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Jun
7
Fri
Movies @ Glass Sword Theater
Jun 7 @ 4:00 pm

For movies currently playing and all show times, see https://www.glassswordcinema.com/

The Rising Star Revue @ The Avenue Theatre
Jun 7 @ 7:00 pm

From organizers:

The Rising Star Revue: At The Avenue returns! This time, we are having another talent competition! Our first rising star was a resounding success and we are happy to bring you an unforgettable evening of talent and entertainment!

Calling all singers, dancers, magicians, comedians, and anyone with a unique talent to share: this is your moment to shine on the grand stage and showcase your skills to a captivated audience!

Our cash prizes for our top performers is back!

First Place: $100
Second Place: $50
Third Place: $25

The magic begins at 7:00 PM, and doors will open at 6:30!
Where: The Historic Avenue Theatre in downtown West Plains!

Join us as we celebrate the rich heritage and talent of the Ozarks in a night filled with music, laughter, and unforgettable performances!

Ready to showcase your talent? Sign up now using the link below:
https://forms.gle/HxbgYiRfV2WSFxCH9

Spread the word, gather your friends, and let’s make this a night to remember at The Avenue!

The Avenue Theatre on Facebook.

Contact aaron@theavenuetheatre.org for more information.

Jun
8
Sat
Heart of the Ozarks Fair @ Heart of the Ozarks Fairgrounds
Jun 8 all-day

Monday and Tuesday, no gate admission charged. Wednesday is $5. Thursday-Saturday, Adults $10, children 6-12 $5. Under 6, free. Grandstand: Wednesday, gospel concert; Thursday, motocross; Friday, truck pull; and Saturday, demolition derby.

Schedule, fair book and other information available at heartoftheozarksfair.net.

West Plains Photography Club photo hosted by The West Plains Council on the Arts @ West Plains Civic Center mezzanine
Jun 8 all-day

From organizers: West Plains Council on the Arts (WPCA) will host an exhibition of works by members of the West Plains Photography Club in the Gallery at the Center, West Plains Civic Center from May 20 through July 6, 2024. The Gallery, on the mezzanine, is open to the public during regular Civic Center hours. The exhibit will feature pieces to complement the Agricultural theme of this year’s Old-Time Music, Ozark Heritage Festival.

The West Plains Photography Club, which was unable to meet for three years because of the Covid pandemic, has enjoyed a rebirth beginning in January of last year. The club currently has meetings at 6:30 p.m. the second Monday of each month in the Missouri State University-West Plains Creative Discovery Center, 411 West Main Street, Suite 1. Everyone regardless of age or ability is invited to join the club which has no membership dues.

The purpose of the club is to share and support everyone’s passion for photography arts whether they are a beginner or have been engaged in photography for many years. Present members include some who do not even own a camera to professionals who make a living by selling their art. For more information on the club feel free to call Bob Cunningham at 417-257-8206 or Dennis Crider at 417-274-7101.

Featured members in the exhibit include:

Jason Adolphson
“I have been a photographer for twenty years. My goal from the beginning has been to show others the wonderful creation that God has gifted us with. As I travel, I can’t help but think about how many people never even stop to see what’s around them in their daily travels. I want to share with others all that I see. God gave us beauty for everyday of our lives, so I feel why only stare at asphalt.

I started my business to share with the world. My goal is some day to have taken photographs in all 50 states. Every state holds some secret treasure. Our country has some of the most diverse landscapes in the world, and few of us ever get to experience them all. Through my photographs I hope to share a piece of each of my experiences with others.”

Bob Anderson
Robert Anderson grew up in West Plains Missouri. He graduated from West Plains High School and earned degrees in Forestry, Forest Pathology, and Public Administration from the University of Missouri and Century University. He served in the US Air Force and worked for the Missouri Department of Conservation (3 years) and the US Forest service as a Forest Pathologist (Tree Doctor) living in Nevada, Virginia, Missouri, Minnesota, Ohio, North Carolina, and Georgia.
He traveled extensively in the US and other countries as a Forest Pathologist working on sick trees. As part of his work, he documented the sick trees and organisms causing diseases using photography. While on location he photographed the culture and landscape. Retiring in West Plains 24 years ago, he has traveled extensively in the Ozarks taking pictures of the landscapes, buildings, people, animals, and whatever presented itself for a picture. He has also used his photography skills in Tennessee and Colorado where his kids reside.

Cindy Blanck
I’m a semi-retired math teacher and nature enthusiast. I purchased my first camera when I was ten years old but wasn’t serious about photography until my children came along. The desire to document my children growing up was the inspiration to learn more about the technical side of photography. Eventually, I took my skills outdoors to capture the world around me. During the pandemic, I purchased a few bird feeders and turned my attention to birding in order to occupy my days. The intriguing world of bird photography has captivated my heart, so that is where you can find me if I’m not teaching or on a hiking trail making memories with my family.

Marc Brannan
Marc Brannan grew up on the family farm near Willow Springs, MO., and currently lives and works in West Plains, MO. He started playing with cameras and taking pictures at a very young age. He loved playing in the old barn and enjoyed being outdoors as much as possible surrounded by nature. His parents nurtured his desire to travel and see new places. His dad encouraged him to learn and enjoy history, especially the history of his family and where they came from.

“I have always enjoyed the stories of my mom attending one-room schools when she was a kid, and I think that is a big reason I seek them out to photograph today. There are less of them around every year, as a lot of them slowly fall into disrepair and collapse unless they have been cared for or restored over the years. I love incorporating them into my landscape photography as much as I can, especially as a way of preserving their history. I have started to reach out with my photography and have started trying to capture more shots in other areas, as well as different states, both in nature and landscape scenes. Lately I have focused more on reaching out to new parts of Missouri, and trying to show the viewer that there is so much more around us than we are used to seeing locally.

The pictures that I have selected for this exhibition show a little bit of our area’s historical and current way of farming life, displaying settings that our area is known for. “Whether historic or current, they are images that we might otherwise only see if you were to travel there and see for yourself.”

Dennis Crider
Dennis Crider has always had a camera in his hand, and as a child in Wichita, Kansas he just had to capture the moments on film. He was newspaper and yearbook photographer in both high school and college and spent high school summers working at a film processing firm in Wichita. Toward the end of his college days, he owned and operated a portrait studio in Edmond, Oklahoma, then Uncle Sam came knocking and he gladly terminated that career.

After moving to West Plains, he became a general assignment reporter/photographer at The Daily Quill Newspaper and spent his last years as sports editor. That career spanned 39 years from 1969 to 2008.
During his tenure at The Quill, he captured thousands of moments through the lens of a camera, both good and bad. The highlight of that career occurred 15 years after his retirement. On Oct. 19, 2023, he was the 77th person to be inducted into the Missouri Press Association Photojournalism Hall of Fame. He was nominated by former Quill Publisher and Editor Frank L. Martin III, who is a member of the Missouri Newspaper Hall of Fame.

Crider is quite busy these days photographing things that don’t talk back and sells his nature/wildlife images at art shows in Kansas, Arkansas, and Missouri. Included in this exhibit are three canvas wrap photos that adhere to the agriculture theme of the festival. “The Target” is an Old West windmill that was at the receiving end of several shotgun blasts. “Missouri Wild Horses” shows three running through a field near Round Spring north of Eminence. “Eclipse 2024” was taken during the totality of the recent solar eclipse.

Bob Cunningham
Cunningham is a life-long Missourian who has lived primarily in the Ozarks. He developed an interest in photography after completing a photo-journalism class at the University of Missouri–Columbia in the early 1970s. Cunningham graduated from the University of Missouri in 1976 with a B.S. in Forest Management, and has resided in West Plains, Missouri since 1988.

Cunningham retired in 2010 after 34 years of service with the Missouri Department of Conservation working as a professional forester, and since that time has owned and operated a forest and wildlife management consulting business, plus freelance outdoor photography. His photographic works have appeared in books, videos, and other publications. His wildlife, nature, and landscape images have been captured from the South Pacific, Central America, Caribbean countries, and throughout all North America.

Artist Statement – “My photography goal is to create artistic images worthy of a lengthy view. Otherwise, the picture is merely a snapshot.”

Bob Greenlee
I am a mostly retired freelance photographer. My experience includes weddings, photojournalism, travel, nature, and portrait photography. I was the photography instructor at Hannibal LaGrange University for several years. I have also worked for several publications. A good day’s photography is when I get to capture the beauty of the world God created.

Janice Gunter-Moss
I took up photography just as a hobby when I was very young. I got my first camera by selling garden seeds and took a camera as my prize. Later I discovered taking pictures was a great stress reliever – just going out and concentrating on the beauty around me and trying to capture it with my camera.

I love old barns so try to get pictures of them so that maybe when they are gone at least a bit will remain.

Vicki Hogan
I am an amateur photographer that enjoys taking pictures of my family, nature and animals. I recently joined the local photography club in West Plains to broaden my understanding of photography.

In my early years I lived on a large farm in the Ozarks with my parents and older sister. My parents moved from Iowa to escape the cold winters and try their hand at farming in the Ozarks, milking cows and raising hogs, and chickens. I passed my time by playing in the barn with the kittens, sat astride the cows as they were milked and watching the baby pigs.

A few years passed. My parents decided it was more difficult to make a living on a farm in the Ozarks as opposed to the rich black soil in Iowa. As a result, they sold the farm and moved to West Plains. But I still have good memories of those times on their farm and acquired a love of animals and nature. After moving to West Plains, my parents nurtured my love for the outdoors by often taking me to nearby rivers and lakes on the weekends to camp and fish.

For 40 years my late husband and I had a small farm that lay between West Plains and Willow Springs, where we raised our three children, hay and Charolais cattle, as well as working full time at other professions. When we retired, we were able to enjoy many camping trips to the local rivers and lakes and take several overdue trips to the Smokey and Rocky Mountains where I fed my love of nature through the eyes of a camera.

Ralph Moore
Ralph Moore is retired from Viola Public School, where he was a teacher and counselor for many years. After retirement he became interested in photography. Today, he travels far and wide searching for interesting subjects in perfect light. His favorite subjects are landscapes, animals, travel, night photography, birds, flowers, micro, and sunrise/sunsets. Really just about anything except people!

Krista Pendergrass
Krista grew up amidst the corn and soybeans of southwest Minnesota. Since leaving the upper Midwest after college, she has spent most of her time in rural north central Texas and here in West Plains. She loves her family dearly which includes her husband, David, and her four sons, whom she homeschools. Her free time (if there is any!) is spent exploring the Ozarks, gardening, reading, spending time with friends and church family, and capturing pictures of all those things.

Krista has always enjoyed photographing botanical items of interest in her garden and in her explorations. In the last ten years, her real passion has been to capture everyday moments of her family and friends that tell a story. That motivated her to purchase a good camera several years ago and learn as much as she could on her own and with the help of others in the photography community here in West Plains.

