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Provo City News

Latter-day Saint Art Show Opens This Friday

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By McKinsleigh Smith

The ARCH-HIVE – the Utah-based art collective most recently responsible for adding “no more than 100 gallons of water to The Great Salt Lake in a wonderfully wacky performance art stunt – is back. This time, the group is returning their focus to fine art with an art exhibit entitled “Public Dreams // Private Myths.” This show will be displayed at Writ & Vision on Center Street in downtown Provo, Utah.

“Public Dreams // Private Myths” will feature pieces about historical Mormon folklore and inventive future twists on familiar concepts. Works from 10 artists will feature imagery such as American angels, charlatan spirits, seagulls, underwater monsters, the Latter-day Saint concept of Kolob, a vision of a future powered by “spirit matter,” and even “strange, newly-discovered relics” suggesting new mythologies. The show will span many mediums, from mixed media and sculptures to digital artwork and film.

The name of the show was inspired by a quote from Joseph Campbell: “Myths are public dreams, dreams are private myths.”

A piece from 2022’s “I Am Bound Upon a Wheel of Fire.”

This is The ARCH-HIVE’s 5th annual show. Last year’s, entitled “I Am Bound Upon a Wheel of Fire,” was a runaway hit, with a line around the block and a wait time of several hours on opening night. The exhibit even stayed open late to accommodate the influx of patrons. The entirety of the show, which explored the intersection of Latter-day Saint faith and obsessive compulsive disorder, was acquired by Brigham Young University.

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This new exhibition aims to be just as poignant. “This show is important because it has taken a new ‘pulse’ of the folk beliefs and traditions of members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints,” says artist Camilla Stark, co-founder of The ARCH-HIVE. “Folklore continuously evolves to be relevant for the time and place that the stories are shared. By asking these artists to interpret a well-known folk belief, or create a new legend, we uncover a view into the modern psyche surrounding this religion and culture.”

“Our collective folklore is a tapestry of tapestries, a recursive system of stories informing stories,” says show curator, ARCH-HIVE co-founder, and Mormcore artist Laz. “In exploring this theme, I hope that viewers will be encouraged not only to appreciate their inherited folklore, but to perpetuate it.”

A portion of the gallery from 2021’s “Midwinter At the Gates of Dawn.”

For featured artist Lexie Hoskin, she’s excited to use her art to help Latter-day Saints feel proud of what makes them unique. “As a church and a culture, we’ve gotten into a bad habit of shying away from the things that make us peculiar,” says Hoskin. “I like the idea of reclaiming some of these ideas that people might laugh at and instead making them something to be proud of, or at least a point of interest.”

The opening reception for “Public Dreams // Private Myths” is Friday, December 1 from 6-9 PM at Writ & Vision. It will be displayed through the rest of December 2023. 

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Categories
State News

Through Pouring Water Into The Great Salt Lake, One Group Hopes to Submerge All of Utah

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By Charlie G. Patreus

Much has been said about the issues facing Utah’s Great Salt Lake. The Great Salt Lake hit its lowest recorded water level ever in November 2022. Arsenic in the exposed lakebed threatens to poison the air. Scientists at Brigham Young University in Provo estimate that without policy changes, the lake will dry up in 2028, with local species killed off by overly salty water beforehand. Today’s exposed lakebed is currently strewn with the corpses of dead seagulls and swarms of brine flies.

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Even after recovering five feet of new water from this year’s massive snow runoff, the Utah Division of Forestry Fire and State Lands reported it’s not going to be enough to fix the problem. The entire lake still needs to rise another five to six feet – hopefully more. In the 1910s, the iconic Black Rock was completely surrounded by water.

Will we ever refill the Great Salt Lake? One group doesn’t just think it’s possible – they think it’s not a big enough goal.

View of Black Rock surrounded by the waters of Great Salt Lake in the 1910s. Photo courtesy of the Utah State Historical Society.

The ARCH-HIVE is a Utah-based art collective featuring “artists, musicians, writers, and thinkers exploring the unique perspectives & peculiarities of Utah, Mormonism, and the American West.” Art styles include folk, pop, esoteric, and psychedelic art. Known for their stylish design, tongue-in-cheek humor, and crowded art shows, the group frequently engages in quirky meet-ups. For instance: last October, the Mormon art group threw a Halloween gathering in Orem’s University Place Deseret Book – after it became a Spirit Halloween.

On August 12, 2023 they held a “Refill Lake Bonneville Protest” at the Black Rock Historic Site near the Great Salt Lake. The goal of the gathering was to not only save the lake, but to restore it to prehistoric levels. Lake Bonneville was a pluvial lake that covered most of the state during the Late Pleistocene, or Ice Age. The infographic below explains just how big these artists like to dream. And how much they value water over… pretty much all human life.

On the morning of the event, nearly two dozen attendees read poems, shouted protest chants, waved signs, and carried “Definitely Real and Definitely Not Cardboard Mitt Romney” to the shoreline before dumping “no more than 100 gallons” of water into the Great Salt Lake. According to the art collective, several attendees made a specific effort to ensure the water was sourced from outside the state of Utah. From what we observed, all water containers were recycled, and some participants removed existing trash and recyclables from the shore before heading home.

Hot dogs were consumed because the actual definitely-real-and-definitely-not-cardboard Mitt Romney’s “favorite meat is hot dog.” Many also gathered for frozen yogurt directly after the event.

Considering the fact that 2.5 billion gallons of water per day were flowing past the Willard Canal into the Great Salt Lake last May, “no more than 100 gallons” is statistically insignificant and will definitely not solve the environmental crisis. Despite this, The ARCH-HIVE insists that there is “definitely more water there than there was before” and “this is only the beginning.” Commenters on social media seemed to look forward to next year, when “dozens more gallons” would be added.

While certainly not the most effective means of delivering high volumes of water to our region’s iconic lake, if consistency turns this gathering into tradition, it could be a powerful and intriguing way to instill a love of environmental conservation in the hearts and minds of the average Utahn. Who knows?

At this point, we need all the help we can get.

Watch a recap of the gathering below.

@zachisatourist

Sometimes you gotta dream bigger than the Great Salt Lake. WE WILL REFILL THE VILLE 👊 #saltlake #saltlakecityutah #saltlakecity #greatsaltlake #utahliving #utahthings #totallynormal

♬ Halo Theme – L’Orchestra Cinematique
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