First-graders at Dilworth Elementary pose in front of the "Utah" mural -painted by Dilworth's fourth-graders. The mural is currently hanging in the City-County Building.
Chris Peterson
The newest artwork hanging at the downtown Salt Lake City-County Building was painted by 75 of the freest spirits you could ever hope to meet.
Unencumbered by the tenets of convention, unbridled by the expectations of others, undefiled by the pursuit of filthy lucre, these amateur artists have collectively created a truly stunning work of art.
But they are so unconcerned about fame and glory, they didn't even sign their work individually, preferring to go instead by their collective moniker:
The entire fourth grade at Dilworth Elementary School.
Their favorite subject this year is art.
Well, after recess.
Their mural reflects a new twist on an old subject. Namely, the state of Utah.
Learning about the state we all live in is one of the major courses of study for a Utah fourth-grader, so when it came time to choose a subject for the fourth-grade art project, art teacher Chris Peterson thought, "Hey, why not Utah?"
Peterson, 33 and no stranger himself to being a free spirit — he once went on a walkout to the wild places of Utah and spent three months painting the unmatched beauty — had every fourth-grader draw a sketch about any aspect of the great Beehive State they chose.
Some chose the mountains, others the red rocks, others the cities, others the desert; some chose the beehive.
When the sketches were completed, Peterson set to work assembling them into the mural.
Then he taught the kids how to paint what they had created. They chose the colors.
Finally, he had their moms touch it up "just a bit."
The finished product is "as collaborative as it gets."
Peterson, a prolific artist whose paintings routinely sell for $2,000, takes one look at what his fourth-grade proteges have produced and gushes.
"It has a beautiful na?ete to it," he says. "I rate it highly, and part of the reason is it's not created by adults."
"If adults try to control something like this, it loses its spontaneity," he adds. "The way it ended up is far different than I would have imagined. It has a really interesting horizontal movement across it. Your eye is drawn to different things. There's really a lot of symbolism. You could seriously spend half an hour just looking at the detail."
- Glenn Beck unleashes his dogs of war
- Cottonwood High School football coach Josh...
- Dangerous silence: Why you need to talk to...
- Bus driver on leave after ejecting 7-year-old...
- Tattoo change from 'Dea' to 'Death' could...
- KSL-TV welcomes 2 new anchors, new format
- Utah woman adopted as baby faces deportation...
- Driver dies in fiery early morning crash on...
- Dangerous silence: Why you need to talk...
31 - Studies try to find why poorer people...
28 - Liljenquist pushing to make name for...
21 - KSL-TV welcomes 2 new anchors, new format
19 - Utah woman adopted as baby faces...
18 - Glenn Beck unleashes his dogs of war
13 - Several Utah high schools moving to...
13 - Vets heart Mitt: Romney enjoys big...
12






DeseretNews.com encourages a civil dialogue among its readers. We welcome your thoughtful comments.
— About comments