Tammy Schulz
Tammy (Gunter) Schulz was raised in West Plains, Missouri and is a West Plains High School Graduate. Tammy currently resides in Mountain View, MO with her husband Ricky. She has a degree in Advertising Design and her ability to compose an image stems from that design training. She’s had a camera in her hand since she was 10 years old and sold seeds to her neighbors and relatives to earn her first camera. She didn’t delve into 35 mm photography until 1999 when she wanted better photographs of her daughter’s dance performances. For years her favorite photography subject was her daughter, especially when she was dancing.

She ventured into digital photography with her first dslr in the early 2000’s with a Sony a100. She currently shoots with her fourth Sony and recently upgraded to the full frame Sony a7 III Mirrorless Camera.

Tammy’s photography was first published in an issue of Country Lifestyle magazine in 2008. Her photo was a Christmas lights photo taken during a Christmas festival in San Marcos, Texas. Tammy has no formal training in photography and continues to learn and practice to perfect her craft. She learns from other photographers, researching online, and practicing what she’s learned. She loves to capture old churches, mills, and schools and prefers candid shots of people over formal poses. She particularly loves to capture scenes she later turns into paintings.

“Art is feeling more than seeing” Tammy Schulz

Regina Stone
From taking pictures as a young girl to shooting professionally since 2008, Gina Stone has made photography a job that she truly loves. She enjoys making beautiful memories for family and friends, but especially photographing life’s special moments such as newborn/children’s photos, senior pictures, weddings, or even your best furry friend. In her spare time, she shoots the occasional wildflower, countryside, old barn, or really all the above. Gina Stone Photography is located on west 8th street here in West Plains.

WPCA will host a Meet the Artists event on Saturday, Junel 22, from 2-4 p.m., in the Gallery at the Center. All are invited to attend, meet the artists, and discuss the pieces. The exhibit is co-sponsored by the West Plains Civic Center and West Plains Council on the Arts, with partial funding provided by Missouri Arts Council, a state agency.

Old-Time Music, Ozark Heritage Festival @ Civic Center & Historic Downtown
Jun 8 @ 10:00 am – 9:00 pm
The 2024 Old-Time Music, Ozarks Heritage Festival in downtown West Plains, Mo., will be held Friday and Saturday, June 7 and 8, 10 a.m. – 9 p.m. The annual event in downtown West Plains celebrates Ozarks music and culture.

The Festival campus will be expanded this year to include activities from the West Plains Civic Center, extending through downtown to the Missouri State University-West Plains campus!

The Old-Time Music, Ozark Heritage Festival is the signature event for West Plains. The festival seeks to celebrate, preserve, pass on and nurture an appreciation of the old-time music and folk life traditions distinctive to the Ozark Highlands. Admission to all festival events is free.

Organizers promise two full days of great activities and music. Music on the main stage will begin at noon and continue through the end of the headliner performance each day.

See 2024 Old-Time Music, Ozarks Heritage Festival on Facebook.

City of West Plains Aquatic Center @ Peoples Park
Jun 8 @ 12:00 pm – 5:00 pm

Hours of operation are noon to 5 p.m. daily with an evening swim Thursdays from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. The cost of admission is $5 for children ages three to 11, and $6 for ages 12 and up. Children under three are free. The Parks and Recreation Department requires that children under 12 be accompanied by an adult. Punch cards will be sold at the Jimmie Carrol Sports Complex for $30. Each punch card is good for 10 pool visits. For additional information, including pool rentals, call the Parks and Recreation office at 417-256-7304.

Ozark Heritage Exhibit featuring the L.L. Broadfoot Collection @ Harlin Museum
Jun 8 @ 12:00 pm – 4:00 pm

The Lennis L. Broadfoot collection, housed at the Harlin Museum, is the most complete collection of art by the Shannon County, Missouri, artist. Broadfoot is best known as the artist who immortalized the often enigmatic people, places, and traditions of the turn-of-the-century Ozarks region, in multiple mediums, while also offering a firsthand narrative in the writings that frequently accompanied his works. He is the author of the highly regarded book, “Pioneers of the Ozarks,” in which the art and the histories were compiled to preserve his work.

The Harlin Museum is an all-volunteer organization, and sometimes there are staffing issues. If you are travelling a distance to see the Broadfoots, please check Harlin Museum of West Plains on Facebook for potential closures. Additional contact methods can be found at HarlinMuseum.com. Private tours can be arranged.

Admission is free, but donations are welcome.

Heart of the Ozarks Bluegrass (HOBA) Spring Bluegrass Show @ HOBA Park
Jun 8 @ 2:00 pm

Check Hoba Bluegrass on Facebook for details.

Live Music ~ One More Dollar performing folk/bluegrass @ Wages Brewing Company
Jun 8 @ 7:00 pm

From Wages: No cover. Performing vintage folk tunes and modern originals, the perfect pairing to the Old-Time Heritage Festival weekend.

Weekly Dance with live music by Country Express Band @ West Plains Senior Center
Jun 8 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

Check the Country Express Band Facebook page for cost and other details, including potential cancellations due to weather, holidays or other unforeseen circumstances.

From Country Express: Two step, Cha Cha, Waltz, Electric Slide, Charleston, Foot Boogie, River Waltz, Sweetheart, Around the Room, Tennessee Waltz, Neon Moon Cha Cha, and many more. Or just come listen to some good ole country music. Old country, new country, southern rock music. No alcohol allowed. Family fun for all ages.

 

Jun
9
Sun
West Plains Photography Club photo hosted by The West Plains Council on the Arts @ West Plains Civic Center mezzanine
Jun 9 all-day

From organizers: West Plains Council on the Arts (WPCA) will host an exhibition of works by members of the West Plains Photography Club in the Gallery at the Center, West Plains Civic Center from May 20 through July 6, 2024. The Gallery, on the mezzanine, is open to the public during regular Civic Center hours. The exhibit will feature pieces to complement the Agricultural theme of this year’s Old-Time Music, Ozark Heritage Festival.

The West Plains Photography Club, which was unable to meet for three years because of the Covid pandemic, has enjoyed a rebirth beginning in January of last year. The club currently has meetings at 6:30 p.m. the second Monday of each month in the Missouri State University-West Plains Creative Discovery Center, 411 West Main Street, Suite 1. Everyone regardless of age or ability is invited to join the club which has no membership dues.

The purpose of the club is to share and support everyone’s passion for photography arts whether they are a beginner or have been engaged in photography for many years. Present members include some who do not even own a camera to professionals who make a living by selling their art. For more information on the club feel free to call Bob Cunningham at 417-257-8206 or Dennis Crider at 417-274-7101.

Featured members in the exhibit include:

Jason Adolphson
“I have been a photographer for twenty years. My goal from the beginning has been to show others the wonderful creation that God has gifted us with. As I travel, I can’t help but think about how many people never even stop to see what’s around them in their daily travels. I want to share with others all that I see. God gave us beauty for everyday of our lives, so I feel why only stare at asphalt.

I started my business to share with the world. My goal is some day to have taken photographs in all 50 states. Every state holds some secret treasure. Our country has some of the most diverse landscapes in the world, and few of us ever get to experience them all. Through my photographs I hope to share a piece of each of my experiences with others.”

Bob Anderson
Robert Anderson grew up in West Plains Missouri. He graduated from West Plains High School and earned degrees in Forestry, Forest Pathology, and Public Administration from the University of Missouri and Century University. He served in the US Air Force and worked for the Missouri Department of Conservation (3 years) and the US Forest service as a Forest Pathologist (Tree Doctor) living in Nevada, Virginia, Missouri, Minnesota, Ohio, North Carolina, and Georgia.
He traveled extensively in the US and other countries as a Forest Pathologist working on sick trees. As part of his work, he documented the sick trees and organisms causing diseases using photography. While on location he photographed the culture and landscape. Retiring in West Plains 24 years ago, he has traveled extensively in the Ozarks taking pictures of the landscapes, buildings, people, animals, and whatever presented itself for a picture. He has also used his photography skills in Tennessee and Colorado where his kids reside.

Cindy Blanck
I’m a semi-retired math teacher and nature enthusiast. I purchased my first camera when I was ten years old but wasn’t serious about photography until my children came along. The desire to document my children growing up was the inspiration to learn more about the technical side of photography. Eventually, I took my skills outdoors to capture the world around me. During the pandemic, I purchased a few bird feeders and turned my attention to birding in order to occupy my days. The intriguing world of bird photography has captivated my heart, so that is where you can find me if I’m not teaching or on a hiking trail making memories with my family.

Marc Brannan
Marc Brannan grew up on the family farm near Willow Springs, MO., and currently lives and works in West Plains, MO. He started playing with cameras and taking pictures at a very young age. He loved playing in the old barn and enjoyed being outdoors as much as possible surrounded by nature. His parents nurtured his desire to travel and see new places. His dad encouraged him to learn and enjoy history, especially the history of his family and where they came from.

“I have always enjoyed the stories of my mom attending one-room schools when she was a kid, and I think that is a big reason I seek them out to photograph today. There are less of them around every year, as a lot of them slowly fall into disrepair and collapse unless they have been cared for or restored over the years. I love incorporating them into my landscape photography as much as I can, especially as a way of preserving their history. I have started to reach out with my photography and have started trying to capture more shots in other areas, as well as different states, both in nature and landscape scenes. Lately I have focused more on reaching out to new parts of Missouri, and trying to show the viewer that there is so much more around us than we are used to seeing locally.

The pictures that I have selected for this exhibition show a little bit of our area’s historical and current way of farming life, displaying settings that our area is known for. “Whether historic or current, they are images that we might otherwise only see if you were to travel there and see for yourself.”

Dennis Crider
Dennis Crider has always had a camera in his hand, and as a child in Wichita, Kansas he just had to capture the moments on film. He was newspaper and yearbook photographer in both high school and college and spent high school summers working at a film processing firm in Wichita. Toward the end of his college days, he owned and operated a portrait studio in Edmond, Oklahoma, then Uncle Sam came knocking and he gladly terminated that career.

After moving to West Plains, he became a general assignment reporter/photographer at The Daily Quill Newspaper and spent his last years as sports editor. That career spanned 39 years from 1969 to 2008.
During his tenure at The Quill, he captured thousands of moments through the lens of a camera, both good and bad. The highlight of that career occurred 15 years after his retirement. On Oct. 19, 2023, he was the 77th person to be inducted into the Missouri Press Association Photojournalism Hall of Fame. He was nominated by former Quill Publisher and Editor Frank L. Martin III, who is a member of the Missouri Newspaper Hall of Fame.

Crider is quite busy these days photographing things that don’t talk back and sells his nature/wildlife images at art shows in Kansas, Arkansas, and Missouri. Included in this exhibit are three canvas wrap photos that adhere to the agriculture theme of the festival. “The Target” is an Old West windmill that was at the receiving end of several shotgun blasts. “Missouri Wild Horses” shows three running through a field near Round Spring north of Eminence. “Eclipse 2024” was taken during the totality of the recent solar eclipse.

