DECEMBER 2025 ARTBEAT

Page 1


ARTBEAT

DECEMBER

2025

showcases local artists in downtown Wenatchee, pg. 5

WENATCHEE FIRST FRIDAYS MAP INSIDE

ARTBOX

ARTBEAT

A monthly publication of the NCW Arts Alliance

Editor: Jamie Howell

Layout & Design: Ron Evans

Contributors: Pamela Farrington, Meg Sanders, Carla Wilson NCW Arts - Elevating the Arts in North Central Washington

NCW ARTS UPDATE

BUCKING

UP AND ASKING

At some point, every non-profi t endeavor boils down to the often cringe-inducing task of sitting across from someone in your community and asking them for their money (or their time, which is even more precious for many).

When fundraising time comes, I know I’m not alone in wishing I was simply wealthy enough to cover whatever I happen to be raising money for out of my own bank account. (If ever I hit the jackpot, I will make one helluva philanthropist.) But that’s not the right way to look at it, at least not if you want to be a successful non-profi t.

“Lean into fundraising as an expression of care for your community,” says Josef Krebs of Scandiuzzi-Krebs, a Seattle consulting fi rm that counsels community-building organizations as they strive to survive and thrive. He raises a vital distinction.

When I sit down to ask a donor for money, I’m not some roadside panhandler hoping to score some smokes and a Big Mac with your spare change. Nor am I some con man promising to double your money if you’ll just take a little risk today. On the contrary, I’m a local citizen, much like yourself, offering you the opportunity to join me in making our shared community a better place.

While we’re blessedly free of the profi t motive that saddles all private enterprise, no non-profi t is free from the need for money. Our motivations are to bring about some positive change in the world. But, pure as those motivations may be, without exception, bringing about lasting positive change requires money.

So, we buck up and we ask.

At NCW Arts, we’re not asking you for your money because we need it. We’re asking for it because, just like all the rest of us, you need it.

You need the culturally rich community that results from having a thriving arts sector locally. You need the creative economy that provides 20 percent of our state’s annual income to continue growing, creating jobs, drawing tourists, generating tax revenues and providing sources of community pride.

You need live music at a small winery on a Friday night; murals brightening the Avenue; thought-provoking sculptures along the Loop Trail; Apple Blossom musicals, writers conferences, movie nights, skillfully inked tattoos, adventurous culinary experiences.

“When we invest in arts and culture, we build more livable communities,” concludes one 2023 study conducted by Americans for the Arts.

At NCW Arts, that’s precisely the investment we’re making. Whether you’re attending one of our ArtBox pop-ups (this First Friday), signing on as a business member, setting up your free page on the Artist Index, or making your year-end donation, you become the one making that investment.

There are big things ahead for the Arts in 2026. As you wrap up your giving for the year, please consider putting your support behind the arts. Consider making a contribution to the NCW Arts Alliance. You can donate and/or find out more at ncwARTS.org .

ON THE COVER:

Artist Marnie Lynn Simmons’ work will be on display at the first annual ARTBOX - a showcase of local artists and fundraiser benefitting NCW Arts. Details on pg. 5

FEATURED FIRST FRIDAYS EVENT

TERRY VALDEZ - SHOW & TELL

Wenatchee mixed-media artist Terry Valdez is presenting a onenight-only exhibit he is calling Show & Tell.

The pop-up will feature a handful of original paintings and mixed media shields as well as a selection of new prints and greeting cards.

“The shields have evolved out of a series of healing shields, I created for different close friends that were struggling with health or emotional issues.” says the artist.

Show & Tell is Friday, Dec. 5 at Hilton Garden Inn from 5-8pm. See pg. 4-5 for a complete First Fridays guide and map.

FIELDHOUSE: A CONVERSATION WITH DESIGNER RON SKYLSTAD

Ron Skylstad’s path wasn’t a straight one to get to where he is now (whose is?). He studied psychology before turning his sights toward design, traveled deep into the Amazon rainforest in hopes of finding his passion again, and has become a fierce supporter of preserving local character while also being vocal about the homogeneity that can creep into small towns and hold back the growth of the valley. Born and raised in Cashmere, he moved far and wide to explore, only to find himself back in the town that shaped him, with a renewed appreciation for everything that continues to influence his life and his work.

