinforce the knowledge within Indigenous communities that all living beings are connected and that parts of nature like stone, water, sun, and moon are understood to be living.

Pretty Shield Foundation Lighted Teepee Display

Pretty Shield Foundation’s spectacular Lighted Teepees returned, this year to the Center for the Arts Park. They were illuminated from October 23rd to October 29th and celebrated with a free Community Celebration on Monday October 28th at 5pm, during which Dr. Shane Doyle (Apsáalooke) presided over the ceremonies that

included live drumming with Young Sky Nation and Hoop Dancer Jaden Ferris (Eastern Shoshone) Sponsored by: US Bank, Center for the Arts, Wyoming Arts Council, Wyoming Wilderness Association, JH Travel and Tourism Board, Fighting Bear Antiques, Outpost, Town Square Inns, Snake River Brewing

Stewardship Through Art

Moderator: Ninabah Winton (Diné)

Artists: Ben Pease (Crow/ Northern Cheyenne), Marlena Myles (Spirit Lake Dakota/ Mohegan/Muscogee),

Rachel Olivia Berg (Mnicoujou Lakota, Mexican and German lineages), Nanibah “Nani” Chacon (Diné [Navajo] and Chicana Artist)

Sponsored by: Wyoming Humanities Council

Discussion centered on how art can encourage connection to the land; how Indigenous lifeways and thinking inform place and practice; as well as how cultural and artistic stewardship align to intervene in public spaces in pursuit of envisioning a future that authentically includes Indigenous voices and knowledge to better steward the natural resources and cultural heritage of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem.

Arts For All Grants

Funding: Town of Jackson, Teton County

Nearly $46,000 in Arts for All funding provided by Teton County and the Town of Jackson was awarded to 16 local arts and culture organizations. These grants provide direct support to organizations and individual artists to address gaps in existing art programs, broaden public access to the arts, enhance arts education, support the production and presentation of new works, and provide ongoing operating assistance.

JH Public Art facilitated the Arts for All grant process with a panel of local community members with diverse experience in the arts who scored and discussed applications. Examples of funded grants include: pARTners efforts to expose local second graders to the Native American culture of the Shoshone and Arapaho tribes through various artistic opportunities; a new program of Cathedral Voices Chamber to share resources, experience, and

expertise with local music educators; and Teton Music School’s annual TMS student showcase that offers vital performance opportunities and welcomes community members to celebrate music making.

The following 16 local organizations were awarded a total of $45,754 in funding with individual grants from $1,754 to $3,000:

Art Association of Jackson Hole Cathedral Voices

Community Center for the Arts

Coombs Outdoors

Dancers’ Workshop

Grand Teton Music Festival

Jackson Hole Community Radio

Jessyca Valdez Perez

National Museum of Wildlife Art

MusicLand

Off Square Theatre

pARTners

People Spread Love

Riot Act

Teton Artlab

Teton Music School

GlowNights 2023/2024

Artists/Presenters: Pneuhaus + Liquid PXL

Location: Teton Village Commons + Center for the Arts Park

Dates: December 22, 2023 - March 5, 2024

Sponsors: Teton Village Association, Jackson Hole Travel & Tourism Board, Jackson Hole Mountain Resort, Wyoming Arts Council, Center for the Arts, Outpost, Two Ocean Builders

Jackson Hole Public Art, in partnership with Teton Village Association, Jackson Hole Mountain Resort, and Center for the Arts, brought a winter of glowing sculptures to Teton Village Commons and the Center for the Arts Park. GlowNights, in its sixth year, has become an anticipated part of winter celebrations.

Two large-scale lighted sculptures were featured. Cloud Lights, landing in the Teton Village Commons at Jackson Hole Mountain Resort, showcased illuminated cloud shapes that pull the sky closer to the earth. Created by designers and fabricators Pneuhaus, these artful inflatables cast warm colors that glow and reflect in snow. At the Center for the Arts Park, 5 Electric Dandelions rose 25 feet above the landscape. Created by Liquid PXL, a Los Angeles art collective, the sculpture used LED lights to cascade twinkling colors high above the ground.

2024 MoonShot 5x5

MoonShot 5x5 Creative Pitches

Walker Young - Pando Park - winner

Jesse Osborne - Home on the Green

James Ablondi - Amplifier Benches

Elle Czura - The Art of Camouflage

Ben Roth - TumbleWhale

Date: January 25, 2024

Location: Center for the Arts Theater

Sponsors: Wyoming Arts Council, Community Foundation of Jackson Hole, and a special thanks to local creative Agnes Bourne!