Bob Cunningham
Cunningham is a life-long Missourian who has lived primarily in the Ozarks. He developed an interest in photography after completing a photo-journalism class at the University of Missouri–Columbia in the early 1970s. Cunningham graduated from the University of Missouri in 1976 with a B.S. in Forest Management, and has resided in West Plains, Missouri since 1988.

Cunningham retired in 2010 after 34 years of service with the Missouri Department of Conservation working as a professional forester, and since that time has owned and operated a forest and wildlife management consulting business, plus freelance outdoor photography. His photographic works have appeared in books, videos, and other publications. His wildlife, nature, and landscape images have been captured from the South Pacific, Central America, Caribbean countries, and throughout all North America.

Artist Statement – “My photography goal is to create artistic images worthy of a lengthy view. Otherwise, the picture is merely a snapshot.”

Bob Greenlee
I am a mostly retired freelance photographer. My experience includes weddings, photojournalism, travel, nature, and portrait photography. I was the photography instructor at Hannibal LaGrange University for several years. I have also worked for several publications. A good day’s photography is when I get to capture the beauty of the world God created.

Janice Gunter-Moss
I took up photography just as a hobby when I was very young. I got my first camera by selling garden seeds and took a camera as my prize. Later I discovered taking pictures was a great stress reliever – just going out and concentrating on the beauty around me and trying to capture it with my camera.

I love old barns so try to get pictures of them so that maybe when they are gone at least a bit will remain.

Vicki Hogan
I am an amateur photographer that enjoys taking pictures of my family, nature and animals. I recently joined the local photography club in West Plains to broaden my understanding of photography.

In my early years I lived on a large farm in the Ozarks with my parents and older sister. My parents moved from Iowa to escape the cold winters and try their hand at farming in the Ozarks, milking cows and raising hogs, and chickens. I passed my time by playing in the barn with the kittens, sat astride the cows as they were milked and watching the baby pigs.

A few years passed. My parents decided it was more difficult to make a living on a farm in the Ozarks as opposed to the rich black soil in Iowa. As a result, they sold the farm and moved to West Plains. But I still have good memories of those times on their farm and acquired a love of animals and nature. After moving to West Plains, my parents nurtured my love for the outdoors by often taking me to nearby rivers and lakes on the weekends to camp and fish.

For 40 years my late husband and I had a small farm that lay between West Plains and Willow Springs, where we raised our three children, hay and Charolais cattle, as well as working full time at other professions. When we retired, we were able to enjoy many camping trips to the local rivers and lakes and take several overdue trips to the Smokey and Rocky Mountains where I fed my love of nature through the eyes of a camera.

Ralph Moore
Ralph Moore is retired from Viola Public School, where he was a teacher and counselor for many years. After retirement he became interested in photography. Today, he travels far and wide searching for interesting subjects in perfect light. His favorite subjects are landscapes, animals, travel, night photography, birds, flowers, micro, and sunrise/sunsets. Really just about anything except people!

Krista Pendergrass
Krista grew up amidst the corn and soybeans of southwest Minnesota. Since leaving the upper Midwest after college, she has spent most of her time in rural north central Texas and here in West Plains. She loves her family dearly which includes her husband, David, and her four sons, whom she homeschools. Her free time (if there is any!) is spent exploring the Ozarks, gardening, reading, spending time with friends and church family, and capturing pictures of all those things.

Krista has always enjoyed photographing botanical items of interest in her garden and in her explorations. In the last ten years, her real passion has been to capture everyday moments of her family and friends that tell a story. That motivated her to purchase a good camera several years ago and learn as much as she could on her own and with the help of others in the photography community here in West Plains.

Tammy Schulz
Tammy (Gunter) Schulz was raised in West Plains, Missouri and is a West Plains High School Graduate. Tammy currently resides in Mountain View, MO with her husband Ricky. She has a degree in Advertising Design and her ability to compose an image stems from that design training. She’s had a camera in her hand since she was 10 years old and sold seeds to her neighbors and relatives to earn her first camera. She didn’t delve into 35 mm photography until 1999 when she wanted better photographs of her daughter’s dance performances. For years her favorite photography subject was her daughter, especially when she was dancing.

She ventured into digital photography with her first dslr in the early 2000’s with a Sony a100. She currently shoots with her fourth Sony and recently upgraded to the full frame Sony a7 III Mirrorless Camera.

Tammy’s photography was first published in an issue of Country Lifestyle magazine in 2008. Her photo was a Christmas lights photo taken during a Christmas festival in San Marcos, Texas. Tammy has no formal training in photography and continues to learn and practice to perfect her craft. She learns from other photographers, researching online, and practicing what she’s learned. She loves to capture old churches, mills, and schools and prefers candid shots of people over formal poses. She particularly loves to capture scenes she later turns into paintings.

“Art is feeling more than seeing” Tammy Schulz

Regina Stone
From taking pictures as a young girl to shooting professionally since 2008, Gina Stone has made photography a job that she truly loves. She enjoys making beautiful memories for family and friends, but especially photographing life’s special moments such as newborn/children’s photos, senior pictures, weddings, or even your best furry friend. In her spare time, she shoots the occasional wildflower, countryside, old barn, or really all the above. Gina Stone Photography is located on west 8th street here in West Plains.

WPCA will host a Meet the Artists event on Saturday, Junel 22, from 2-4 p.m., in the Gallery at the Center. All are invited to attend, meet the artists, and discuss the pieces. The exhibit is co-sponsored by the West Plains Civic Center and West Plains Council on the Arts, with partial funding provided by Missouri Arts Council, a state agency.

City of West Plains Aquatic Center @ Peoples Park
Jun 9 @ 12:00 pm – 5:00 pm

Hours of operation are noon to 5 p.m. daily with an evening swim Thursdays from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. The cost of admission is $5 for children ages three to 11, and $6 for ages 12 and up. Children under three are free. The Parks and Recreation Department requires that children under 12 be accompanied by an adult. Punch cards will be sold at the Jimmie Carrol Sports Complex for $30. Each punch card is good for 10 pool visits. For additional information, including pool rentals, call the Parks and Recreation office at 417-256-7304.

Concert to benefit families affected by the May 26 Mtn. View tornado @ Veteran's Park (Mtn. View)
Jun 9 @ 12:00 pm – 7:00 pm

From organizers: In the wake of the tornadoes of May 26, Brandy Lee of Brandy Lee Music has organized a benefit concert on Sunday, June 9th from 12pm to 7pm at the Veteran’s Park in Mountain View, MO.

As of the time of this release (May 31) Sacrifice the Truth, Charlie Nelson & and County Nights Band, and Brandy Lee will be performing with more expected to sign up in the week ahead. A painting by Garrett Melby Art will also be done live at the event, as well.

Over 2 dozen businesses and individuals have donated to the event so far. There will be raffles and/or auctions for the items donated, grilled hot dogs and hamburgers, sides and drinks.

All proceeds collected, including any tips from the performers, are being donated to affected families in Mountain View. The First Baptist Church will handle distribution of the donations, with the Chamber of Commerce being a second donation location. West Plains music at 18 Court Square in West Plains will collect donations, as well.

For more information on how you can donate, attend, or participate in this event, contact Brandy Lee at 808-256-5925 or via Facebook messenger at Brandy Lee Music.

Ozark Heritage Exhibit featuring the L.L. Broadfoot Collection @ Harlin Museum
Jun 9 @ 12:00 pm – 4:00 pm

The Lennis L. Broadfoot collection, housed at the Harlin Museum, is the most complete collection of art by the Shannon County, Missouri, artist. Broadfoot is best known as the artist who immortalized the often enigmatic people, places, and traditions of the turn-of-the-century Ozarks region, in multiple mediums, while also offering a firsthand narrative in the writings that frequently accompanied his works. He is the author of the highly regarded book, “Pioneers of the Ozarks,” in which the art and the histories were compiled to preserve his work.

The Harlin Museum is an all-volunteer organization, and sometimes there are staffing issues. If you are travelling a distance to see the Broadfoots, please check Harlin Museum of West Plains on Facebook for potential closures. Additional contact methods can be found at HarlinMuseum.com. Private tours can be arranged.

Admission is free, but donations are welcome.

Jun
10
Mon
West Plains Photography Club photo hosted by The West Plains Council on the Arts @ West Plains Civic Center mezzanine
Jun 10 all-day

From organizers: West Plains Council on the Arts (WPCA) will host an exhibition of works by members of the West Plains Photography Club in the Gallery at the Center, West Plains Civic Center from May 20 through July 6, 2024. The Gallery, on the mezzanine, is open to the public during regular Civic Center hours. The exhibit will feature pieces to complement the Agricultural theme of this year’s Old-Time Music, Ozark Heritage Festival.

The West Plains Photography Club, which was unable to meet for three years because of the Covid pandemic, has enjoyed a rebirth beginning in January of last year. The club currently has meetings at 6:30 p.m. the second Monday of each month in the Missouri State University-West Plains Creative Discovery Center, 411 West Main Street, Suite 1. Everyone regardless of age or ability is invited to join the club which has no membership dues.

The purpose of the club is to share and support everyone’s passion for photography arts whether they are a beginner or have been engaged in photography for many years. Present members include some who do not even own a camera to professionals who make a living by selling their art. For more information on the club feel free to call Bob Cunningham at 417-257-8206 or Dennis Crider at 417-274-7101.

Featured members in the exhibit include:

Jason Adolphson
“I have been a photographer for twenty years. My goal from the beginning has been to show others the wonderful creation that God has gifted us with. As I travel, I can’t help but think about how many people never even stop to see what’s around them in their daily travels. I want to share with others all that I see. God gave us beauty for everyday of our lives, so I feel why only stare at asphalt.

I started my business to share with the world. My goal is some day to have taken photographs in all 50 states. Every state holds some secret treasure. Our country has some of the most diverse landscapes in the world, and few of us ever get to experience them all. Through my photographs I hope to share a piece of each of my experiences with others.”

Bob Anderson
Robert Anderson grew up in West Plains Missouri. He graduated from West Plains High School and earned degrees in Forestry, Forest Pathology, and Public Administration from the University of Missouri and Century University. He served in the US Air Force and worked for the Missouri Department of Conservation (3 years) and the US Forest service as a Forest Pathologist (Tree Doctor) living in Nevada, Virginia, Missouri, Minnesota, Ohio, North Carolina, and Georgia.
He traveled extensively in the US and other countries as a Forest Pathologist working on sick trees. As part of his work, he documented the sick trees and organisms causing diseases using photography. While on location he photographed the culture and landscape. Retiring in West Plains 24 years ago, he has traveled extensively in the Ozarks taking pictures of the landscapes, buildings, people, animals, and whatever presented itself for a picture. He has also used his photography skills in Tennessee and Colorado where his kids reside.