I first became aware of Ron, or rather Norse Creative, when I was walking down Wenatchee Avenue and saw the Norwood Wine Bar logo appear on their window. Up until that point, most of the branding I saw around Wenatchee didn’t truly reflect the character or heritage of the valley. This one felt different. Modern yet rustic. Upscale and also approachable. After some deep Googling, I found Norse Creative

was responsible for the branding. As a fellow graphic designer I was intrigued. I kept the studio in the back of my mind for years, until another logo caught my eye. More Googling. This time the studio was called In Case of Success. I had no idea it was the same person. I was obsessed with the name. Clever and honest. After meeting Ron and hearing the story behind it, I loved it even more.

Today his studio is called Fieldhouse, a name that feels exactly right for where he is headed. I met Ron for this interview at Azul Cantina in Cashmere. The minute he walked in, he greeted me with a warm smile, then was immediately greeted by several people he knew, including his brother.

Do you know those people? Oh, yeah, he is my brother, and I know most everyone here. Small town life means you cannot go anywhere without bumping into people you know.

It is great to finally meet you. I loved your previous studio name, In Case of Success. Your studio is Fieldhouse now.

How did that come about?

Norse Creative was my first real studio name. Visually it worked. It stuck in people’s minds. The problem showed up every time I was on the phone. I would say, “Ron at Norse Creative,” and people heard “North Creative” and assumed I could not say my r’s. They would send emails to northcreative dot com, which did not exist. That became a real problem for a business that runs on email.

After Covid I hit a wall. I was self employed and I was not going to get unemployment or a PPP loan, so my mindset became, “Any nickel on the table, I am going to grab it.” I said yes to everyone. A lot of people I had worked with suddenly realized they had to be visible online and had no online presence. They needed websites, social media, branding, everything. I said yes to all of it and completely burned out.

A client and friend from South Carolina asked how I was doing and I told her, “I am just fucking tired. Inside I feel threadbare.” She suggested a classic resort vacation. Sit by a pool, read a book. That sounded like torture. I did not want to listen to kids yelling and shallow conversations around me.

She asked, “Then what does sound good?”

I heard myself say, “I want to walk into a jungle and a month later walk out.”

That became the seed for In Case of Success. After that trip, I saw a clipping of an old Ernest Shackleton ad that said something like, “Low pay, danger, may not make it back alive. Honor and recognition in case of success.” I thought, this is every small business I know. You might lose everything. But if you manage to pull it off, in case of actual success, then what if?

So I renamed the studio In Case of Success. It was a mantra. It also confused some people and attracted a lot of executive coaches and self help folks. Fieldhouse is the first name that feels like my actual voice. It has that rural, blue collar, gym floor energy yet still leaves room for world building and a little magic. It feels like a place, not a slogan. That is what I do. I build places and worlds for people to live and work in, even if it is “just” a logo and a sign.

You grew up in Cashmere and studied psychology before design. How did that path shape the way you work now?

I grew up along the Wenatchee River, mostly in and around Cashmere in the

nineties. Teachers knew I could draw. That turned into, “Can you do the yearbook cover? Can you paint the mural on the gym wall?” No one ever said, “This could be your job.” Around here, if you needed a logo, you went to the sign shop. The sign maker designed your sign, and that sign became your logo and later your Facebook avatar. That was the whole brand process. I did not want to be a sign maker, and I did not know there was anything else. So I went to college, majored in psychology, and thought I might be a therapist. Then I realized I could not sit in an office for eight hours a day listening. That is not how I am wired.

I spent about fifteen years working for small nonprofits. Tiny budgets, big dreams. I taught myself how to build websites, how to use InDesign, how to lay out newsletters and posters. I am mostly self taught on the tools, but the psychology degree never left. I am always asking, “What informed this decision? Why did I choose that? How will this feel to the person on the other end?”

I might love a logo, but if the customer does not connect, it is not doing its job. The psych background keeps me curious about the other side of the equation, how the work is experienced rather than just how it looks.

You mentioned burning out and then disappearing into the Amazon. Can you share that story and what shifted for you there?