Keynote Speaker: Peter Lawrence

MoonShot began with a keynote speech from biomimicry expert Peter Lawrence, the President and CoFounder of Biomimicry New England.

The keynote was followed by MoonShot 5x5 pitches. Five regional creatives

launched their out-of-this-world public art ideas designed to ignite imaginations and to build a beautiful, sustainable, and vibrant community. Presenters had 5 slides and 5 minutes to pitch their public art idea. Walker Young’s concept, Pando Park, a fabricated tree that lights up in response to community singing, won the Buzz Aldrin Award of $3,000 selected by a jury of community members.

Peter Lawrence also faciliated a free design thinking workshop in the Creative Commons at the Center.

Support From: ArtShop, Cafe

Genevieve, The Center, Local, Pinky G’s, Snake River Brewing, Stio, Table 307, Trio, Tayloe Piggott Gallery, Whole Foods, Workshop

Mosaic Mural: Making Tracks

Date: 2024

Materials: Ceramic Tile, Glass Tile, Stained Glass, Mirror

Size: 40’ x 11’ with mosaic edging

Location: Teton County/Jackson Recreation Center

Funding: Teton County/Jackson Recreation Center

The design of this sweeping mosaic mural was inspired by our active lifestyle and designed to inspire good health and to nourish community connections.

The artist visited the area’s most iconic sites and met with people of all ages to gather input for the mural design. The playful design includes an enormous bull elk, the majestic Teton Range with reflective, snow-capped mountaintops, and depicts vibrant active people.

ceramic tile, glass tile, stained glass, and mirror. Over the course of several months, the artist built the artwork in large sections in her studio. The mural was installed in sections, mortared to the wall, and grouted on-site.

Teton County Fair Building

Mural: Out West

Artist: Dan Toro

Date: 2024

Location: Community Building, Teton County Fairgrounds

Sponsored By: Teton County Fair & Fairgrounds, JH Travel & Tourism Board, Wyoming Cultural Trust Fund

Dan Toro’s mural is a portal into a western movie-like scene. Toro’s expert use of spray paint creates a romanticized view of a ranch scene under the mountains. You can hear the cows and taste the dust of the dry, summer landscape in the morning light. The dramatic cropping of the artwork emphasizes the animals, which is appropriate for the Fairgrounds. The title, Out West, captures a moment that some know well and others can only dream about.

Town Pathway Murals : Root, Culture

Artist: Pedro Avelino Alcántara

Installation Date: November, 2023

Location: PATH22 Underpass at Skyline Ranch

Partners: Jackson Hole Community Pathways and JH Public Art

Supported by: First Interstate Bank

Pedro Avelino Alcántara details the historical story of Jackson’s sister city, Hueyotlipan in Tlaxcala, in three

and Migration

parts: origin, landscape, and alliances. Alcántara was born in Hueyotlipan, Mexico and has since taught drawing and painting, and coordinated the Cultural Center there.

Alcántara joined for the ribbon cutting, which included several local leaders and over 80 students and faculty from Jackson Hole High School.

The Shape of the Road

Artist: Francisco Jesús Saldaña Perez

Installation Date: April, 2024

Location: PATH22 Underpass at Skyline Ranch

Partners: Jackson Hole Community Pathways and JH Public Art

Francisco Jesús Saldaña Perez’s mural portrays an immigrant integrating into a

new world and new customs. Saldaña, who is also from Tlaxcala, moved to Jackson when he was 15. This is his first U.S.-based mural. A portion of the mural shows a house strapped to the back of a young man. “I like to think that people bring with them the culture, the traditions, and the mentalities of where they come from,” says Saldaña.

Asphalt Art: Wild Tracks

Artist: Maria Sengle

Date: 2024

Materials: Acrylic House Paint

Location: Miller Park, 255 W Deloney Ave

Funding By: Teton County, Town of Jackson, Jackson Hole Travel & Tourism Board, Sherwin Williams

This asphalt art mural created a sense of place and increased pedestrian safety at the Miller Mobility Hub. The artwork is inspired by the Wildlife Viewing Rule of Thumb Law. Extend

your arm all the way out and make a “thumbs up.” Close one eye, and see if you can hide the animal with your thumb, then you are far enough away. If you can’t cover them with your thumb, then you are too close. As you follow the different wildlife tracks running East to West down the street, notice the interrupting color bar at 25 ft. intervals. Green indicating proceed with caution, Yellow and orange indicating you’re too close to the animal at the end of the block!