Cindy Blanck
I’m a semi-retired math teacher and nature enthusiast. I purchased my first camera when I was ten years old but wasn’t serious about photography until my children came along. The desire to document my children growing up was the inspiration to learn more about the technical side of photography. Eventually, I took my skills outdoors to capture the world around me. During the pandemic, I purchased a few bird feeders and turned my attention to birding in order to occupy my days. The intriguing world of bird photography has captivated my heart, so that is where you can find me if I’m not teaching or on a hiking trail making memories with my family.

Marc Brannan
Marc Brannan grew up on the family farm near Willow Springs, MO., and currently lives and works in West Plains, MO. He started playing with cameras and taking pictures at a very young age. He loved playing in the old barn and enjoyed being outdoors as much as possible surrounded by nature. His parents nurtured his desire to travel and see new places. His dad encouraged him to learn and enjoy history, especially the history of his family and where they came from.

“I have always enjoyed the stories of my mom attending one-room schools when she was a kid, and I think that is a big reason I seek them out to photograph today. There are less of them around every year, as a lot of them slowly fall into disrepair and collapse unless they have been cared for or restored over the years. I love incorporating them into my landscape photography as much as I can, especially as a way of preserving their history. I have started to reach out with my photography and have started trying to capture more shots in other areas, as well as different states, both in nature and landscape scenes. Lately I have focused more on reaching out to new parts of Missouri, and trying to show the viewer that there is so much more around us than we are used to seeing locally.

The pictures that I have selected for this exhibition show a little bit of our area’s historical and current way of farming life, displaying settings that our area is known for. “Whether historic or current, they are images that we might otherwise only see if you were to travel there and see for yourself.”

Dennis Crider
Dennis Crider has always had a camera in his hand, and as a child in Wichita, Kansas he just had to capture the moments on film. He was newspaper and yearbook photographer in both high school and college and spent high school summers working at a film processing firm in Wichita. Toward the end of his college days, he owned and operated a portrait studio in Edmond, Oklahoma, then Uncle Sam came knocking and he gladly terminated that career.

After moving to West Plains, he became a general assignment reporter/photographer at The Daily Quill Newspaper and spent his last years as sports editor. That career spanned 39 years from 1969 to 2008.
During his tenure at The Quill, he captured thousands of moments through the lens of a camera, both good and bad. The highlight of that career occurred 15 years after his retirement. On Oct. 19, 2023, he was the 77th person to be inducted into the Missouri Press Association Photojournalism Hall of Fame. He was nominated by former Quill Publisher and Editor Frank L. Martin III, who is a member of the Missouri Newspaper Hall of Fame.

Crider is quite busy these days photographing things that don’t talk back and sells his nature/wildlife images at art shows in Kansas, Arkansas, and Missouri. Included in this exhibit are three canvas wrap photos that adhere to the agriculture theme of the festival. “The Target” is an Old West windmill that was at the receiving end of several shotgun blasts. “Missouri Wild Horses” shows three running through a field near Round Spring north of Eminence. “Eclipse 2024” was taken during the totality of the recent solar eclipse.

Bob Cunningham
Cunningham is a life-long Missourian who has lived primarily in the Ozarks. He developed an interest in photography after completing a photo-journalism class at the University of Missouri–Columbia in the early 1970s. Cunningham graduated from the University of Missouri in 1976 with a B.S. in Forest Management, and has resided in West Plains, Missouri since 1988.

Cunningham retired in 2010 after 34 years of service with the Missouri Department of Conservation working as a professional forester, and since that time has owned and operated a forest and wildlife management consulting business, plus freelance outdoor photography. His photographic works have appeared in books, videos, and other publications. His wildlife, nature, and landscape images have been captured from the South Pacific, Central America, Caribbean countries, and throughout all North America.

Artist Statement – “My photography goal is to create artistic images worthy of a lengthy view. Otherwise, the picture is merely a snapshot.”

Bob Greenlee
I am a mostly retired freelance photographer. My experience includes weddings, photojournalism, travel, nature, and portrait photography. I was the photography instructor at Hannibal LaGrange University for several years. I have also worked for several publications. A good day’s photography is when I get to capture the beauty of the world God created.

Janice Gunter-Moss
I took up photography just as a hobby when I was very young. I got my first camera by selling garden seeds and took a camera as my prize. Later I discovered taking pictures was a great stress reliever – just going out and concentrating on the beauty around me and trying to capture it with my camera.

I love old barns so try to get pictures of them so that maybe when they are gone at least a bit will remain.

Vicki Hogan
I am an amateur photographer that enjoys taking pictures of my family, nature and animals. I recently joined the local photography club in West Plains to broaden my understanding of photography.

In my early years I lived on a large farm in the Ozarks with my parents and older sister. My parents moved from Iowa to escape the cold winters and try their hand at farming in the Ozarks, milking cows and raising hogs, and chickens. I passed my time by playing in the barn with the kittens, sat astride the cows as they were milked and watching the baby pigs.

A few years passed. My parents decided it was more difficult to make a living on a farm in the Ozarks as opposed to the rich black soil in Iowa. As a result, they sold the farm and moved to West Plains. But I still have good memories of those times on their farm and acquired a love of animals and nature. After moving to West Plains, my parents nurtured my love for the outdoors by often taking me to nearby rivers and lakes on the weekends to camp and fish.

For 40 years my late husband and I had a small farm that lay between West Plains and Willow Springs, where we raised our three children, hay and Charolais cattle, as well as working full time at other professions. When we retired, we were able to enjoy many camping trips to the local rivers and lakes and take several overdue trips to the Smokey and Rocky Mountains where I fed my love of nature through the eyes of a camera.

Ralph Moore
Ralph Moore is retired from Viola Public School, where he was a teacher and counselor for many years. After retirement he became interested in photography. Today, he travels far and wide searching for interesting subjects in perfect light. His favorite subjects are landscapes, animals, travel, night photography, birds, flowers, micro, and sunrise/sunsets. Really just about anything except people!

Krista Pendergrass
Krista grew up amidst the corn and soybeans of southwest Minnesota. Since leaving the upper Midwest after college, she has spent most of her time in rural north central Texas and here in West Plains. She loves her family dearly which includes her husband, David, and her four sons, whom she homeschools. Her free time (if there is any!) is spent exploring the Ozarks, gardening, reading, spending time with friends and church family, and capturing pictures of all those things.

Krista has always enjoyed photographing botanical items of interest in her garden and in her explorations. In the last ten years, her real passion has been to capture everyday moments of her family and friends that tell a story. That motivated her to purchase a good camera several years ago and learn as much as she could on her own and with the help of others in the photography community here in West Plains.

Tammy Schulz
Tammy (Gunter) Schulz was raised in West Plains, Missouri and is a West Plains High School Graduate. Tammy currently resides in Mountain View, MO with her husband Ricky. She has a degree in Advertising Design and her ability to compose an image stems from that design training. She’s had a camera in her hand since she was 10 years old and sold seeds to her neighbors and relatives to earn her first camera. She didn’t delve into 35 mm photography until 1999 when she wanted better photographs of her daughter’s dance performances. For years her favorite photography subject was her daughter, especially when she was dancing.

She ventured into digital photography with her first dslr in the early 2000’s with a Sony a100. She currently shoots with her fourth Sony and recently upgraded to the full frame Sony a7 III Mirrorless Camera.

Tammy’s photography was first published in an issue of Country Lifestyle magazine in 2008. Her photo was a Christmas lights photo taken during a Christmas festival in San Marcos, Texas. Tammy has no formal training in photography and continues to learn and practice to perfect her craft. She learns from other photographers, researching online, and practicing what she’s learned. She loves to capture old churches, mills, and schools and prefers candid shots of people over formal poses. She particularly loves to capture scenes she later turns into paintings.

“Art is feeling more than seeing” Tammy Schulz

Regina Stone
From taking pictures as a young girl to shooting professionally since 2008, Gina Stone has made photography a job that she truly loves. She enjoys making beautiful memories for family and friends, but especially photographing life’s special moments such as newborn/children’s photos, senior pictures, weddings, or even your best furry friend. In her spare time, she shoots the occasional wildflower, countryside, old barn, or really all the above. Gina Stone Photography is located on west 8th street here in West Plains.

WPCA will host a Meet the Artists event on Saturday, Junel 22, from 2-4 p.m., in the Gallery at the Center. All are invited to attend, meet the artists, and discuss the pieces. The exhibit is co-sponsored by the West Plains Civic Center and West Plains Council on the Arts, with partial funding provided by Missouri Arts Council, a state agency.

Art at OzSBI ~ Artist Angela Bullard (sponsored by Council on the Arts) @ Ozarks Small Business Incubator
Jun 10 @ 8:30 am – 4:30 pm
Art at the Library ~ Marc Brannon Artist @ West Plains Public Library
Jun 10 @ 9:00 am – 6:00 pm

The West Plains Council on the Arts (WPCA) and West Plains Public Library (WPPL) will partner to bring quarterly art displays to the library. Photography from local artist Marc Brannan will be featured through the end of June 2024. Visitors may view the display at the library during their open hours, 9:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Monday-Friday, 9:00 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday.

WPPL Director Greg Carter shares, “Here at the library, our vision is that we are a space where all come to learn, create, discover, and connect. There is no better way to accomplish that vision than displaying local pieces of art for the community to peruse and appreciate. We are always proud to partner with the Council on the Arts to bring the beauty of art to our patrons.”

Marc Brannan grew up on his family farm near Willow Springs, MO., and currently lives and works in West Plains. He started playing with cameras and taking pictures at a very young age. He loved playing in the old barn and enjoyed being outdoors as much as possible surrounded by nature. His parents nurtured his desire to travel and see new places. His dad encouraged him to learn and enjoy history, especially the history of his family and where they came from.

Brannan says, “I have always enjoyed the stories of my mom attending one-room schools when she was a kid, and I think that is a big reason I seek them out to photograph today. There are fewer of them around every year, as a lot of them slowly fall into disrepair and collapse unless they have been cared for or restored over the years. I love incorporating them into my landscape photography as much as I can, especially as a way of preserving their history. I have started to reach out with my photography and have started trying to capture more shots in other areas, as well as different states, both in nature and landscape scenes. Lately I have focused more on reaching out to new parts of Missouri, and trying to show the viewer that there is so much more around us than we are used to seeing locally. The pictures that I have selected for this exhibition show a range of my photos that depict the history and outdoor settings that our area, as well as other parts of the country, are known for—whether historic or in the natural beauty that we might otherwise only see if you were to travel there and see for yourself.”

A Meet-the-Artists event will be held on Tuesday, April 23, 2024, 3:00-4:30 PM, hosted by the library, 750 W. Broadway, in West Plains. The public is invited to attend, meet the artist, view, and discuss the pieces on display. Partial funding for this exhibit is provided by the Missouri Arts Council, a state agency.

