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Tyler Barham returns to Autumn Creek Vineyards on Feb. 1

If you’re a country music fan, you won’t want to miss the chance to check out Tyler Barham live at Autumn Creek Vineyards on Saturday, Feb. 1, from 2-5:30 p.m. in the Tasting Room. There’s no cover charge. He played in Pilot Mountain on Thursday and in Greensboro on Friday at WineStyles. Named Billboard’s 10 Country Artists to Watch in 2014, the might be your last chance to catch Barham free. 
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Had the opportunity to interview Jay Franck of Asheville-based Sanctum Sully, voted one of Western N.C.’s top three bluegrass bands, this week for MerleFest and Rooster Walk previews. If you haven’t heard of Rooster Walk, an up-and-coming music festival held over Memorial Day Weekend in Martinsville, Va., check out my review from last year’s event here.


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Las Vegas Gallery Bets on a Calder Show

The following story was originally published in The Los Angeles Times:
January 25, 2002|LISA SNEDEKER | ASSOCIATED PRESS

LAS VEGAS — Alexander Calder’s family never dreamed that one day his mobiles, stabiles and wire sculptures would be displayed on the Las Vegas Strip, but they aren’t disappointed.

“I think it’s great that the exhibit’s next to a craps table and down the hall from a wedding chapel,” said Alexander Rower, Calder’s grandson and director of the Calder Foundation. “Art can be intimidating. Calder’s work belongs to everybody, not just art historians.”

The Bellagio Gallery of Fine Art will open Calder’s “The Art of Invention” to the public today after postponing the show in October because of the Sept. 11 attacks.

One reason the foundation and Calder’s family members agreed to lend some personal pieces to the exhibition–the “Rat” usually sits on Rower’s mother’s coffee table–was a belief that an art gallery in a Las Vegas resort would attract a different audience, Rower said.

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Las Vegas Casinos Gamble on Art as a Crowd Pleaser

Tourism: Guggenheim Foundation plans to open two galleries on the Strip, hoping to attract attention of city’s 36 million annual visitors.

June 10, 2001|LISA SNEDEKER | ASSOCIATED PRESS

LAS VEGAS — Can Picasso and Renoir compete with topless revues and video poker? Will a museum exhibit draw the same crowds that scramble to see fighting pirates, dancing water fountains and exploding volcanoes?

Las Vegas resorts are betting on it.

The newest form of entertainment to headline on the Las Vegas Strip isn’t magicians with white tigers or lounge act impersonators. It’s fine art.

“It’s a gamble, but it’s an educated gamble,” says Rob Goldstein, president of the Venetian hotel-casino. “We like the odds.”

That’s because developer Steve Wynn, former owner of Mirage Resorts Inc., emerged a winner when he put his private art collection on display at the luxurious Bellagio hotel-casino in 1998. He had wagered a bundle on the belief that when tourists had their fill of free booze, cheap buffets and nickel slots, they might be in the mood for a little culture.

And art continues to attract tourists. Last year they flocked to the “Treasures of Russia” exhibit at the Rio hotel-casino.

“I’m delighted to be a catalyst,” Wynn says. “This is fundamental change. This is not going to go away.”

Not if the long lines of tourists in shorts and Hawaiian shirts filing in to catch a glimpse of works by Monet and van Gogh are any indication.

That’s what inspired Thomas Krens, chairman of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation, to collaborate with Sheldon Adelson, owner of the Venetian, to bring the Guggenheim-Hermitage museums to the Strip. Two separate galleries are set to open in September at the resort.

Of the two museums, designed by Dutch architect Rem Koolhaas, the smaller is a collaboration between Guggenheim and the State Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg, Russia.

Referred to as the “Jewel Box,” the Guggenheim-Hermitage, located just off the upscale Venetian’s lobby, will house more intimate exhibits, such as Picasso’s early works and Faberge eggs. Its first show will be a display of Impressionist and early modern masters from both institutions.

For larger traveling exhibitions, plans call for a 63,700-square-foot building between the hotel’s casino and the parking garage. The inaugural exhibition will be “The Art of the Motorcycle,” sponsored by BMW, which debuted at the Guggenheim Museum in New York City in 1998.

The center would be only the sixth Guggenheim branch in the world, joining branches in New York; Berlin; Venice, Italy; and Bilbao, Spain.

Krens’ move to build a museum in Las Vegas has made him controversial in the art world, and many remain skeptical about the project, which was to have been completed this spring.

“We need more motorcycles like we need more hookers,” says art critic Dave Hickey, a professor at the University of Nevada-Las Vegas. But he agrees that having the Hermitage in town will be a boon to a community in search of substance.

Though it is internationally famous, few place Las Vegas in the same cultural league as such cities as Berlin, Venice and New York.

“The fact that it is based in Las Vegas is creating something of a stir,” Krens acknowledges.

Still, he says that the glitz, glitter and glamour of the Strip should not be brushed away so easily by those in the art world. Shows such as the “O” at the Bellagio, and even magic shows like the Mirage’s “Siegfried & Roy,” should be admired.

“They’re all about cultural expression,” Krens says.

David Carver, president of the Las Vegas Art Museum, says that exposing people to fine arts has to be considered a positive–even if the arts are being used to drive casino traffic.

“Because we’ve grown so rapidly, the arts have lagged behind,” he says. “Anything that brings fine arts to people here is worthwhile. Bring them on. The more, the merrier.”

Las Vegas Mayor Oscar Goodman sees it as an artistic and cultural renaissance, skipping references to the Dark Ages that preceded the rebirth.

“People will be lining up to visit our museums and galleries like they are now lining up to play in our casinos and see our shows,” Goodman says.

Gambling industry experts say bringing fine art to the Strip is a natural progression as the city evolves, moving from a narrow gambling focus to have broader appeal.

“And we have more live entertainment than L.A., New York and London put together,” says Bill Thompson, gambling industry expert and professor of public administration at UNLV. “It’s a way for Las Vegas to go. It gives us world class.”

That’s why Krens remains convinced that the criticism will soon dissipate once the museum opens. “And it will be replaced by jealousy.”

And profits, he hopes.

Krens estimates that the Guggenheim could pull in $15 million a year for his foundation and the Hermitage; the $7.5-million cut going to the Hermitage would be massive for a museum that currently receives only $7 million a year in endowments.

Here’s a link to an abbreviated version of my story that ran in the Los Angeles Times: http://articles.latimes.com/2001/jun/10/local/me-8586

And another link to a longer version of my story: http://www.geocities.ws/s00keyjane/bellag3.html