I had a contact in Peru from a previous job. He connected me with a friend whose brother lived in a small village up a tributary of a tributary of the Amazon. The plan was simple. Go stay with this guy, help out around the house and village, disappear for a while.

When I landed in Peru my friend met me and said, “There is a change of plans. The brother had to go farther up river for work. Just get to the village. He will meet you there.”

I get to this little village and nobody is there. I stand on the riverbank for four hours while people come out to stare at the lost gringo. They ask if I am lost and need help going home. I tell them the name of the man I am waiting for and they say, “No one by that name lives here.”

The sandflies are eating me alive, I am roasting, and it dawns on me that I have no signal, no way to contact anyone, no easy

DECEMBER2025

Meet artists, shop their work, and music, and support

Friday, December 5th, 3 pm - 9 pm

Wells and Wade building 15 Yakima St.,

ARTS WALK

5. Ye Olde Bookshoppe 5-8 PM

Martha Flores, artist.

1. MAC Gallery 5-7 PM “13 Senses,” Ellen Picken, artist. “Dawn on Haleakala— Wana’ao ma Haleakala,” soundscape with Nick McMahan. Reception in the Grove Recital Hall.

2. Visit Wenatchee Tasting Room 5-7 PM Butters to the Rescue, artist. Local wines from Neu Flessenow Cellars.

3. Two Rivers Art Gallery 5-8 PM Jan Cook Mack, artist. Suzanne Grassell, harpist. Local wines.

4. Ground Control 8-10 PM

“Projected Pages,” featuring DJ Pleasure Planet. Come see the community zine pages from our Sip & Snip event projected on the walls and enjoy the vibes.

6. Epoch 3-11:30 PM Sherwood Tuft That, Eloise Sheets, artist. Live rug tufting starts at 7 pm. $2 off all house cocktails all night long!

7. Wells & Wade 3-9 PM “ARTBOX: A Warehouse Showcase” benefiting NCW Arts. Shop dozens of local artists, enjoy live music, cash bar and bites available for purchase. 21+ event.

8. Art Alley @ Pybus 5-7 PM Geraldine Warner, artist. Just Us, live music. Beverages and hors d’oeuvres by donation.

9. Hilton Garden Inn 5-7 PM

“Show and Tell,” Terry Valdez, artist. New prints and cards release. One night only!

5. Steam Panda 4-9 PM

Buy one noodle soup, get 2nd noodle soup $5 off when you mention First Fridays. Dine in only.

6. Cave Noire 4-10 PM

Enjoy a complimentary glass after any wine tasting flight.

7. South @ Pybus 4-9 PM

Roll a D20 and get up to 20% off your entire purchase. 30% off Funko Pop figures. 4. Watermill Winery on the

3. The Original Children’s Shop 3-5 PM 10% discount on all merch when you mention First Fridays.

Cocktail special: Cueva’s Puebla, a limited time cocktail inspired by Pueblaborn sculptor José Luis Cuevas.

4. Woody’s Classic Man 3-8 PM

Happy Hour pricing on all beers and ciders. 15% off store merchandise. Extended hours.

5. Time Capsule 3-7 PM

ARTBOX POP-UP TO FILL HISTORIC WELLS & WADE WAREHOUSE

This First Friday the historic walls within the former Wells & Wade warehouse on Yakima Street in Wenatchee will transform into a pop-up art showcase featuring pieces from local artists across our region.

A benefit for NCW Arts, ArtBox will feature a wide range of artwork from dozens of artists; music; a cash bar and snacks. All purchases support both local artists di-

rectly and the ongoing work of NCW Arts in its mission to support and elevate artists and the creative economy across North Central Washington. Free admission. The event runs from 3 p.m. to 9 p.m., Friday, Dec. 5, at the Wells & Wade Warehouse alley entrance at 15 Yakima Street in Wenatchee. The event is for adults 21 and over.

For more information, visit ncwArts.org

way out, and no one expects to hear from me for almost a month. I let myself panic for about five seconds. Then something very practical clicked in. I need shelter, food, and water. Then we will work out the rest.

I ended up finding a place to stay. I befriended an older man with one tooth who took me into the jungle to show me plants, fishing spots, everything. I had forgotten earbuds and gadgets, so I had almost nothing to distract me. Just a journal and one book, the biography of David Chang.