For more information about the exhibit, contact Greg Carter greg.carter@westplains.gov at the library or WPCA Coordinator Audrey Scott at Audrey.scott@zizzers.org

Photo courtesy of Marc Brannan

City of West Plains Aquatic Center @ Peoples Park
Jun 10 @ 12:00 pm – 5:00 pm

Hours of operation are noon to 5 p.m. daily with an evening swim Thursdays from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. The cost of admission is $5 for children ages three to 11, and $6 for ages 12 and up. Children under three are free. The Parks and Recreation Department requires that children under 12 be accompanied by an adult. Punch cards will be sold at the Jimmie Carrol Sports Complex for $30. Each punch card is good for 10 pool visits. For additional information, including pool rentals, call the Parks and Recreation office at 417-256-7304.

Movies @ Glass Sword Theater
Jun 10 @ 4:00 pm

For movies currently playing and all show times, see https://www.glassswordcinema.com/

West Plains Photography Club
Jun 10 @ 6:30 pm

The West Plains Photography Club currently has 34 members and meetings are at 6:30 p.m. the second Monday of each month in the Missouri State University-West Plains Creative Discovery Center, 411 West Main Street, Suite 1. Everyone regardless of age or ability is invited to join the club which has no membership dues.

The purpose of the club is to share and support everyone’s passion for photography arts whether they are a beginner or have been engaged in photography for many years. Present members include some who do not even own a camera to professionals who make a living by selling their art. For more information on the club feel free to call Bob Cunningham at 417-257-8206 or Dennis Crider at 417-274-7101.

Jun
11
Tue
West Plains Photography Club photo hosted by The West Plains Council on the Arts @ West Plains Civic Center mezzanine
Jun 11 all-day

From organizers: West Plains Council on the Arts (WPCA) will host an exhibition of works by members of the West Plains Photography Club in the Gallery at the Center, West Plains Civic Center from May 20 through July 6, 2024. The Gallery, on the mezzanine, is open to the public during regular Civic Center hours. The exhibit will feature pieces to complement the Agricultural theme of this year’s Old-Time Music, Ozark Heritage Festival.

The West Plains Photography Club, which was unable to meet for three years because of the Covid pandemic, has enjoyed a rebirth beginning in January of last year. The club currently has meetings at 6:30 p.m. the second Monday of each month in the Missouri State University-West Plains Creative Discovery Center, 411 West Main Street, Suite 1. Everyone regardless of age or ability is invited to join the club which has no membership dues.

The purpose of the club is to share and support everyone’s passion for photography arts whether they are a beginner or have been engaged in photography for many years. Present members include some who do not even own a camera to professionals who make a living by selling their art. For more information on the club feel free to call Bob Cunningham at 417-257-8206 or Dennis Crider at 417-274-7101.

Featured members in the exhibit include:

Jason Adolphson
“I have been a photographer for twenty years. My goal from the beginning has been to show others the wonderful creation that God has gifted us with. As I travel, I can’t help but think about how many people never even stop to see what’s around them in their daily travels. I want to share with others all that I see. God gave us beauty for everyday of our lives, so I feel why only stare at asphalt.

I started my business to share with the world. My goal is some day to have taken photographs in all 50 states. Every state holds some secret treasure. Our country has some of the most diverse landscapes in the world, and few of us ever get to experience them all. Through my photographs I hope to share a piece of each of my experiences with others.”

Bob Anderson
Robert Anderson grew up in West Plains Missouri. He graduated from West Plains High School and earned degrees in Forestry, Forest Pathology, and Public Administration from the University of Missouri and Century University. He served in the US Air Force and worked for the Missouri Department of Conservation (3 years) and the US Forest service as a Forest Pathologist (Tree Doctor) living in Nevada, Virginia, Missouri, Minnesota, Ohio, North Carolina, and Georgia.
He traveled extensively in the US and other countries as a Forest Pathologist working on sick trees. As part of his work, he documented the sick trees and organisms causing diseases using photography. While on location he photographed the culture and landscape. Retiring in West Plains 24 years ago, he has traveled extensively in the Ozarks taking pictures of the landscapes, buildings, people, animals, and whatever presented itself for a picture. He has also used his photography skills in Tennessee and Colorado where his kids reside.

Cindy Blanck
I’m a semi-retired math teacher and nature enthusiast. I purchased my first camera when I was ten years old but wasn’t serious about photography until my children came along. The desire to document my children growing up was the inspiration to learn more about the technical side of photography. Eventually, I took my skills outdoors to capture the world around me. During the pandemic, I purchased a few bird feeders and turned my attention to birding in order to occupy my days. The intriguing world of bird photography has captivated my heart, so that is where you can find me if I’m not teaching or on a hiking trail making memories with my family.

Marc Brannan
Marc Brannan grew up on the family farm near Willow Springs, MO., and currently lives and works in West Plains, MO. He started playing with cameras and taking pictures at a very young age. He loved playing in the old barn and enjoyed being outdoors as much as possible surrounded by nature. His parents nurtured his desire to travel and see new places. His dad encouraged him to learn and enjoy history, especially the history of his family and where they came from.

“I have always enjoyed the stories of my mom attending one-room schools when she was a kid, and I think that is a big reason I seek them out to photograph today. There are less of them around every year, as a lot of them slowly fall into disrepair and collapse unless they have been cared for or restored over the years. I love incorporating them into my landscape photography as much as I can, especially as a way of preserving their history. I have started to reach out with my photography and have started trying to capture more shots in other areas, as well as different states, both in nature and landscape scenes. Lately I have focused more on reaching out to new parts of Missouri, and trying to show the viewer that there is so much more around us than we are used to seeing locally.

The pictures that I have selected for this exhibition show a little bit of our area’s historical and current way of farming life, displaying settings that our area is known for. “Whether historic or current, they are images that we might otherwise only see if you were to travel there and see for yourself.”

Dennis Crider
Dennis Crider has always had a camera in his hand, and as a child in Wichita, Kansas he just had to capture the moments on film. He was newspaper and yearbook photographer in both high school and college and spent high school summers working at a film processing firm in Wichita. Toward the end of his college days, he owned and operated a portrait studio in Edmond, Oklahoma, then Uncle Sam came knocking and he gladly terminated that career.

After moving to West Plains, he became a general assignment reporter/photographer at The Daily Quill Newspaper and spent his last years as sports editor. That career spanned 39 years from 1969 to 2008.
During his tenure at The Quill, he captured thousands of moments through the lens of a camera, both good and bad. The highlight of that career occurred 15 years after his retirement. On Oct. 19, 2023, he was the 77th person to be inducted into the Missouri Press Association Photojournalism Hall of Fame. He was nominated by former Quill Publisher and Editor Frank L. Martin III, who is a member of the Missouri Newspaper Hall of Fame.

Crider is quite busy these days photographing things that don’t talk back and sells his nature/wildlife images at art shows in Kansas, Arkansas, and Missouri. Included in this exhibit are three canvas wrap photos that adhere to the agriculture theme of the festival. “The Target” is an Old West windmill that was at the receiving end of several shotgun blasts. “Missouri Wild Horses” shows three running through a field near Round Spring north of Eminence. “Eclipse 2024” was taken during the totality of the recent solar eclipse.

Bob Cunningham
Cunningham is a life-long Missourian who has lived primarily in the Ozarks. He developed an interest in photography after completing a photo-journalism class at the University of Missouri–Columbia in the early 1970s. Cunningham graduated from the University of Missouri in 1976 with a B.S. in Forest Management, and has resided in West Plains, Missouri since 1988.

Cunningham retired in 2010 after 34 years of service with the Missouri Department of Conservation working as a professional forester, and since that time has owned and operated a forest and wildlife management consulting business, plus freelance outdoor photography. His photographic works have appeared in books, videos, and other publications. His wildlife, nature, and landscape images have been captured from the South Pacific, Central America, Caribbean countries, and throughout all North America.

Artist Statement – “My photography goal is to create artistic images worthy of a lengthy view. Otherwise, the picture is merely a snapshot.”

Bob Greenlee
I am a mostly retired freelance photographer. My experience includes weddings, photojournalism, travel, nature, and portrait photography. I was the photography instructor at Hannibal LaGrange University for several years. I have also worked for several publications. A good day’s photography is when I get to capture the beauty of the world God created.

Janice Gunter-Moss
I took up photography just as a hobby when I was very young. I got my first camera by selling garden seeds and took a camera as my prize. Later I discovered taking pictures was a great stress reliever – just going out and concentrating on the beauty around me and trying to capture it with my camera.

I love old barns so try to get pictures of them so that maybe when they are gone at least a bit will remain.

Vicki Hogan
I am an amateur photographer that enjoys taking pictures of my family, nature and animals. I recently joined the local photography club in West Plains to broaden my understanding of photography.

In my early years I lived on a large farm in the Ozarks with my parents and older sister. My parents moved from Iowa to escape the cold winters and try their hand at farming in the Ozarks, milking cows and raising hogs, and chickens. I passed my time by playing in the barn with the kittens, sat astride the cows as they were milked and watching the baby pigs.

A few years passed. My parents decided it was more difficult to make a living on a farm in the Ozarks as opposed to the rich black soil in Iowa. As a result, they sold the farm and moved to West Plains. But I still have good memories of those times on their farm and acquired a love of animals and nature. After moving to West Plains, my parents nurtured my love for the outdoors by often taking me to nearby rivers and lakes on the weekends to camp and fish.

For 40 years my late husband and I had a small farm that lay between West Plains and Willow Springs, where we raised our three children, hay and Charolais cattle, as well as working full time at other professions. When we retired, we were able to enjoy many camping trips to the local rivers and lakes and take several overdue trips to the Smokey and Rocky Mountains where I fed my love of nature through the eyes of a camera.

Ralph Moore
Ralph Moore is retired from Viola Public School, where he was a teacher and counselor for many years. After retirement he became interested in photography. Today, he travels far and wide searching for interesting subjects in perfect light. His favorite subjects are landscapes, animals, travel, night photography, birds, flowers, micro, and sunrise/sunsets. Really just about anything except people!

Krista Pendergrass
Krista grew up amidst the corn and soybeans of southwest Minnesota. Since leaving the upper Midwest after college, she has spent most of her time in rural north central Texas and here in West Plains. She loves her family dearly which includes her husband, David, and her four sons, whom she homeschools. Her free time (if there is any!) is spent exploring the Ozarks, gardening, reading, spending time with friends and church family, and capturing pictures of all those things.

Krista has always enjoyed photographing botanical items of interest in her garden and in her explorations. In the last ten years, her real passion has been to capture everyday moments of her family and friends that tell a story. That motivated her to purchase a good camera several years ago and learn as much as she could on her own and with the help of others in the photography community here in West Plains.

