![]() |
| News for and about artists, art educators and people who love the visual arts |
![]()
![]()
Artpoints Alaska and Yukon Tour, 2008
Anchorage, Alaska
June 3, 2008
Chicken, Eagle and Tok It was to be another grueling day of travel. We departed from Gold dredge #8 for our hotel in Tok. An interesting stop at Rika's Roadhouse State Park. The roadhouse was operated by a Swedish Immigrant from the 1920s through 1947. Rika, must have been an very energetic woman, she managed a lodging business, livestock, an extensive garden and restaurant. Tok itself held no great attraction for us. It was a just place to sleep on our way to the Yukon Territories. We boarded the motorcoach early in the morning heading to Eagle, Alaska where we would board the Yukon Queen riverboat for a cruise to Dawson City, British Columbia. Eagle, the first incorporated city in Alaska, was founded by disgruntled prospectors. |
![]() |
|---|
| Dawson City still has some of the feeling of the Gold Rush boom town it once was. The streets are unpaved with boardwalks. Many of the town’s historic building are restored and maintained by Parks Canada. We walked around town and took a hike on the hills above town to a complex of historic graveyards. There was a large Catholic cemetery, a small Jewish cemetery, areas for several fraternal organizations such as the Yukon Order of Pioneers, the Elks and the Masons. A separate and well maintained plot held law enforcement officers, many of whom died young. The grave markers were mostly made of wood, so even fairly recent placards were weathered and difficult to read. |
|---|
![]() |
![]() |
|---|---|
| We were astonished to see a newly restored building in the center of town serving as a College of Art. We had to investigate! A lovely young librarian gave us an impromptu tour of the recently founded Klondike Institute of Art and Culture. We toured the library, classrooms, media labs and gallery, all beautiful and newly installed. 2007-2008 was the Institute’s first year of operation with 20-some students completing a foundation year in preparation for transfer. The on campus gallery was showing a selection of works by local artists and craftspersons. Of particular interest was a chair created by “the Caveman”, a local who lives in a cave above town with his pet chickens. | |
Klondike Institute of Art and Culture |
|---|
Studio classroom at the KIAC |
The KIAC on-campus gallery |
The "Caveman's Chair" |
We were directed to the off-campus ODD Gallery where we saw an installation painted directly on the gallery walls by local artist Jesse Mitchell. How wonderful to see an energetic new Arts institution in the thinly populated Yukon! The community of Dawson has clearly moved mountains to create and support the Klondike Institute of Art and Culture. It was another long morning on the motorcoach along a narrow road through the Alaskan Interior. We were glad to get to Eagle! |
|---|
![]()
Whitehorse, Yukon Territory: Page 4 of Alaska Art 2008
Alaska Art: Page 1 - Alaska Art: Page 2 - Alaska Art: Page 4 - Alaska Art: Page 5
Travel in 2007, England, Ireland and Wales - Museums and Art Studios