The Art Box
Every painting, every song, every photograph, every chunk of clay, every poem, every book, every dance, every artistic creation has a human story behind it. We just happen to have 190+ of them for you to enjoy. Listen to us at your leisure on Spotify, Podbean, Samsung, iHeartRadio, Amazon Music, PodChaser or your favorite podcast app. The Art Box a lively and engaging discussion about creativity and humanity in the Virgin Valley of Nevada and beyond.
Episodes
Monday Oct 31, 2022
Monday Oct 31, 2022
Utah State Division of History - Utah State Historic Preservation Office's Matt Podolinsky and Ian Wright take time with the Art Box to talk about the Utah Site Steward Program. If you like history, archaeology and just helping keep cultural sites safe please listen in and maybe join in with us.
There are lots of reasons why you should become a Site Steward with the Utah Cultural Site Stewardship Program(UCSS)! Each stewards’ reasons are different. Perhaps one steward has a cultural connection with a place and its history. Maybe another is looking for ways to get outside and volunteer their time helping safeguard cultural resources. Some stewards are looking for educational experiences or for a community of people who are passionate about the outdoors, recreation and history. Others are simply looking for a fun opportunity that allows them to also give back in some way.
Site Stewards work directly with archaeologists and land managers to keep an eye on sensitive archaeological sites for new damage. Here in Utah we have seen an increase in damage to archaeological sites ranging from intentional vandalism to subtle destruction from changing climate forces. Traces of the past that have existed for thousands of years are in danger of going away forever, but Site Stewards help to identify issues before they become big problems. Site Stewards visit the same site several times a year to look for changes, which makes many Stewards the uncontested experts in their sites after all those visits!
Whatever your reasons, the UCSS Program could use your help. We are looking for good folks who are willing to pitch in and assist land managers by monitoring archaeological and cultural sites, reporting on any damages or changes that they may encounter. We know everyone has different areas of interest or parts of the state that they enjoy visiting. We will work with you to determine your comfort level when it comes to identifying a site that is right for you. We want to make sure that the site you monitor is in a part of the state that is accessible for you. We also understand that everyone has different capabilities and we will work with you as we find a site that is within your abilities to monitor and is connected to an aspect of history that you find interesting. Utah is home to incredible history and stewards play an integral part in safeguarding the stories of those who were here before, helping to ensure that they are not lost to future generations.
The strength of this program is in the diversity and breadth of the people who make it possible, the site stewards! For more information on becoming a Utah Cultural Site Steward, please visit our website or chat with Ian Wright , the Utah Cultural Site Stewardship Coordinator.
Sunday Oct 30, 2022
Sunday Oct 30, 2022
A special Directors cut version where Tyler Roylance (Gollum) and Stewart Plank (Bilbo) discuss the creation and making of this art inspired adaptation of a chapter in the book The Hobbit. Additionally a few outtakes are included for your enjoyment.
Sunday Oct 30, 2022
Sunday Oct 30, 2022
This was recorded in mid-July after we learned a scheduled guest was not going to show up. In lieu of packing all of our stuff up we started chatting about the adventures we have had since we first proposed a podcast to the VVAA Board of Directors. We have obviously been bouncing it back because we have so many great guests that we want to get on the air. We are going to publish this on a normal Ten Minute episode week maybe because Halloween seems just like a good time for you to listen to our idle chatter and silliness, don't worry we will pair this with the Bilbo vs. Gollum Directors Cut mini-episode so you will get your expected mini-episode this week as well.
Monday Oct 24, 2022
Monday Oct 24, 2022
The Love Family joins the Art Box to talk about their coming fundraising event the Masquerade Ball on Saturday December 3. All proceeds go to the Hope Squads at Virgin Valley High School and Hughes Middle School to support teen suicide prevention. Listen in and learn about the Hope Squads, their work and how fun the Masquerade Ball will be. Tickets are only $20 and can be purchased at https://www.eventbrite.com/e/masquerade-disco-ball-a-fundraiser-for-local-youth-suicide-prevention-tickets-421283017847?aff=ebdssbcitybrowse
Sunday Oct 23, 2022
Sunday Oct 23, 2022
This is a bonus extra special ten minutes mini that is not scheduled to be released until November 14. Shhhhhh, please do not tell anyone that your friend Steve is giving you special access. It was next in queue to be edited and I just loved it sooooo much I had to share it with just my friends. Hardly any editing (You know I love that) so it was add the Dottie beginning, ending, take out a few ahhs and hems, save it, publish it. Yooohooo.
I happened to be in the classroom one day and 'poof' standing in front of me was Tyler Roylance and Floyd Johnson. After I bowed several times (necessary to do when in the presence of royalty) I asked if they would do a quick podcast? Yes was the answer, so I threw down the cell phone on the table and asked, "hey what do you guys wanna talk about?" Creativity was the answer and off they went.
My ears sure enjoyed it, hope yours do to.
Notable quotes from this episode:
“It’s the thing that makes art so wonderful, that little kid in us.” – Tyler Roylance
“They are in the process of learning, not necessarily about art, but about themselves, what they are capable of doing.” - Floyd Johnson
Saturday Oct 22, 2022
Saturday Oct 22, 2022
Join us for the much anticipated release of our interview with the mayor of our thriving small town Mayor Al Litman. We chat about his leadership through Covid, city growth, new industries, affordable housing, the STEAM Center, the coming First Fridays, his passions and of course we talk Art.
Mayor Litman hails originally from Duluth, Minnesota and moved to Los Angeles following graduation from the University of Minnesota where he received his Bachelor of Science in History and Political Science.
Mayor Litman entered the Army in 1965 and served in Vietnam with the First Calvary Division Artillery where he received a Bronze Star for Valor and the Air Metal for flying in numerous helicopter flights.