Tammy Schulz
Tammy (Gunter) Schulz was raised in West Plains, Missouri and is a West Plains High School Graduate. Tammy currently resides in Mountain View, MO with her husband Ricky. She has a degree in Advertising Design and her ability to compose an image stems from that design training. She’s had a camera in her hand since she was 10 years old and sold seeds to her neighbors and relatives to earn her first camera. She didn’t delve into 35 mm photography until 1999 when she wanted better photographs of her daughter’s dance performances. For years her favorite photography subject was her daughter, especially when she was dancing.

She ventured into digital photography with her first dslr in the early 2000’s with a Sony a100. She currently shoots with her fourth Sony and recently upgraded to the full frame Sony a7 III Mirrorless Camera.

Tammy’s photography was first published in an issue of Country Lifestyle magazine in 2008. Her photo was a Christmas lights photo taken during a Christmas festival in San Marcos, Texas. Tammy has no formal training in photography and continues to learn and practice to perfect her craft. She learns from other photographers, researching online, and practicing what she’s learned. She loves to capture old churches, mills, and schools and prefers candid shots of people over formal poses. She particularly loves to capture scenes she later turns into paintings.

“Art is feeling more than seeing” Tammy Schulz

Regina Stone
From taking pictures as a young girl to shooting professionally since 2008, Gina Stone has made photography a job that she truly loves. She enjoys making beautiful memories for family and friends, but especially photographing life’s special moments such as newborn/children’s photos, senior pictures, weddings, or even your best furry friend. In her spare time, she shoots the occasional wildflower, countryside, old barn, or really all the above. Gina Stone Photography is located on west 8th street here in West Plains.

WPCA will host a Meet the Artists event on Saturday, Junel 22, from 2-4 p.m., in the Gallery at the Center. All are invited to attend, meet the artists, and discuss the pieces. The exhibit is co-sponsored by the West Plains Civic Center and West Plains Council on the Arts, with partial funding provided by Missouri Arts Council, a state agency.

Art at OzSBI ~ Artist Angela Bullard (sponsored by Council on the Arts) @ Ozarks Small Business Incubator
Jun 11 @ 8:30 am – 4:30 pm
Art at the Library ~ Marc Brannon Artist @ West Plains Public Library
Jun 11 @ 9:00 am – 6:00 pm

The West Plains Council on the Arts (WPCA) and West Plains Public Library (WPPL) will partner to bring quarterly art displays to the library. Photography from local artist Marc Brannan will be featured through the end of June 2024. Visitors may view the display at the library during their open hours, 9:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Monday-Friday, 9:00 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday.

WPPL Director Greg Carter shares, “Here at the library, our vision is that we are a space where all come to learn, create, discover, and connect. There is no better way to accomplish that vision than displaying local pieces of art for the community to peruse and appreciate. We are always proud to partner with the Council on the Arts to bring the beauty of art to our patrons.”

Marc Brannan grew up on his family farm near Willow Springs, MO., and currently lives and works in West Plains. He started playing with cameras and taking pictures at a very young age. He loved playing in the old barn and enjoyed being outdoors as much as possible surrounded by nature. His parents nurtured his desire to travel and see new places. His dad encouraged him to learn and enjoy history, especially the history of his family and where they came from.

Brannan says, “I have always enjoyed the stories of my mom attending one-room schools when she was a kid, and I think that is a big reason I seek them out to photograph today. There are fewer of them around every year, as a lot of them slowly fall into disrepair and collapse unless they have been cared for or restored over the years. I love incorporating them into my landscape photography as much as I can, especially as a way of preserving their history. I have started to reach out with my photography and have started trying to capture more shots in other areas, as well as different states, both in nature and landscape scenes. Lately I have focused more on reaching out to new parts of Missouri, and trying to show the viewer that there is so much more around us than we are used to seeing locally. The pictures that I have selected for this exhibition show a range of my photos that depict the history and outdoor settings that our area, as well as other parts of the country, are known for—whether historic or in the natural beauty that we might otherwise only see if you were to travel there and see for yourself.”

A Meet-the-Artists event will be held on Tuesday, April 23, 2024, 3:00-4:30 PM, hosted by the library, 750 W. Broadway, in West Plains. The public is invited to attend, meet the artist, view, and discuss the pieces on display. Partial funding for this exhibit is provided by the Missouri Arts Council, a state agency.

For more information about the exhibit, contact Greg Carter greg.carter@westplains.gov at the library or WPCA Coordinator Audrey Scott at Audrey.scott@zizzers.org

Photo courtesy of Marc Brannan

Summer Reading Program hosted by @ West Plains Public Library
Jun 11 @ 10:00 am

Not all events will be held at the library. Call West Plains Public Library, 417-256-4775, for more information and full schedule.

City of West Plains Aquatic Center @ Peoples Park
Jun 11 @ 12:00 pm – 5:00 pm

Hours of operation are noon to 5 p.m. daily with an evening swim Thursdays from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. The cost of admission is $5 for children ages three to 11, and $6 for ages 12 and up. Children under three are free. The Parks and Recreation Department requires that children under 12 be accompanied by an adult. Punch cards will be sold at the Jimmie Carrol Sports Complex for $30. Each punch card is good for 10 pool visits. For additional information, including pool rentals, call the Parks and Recreation office at 417-256-7304.

Movies @ Glass Sword Theater
Jun 11 @ 4:00 pm

For movies currently playing and all show times, see https://www.glassswordcinema.com/

An Oral History of West Plains by Traditional Storyteller Danette House hosted by Ozarks Heritage Research Center @ Garnett Library
Jun 11 @ 6:00 pm

Danette House, Traditional Ozarks Storyteller, will tell the story of West Plains by weaving together vivid details, personal stories, significant events, and the lives of colorful characters. Within this narrative, she will explore both moments of great joy and heart-wrenching tragedies that made West Plains not just a town but a home for generations of Ozarkers.

Free and open to the public with light refreshments provided.

Jun
12
Wed
West Plains Photography Club photo hosted by The West Plains Council on the Arts @ West Plains Civic Center mezzanine
Jun 12 all-day

From organizers: West Plains Council on the Arts (WPCA) will host an exhibition of works by members of the West Plains Photography Club in the Gallery at the Center, West Plains Civic Center from May 20 through July 6, 2024. The Gallery, on the mezzanine, is open to the public during regular Civic Center hours. The exhibit will feature pieces to complement the Agricultural theme of this year’s Old-Time Music, Ozark Heritage Festival.

The West Plains Photography Club, which was unable to meet for three years because of the Covid pandemic, has enjoyed a rebirth beginning in January of last year. The club currently has meetings at 6:30 p.m. the second Monday of each month in the Missouri State University-West Plains Creative Discovery Center, 411 West Main Street, Suite 1. Everyone regardless of age or ability is invited to join the club which has no membership dues.

The purpose of the club is to share and support everyone’s passion for photography arts whether they are a beginner or have been engaged in photography for many years. Present members include some who do not even own a camera to professionals who make a living by selling their art. For more information on the club feel free to call Bob Cunningham at 417-257-8206 or Dennis Crider at 417-274-7101.

Featured members in the exhibit include:

Jason Adolphson
“I have been a photographer for twenty years. My goal from the beginning has been to show others the wonderful creation that God has gifted us with. As I travel, I can’t help but think about how many people never even stop to see what’s around them in their daily travels. I want to share with others all that I see. God gave us beauty for everyday of our lives, so I feel why only stare at asphalt.

I started my business to share with the world. My goal is some day to have taken photographs in all 50 states. Every state holds some secret treasure. Our country has some of the most diverse landscapes in the world, and few of us ever get to experience them all. Through my photographs I hope to share a piece of each of my experiences with others.”

Bob Anderson
Robert Anderson grew up in West Plains Missouri. He graduated from West Plains High School and earned degrees in Forestry, Forest Pathology, and Public Administration from the University of Missouri and Century University. He served in the US Air Force and worked for the Missouri Department of Conservation (3 years) and the US Forest service as a Forest Pathologist (Tree Doctor) living in Nevada, Virginia, Missouri, Minnesota, Ohio, North Carolina, and Georgia.
He traveled extensively in the US and other countries as a Forest Pathologist working on sick trees. As part of his work, he documented the sick trees and organisms causing diseases using photography. While on location he photographed the culture and landscape. Retiring in West Plains 24 years ago, he has traveled extensively in the Ozarks taking pictures of the landscapes, buildings, people, animals, and whatever presented itself for a picture. He has also used his photography skills in Tennessee and Colorado where his kids reside.

Cindy Blanck
I’m a semi-retired math teacher and nature enthusiast. I purchased my first camera when I was ten years old but wasn’t serious about photography until my children came along. The desire to document my children growing up was the inspiration to learn more about the technical side of photography. Eventually, I took my skills outdoors to capture the world around me. During the pandemic, I purchased a few bird feeders and turned my attention to birding in order to occupy my days. The intriguing world of bird photography has captivated my heart, so that is where you can find me if I’m not teaching or on a hiking trail making memories with my family.

Marc Brannan
Marc Brannan grew up on the family farm near Willow Springs, MO., and currently lives and works in West Plains, MO. He started playing with cameras and taking pictures at a very young age. He loved playing in the old barn and enjoyed being outdoors as much as possible surrounded by nature. His parents nurtured his desire to travel and see new places. His dad encouraged him to learn and enjoy history, especially the history of his family and where they came from.

“I have always enjoyed the stories of my mom attending one-room schools when she was a kid, and I think that is a big reason I seek them out to photograph today. There are less of them around every year, as a lot of them slowly fall into disrepair and collapse unless they have been cared for or restored over the years. I love incorporating them into my landscape photography as much as I can, especially as a way of preserving their history. I have started to reach out with my photography and have started trying to capture more shots in other areas, as well as different states, both in nature and landscape scenes. Lately I have focused more on reaching out to new parts of Missouri, and trying to show the viewer that there is so much more around us than we are used to seeing locally.

The pictures that I have selected for this exhibition show a little bit of our area’s historical and current way of farming life, displaying settings that our area is known for. “Whether historic or current, they are images that we might otherwise only see if you were to travel there and see for yourself.”

Dennis Crider
Dennis Crider has always had a camera in his hand, and as a child in Wichita, Kansas he just had to capture the moments on film. He was newspaper and yearbook photographer in both high school and college and spent high school summers working at a film processing firm in Wichita. Toward the end of his college days, he owned and operated a portrait studio in Edmond, Oklahoma, then Uncle Sam came knocking and he gladly terminated that career.

After moving to West Plains, he became a general assignment reporter/photographer at The Daily Quill Newspaper and spent his last years as sports editor. That career spanned 39 years from 1969 to 2008.
During his tenure at The Quill, he captured thousands of moments through the lens of a camera, both good and bad. The highlight of that career occurred 15 years after his retirement. On Oct. 19, 2023, he was the 77th person to be inducted into the Missouri Press Association Photojournalism Hall of Fame. He was nominated by former Quill Publisher and Editor Frank L. Martin III, who is a member of the Missouri Newspaper Hall of Fame.