So I had a lot of hours to sit with myself. No internet, no noise, no comfort scroll. Just me.

At one point I remember sitting on a bench and realizing, very clearly, “I do not believe good things are for me. I do not believe I am the kind of person success happens to. I attach myself to successful people and that feels like the best I can hope for.” That hit hard.

I looked around and thought, “Nobody knows if I am alive. I am surviving on bread and water and beer. I am doing fine. What if I pull this off? What does that mean when I go home and apply that same belief to my business, my marriage, my life?”

That trip did not just give me a break. It cracked open a belief about what I deserve and what I am capable of. Fieldhouse lives on the other side of that.

You use the phrase “heritage informed design.” What does that mean to you in the context of the Wenatchee Valley and small towns like Cashmere?

For me, heritage informed design starts with context. It is not about sepia tones or

old timey fonts. It is about understanding who and what shaped a place or a person.

When I take on a project, I sit with the owner and ask them to tell me their story. “Why this idea? Why now? Why here?”

They always start with the human pieces. At a community level, I sit in an odd middle ground. I grew up here, left, traveled, and returned. People who never leave sometimes miss what is special about this place. People who leave and never return decide it is backward. I understand both sides.

I am not trying to freeze the past. But I am also tired of every town trying to look like the same generic “cool” place the algorithm says is relevant. When you chase that, you lose yourself.

Heritage informed design asks what is good and specifi c about a place that is worth carrying forward, and how to give it a fresh, honest update without turning it into a theme park.

Nostalgia plays a role. It is not about living in the past. It is your body reacting to something that shaped you. A song, a sign, a street. Those things become anchors. If we bulldoze or paint over all of them, we lose the anchors.

You worked with Timberline Brewing to create their space and identity, which includes that awesome Timberline Motel sign. Can you tell the story of that sign and what it represents for you as a designer?

That sign is almost single-handedly why I became a designer.

When I was a kid we drove to Ski Hill in Leavenworth every Saturday. We al-

ways passed the Timberline Motel sign. Back then it was still lit. Green neon tree, beautiful typography, that little line about there always being room at Timberline. I remember staring at it and thinking, that is the perfect green, that is the perfect tree shape, those are the perfect letters. It was magic.

In high school the sign stopped working. It fell into disrepair and I kept driving past it thinking, “Somebody should save that.”

Years later I am talking with Eric Peterson who owns Blewett Brewing and Timberline. He says, “You know that old Timberline Motel sign.” I said, “It is the greatest sign ever made. That sign is why I got into design.” He asked, “Do you think there is a way we could get it?”

We tracked down the owner and said, “If we show up with a crew and take it down carefully, “Can we buy it from you?” They agreed. I then went on a little quest to fi nd someone who could restore the neon. I fi nally found the last tube bender in eastern Washington, in Yakima.

We had the tubes rebuilt, the electrical updated, the face cleaned and repaired. Then we installed it at Timberline Brewing. Now when you walk in, that sign is there. It fl ashes again. It has a new home.

When we posted about saving it, people came out of the woodwork. Folks said, “We were so sad when we thought that sign got scrapped. We are so happy it is still here.” There were a lot of memories attached to it. Ski trips, family drives, first overnights out on their own.

To me that is heritage informed design in one object. We did not put the sign in a museum. We put it in a working space where people gather, drink beer, and tell stories. It keeps a piece of the valley’s visual history alive in a way that feels current. That is what I want to do again and again.

How do people usually find you, and what kind of projects are you most excited about under Fieldhouse?

I have never really advertised. People usually see something out in the world, ask,“Who did this?” and someone says, “Oh, that is Ron. He is my guy.” That creates these funny overlapping circles. I do a lot of work for leadership consultants in southern California. I also do projects for scientists, botanists, and entomologists who do not want cartoon logos for their conferences. They want something that honors the science and still feels human. Then there are the rural projects. Breweries, small businesses, adaptive reuse projects that want to feel like they belong to their town, not to a trend.

The ones that light me up are the Fieldhouse projects that pull all of that together. Something with roots. A story. A bit of risk. A chance to save or create an anchor for a community. If there is an old sign, an odd object, or a building everyone drives past without really seeing it. That is usually where I want to start.

