From Mormon Pioneers to the Fremont Indians to the Utah Symphony, experience
Utah's Fine Arts.
Utah's
Guide to the Arts
Even from its earliest days, Salt Lake has placed a high
priority on the arts.The Utah
Arts Council, the country’s oldest state arts agency, was organized in Utah in
1899.Today, Salt Lake is home to the world-famous Mormon Tabernacle Choir, and
boasts its own symphony, ballet, theatre, opera and modern dance companies. Salt
Lake’s galleries showcase compelling visual art collections, while museums
preserve treasures of the past, including pioneer artifacts, military
aircrafts,
prehistoric fossils and fine art.
VISUAL
ARTS
The state has offered a
place where the work of visual artists
can flourish. The Utah's Art Council
preserves and promotes art through the
collection, preservation, documentation
and exhibition of the State Fine Art
Collection.
Unquestionably, the
number one festival in Utah is the Sundance Film
Festival, however there are plenty more captivating
the city such as the Greek Festival or the Utah Arts
Festival. Also in Cedar City, UT each year they put
on the Shakespearean Festival. More Info
FILM
INDUSTRY
Utah has
been put on the map because of the
unique scenery it has for many movies.
You'd be surprised how many times its
showed up on the big screen, more often
than you might realize.
Ever
since the Anasazi and Fremont Indians inscribed their history on rock walls in
Southern Utah, the state has offered a place where the work of visual artists
can flourish. The Utah Arts Council's Visual Arts program preserves and
promotes Utah's artistic heritage through the collection, preservation,
documentation and exhibition of the State Fine Art collection. It also provides
traveling art exhibitions, which are cosponsored by museums, libraries, schools
and community centers throughout the state.
Salt Lake City is home to the
Intermountain West's largest collection of world art, which is found at the Utah
Museum of Fine Arts on the University of Utah campus.One of the best places to experience what Utah’s visual
arts community has to offer is Salt Lake City’s Gallery Stroll- with an
average of 15 galleries participating each month, the stroll represents a large
spectrum of artistic media and expression. There are more than 25 art galleries
and museums throughout the valley, such as the Salt
Lake Art Center and the Springville Museum of Art that showcase an
eclectic array of early and contemporary work by local, regional and
international artists. The Museum of Church History and Art highlights LDS
Church history and art from pioneer times to the present day. The Museum
of Utah Art and History, the newest museum in the heart of Salt Lake
City, fosters an awareness of, and excitement about, Utah art and history.
Performing Arts
Within one year of arriving in the Salt Lake Valley, the Utah pioneers
constructed a social hall where dances, concerts and plays provided
entertainment for the community.Today
the tradition continues with the 2,800-seat Abravanel Hall/Art Center Complex
and the elegant 1,943-seat Capitol Theatre, which are spectacular venues
for showcasing Utah's performing arts.
The world-class Utah Symphony
orchestra has earned international renown among classical music cognoscenti and
performs a 52-week season in Abravanel Hall and other concert venues within the
region. Utah Opera enhances the area's cultural mix.Since 1978, Utah Opera has stirred the emotions of a growing audience,
performing annually for more than 130,000 people in Utah and its neighboring
states.In 2002 the symphony and
opera combined their management operations in a historical merger to form the Utah
Symphony & Opera.
The Gina Bachauer International Piano Foundation, headquartered in
Salt Lake, hosts one of the most prestigious piano competitions in the country.The world-famous Salt Lake Mormon Tabernacle Choir performs in the
Conference Center on Temple Square each week.The public is invited to attend rehearsal performances on Thursdays at
8:00 p.m. and Sundays at 9:30 a.m., during their global network broadcast.
The art of dance is alive and well in many forms in Salt Lake.Ballet West is one of the six largest ballet companies in the
country and attracts professional dancers from around the world.
The Ririe-Woodbury Dance Company and The Repertory Dance
Theatre (RDT) are premiere modern dance companies based in Salt Lake City.The two companies present works of distinguished modern dance
choreographers, as well as original works by their artistic directors and
dancers.Both companies take their
work on the road to perform and conduct workshops and classes in schools and
local communities.Located in South
Valley, Odyssey Dance Theatreoffers
professional jazz ballet that produces four homes seasons a year.
The Children’s Dance Theatre, the second oldest performing arts
organization in Utah, is designed for young dancers.It is housed at the Virginia Tanner Creative Dance Studio on the
University of Utah campus.
Of note is the Rose Wagner Performing Arts Center that includes a
500-seat theater, orchestra pit, and rehearsal studio. In addition, the Theater
League of Utah brings Broadway shows to the Salt Lake area.
Theater productions at the Pioneer
Theatre Company at the University of Utah, Salt Lake Acting Company,
Hale
Centre Theatre at Harman Hall, The Grand Theater at Salt Lake
Community College and numerous other local acting groups are found around the
Salt Lake area.
Just outside of St. George, the outdoor Tuacahn
Amphitheatre is the home of the annual Broadway in the Desert theatre
series, featuring productions of classical musicals, June - October. In Logan
you can enjoy the Utah Festival Opera.
Literary
Arts
Utah writers, whose stories celebrate the landscape and lore of the
American West, are receiving national acclaim for their work.Readers often gather at Salt Lake bookstores and coffeehouses to hear the
works of local and regional authors.
There are also noteworthy writers’ conferences scheduled in the cool
mountains of the north and the desert landscape of the south.One conference that has gained a national reputation among writers is the
Writers at Work Conference at Westminster College.