Crider is quite busy these days photographing things that don’t talk back and sells his nature/wildlife images at art shows in Kansas, Arkansas, and Missouri. Included in this exhibit are three canvas wrap photos that adhere to the agriculture theme of the festival. “The Target” is an Old West windmill that was at the receiving end of several shotgun blasts. “Missouri Wild Horses” shows three running through a field near Round Spring north of Eminence. “Eclipse 2024” was taken during the totality of the recent solar eclipse.

Bob Cunningham
Cunningham is a life-long Missourian who has lived primarily in the Ozarks. He developed an interest in photography after completing a photo-journalism class at the University of Missouri–Columbia in the early 1970s. Cunningham graduated from the University of Missouri in 1976 with a B.S. in Forest Management, and has resided in West Plains, Missouri since 1988.

Cunningham retired in 2010 after 34 years of service with the Missouri Department of Conservation working as a professional forester, and since that time has owned and operated a forest and wildlife management consulting business, plus freelance outdoor photography. His photographic works have appeared in books, videos, and other publications. His wildlife, nature, and landscape images have been captured from the South Pacific, Central America, Caribbean countries, and throughout all North America.

Artist Statement – “My photography goal is to create artistic images worthy of a lengthy view. Otherwise, the picture is merely a snapshot.”

Bob Greenlee
I am a mostly retired freelance photographer. My experience includes weddings, photojournalism, travel, nature, and portrait photography. I was the photography instructor at Hannibal LaGrange University for several years. I have also worked for several publications. A good day’s photography is when I get to capture the beauty of the world God created.

Janice Gunter-Moss
I took up photography just as a hobby when I was very young. I got my first camera by selling garden seeds and took a camera as my prize. Later I discovered taking pictures was a great stress reliever – just going out and concentrating on the beauty around me and trying to capture it with my camera.

I love old barns so try to get pictures of them so that maybe when they are gone at least a bit will remain.

Vicki Hogan
I am an amateur photographer that enjoys taking pictures of my family, nature and animals. I recently joined the local photography club in West Plains to broaden my understanding of photography.

In my early years I lived on a large farm in the Ozarks with my parents and older sister. My parents moved from Iowa to escape the cold winters and try their hand at farming in the Ozarks, milking cows and raising hogs, and chickens. I passed my time by playing in the barn with the kittens, sat astride the cows as they were milked and watching the baby pigs.

A few years passed. My parents decided it was more difficult to make a living on a farm in the Ozarks as opposed to the rich black soil in Iowa. As a result, they sold the farm and moved to West Plains. But I still have good memories of those times on their farm and acquired a love of animals and nature. After moving to West Plains, my parents nurtured my love for the outdoors by often taking me to nearby rivers and lakes on the weekends to camp and fish.

For 40 years my late husband and I had a small farm that lay between West Plains and Willow Springs, where we raised our three children, hay and Charolais cattle, as well as working full time at other professions. When we retired, we were able to enjoy many camping trips to the local rivers and lakes and take several overdue trips to the Smokey and Rocky Mountains where I fed my love of nature through the eyes of a camera.

Ralph Moore
Ralph Moore is retired from Viola Public School, where he was a teacher and counselor for many years. After retirement he became interested in photography. Today, he travels far and wide searching for interesting subjects in perfect light. His favorite subjects are landscapes, animals, travel, night photography, birds, flowers, micro, and sunrise/sunsets. Really just about anything except people!

Krista Pendergrass
Krista grew up amidst the corn and soybeans of southwest Minnesota. Since leaving the upper Midwest after college, she has spent most of her time in rural north central Texas and here in West Plains. She loves her family dearly which includes her husband, David, and her four sons, whom she homeschools. Her free time (if there is any!) is spent exploring the Ozarks, gardening, reading, spending time with friends and church family, and capturing pictures of all those things.

Krista has always enjoyed photographing botanical items of interest in her garden and in her explorations. In the last ten years, her real passion has been to capture everyday moments of her family and friends that tell a story. That motivated her to purchase a good camera several years ago and learn as much as she could on her own and with the help of others in the photography community here in West Plains.

Tammy Schulz
Tammy (Gunter) Schulz was raised in West Plains, Missouri and is a West Plains High School Graduate. Tammy currently resides in Mountain View, MO with her husband Ricky. She has a degree in Advertising Design and her ability to compose an image stems from that design training. She’s had a camera in her hand since she was 10 years old and sold seeds to her neighbors and relatives to earn her first camera. She didn’t delve into 35 mm photography until 1999 when she wanted better photographs of her daughter’s dance performances. For years her favorite photography subject was her daughter, especially when she was dancing.

She ventured into digital photography with her first dslr in the early 2000’s with a Sony a100. She currently shoots with her fourth Sony and recently upgraded to the full frame Sony a7 III Mirrorless Camera.

Tammy’s photography was first published in an issue of Country Lifestyle magazine in 2008. Her photo was a Christmas lights photo taken during a Christmas festival in San Marcos, Texas. Tammy has no formal training in photography and continues to learn and practice to perfect her craft. She learns from other photographers, researching online, and practicing what she’s learned. She loves to capture old churches, mills, and schools and prefers candid shots of people over formal poses. She particularly loves to capture scenes she later turns into paintings.

“Art is feeling more than seeing” Tammy Schulz

Regina Stone
From taking pictures as a young girl to shooting professionally since 2008, Gina Stone has made photography a job that she truly loves. She enjoys making beautiful memories for family and friends, but especially photographing life’s special moments such as newborn/children’s photos, senior pictures, weddings, or even your best furry friend. In her spare time, she shoots the occasional wildflower, countryside, old barn, or really all the above. Gina Stone Photography is located on west 8th street here in West Plains.

WPCA will host a Meet the Artists event on Saturday, Junel 22, from 2-4 p.m., in the Gallery at the Center. All are invited to attend, meet the artists, and discuss the pieces. The exhibit is co-sponsored by the West Plains Civic Center and West Plains Council on the Arts, with partial funding provided by Missouri Arts Council, a state agency.

Art at OzSBI ~ Artist Angela Bullard (sponsored by Council on the Arts) @ Ozarks Small Business Incubator
Jun 12 @ 8:30 am – 4:30 pm
Art at the Library ~ Marc Brannon Artist @ West Plains Public Library
Jun 12 @ 9:00 am – 6:00 pm

The West Plains Council on the Arts (WPCA) and West Plains Public Library (WPPL) will partner to bring quarterly art displays to the library. Photography from local artist Marc Brannan will be featured through the end of June 2024. Visitors may view the display at the library during their open hours, 9:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Monday-Friday, 9:00 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday.

WPPL Director Greg Carter shares, “Here at the library, our vision is that we are a space where all come to learn, create, discover, and connect. There is no better way to accomplish that vision than displaying local pieces of art for the community to peruse and appreciate. We are always proud to partner with the Council on the Arts to bring the beauty of art to our patrons.”

Marc Brannan grew up on his family farm near Willow Springs, MO., and currently lives and works in West Plains. He started playing with cameras and taking pictures at a very young age. He loved playing in the old barn and enjoyed being outdoors as much as possible surrounded by nature. His parents nurtured his desire to travel and see new places. His dad encouraged him to learn and enjoy history, especially the history of his family and where they came from.

Brannan says, “I have always enjoyed the stories of my mom attending one-room schools when she was a kid, and I think that is a big reason I seek them out to photograph today. There are fewer of them around every year, as a lot of them slowly fall into disrepair and collapse unless they have been cared for or restored over the years. I love incorporating them into my landscape photography as much as I can, especially as a way of preserving their history. I have started to reach out with my photography and have started trying to capture more shots in other areas, as well as different states, both in nature and landscape scenes. Lately I have focused more on reaching out to new parts of Missouri, and trying to show the viewer that there is so much more around us than we are used to seeing locally. The pictures that I have selected for this exhibition show a range of my photos that depict the history and outdoor settings that our area, as well as other parts of the country, are known for—whether historic or in the natural beauty that we might otherwise only see if you were to travel there and see for yourself.”

A Meet-the-Artists event will be held on Tuesday, April 23, 2024, 3:00-4:30 PM, hosted by the library, 750 W. Broadway, in West Plains. The public is invited to attend, meet the artist, view, and discuss the pieces on display. Partial funding for this exhibit is provided by the Missouri Arts Council, a state agency.

For more information about the exhibit, contact Greg Carter greg.carter@westplains.gov at the library or WPCA Coordinator Audrey Scott at Audrey.scott@zizzers.org

Photo courtesy of Marc Brannan

City of West Plains Aquatic Center @ Peoples Park
Jun 12 @ 12:00 pm – 5:00 pm

Hours of operation are noon to 5 p.m. daily with an evening swim Thursdays from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. The cost of admission is $5 for children ages three to 11, and $6 for ages 12 and up. Children under three are free. The Parks and Recreation Department requires that children under 12 be accompanied by an adult. Punch cards will be sold at the Jimmie Carrol Sports Complex for $30. Each punch card is good for 10 pool visits. For additional information, including pool rentals, call the Parks and Recreation office at 417-256-7304.

Movies @ Glass Sword Theater
Jun 12 @ 4:00 pm

For movies currently playing and all show times, see https://www.glassswordcinema.com/

Jun
13
Thu
West Plains Photography Club photo hosted by The West Plains Council on the Arts @ West Plains Civic Center mezzanine
Jun 13 all-day

From organizers: West Plains Council on the Arts (WPCA) will host an exhibition of works by members of the West Plains Photography Club in the Gallery at the Center, West Plains Civic Center from May 20 through July 6, 2024. The Gallery, on the mezzanine, is open to the public during regular Civic Center hours. The exhibit will feature pieces to complement the Agricultural theme of this year’s Old-Time Music, Ozark Heritage Festival.

The West Plains Photography Club, which was unable to meet for three years because of the Covid pandemic, has enjoyed a rebirth beginning in January of last year. The club currently has meetings at 6:30 p.m. the second Monday of each month in the Missouri State University-West Plains Creative Discovery Center, 411 West Main Street, Suite 1. Everyone regardless of age or ability is invited to join the club which has no membership dues.

The purpose of the club is to share and support everyone’s passion for photography arts whether they are a beginner or have been engaged in photography for many years. Present members include some who do not even own a camera to professionals who make a living by selling their art. For more information on the club feel free to call Bob Cunningham at 417-257-8206 or Dennis Crider at 417-274-7101.

Featured members in the exhibit include:

Jason Adolphson
“I have been a photographer for twenty years. My goal from the beginning has been to show others the wonderful creation that God has gifted us with. As I travel, I can’t help but think about how many people never even stop to see what’s around them in their daily travels. I want to share with others all that I see. God gave us beauty for everyday of our lives, so I feel why only stare at asphalt.

