March 10, 2021 / Modified mar 10, 2021 9:24 p.m.

"Bend in the Wash: The Rancho Linda Vista Artist Community"

Also on Arizona Spotlight: Searching for gamma-rays with a telescope array in the Santa Rita Mountains, and film essayist Chris Dashiell on the masterpiece “La Jetée”.

rancho linda vista wide unsized VIEW LARGER Rancho Linda Vista in 1968. (photo by Larry Sturhahn, digitally recomposed by Rebecca Hamilton)
courtesy Paul Gold

Arizona Spotlight

March 11, 2021

NPR
(Download MP3)

Featured on the March 11th, 2021 edition of ARIZONA SPOTLIGHT with host Mark McLemore:

  • In 1968, a group of artists and their families, many affiliated with the University of Arizona, created an independent community in the desert south of Oracle. The legacy of what they built continues to this day, inspiring author Paul Gold to spend fifteen years of research to create his book, “Bend in the Wash: The Rancho Linda Vista Artist Community”. Mark asks Gold to share what he learned about this unique slice of local history.
rancho linda vista group unsized VIEW LARGER 1968 Rancho Linda Vista residents (photo by Boyd Nicholl)
courtesy Paul Gold
rancho linda vista book unsized VIEW LARGER Paul Gold’s limited edition book, illustrated with many photographs of the artists and their creations.
courtesy Paul Gold
fox mcgrew unsized VIEW LARGER Joy Fox McGrew in her Rancho Linda Vista studio. (photo by Tom Rossi)
courtesy Paul Gold
  • Why are gamma-rays so important to understanding the size and scope of our universe? The world-renowned Fred Lawrence Whipple Observatory in the Santa Rita Mountains is offering a new series of online community lectures. Wystan Benbow, the primary investigator at the VERITAS Gamma-ray Observatory, tells about the astronomical discoveries that are being made there, and breakthroughs that are on the horizon.

Wystan Benbow's contribution to the 51st annual New Vistas in Astronomy public lecture series will livestream on Wednesday, March 17th at 10 am. It is accessible via the Whipple Observatory’s YouTube channel.

veritas usized VIEW LARGER The Very Energetic Radiation Imaging Telescope Array System (VERITAS) is a collection of four 12-meter Cherenkov telescopes in Southern Arizona, and is used to detect astrophysical sources of very-high-energy gamma rays.
courtesy Wystan Benbow
gamma ray image unsized VIEW LARGER This representative-color figure shows the very-high-energy gamma-ray emission observed by VERITAS coming from the Cigar Galaxy, also known as Messier 82. The black star is the location of the active starburst region. The emission from M82 is effectively point-like for VERITAS, and the white circle indicates the size of a simulated point source. The entire galaxy would be contained within the circle.
courtesy Wystan Benbow
  • And, film essayist Chris Dashiell looks back at director Chris Marker's 1962 black & white masterpiece La Jetée. Dashiell marvels at how one of the most influential short films of all time defied so many conventions of cinema.
La Jetée couple in museum Spotlight “She welcomes a s a natural phenomenon the ways of that visitor who comes and goes, who exists, talks, laugh with her, stops laughing, listens to her, then vanishes.” - from "La Jetée" (1962)
La Jetée
La Jetée man in glasses Spotlight Filmmaker Chris Marker's short masterpiece "La Jetée" depicts a post-apocalyptic world, where people live in underground galleries where some engage in weird experiments.
La Jetée
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