You can find more of Ron Skylstad’s work at his website, wearefieldhouse.com. Pamela Farrington is a graphic designer who recently relocated to the Wenatchee Valley from New Mexico.

Recent branding work samples from Fieldhouse by designer and owner Ron Skylstad

BRAVE WARRIORS NCW SEEKS ARTISTS TO TEACH IN NEW ART STUDIO

The Brave Warriors step over the threshold into the Whispering Woods to find themselves transformed as if by magic into Courageous Creators.

While that may sound a bit like a line from a fantasy novel, it’s actually a very real occurrence taking place every single week in the shire we know as Olds Station on the north end of Wenatchee.

Whispering Woods is a brand-new arts studio in the new home of Brave Warriors NCW (formerly known as the Brave Warrior Project) built out of a converted garage thanks to a generous donation from local patron of the arts, Kathryn Woods.

In the Whispering Woods, special needs clients ranging in age from children to adults, improve motor skills, develop their social skills, regulate their moods, boost self-esteem and, of course, make all kinds of art.

These are the Brave Warriors served by the non-profit organization Moshe and her husband, Phil, founded in 2017 to fill a gaping hole in local support services for families caring full-time for special needs children and adults.

The non-profit relocated to its new Olds Station location in April 2025 after landing a $1 million state grant to purchase the building. They have been busily renovating the space and planning yet another capital campaign to expand into a second building as they strive to meet

the demand for assistance across the four-county region they serve (Chelan, Douglas, Grant and Okanogan counties).

According to Moshe, the addition of the the new art studio space has been especially helpful.

Why Art?

“It’s a proven therapy within the population we’re working with,” said Moshe.

“The magic is in the work.”

Studies have shown that art provides avenues for non-verbal expression combined with opportunities for emotional exploration and regulation that can be difficult to access for students across a full spectrum of disabilities and conditions such as nonverbal autism.

“They love art just as much as you love art,” Moshe says of her students and adult participants.

Group art activities build social skills; manipulating art supplies (brushes, clay, scissors) improves fine motors skills; creative “flow” states can improve cognitive abilities. Everyone can relate to the sense of accomplishment that comes with completing an art project and the creative process itself is a form of empowerment, providing individuals the opportunity to make choices, solve problems and flex their imaginations.

Hence the “Courageous Creators” title - a name the staff cooked up to honor the fact that there’s a lot more than art happening in Whispering Woods. Many of these students are learning new ways to make their way in the world.

“Art was in our very first program,” Moshe said. “All of our programs have art – all of them.”

Looking for Creative Community Partners

As Brave Warriors NCW expands its footprint and programs in service of their mission to “eliminate barriers for kids with special needs, chronic illness and cancer,” they are actively seeking community partners and, in this case, artists who might be interested in sharing their own creative talents with the Courageous Creators as they find their own pathways through the Whispering Woods.

“Volunteering on its own can be therapeutic,” Moshe pointed out. The possibilities are limited only by imagination (not typically a problem in the realm of creatives). Artists interested in visiting with participants at Whispering Woods, leading an art project or even with an idea for collaboration with students out in the community (think student art show, for example); are invited to contact Executive Director Erica Moshe or Recreational Therapist Nicole Haskey (who leads the art program) at (509) 888-0902 or by email at info@bravewarriorproject.com

FEATURED OPPORTUNITY

CALL FOR ART: GRAPHITE-ONLY SHOW

Graphite deserves its moment in the spotlight, and we’re giving it a whole damn show!

Ellen Bruex and Ron Evans are curating a collection of locally created works - exclusively in graphite: raw, smudgy, subtle, dramatic, and criminally underrated. (Charcoal gets all the drama, ink gets all the credit, and paint hogs all the wall space... it’s time to get the lead out...of the shadows!

If you’ve got drawings that prove the power of simple gray matter, they want to see them. Final works must be ready to hang.

Deadline: January 31st Submit work to: thecometmagazine@gmail.com

You do not have to sell the works, but it’d be a lot cooler if you did. Date and location of final exhibit TBD

Brave Warriors NCW students Cora Howell and Anthony Strang show off their Dia de los Muertos art projects.

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DECEMBER 2025 ARTBEAT by ncwarts - Issuu