This conference is known for its workshops in poetry, fiction and non-fiction
writing, as well as seminars, panel discussions and manuscript consultations.
There is also one of the country's most prestigious Creative Writing Programs
for MFA and PhD degrees at the University of Utah.
Festivals
Unique festivals and celebrations
take place in Utah throughout the year.
Including the now prestigious film festival that gathers plenty of celebrities
in Park City for ten days.
·Robert Redford’s Sundance Film
Festival is staged each January in Park City.The festival is America's premiere showcase for the best
independently-produced documentary and dramatic films.Screenings take place in Park City, Salt Lake City and Ogden.
·The annual Utah Arts
Festival, held in downtown Salt Lake City in late June, celebrates the
visual and performing arts, crafts, demonstrations, and children's art projects.
·Salt Lake’s multi-cultural
community produces events like the popular Greek Festival, the Japanese
Obon Festival, Snowbird Ski and Summer Resort’s Oktoberfest, and
more.
·The Utah Shakespearean Festival
in Cedar City is recognized as one of the finest in the country.In 2004, the festival completed its 43rd season and was the recipient of the 2000 Tony
Award for Outstanding Regional Theatre. The 2008 festival runs June 19 - October 25 in an authentic Shakespearean theatre.
·Living Traditions: A Celebration
of Salt Lake's Folk & Ethnic Arts
is held every May on the grounds of the City & County
Building. This free three-day festival features three stages
of ongoing performances, crafts demonstrations and sales and
20 ethnic food booths selling traditional cuisine.
·The Downtown Farmers' Market
is a local growers market, featuring fresh produce from over 50 Utah farmers. In
addition to the produce, the Market also offers a wide variety of fresh baked
breads and pastries, cheeses, meat and seafood, jams and honeys, house and
garden plants, arranged planters and numerous handmade arts & crafts.
Unique food vendors also are a part of the Market, offering prepared foods and
beverages. The Market runs every Saturday morning for 19 weeks at Historic
Pioneer Park in downtown Salt Lake City, from mid-June through mid-October.
·The Downtown Art and Craft Market
features over 60 vendors who create all categories of hand-made, non-imported
crafts and visual arts. Traditional and non-traditional artists showcase and
sell a colorful and varied display of high quality, handmade crafts and artworks
each Saturday morning; adjacent to the Downtown Farmers' Market in Historic
Pioneer Park.
·The annual Festival of the
American West relives the cultural history of the American West.The American West Heritage Foundation will sponsor various festival
events throughout the year that will highlight a specific western theme.
·The annual Park
City Kimball Arts Festival, held the first weekend in August, is a two-day
visual arts exhibition staged on the streets of the historic mining town.About 200 artists from throughout the West exhibit their work for more
than 100,000 attendees.
The Film Industry
Chances
are you have seen areas of the state of Utah on the big screen in one of the
more than 700 films and TV movies filmed here. The reasons filmmakers come to
Utah are similar to what attracts other visitors to the state: the scenic
beauty, geographic diversity, people and services. Hollywood first discovered
Utah in the 1920s. Since then, Utah has been the backdrop for hundreds of films,
such as Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, Dumb and Dumber, and Mission
Impossible 2. From the Bonneville Salt Flats near the Great Salt Lake to the
forests of the Wasatch and Uinta Mountains, northern Utah has set the stage for
films such as Footloose, Con Air and Independence Day.
Salt Lake City and the surrounding areas have doubled for some unusual
locations, such as the Alps and as Beijing and the Sudan for the CBS TV series Touched
By An Angel. WB’s popular series Everwood was filmed in Ogden and
other areas of northern Utah. The Life and Times of Grizzly Adams was
another popular TV series that filmed in northern Utah during the late 1970s. In
2005 the film industry in Utah contributed nearly $110 million in the state’s
economy through film related activities.
The most recent made for television movie associated with Utah is Disney's very
own High School Musical and High School Musical 2.
Movies
filmed throughout southeastern Utah include Indiana Jones and the Last
Crusade, Thelma and Louise, Austin Powers in Gold Member and Hulk;
as well as such galactic flicks as 2001: ASpace Odyssey, Rocket
Man and Galaxy Quest.
Film
companies have been attracted to the area not only because of the awesome and
diversified scenery but also because of the efforts of the local film
commissions and the film incentive programs our state offers. Utah has become
widely recognized for the talent and professionalism of its residents.
The
Sundance Film Festival is considered the premier showcase of U.S. and
international independent film. The Sundance Film Festival has its origins in
the Utah/U.S. Film Festival, which began in 1978 in Salt Lake City. In 1985, the
festival became a program of the Sundance Institute. The Festival attracts
50,000 visitors annually and is held every January in Park City, with screenings
in Salt Lake City, Ogden and Sundance. The Festival includes a range of film
categories and related offerings that represent the broad scope of contemporary
independent films being made in the U.S. and internationally. Each year, the
Festival screens more than 125 dramatic and documentary feature length films and
90 short films, selected from more than 5,000 submissions.
The Salt Lake Chamber and Downtown Alliance are committed to planning and
implementing a Salt Lake Cultural District in the capital city.Coordinating with current facilities, such as Abravanel Hall, Capitol
Theater and the Rose Wagner Performing Arts Center, the future plan will incorporate many other arts
groups to encourage economic development.Engaging
the business community, arts groups and their supporters and Federal, State and
Local governments will be an opportunity to plan for a Salt Lake City 50 years
into the future.
For many years, Salt Lake and Utah have interchangeably been called the
"best of the west.” This is a description that continues to ring true for
the area’s arts and culture community.