Sedona.Biz – The Voice of Sedona and The Verde ValleySedona.Biz – The Voice of Sedona and The Verde Valley
    Sedona.Biz – The Voice of Sedona and The Verde Valley Sedona.Biz – The Voice of Sedona and The Verde Valley
    • Home
    • Sedona News
      • Arts and Entertainment
      • Bear Howard Chronicles
      • Business Profiles
      • City of Sedona
      • Elections
      • Goodies & Freebies
      • Mind & Body
      • Sedona News
    • Opinion
    • Real Estate
    • The Sedonan
    • Advertise
    • Sedona’s Best
    Sedona.Biz – The Voice of Sedona and The Verde ValleySedona.Biz – The Voice of Sedona and The Verde Valley
    Home»Arts and Entertainment»Oct 12th is Second Saturday Art & Cultural Walk in Old Town Cottonwood
    Arts and Entertainment

    Oct 12th is Second Saturday Art & Cultural Walk
    in Old Town Cottonwood

    October 2, 2019No Comments
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Email Reddit WhatsApp
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email Reddit WhatsApp

    logo_artwalkoldtowncottonwoodCottonwood AZ (October 2, 2019) – Join in for a fabulous evening of wine, music, food and ART in Old Town Cottonwood, along Historic 89A. Most merchants celebrate from 4-9pm.

    Starting at 735 N Main Street, at The Muse Gallery, you’ll find two featured artists in the house: Nancy White and Karon Leigh.

    Blue Flower - alcohol ink by Nancy White
    Blue Flower – alcohol ink
    by Nancy White

    Mrs. White’s journey with glass started when she was gifted a torch and glass rods in 2007. After learning how to make glass beads, she moved on to blow glass tubing into chandelier components. Her education continued to include glass blowing, marble making and glass flowers at various schools in Arizona. She will have numerous pieces of glass work and alcohol ink in gallery for the show.

    Karon Leigh is an expressionist  painter/printmaker inspired by the Arizona landscape. Her art incorporates a bold use of color and a raw emotion, attacking her canvases with vigorous gestural expressionism, an art grounded in personal experience, inviting viewers to experience the art, rather than define it. This is Karon’s last month with The Muse as she sets off to be the new Artistic Director at Tubac Center of the Arts.

    For other monthly Muse events visit the-muse-gallery.com/events. Autumn Hours are Wednesday through Sunday, 12-7pm.

    Breathe - ceramics by Magda Gluszek
    Breathe – ceramics
    by Magda Gluszek

    Next down the street at ARIZONA REGIONAL CERAMICS (ARC) – CONTEMPORARY FINE ART catch Magda Gluszek’s stunning solo exhibition “Can’t See The Forest for the Trees.” These thirteen, all-new sculptures will be showing from October 1st through November 23rd, 2019.

    ARC is located at 747 North Main Street. For additional information and other exhibitions please call 928-202-9070. ARC Fall Hours: Tuesday-Saturday 12-5, and Second Saturday until 9PM.

    Around the bend, The City of Cottonwood presents “Southwest Expressions” by Barbara Donahue as its rotating art exhibit for the month of October.  Donahue’s art career started at the early age of 8 years old, drawing animals and painting store windows for the holidays in her birth place, Van Wert, Ohio. 

    She attended ASU majoring in Art, and Scottsdale Artists School.  Representational art is her focus and she is a self-proclaimed colorist using vivid colors in her southwest paintings.  She does paintings of New Mexico Pueblos, and landscapes of Arizona Southwest and Colorado scenes. Traveling all over the U.S. and Europe she paints from her visits to many locations.  Donahue is a founding member of Arizona Plein Air Painters and exhibits at many local events and galleries.

    Sedona Gift Shop

    Exhibit runs from October 1st through 30th, 2019, at the City Council Chambers located at 826 North Main Street.  An artist reception will be held during the Second Saturday Art & Cultural Walk on October 12, 2019, from 4-7 p.m.

    Finish off the evening at 3 Kings Kasbar with dinner and the work of award-winning artist, Brianna Rush. Rush has been exhibiting her art in juried, open solo and group shows since 1994 in Connecticut, New York, New Mexico, Arizona and Taiwan.

    Since moving to the Southwest in 2006, she has been enraptured with the Southwest landscape. It has been an integral part of her daily life and informs her art. Color, intuition, nature and energy are sources that create a curiosity large enough for her to explore on canvas.

