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Sedona Arts Center Media Alert

Public Art Installed in Uptown Sedona

Sedona Arts Center Announces the Installation of Sculptures by James Muir

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
March 30, 2016
Sedona Arts Center
MEDIA CONTACT:
Kelli Klymenko, Marketing Manager
(928) 282-3809


Sedona Arts Center Installs Public Art in Uptown 
Two Sculptures by James Muir Now on View


Early on the morning of March 24, Sedona Arts Center facilitated the installation of two extraordinary bronze sculptures created by artist James Muir.  Caduceus and Children are the newest additions to Sedona’s public art experiences, and can now be seen in the small plaza between the Best Western Arroyo Roble Hotel and the Arts Center campus in Uptown.

“Our board and staff have been working with the artist, whose sculptures adorn public space across America, and we are thrilled to position these James Muir works as new creative additions to the neighborhood,” says Eric Holowacz, Executive Director of the Arts Center. “We invite the public to stop by and meet these new Uptown figures." 

Caduceus, the largest of the two sculptures, stands 12-feet high and has a 9-foot wide wingspan. The figure is striking and otherworldly, and provides a dramatic greeting to those heading into Oak Creek Canyon or arriving from that direction. The work gloriously transform the symbol of medicine, Caduceus, into a figure that the artist calls an Angel of Healing for our time. 

“She rises, like the mythical Phoenix heralding in a new era of harmony and peace, to heal the earth and all its inhabitants with love as the master physician,” explains Muir. 

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The commanding sculpture has been generously loaned to the site owned by Phil Evans, Managing Member of Arroyo Roble Hotel and Creekside Villas. Another cast of Caduceus has been donated to the Sedona Art Museum for its new collection.
   
A second bronze sculpture, Children, was also installed on that morning in a quiet corner of the same plaza. Standing just under 5-feet tall, it has been gifted by the artist to the permanent collection of Sedona Arts Center. This special work depicts a young refugee girl, fleeing before the storm clouds of war, quietly giving comfort and reassurance to her own doll-child. The tender work reflects the innocence of children, filled with kindness and the hope of creating a better future.  A life size version of Children is also in the permanent collection of the Auschwitz-Birkenau Holocaust Museum in Poland.  

Arts Center board members Kathy Levin and Pam Frazier have been working on this project for the past few months, planning the details with City staff, lining up the installation crew, and finalizing the generous loan and gift from Linda and James Muir.  

“The Arts Center is so grateful for this partnership with the Muirs, and the opportunity to expand the creative environment we share in Sedona,” says Levin. “Together, these new public art works bring inspiration, provoke thought, and transform a simple plaza into an extraordinary place to experience art.” 

James Muir’s professional art career as a sculptor began in Sedona in 1980, where he has been a full time professional artist for over three decades.  He has completed 100 sculptures to date, with over 60 commissions and monumental installations across the country and abroad.  Muir describes his art as allegorical and filled with symbolic meaning.  In keeping with his deep spiritual convictions and social consciousness, Muir’s sculptural and philanthropic works reflect the critical nature of the times in which we live. His work is represented locally by the Goldenstein Gallery in West Sedona.

“Thanks to the generosity of the Sedona Arts Center, Sedona Art Museum, and Phil Evans, I am deeply honored to have my sculptures Caduceus and Children in Uptown Sedona surrounded by the natural beauty that has inspired my art for nearly forty years,” Muir says. 

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For most of his impressive career, Muir has created his Allegorical Sculptures from his studio and foundry in Sedona, layering an ever-expanding array of artistic meaning that speaks to the highest qualities of man and the triumphs of the human spirit.

"It's partnerships like this, and generous people like Linda and James Muir, that help expand our organization role in Northern Arizona," says Holowacz, who arrived nine months ago to assume leadership of the 58 year old organization. "This year has seen extraordinary growth in programs, wonderful new partnerships, and bold  ideas on how to make our community more creative. I am humbled and honored to be part of it all."

To learn more about the Arts Center's upcoming projects, programing, and creative opportunities, visit the gallery and offices in Uptown Sedona, or contact Holowacz at 282-3809. 

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About Sedona Arts Center

Sedona Arts Center is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization dedicated to the creative life of Sedona and the unbridled support of artists in Northern Arizona.

Founded nearly sixty years ago, the Arts Center operates a Fine Art Gallery featuring over 100 local artists, year-round workshops and arts education, cultural celebrations and community partnerships, and annual festivals. The organization also presents innovative collaborative projects like Loving Bowls, the 12 x 12 Project, Plein Air festivals, arts education outreach to schools like Monument Valley High, and new public art partnerships in Sedona. 



For Media Information, including interview requests and photo opportunities, please contact Kelli Klymenko, Marketing Manager, at (928) 282-3809 or click here.  

 
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