Mama Mimi’s Birthday Party

Title: Mama Mimi

Artist: Thomas Dambo

Location: R Park

Medium: Recycled Wood, Steel, Driftwood

Sponsored by: First Western Trust

Stilson Transit Center

Artist: Patrick Marold

Date: to be installed in 2026

Funded by: Town of Jackson, Teton County, National Endowment for the Arts

Patrick Marold was selected to create a three-dimensional artwork for the Stilson Transit Center. Marold’s design includes a glass column constructed in layered and laminated low-iron glass that is framed within a stainless steel pedestal and edges. Each side will reveal a porous and abstracted collection of elliptical holes filled by light. The rounded stones [represented within the glass] reveal a broad and diverse range of shapes that the voids reflect in the layered glass sculpture.

A panel of community stakeholders and Town and County employees reviewed the qualifications of nearly 180 respondents and narrowed the pool to six nationally recognized artists before choosing Marold.

Marold visited this fall to engage with community members, float the Snake River, and meet with the Conservation District to better understand particulars of the site.

Marold has been working to bind the physical environment with our sense of orientation for over two decades. Since earning a BFA from Rhode Island School of Design in 1997, his artistic development has maintained an intimate connection to landscape. Exhibiting widely in galleries and museums, he has earned multiple awards and recognition for his studio works as well as his publicly sited projects including the 7-acre installation, Shadow Array, at Denver’s International Airport. During October of 2023, Marold participated in the Arctic Circle Residency. To learn more about Marold’s work, please visit: PatrickMarold.com.

Utility Box Wraps by Local Artists

Artists: Taryn Boals, Sue Cedarholm, Wendell Field, Mae Orm, Miga Rossetti, Shannon Schacht, Kay Stratman, Kathryn Turner, Boughton Walden, and Travis Walker.

Date: 2024

Materials: 3M Vinyl Various Locations in downtown Jackson

Funding: Town of Jackson

Ten local artists were selected from a pool of thirty-nine to have their images printed on vinyl wraps for traffic boxes throughout downtown. Utility box artworks enliven the streetscape and contribute to wayfinding with images that highlight community character. The first round of utility box wraps were installed in 2014 as part of the Town’s 100th anniversary celebration.

Invisible in Plain Sight | Invisible a Plena Vista

Artist: Jessyca Vianey Valdez Perez

Date: March 16 - April 30, 2024

Medium: Photography

Location: Center Theater Gallery

Supported By: Wyoming Arts Council, Jackson Hole Travel and Tourism Board, Arts for All, WESTAF, Voices JH, Center for the Arts

Collaborating/participating organizations:

Voices JH, Center for the Arts, Teton County School District, Carving the Future, Town of Jackson, St. John’s Health, History Museum, People’s Market, Art Association, Land Trust, Sprout Mobile, Hole Food Rescue, Community Pathways, JH High School, Teton Literacy, Coombs Outdoors, Sweet Peas, Grand Teton National Park Foundation, JH Writers.

Community Outreach

Number served: 1750 Every project we produce includes community education and outreach. We work with our partners to provide innovative, accessible, and intriguing educational opportunities to dive deeper into each artwork. We translate all of our outreach materials geared toward youth and families into Spanish and we also have Spanish translation on our website.

JH Public Art staff, visiting and local artists, and interns provided programs attended by: JH Community School, Teton Conservation District, Protect Our Water JH, Voices JH, JHHS Art students (teachers: Borrego, Horrigan, Lopez, Malley), JHHS ESL students with Jenna Malley, Teton Literacy Summer School 3rd grade (ages 8-9), Coombs Outdoors, St. John’s Hospital Day Care, Sweet Peas.

Poetry Box

Small art with a big impact placed where passersby can grab a piece of inspiration as they walk by. The Poetry Box is a collaboration with JH Writers.

Artist: John Frechette

Curated by: Matt Daly, Director of Jackson Hole Writers

Location: East Broadway in front of Persephone Bakery

Date: 2010

Medium: Wood, Glass, Pipe

Partners: Jackson Hole Public Art and Jackson Hole Writers

Sponsored by: MADE and Mountain Dandy

Tanager

A flash of red yellow black crosses my window. Gladness lightens my heart where gloom had reigned, this tanager the poem I could not write.

