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When Gilmore was hired, the job was second only to a position at the Denver Art Museum. But during his five years at the helm, Gilmore brought the place to its knees with his questionable choices (one exhibit featured only art about dogs and ponies), overly long shows (a recent watermedia production lasted five months), poor scheduling, and mixing of amateurs (including Gilmore's friends) with professionals. He also ran off good staff members, and in doing so made the Arvada Center nearly irrelevant in the art world around here.
In fact, Gilmore lowered the standards of the once-top-tier art venue so much that Arvada's newish executive director, Gene Sobczak, is toying with the idea of not replacing him and doing the job himself in his spare time, supplemented by freelance guest curators. But I believe this would nail the coffin lid shut on the place.
Sobczak must understand that the job of presenting exhibits at the Arvada Center is not a hobby, but a vocation. There is nothing wrong with the job description of "gallery and museum director" in and of itself. The problem was Gilmore. If the position is eliminated, that will be Gilmore's greatest crime against the community.
I hope Sobczak makes the right choice, because if he doesn't, there will be enough shame to pass some on to himself, as well. And unlike Gil-more, Sobczak will still be available to be kicked around by people like me. Or worse yet, the Arvada Center under Sobczak's leadership will simply fall below the radar and never be heard from again.
But for now, let's leave behind the sordid events of the suburbs and come back to the more wholesome environment of the city, where there are also changes afoot at the venerable Sandy Carson Gallery. A couple of weeks ago, when Sandy Carson herself called to tell me that she had sold her namesake gallery, lock, stock and building, I was shocked, to say the least. But she explained that after 33 years in the art business, it was time to retire.

Carson's gallery wasn't for sale, but that didn't stop Jan and Bill van Straaten, owners of the van Straaten Gallery and Riverhouse Editions, a fine-art printmaker in Steamboat Springs, from walking in and offering to buy it. Within days, a price was agreed on and the sale moved forward. Word is, the van Straatens, who started their business in Chicago before moving to Steamboat twenty years ago, wanted to live in a city again. Carson will stay on at least until June; afterward, she'll most likely serve as a consultant. Gallery director William Biety also plans to stay. The exhibition schedule already in place will be carried out, but there's no word yet on any new direction the gallery may go in. Presumably, printmaking will be increasingly showcased.
"It happened so fast, I feel like I'm on another planet," Carson says with a laugh, adding that the sale is good for everyone: She gets to relax after a long career; the van Straatens get to move to town; and one of the city's great art venues will remain up and running for the foreseeable future.
All through March, the gallery had two photo shows on display as part of the Month of Photography. That event is over, but the exhibits will stay up through Saturday.
In the front is Wonders & Marvels, an impressive and intriguing solo showcasing the experimental techniques of Carol Golemboski. An associate professor of photography at the University of Colorado Denver, Golemboski has exhibited nationally. For this recent body of work, she puts a twist on the idea of "trick" photography by creating images about the kind of magic done by magicians on stage. There's the rabbit coming out of a hat, the woman who's sawed in half, and the card trick, as in "Queen of Hearts."