    She holds an Associates of Fine Arts from the Western New Mexico University in Silver City, New Mexico. She began her fine arts study at Manchester Community College in Manchester, Connecticut.

    Steven Schutz - at Pillsbury Wine
    Steven Schutz – at Pillsbury Wine

    Down the road at Pillsbury Wine Company North, artist Steven Schutz will be in the house, and holding a raffle for a framed print.$3 per ticket. Winner drawn at 9 p.m.

    And across the street at Arizona Stronghold Vineyards tasting room, the art of Jeremia Sunfellow and Malou Leanstinsis will be featured. Jeremia is a self-taught artist, always learning new techniques and adding new materials into her work. She combines wood, oil, pencil, and ink to create each distinctive image. She is known for her focus on the female form, her love of anatomy and her exploration of beauty and it’s complexities.

    Malou has had a lifelong fascination with the human & animal subject and culminating in the liberation and integration of all that is essential in her continuing explorations of the often overlooked in our world. Born and raised in Luxembourg, Malou has had the good fortune to find success in her career in both painting and graphic design.

    For updates, visit: https://www.facebook.com/oldtowncottonwoodsecondsaturday or call (928) 634-0003.

    Healing Paws

    This is an advertisement

    Comments are closed.


    What Would I Change?
    By Amaya Gayle Gregory

    What would I change if I could? You and I both know I can’t, but it’s a fun exercise anyway. I would have been less of a know-it-all on my spiritual journey. It seems to be a side-effect of the path. Spiritual folks develop an all-knowing buffer to protect against their inevitable surrender to the unknown, but understanding that now didn’t make it gentler on me or those I loved, let alone those that I deemed not capable of getting it 😉 Yeah … I’d have dropped the spiritual snob act. I’d have recognized that spiritual radicals are only different on the outside from radical right Christians, and that the surface doesn’t really matter as much as I thought. We are all doing our couldn’t be otherwise things, playing our perfect roles. I’d have learned to bow down humbly before my fellow man, regardless of whether I agreed with him or not. We’re all in this together and not one of us will get out alive. Read more→
    The Sedonan
    Need More Customers?
    Bear Howard Chronicles
    Humankind
    Tlaquepaque
    Verde Valley Wine Trail
    Recent Comments
    • Bill w on Innovative Affordable Workforce Housing for the City of Sedona
    • JB on Honoring Mom on Mother’s Day
    • @Bill on Innovative Affordable Workforce Housing for the City of Sedona
    • Jill Dougherty on Innovative Affordable Workforce Housing for the City of Sedona
    • TJ Hall on Innovative Affordable Workforce Housing for the City of Sedona
    • Bill N. on Innovative Affordable Workforce Housing for the City of Sedona
    • JB on Innovative Affordable Workforce Housing for the City of Sedona
    • Bill w on Innovative Affordable Workforce Housing for the City of Sedona
    • Jon Hamnderna on Innovative Affordable Workforce Housing for the City of Sedona
    • JB on Innovative Affordable Workforce Housing for the City of Sedona
    • TJ Hall on Innovative Affordable Workforce Housing for the City of Sedona
    • Jill Dougherty on Innovative Affordable Workforce Housing for the City of Sedona
    • Bill w on Innovative Affordable Workforce Housing for the City of Sedona
    • Jill Dougherty on “Picking Up the Pieces in 2029: The 100 Days After Trump’s America”
    • TJ Hall on Verde Valley Groups Participate in May Day Strong Rallies to Demand a Fair Future for Working Families
    Archives

    What Would I Change?
    By Amaya Gayle Gregory

    What would I change if I could? You and I both know I can’t, but it’s a fun exercise anyway. I would have been less of a know-it-all on my spiritual journey. It seems to be a side-effect of the path. Spiritual folks develop an all-knowing buffer to protect against their inevitable surrender to the unknown, but understanding that now didn’t make it gentler on me or those I loved, let alone those that I deemed not capable of getting it 😉 Yeah … I’d have dropped the spiritual snob act. I’d have recognized that spiritual radicals are only different on the outside from radical right Christians, and that the surface doesn’t really matter as much as I thought. We are all doing our couldn’t be otherwise things, playing our perfect roles. I’d have learned to bow down humbly before my fellow man, regardless of whether I agreed with him or not. We’re all in this together and not one of us will get out alive. Read more→
    The Sedonan
    The Sedonan
    © 2025 All rights reserved. Sedona.biz.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.