- Stephen Lottridge

ArtSpot

Title: Fabric of the Community

Artist: Sarah Jeffrey

Location: Karns Hillside on Broadway

Date: Installed July 12, 2024

Fabric of the Community, is a 1970’s style Ford Truck made of repurposed materials and is sure to bring a smile to your face.

The ArtSpot is a JH Public Art project for which regional artists are invited to

create site-specific installations that inspire moments of discovery and joy for the more than 30,000 daily drivers that pass by.

“Through the creation of this piece, I aim to pay homage to the ranching lifestyle while involving surrounding community members and inspiring daily commuters. The piece is playful and fun and displays my creativity and ethos as an artist.”

— Sarah Jeffrey

Art & Healing

Artists: 12 Local and Regional

Locations: St. John’s Health

Professional and Medical Buildings, Sage Living

Sponsor: St. John’s Health Foundation

The collection of temporary and permanent artworks displayed in St. John’s Health and the Professional Building is managed by St. John’s Health Patient Services. New

acquisitions and donations to the collection are stewarded by St. John’s Health Foundation. In 2014, JH Public Art was hired by St. John’s Health Foundation to develop new collection criteria and donation policies guided by evidence-based criteria and designed to promote healing, wellness, and excellence in the art collection. JH Public Art is proud to continue to provide art consultation services to further this mission.

Announcing!

Featured 2025 Project

In 2025, we will embark on a community-building exploration of the magic of illuminated lantern creations made by local artists, youth, and residents of all ages.

JHPA will host guest artists to teach lantern making techniques in free workshops and in-school projects engaging as many residents and youth as possible. Lantern displays will migrate around the valley to appear in both expected and unexpected locations culminating with a celebration at the Center for the Arts.

Bronwyn Minton, Guest Curator

To elevate the impact of the art we share, we hired veteran local artist and curator Bronwyn Minton. Bronwyn will curate educational community experiences inspired by the art we commission to encourage deeper learning and to offer handson participation in the public art program. She will also be charged with developing a feature program in 2026.

Developing Civic Projects with Impact:

Incorporating engaging and climbable public art into affordable housing developments, identifying approaches to include public art in the Justice Center, North Cache complete Street/ gateway installation, Gregory Lane Complete

Thank you to our Major Sponsors and Partners

Thank you to our generous supporters

Anonymous (9)

