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Photographs by Kara Hetrick · Exhibit runs from Mar 26 - May 6
ARTIST STATEMENT:
I have fallen in love with the high desert and love driving around central Nevada in particular. It’s a special place that I partly hope remains a pretty well-kept secret, but it’s hard not to share its calm, open beauty. Trying to capture a little bit of it with film photography brings me back to sleeping in the back of a truck at night, learning new constellations, smelling sagebrush, and hearing coyotes howl back and forth across the valley. These photos are some of my favorite parts of Nevada and Utah.
ARTIST BIO:
I wish I were a painter like Maynard Dixon, Frank Serrano, or local artist G. Russell Case, and so many more, but instead I have a medium format film camera. I don’t have any formal education in art or photography, I just enjoy it and it gives me an excuse to go out to places that make me feel at home in the world.
AGE GROUP: | All Ages |
EVENT TYPE: | Exhibits | Arts & Creativity |
The pleasing design of the Anderson-Foothill Branch has two unique elements as part of its plan. The first is a passive solar energy design that includes earth berming, window placement for solar heating, and zone supplemental heating/cooling. The second element of this 14,900 square foot community library built in 1985, expanded in 1992 and in 2002, is a modular design.
The Anderson-Foothill Branch has a meeting room available for public use with tables, chairs, and a projector screen. The Anderson-Foothill Branch's outdoor amphitheater is a popular location for summer concerts. Free parking is available to the north and south of the building, and free wi-fi access is provided throughout the library.