Western Art Collector

Montana Miniatures Great Falls, MT

More than 100 artists will be offering small works at the fourth annual Montana Miniatures show.

-

After the success of three previous Montana Miniatures shows in Great Falls, Montana, organizer Bitterroot Frames and Publishing was ready for more than 300 applicatio­ns for the 2020 show. From that immense wave of interest 100 artists have been chosen to have their artwork shown starting March 18 during Western Art Week.

The show, held at the same time and place as the Out West Art Show & Sale, will take place at the Heritage Inn in Great Falls. It will run concurrent­ly alongside Bitterroot Frame’s sister event Montana Masters, as well as several other key shows that are nested within the Out West show. The show opens the evening of March 18 and continues until 6 p.m. on March 21. All the artwork will be sold via silent auction, in addition to a “buy it now” price that will allow interested collectors to take a piece with them before the conclusion of the weekend sale.

One artist in the show is Kenneth Yarus, whose work Spring’s Promise shows a captivatin­g Montana landscape featuring snowcapped peaks and a mountain lake. “Montana sure likes to hold on to that firm handshake of winter,” Yarus says of the work. “That is why that first warm sunshine in spring feels like the awaited promise of a lover. That sweet summer is just a few more months away.”

Brian Bateman will be showing a piece with Native American subject matter, Guardian of the Badlands. The work features a single figure on horseback and includes lots of historical detail. “This piece was done after many trips to the Badlands in South Dakota,” Bateman says. “The quiet beauty of the rugged landscape where Lakota once roamed in abundance was my inspiratio­n.”

Michael Blessing presents a more contempora­ry view of the West with his brightly painted work

Horizon, showing a cowboy admiring the lands stretched out below him. “Horizon is part of my

Neon West series, painted as if it were lit from within,” the artist says. “To me, it represents hope for a bright future and the limitless possibilit­ies of what might lie beyond the horizon line. Much like the cowboys who came West looking for a better life and adventure on the trail, the joy of discovery is still a driving force for us today.”

Michelle Kondos has painted a train for her work

500 Miles from Home. “We know we are looking at steel and steam, and yet a locomotive at night under the coal black skies of the Old West seems set to carry us into another more mysterious realm,” she says. “Who can look at a train without feeling the gravity of that magic? That is what I have tried to capture in this painting.”

 ??  ?? Kenneth Yarus, Spring’s Promise, oil, 11 x 14"
Kenneth Yarus, Spring’s Promise, oil, 11 x 14"
 ??  ?? Leslie Kirchner, Calm Before the Storm, oil, 12 x 12"
Leslie Kirchner, Calm Before the Storm, oil, 12 x 12"
 ??  ?? Michael Blessing, Horizon, oil, 11 x 14"
Michael Blessing, Horizon, oil, 11 x 14"
 ??  ?? Brian Bateman, Guardian of the Badlands, oil, 14 x 11"
Brian Bateman, Guardian of the Badlands, oil, 14 x 11"

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States