Debra Wuersch and Bob Ablondi

Sally Maca and Alex Alimanestianu

Charlotte Alimanestianu

Katti and Sandy Anstey

Mary and Dan Armour

Joan Baldwin

Andrew Barash

Jean Barash

Linda and Paul Barnett

Cathy and Ken Blount

Shannon and Rudy Borrego

Agnes Bourne

Angela Burton and Fred Bowditch

Tenley Thompson and Dan Bowen

Catherine and Bill Bradford

Ruth Harrington and Tim Bradley

Stephanie Brennan

Amy and Herb Brooks

Lauren Browne

Shari Brownfield

Laura and Ryan Burdick

Laura Bush

Janice and Ed Bushnell

Robin and Phil Cameron

Hilary and Marty Camino

Lisa Carlin

Anne Ladd and Len Carlman

Mary and David Cernicek

Susan Durfee and Joseph Cipro

Alexi and Steve Conine

Jane Cooney

Kathy and Phil Coosaia

Dodie and Peter Crawford

Matthew Crisp

Jorge Cruz

Amanda Flosbach and Matt Daly

Jill Reich and Mitch Dann

Peggy and Kirk Davenport

Michele and Doug Dillard

Alexis Dittmer

Kathleen and Randolph Doffermyre

Liza Millet and Mike Dowda

Katherine and Mark Dowson

Alexander Duncan

Stephen Dynia

Diana and Mike Eden

Shannon Shuptrine and Ben Ellis

Jacqui and Chris Erdman

Ithzel Felipe

Annie and Jon Fenn

Robin and John Fields

Sylvia Neil and Daniel Fischel

Phyllis Fischel

Chuck Fleischman

Astrid Flood

Sheryl and Jeff Flug

Petria and Scott Fossel

Lisa Franzen

Nancy and Robert Gardiner

Carrie and Mike Geraci

Pam and Scott Gibson

Peggy Gilday and Maho Hakoshima

Sue Fleming and Doug Halsey

Kay Stratman and Paul Hansen

Leslye, Lachlan, and David Hardie

Gillian Chapman and John Heim

Kerri Ratcliffe and Doug Henderson

Berte Hirschfield

Barbara and Chris Hoeft

Cynthia and Tom Hogan

Liza and Bland Hoke

Missy and David Hoster

Dawn and John Hummel

Maggie and Jim Hunt

Carlie Ideker

Emily and Adam Janak

Erika Pearsall and Ned Jannotta

Morgan and Nick Jaouen

Reece Jenkins

Chloe Lewis and Des Jennings

Lene Jordan

Liz and Andy King

Thomas Kirk

Carrie F. Kirkpatrick DA Fund of CFJH

Lindsay and Matt Kissel

Crissy Knox

Laura and Ted Ladd

Tracy Lamb

Jane Lavino

Wendy Hagedorn and Dan Leemon

Lea Bonnecaze and Ian Levenson

Elizabeth and Jim Little

Jodi and Jack Livingood

Sean Louden

Sam Danahy and Chris Ludwig

Margie Lynch

Robin and Bill MacLeod

Patricia Mayers

Heide and Mike McBride

Mary McCarthy

Andrea McClave

Kimberly and Robert McGregor

Doyen McIntosh

Dwayne Meadows

Carolyn Miller

Kea and Tom Molnar

Judy and Matt Montagne

Maggie Moore

Jilly and Clay Moorhead

Alice and Rod Moorhead

Amy Glenn and Jeff Moran

Hillary and Mac Munro

Hannah Navarro

Lizzie Needham

The Nichols Family Fund

Katy Niner

Pam Niner

April and Alex Norton

June and Ron Nystrom

Doug Ober

Jenny Olvera

The Opatrny Family Foundation

Genie Copp and Ken Overfield

Lauren Owens

Carroll Padriac

Sally and Robert Painter

Veronique and Marshall Parke

Caroline and Dan Patten

Laurie Andrews and Perk Perkins

Leslie Petersen

Floren Poliseo

Carol and Steve Poole

Alex and Sam Pope

Elizabeth Storer and Luther Propst

Annie and George Putnam

Beth Burrough and David Ramsay

Kristin and Joel Revill

Andrea and LaVar Riniker

Carolyn and Andy Ripps

Lynn Fleisher and John Roberts

Jason Robertson

Lisa and Stephen Robertson

Belinda and Ferrill Roll

Wendy Rominger

Joyce Frye and Doug Ross

Katrina and Brandon Ryan

Laurel and Kevin Sanville

Alex and Jonathan Schechter

Maggie and Brian Schilling

Sarah Fischel and James Schondelmeier

LeeAnn Inberg-Schuff and Theo Schuff

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Douglas Schultz

Michael Sellett

Kris Shean

Barbara and John Simms

Charles Smith

Melissa and Jason Snider

Patrice Sobecki

Linda and Keith Soper

Trish and Michael Spain

Noa and Ted Staryk

Jana Stearns

Bridget Mullen and Michael Stern

Karen and Dick Stewart

John Stricklin

Anna and Steve Sullivan

Karen Terra

Patricia and Tom Tisone

Meaghan and Johnny Tozzi

Barbara and Stan Trachtenberg

Lisa Samford and Wally Ulrich

Juliet Unfried

Amy and Steve Unfried

Colleen and Ethan Valenstein

Allison Lenz and David Vandenberg

Jami and Bill Voge

Allison von Maur

Kate Vranac

Polly and Sandy Wakeman

Christy Walton

Susan McGuire and Robert Warburton

Lucinda Abbe and James Warner

Jocelyn Slack and John Wasson

Betsy Carlin and Becky Watson

Diana and Mike Welch

Lindsay and James Wilcox

Katie Wilson

Chris and Kurt Wimberg

Claudia and Terry Winchell, Fighting Bear Antiques

Cheryl and Michael Witz

Barbara and Jeff Wogoman

Dana Olson and John Wright

Anika Youcha

Dimmie and Greg Zeigler

Businesses

460º Bread

ArtShop

Brown Cat Bookkeeping LLC.

Cafe Genevieve

Canvas Unlimited

Central Wyoming College

Creekside Market

Dave Hansen Whitewater

Dowd House Studios LLC

EcoTour Adventures, LLC

Fine Dining

Fish Creek Excavation

Friends of the Bridger Teton

Graze

Häagen-Dazs

Hand Fire Pizza

Hungry Jack’s

J.C. Jewelers

Jackson Hole Book Trader

King Sushi

Local Made

Mountain Dandy

Northworks

Pearl Street Bagels

Pearl Street Market

Pinky G’s

Stio

Table 307

Tayloe Piggott Gallery

Thursday Roundtable

Trapper Corporation

Trio

Whole Foods

Workshop

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