First James Turrell Skyspace in the state of Colorado to be inaugurated this summer in Green djournal.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from djournal.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
A world-renowned visual artist will build one of his coveted exhibits in a small, scenic mountain town just a few miles west of Colorado Springs.
Residents of Green Mountain Falls gathered with members of the town’s artistic community early Saturday at a groundbreaking ceremony for a James Turrell Skyspace, which will overlook the town at the top of Red Mountain.
Turrell is an internationally known artist whose work can be seen in multiple countries on several continents. He has built 85 Skyspaces around the world. His Green Mountain Falls project will be the first in Colorado and the first built on the side of a mountain.
James Turrell and American Ballet Theatre to headline blockbuster Green Box Arts Festival Robust festival lineup features first James Turrell Skyspace for the state of Colorado,New York’s American Ballet Theatre, concerts, NEW events, classes, camps, culinary arts and more
April 16, 2021 13:08 ET | Source: Kirkpatrick Family Fund Kirkpatrick Family Fund Norman, Oklahoma
Green Mountain Falls, April 16, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE)
GREEN MOUNTAIN FALLS, COLO. – The 2021 Green Box Arts Festival is thrilled to announce it will welcome a Skyspace installation to the town of Green Mountain Falls, created by internationally-renowned contemporary light and space artist James Turrell. The work will be the first permanent Turrell installation in the state of Colorado, and the first in the world to be positioned on the side of a mountain. The piece joins an exclusive list of more than 85 Skyspaces the artist has designed a
James Turrell and American Ballet Theatre to headline blockbuster Green Box Arts Festival apnews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from apnews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
If your neighborhood has been filled with construction noise over the past year, if youâve seen an unusual number of people hanging onto ladders or hammering on rooftops, an increase in permit applications for residential alterations might offer at least a partial explanation.
According to the Pikes Peak Regional Building Department database on pprbd.org, a total of 61,996 total permits were approved in 2019 for El Paso County residents looking to perform major construction work on their homes, like installing new air conditioning systems, building new decks and working on electrical systems. Last year saw that number increase by about 2 percent, to 63,215 permits.