Following his military service, Mayor Litman taught public school for the Los Angeles Unified School District before teaching in Simi Valley California for 15 years.
He taught and directed programs for special needs students, specializing in the mildly mentally retarded, as well as developing driver education and training for the deaf and hard of hearing, and other disabilities.
In addition to his work with the public schools, he was an adjunct professor at Pepperdine University, teaching in the Graduate School of Education and Psychology and also completed his Masters of Science in Administration and Supervision and his Doctoral work in Institutional Management.
In 1984, he left education and founded an automobile service company until retiring and moved to Maui, Hawaii in 1994.
After a brief retirement, he opened a small practice in Child and Family Psychotherapy as well as providing Autism consulting for the State of Hawaii public schools retiring again in 2004 moved to Mesquite.
Since relocating to Mesquite, Mayor Litman has taught Psychology at the College of Southern Nevada, became active in veteran’s affairs, directed the Veterans Day parade for fourteen years and continues to conduct the annual Veterans Day and Memorial Day programs.
He was responsible for bringing the Vietnam Wall That Heals to Mesquite in 2010, and was a founder of the Mesquite Veterans Center.
In 2011, he was elected to a two-year term on the Mesquite City Council; being re-elected in 2013.
On May 14, 2014, Councilman Litman was appointed Mayor and was elected to a four-year term in 2016, and again, a four-year term in 2020.
In his spare time, he works out frequently at the City Recreation Center and has taught spin classes for many years.
Mayor Litman has been married to Phyllis for 56 years.
Monday Oct 17, 2022
Monday Oct 17, 2022
A quick, interesting and fun conversation with our Bureau of Land Management - Gold Butte National Monument Archeologists at the Three Corners Archeology Conference at University of Nevada Las Vegas. How they protect our cultural treasures of rock art.
Friday Oct 14, 2022
Friday Oct 14, 2022
Bilbo Picasso wanders too deep in the art closet where he meets former artist Van Smego, now known as Gollum, and must use his wit with art riddles to outsmart him and escape with his life.
Sunday Oct 09, 2022
Sunday Oct 09, 2022
Doug Herbert served both the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) and the U.S. Department of Education (ED) as an arts education program director and special assistant in his 30-year federal career.
Between 1987 and 2004, Doug directed the NEA's Arts Education grants and technical assistance programs, initially as the assistant director and then as director for 12 years. There he initiated several interagency partnerships with the Department of Education in order to create nationwide surveys of the conditions of arts in schools. Doug also led federal efforts at the NEA to put the arts into the National Assessment of Educational Progress, widely known as The Nation's Report Card.
At ED, Doug was a special assistant to former Secretary Rod Paige and then to several assistant deputy secretaries of innovation and improvement until his retirement at the end of 2017. At ED, he continued to foster or manage federal partnerships to assess arts achievement and determine the state of arts education.
The Arts Education Partnership, which Doug was instrumental in creating in 1994, continues to serve as the nation's clearinghouse for arts education and brings together more than 100 arts, education, governance, and philanthropic organizations to advance arts education for all American students.
Between 1980 and '86, Doug was director of the Very Special Arts Festival Program of VSA, an educational affiliate of The Kennedy Center. During this time, he fell in love with the Southwest, particularly Arizona and New Mexico.
His career in arts and arts education administration began as the first managing director of The Publick Playhouse, a community performing arts center in the Maryland suburbs of the D.C. metro area.
A graduate of the University of Maryland in 1972, Doug found his calling "behind the curtain" in community theatre following college and chose publicity and producing over acting and directing.
Sunday Oct 09, 2022
Sunday Oct 09, 2022
Linda Harris is a retired mathematics teacher who has lived with her husband in Mesquite since 2017. They were drawn to Mesquite by the golf, arts and culture, and the beautiful desert landscape. Linda received a B.S. in Applied Mathematics and a Masters in Education. She taught in Missouri for 25 years, and was also a curriculum specialist for her district.
Linda is a self-taught artist, receiving no formal training after 9th grade art class. While in Missouri, Linda enjoyed porcelain art in her spare time. She attended porcelain art workshops around the country, and after retiring, bought her own kiln and taught porcelain art in her home. Upon moving to Mesquite, Linda became interested in watercolor, oils and acrylics. She took some watercolor classes and workshops, and found that she especially like painting portraits. She won awards in the Mesquite Fine Arts Gallery Exhibitions for four of her portraits, “Earth, Wind, and Fiery Redheads” (1st Place/2018), “A Special Sliver of Light,” (Best of Show/ Sponsor’s Choice/2019) and “Moonlit Vigil” (1st Place/2020), and Mesquite Mayor Al Litman (Honorable Mention/ 2021).
Linda taught two of the GSWA classroom lessons in 2019, and became coordinator of the program the following year. She now oversees the free educational programs and workshops for VVAA, believing strongly in the mission “to promote the power of the arts for all ages and all cultures,” and the educational goals which support this mission. She is responsible for working with VVAA volunteers to plan, advertise and implement the programs, write grants which support the programs. She previously wrote the FY 2022 Arts Learning Project Grant to bring Artist/ Photographer Larry Burton to Mesquite as VVAA's first Artist in Residence during February 2022. She worked closely with Mr. Burton and the Project Director to plan activities and workshops, host community events, organize data, and write the final report. A recent grant has just been approved to bring Recycle and Reuse Artist Deborah Lambin here as February’s Artist in Residence.
When not at the art gallery, Linda enjoys hiking in the beautiful desert landscape near Mesquite. She has two sons, a granddaughter, and two brothers and their families still in the Midwest.
The Art Box
Join our hosts Linda Harris and Steve Dudrow as they bring in talented and interesting guests to chat about all things art.