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  • When art's in season

    Salt Lake Tribune, United States

    Bountiful Summerfest International

    When art's in season

    Annual event featured diverse entertainment, 40 booths
    with diverse creations
    By Janine S. Creager
    Close-Up Correspondent

    Article Last Updated: 09/20/2007 12:20:53 PM MDT


    Sculptures by Michelle Lawson sit near watercolors...
    (Janine S. Creager/Close-Up Correspondent )«1»With the
    arrival of the autumnal equinox at 3:51 a.m. this
    morning, summer became a memory. But for participants
    at the Bountiful Summerfest International (BSI), oh,
    what a memory it was.
    Bountiful Davis Arts Center Director Emma Dugal
    said changes implemented at this year's festival
    helped make the event a success.
    "Performances were enjoyed on the beautiful new
    stage designed and built by Bountiful . . . [and]
    admission was free due to the increased sponsorships
    by Menlove Dodge Toyota and many of the municipalities
    of Davis County as well as the Davis County
    Commission," she said.
    Attendance at this year's event was better than
    ever. Festival-goers watched performances by groups
    from Armenia, Croatia, the Czech Republic, Peru,
    Philippines and Poland. They also enjoyed performances
    by Utah groups such as Salzburger Echo and Salt City
    Saints.
    With 40 artists' booths at the festival, visitors
    were treated to a vast selection of talent. Among
    these artists were Cottonwood Heights residents Emily
    Willis and Michelle Lawson.
    Lawson moved to Utah 18 months ago from Australia.
    Years ago, she began her artwork with stone and chain
    saw sculptures. But with two small children now at
    home, she turned to the less dangerous medium of clay.
    Her sculptures depict themes such as boab trees and
    howling dogs that are reminiscent of her homeland.
    Although Lawson loves to sculpt
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    the Australian dogs, she laments the fact that her own
    dog, Kelby, won't howl here because emergency sirens
    in America sounds different from the ones in
    Australia.
    Despite the theme of her art, Lawson doesn't
    believe that art owes allegiance to any particular
    country.
    Art, she says, allows you to be "able to express
    what you're feeling."
    When Lawson moved into Willis' neighborhood, it
    didn't take long for the two to discover their shared
    passion for art. Believing that it would be more fun
    to work together, Willis suggested to Lawson that they
    share a booth at a festival.
    "I love her sculptures [and the stories they
    tell]," Willis says about Lawson's art.
    Emily Willis is a watercolor instructor at Granite
    Community Education and has received numerous awards,
    including one for excellence from the Utah Watercolor
    Society Fall Juried Show.
    Willis' start in art began when she was 14 and
    took a watercolor class with a friend.
    "It was then that I fell in love with painting
    with watercolors," she recalls. "I love the
    transparency and radiance of watercolors."
    Before her children were grown, Willis had to find
    time for her art. She enjoys the relative freedom she
    now has as an artist.
    Art "is becoming more and more of my life," Willis
    says. "If there's an arts festival, I want to be
    [there]. If I don't have something to do, I paint.
    It's like a good friend."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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