I started my business to share with the world. My goal is some day to have taken photographs in all 50 states. Every state holds some secret treasure. Our country has some of the most diverse landscapes in the world, and few of us ever get to experience them all. Through my photographs I hope to share a piece of each of my experiences with others.”

Bob Anderson
Robert Anderson grew up in West Plains Missouri. He graduated from West Plains High School and earned degrees in Forestry, Forest Pathology, and Public Administration from the University of Missouri and Century University. He served in the US Air Force and worked for the Missouri Department of Conservation (3 years) and the US Forest service as a Forest Pathologist (Tree Doctor) living in Nevada, Virginia, Missouri, Minnesota, Ohio, North Carolina, and Georgia.
He traveled extensively in the US and other countries as a Forest Pathologist working on sick trees. As part of his work, he documented the sick trees and organisms causing diseases using photography. While on location he photographed the culture and landscape. Retiring in West Plains 24 years ago, he has traveled extensively in the Ozarks taking pictures of the landscapes, buildings, people, animals, and whatever presented itself for a picture. He has also used his photography skills in Tennessee and Colorado where his kids reside.

Cindy Blanck
I’m a semi-retired math teacher and nature enthusiast. I purchased my first camera when I was ten years old but wasn’t serious about photography until my children came along. The desire to document my children growing up was the inspiration to learn more about the technical side of photography. Eventually, I took my skills outdoors to capture the world around me. During the pandemic, I purchased a few bird feeders and turned my attention to birding in order to occupy my days. The intriguing world of bird photography has captivated my heart, so that is where you can find me if I’m not teaching or on a hiking trail making memories with my family.

Marc Brannan
Marc Brannan grew up on the family farm near Willow Springs, MO., and currently lives and works in West Plains, MO. He started playing with cameras and taking pictures at a very young age. He loved playing in the old barn and enjoyed being outdoors as much as possible surrounded by nature. His parents nurtured his desire to travel and see new places. His dad encouraged him to learn and enjoy history, especially the history of his family and where they came from.

“I have always enjoyed the stories of my mom attending one-room schools when she was a kid, and I think that is a big reason I seek them out to photograph today. There are less of them around every year, as a lot of them slowly fall into disrepair and collapse unless they have been cared for or restored over the years. I love incorporating them into my landscape photography as much as I can, especially as a way of preserving their history. I have started to reach out with my photography and have started trying to capture more shots in other areas, as well as different states, both in nature and landscape scenes. Lately I have focused more on reaching out to new parts of Missouri, and trying to show the viewer that there is so much more around us than we are used to seeing locally.

The pictures that I have selected for this exhibition show a little bit of our area’s historical and current way of farming life, displaying settings that our area is known for. “Whether historic or current, they are images that we might otherwise only see if you were to travel there and see for yourself.”

Dennis Crider
Dennis Crider has always had a camera in his hand, and as a child in Wichita, Kansas he just had to capture the moments on film. He was newspaper and yearbook photographer in both high school and college and spent high school summers working at a film processing firm in Wichita. Toward the end of his college days, he owned and operated a portrait studio in Edmond, Oklahoma, then Uncle Sam came knocking and he gladly terminated that career.

After moving to West Plains, he became a general assignment reporter/photographer at The Daily Quill Newspaper and spent his last years as sports editor. That career spanned 39 years from 1969 to 2008.
During his tenure at The Quill, he captured thousands of moments through the lens of a camera, both good and bad. The highlight of that career occurred 15 years after his retirement. On Oct. 19, 2023, he was the 77th person to be inducted into the Missouri Press Association Photojournalism Hall of Fame. He was nominated by former Quill Publisher and Editor Frank L. Martin III, who is a member of the Missouri Newspaper Hall of Fame.

Crider is quite busy these days photographing things that don’t talk back and sells his nature/wildlife images at art shows in Kansas, Arkansas, and Missouri. Included in this exhibit are three canvas wrap photos that adhere to the agriculture theme of the festival. “The Target” is an Old West windmill that was at the receiving end of several shotgun blasts. “Missouri Wild Horses” shows three running through a field near Round Spring north of Eminence. “Eclipse 2024” was taken during the totality of the recent solar eclipse.

Bob Cunningham
Cunningham is a life-long Missourian who has lived primarily in the Ozarks. He developed an interest in photography after completing a photo-journalism class at the University of Missouri–Columbia in the early 1970s. Cunningham graduated from the University of Missouri in 1976 with a B.S. in Forest Management, and has resided in West Plains, Missouri since 1988.

Cunningham retired in 2010 after 34 years of service with the Missouri Department of Conservation working as a professional forester, and since that time has owned and operated a forest and wildlife management consulting business, plus freelance outdoor photography. His photographic works have appeared in books, videos, and other publications. His wildlife, nature, and landscape images have been captured from the South Pacific, Central America, Caribbean countries, and throughout all North America.

Artist Statement – “My photography goal is to create artistic images worthy of a lengthy view. Otherwise, the picture is merely a snapshot.”

Bob Greenlee
I am a mostly retired freelance photographer. My experience includes weddings, photojournalism, travel, nature, and portrait photography. I was the photography instructor at Hannibal LaGrange University for several years. I have also worked for several publications. A good day’s photography is when I get to capture the beauty of the world God created.

Janice Gunter-Moss
I took up photography just as a hobby when I was very young. I got my first camera by selling garden seeds and took a camera as my prize. Later I discovered taking pictures was a great stress reliever – just going out and concentrating on the beauty around me and trying to capture it with my camera.

I love old barns so try to get pictures of them so that maybe when they are gone at least a bit will remain.

Vicki Hogan
I am an amateur photographer that enjoys taking pictures of my family, nature and animals. I recently joined the local photography club in West Plains to broaden my understanding of photography.

In my early years I lived on a large farm in the Ozarks with my parents and older sister. My parents moved from Iowa to escape the cold winters and try their hand at farming in the Ozarks, milking cows and raising hogs, and chickens. I passed my time by playing in the barn with the kittens, sat astride the cows as they were milked and watching the baby pigs.

A few years passed. My parents decided it was more difficult to make a living on a farm in the Ozarks as opposed to the rich black soil in Iowa. As a result, they sold the farm and moved to West Plains. But I still have good memories of those times on their farm and acquired a love of animals and nature. After moving to West Plains, my parents nurtured my love for the outdoors by often taking me to nearby rivers and lakes on the weekends to camp and fish.

For 40 years my late husband and I had a small farm that lay between West Plains and Willow Springs, where we raised our three children, hay and Charolais cattle, as well as working full time at other professions. When we retired, we were able to enjoy many camping trips to the local rivers and lakes and take several overdue trips to the Smokey and Rocky Mountains where I fed my love of nature through the eyes of a camera.

Ralph Moore
Ralph Moore is retired from Viola Public School, where he was a teacher and counselor for many years. After retirement he became interested in photography. Today, he travels far and wide searching for interesting subjects in perfect light. His favorite subjects are landscapes, animals, travel, night photography, birds, flowers, micro, and sunrise/sunsets. Really just about anything except people!

Krista Pendergrass
Krista grew up amidst the corn and soybeans of southwest Minnesota. Since leaving the upper Midwest after college, she has spent most of her time in rural north central Texas and here in West Plains. She loves her family dearly which includes her husband, David, and her four sons, whom she homeschools. Her free time (if there is any!) is spent exploring the Ozarks, gardening, reading, spending time with friends and church family, and capturing pictures of all those things.

Krista has always enjoyed photographing botanical items of interest in her garden and in her explorations. In the last ten years, her real passion has been to capture everyday moments of her family and friends that tell a story. That motivated her to purchase a good camera several years ago and learn as much as she could on her own and with the help of others in the photography community here in West Plains.

Tammy Schulz
Tammy (Gunter) Schulz was raised in West Plains, Missouri and is a West Plains High School Graduate. Tammy currently resides in Mountain View, MO with her husband Ricky. She has a degree in Advertising Design and her ability to compose an image stems from that design training. She’s had a camera in her hand since she was 10 years old and sold seeds to her neighbors and relatives to earn her first camera. She didn’t delve into 35 mm photography until 1999 when she wanted better photographs of her daughter’s dance performances. For years her favorite photography subject was her daughter, especially when she was dancing.

She ventured into digital photography with her first dslr in the early 2000’s with a Sony a100. She currently shoots with her fourth Sony and recently upgraded to the full frame Sony a7 III Mirrorless Camera.

Tammy’s photography was first published in an issue of Country Lifestyle magazine in 2008. Her photo was a Christmas lights photo taken during a Christmas festival in San Marcos, Texas. Tammy has no formal training in photography and continues to learn and practice to perfect her craft. She learns from other photographers, researching online, and practicing what she’s learned. She loves to capture old churches, mills, and schools and prefers candid shots of people over formal poses. She particularly loves to capture scenes she later turns into paintings.

“Art is feeling more than seeing” Tammy Schulz

Regina Stone
From taking pictures as a young girl to shooting professionally since 2008, Gina Stone has made photography a job that she truly loves. She enjoys making beautiful memories for family and friends, but especially photographing life’s special moments such as newborn/children’s photos, senior pictures, weddings, or even your best furry friend. In her spare time, she shoots the occasional wildflower, countryside, old barn, or really all the above. Gina Stone Photography is located on west 8th street here in West Plains.

WPCA will host a Meet the Artists event on Saturday, Junel 22, from 2-4 p.m., in the Gallery at the Center. All are invited to attend, meet the artists, and discuss the pieces. The exhibit is co-sponsored by the West Plains Civic Center and West Plains Council on the Arts, with partial funding provided by Missouri Arts Council, a state agency.

Art at OzSBI ~ Artist Angela Bullard (sponsored by Council on the Arts) @ Ozarks Small Business Incubator
Jun 13 @ 8:30 am – 4:30 pm
Art at the Library ~ Marc Brannon Artist @ West Plains Public Library
Jun 13 @ 9:00 am – 6:00 pm

The West Plains Council on the Arts (WPCA) and West Plains Public Library (WPPL) will partner to bring quarterly art displays to the library. Photography from local artist Marc Brannan will be featured through the end of June 2024. Visitors may view the display at the library during their open hours, 9:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Monday-Friday, 9:00 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday.

WPPL Director Greg Carter shares, “Here at the library, our vision is that we are a space where all come to learn, create, discover, and connect. There is no better way to accomplish that vision than displaying local pieces of art for the community to peruse and appreciate. We are always proud to partner with the Council on the Arts to bring the beauty of art to our patrons.”

Marc Brannan grew up on his family farm near Willow Springs, MO., and currently lives and works in West Plains. He started playing with cameras and taking pictures at a very young age. He loved playing in the old barn and enjoyed being outdoors as much as possible surrounded by nature. His parents nurtured his desire to travel and see new places. His dad encouraged him to learn and enjoy history, especially the history of his family and where they came from.

Brannan says, “I have always enjoyed the stories of my mom attending one-room schools when she was a kid, and I think that is a big reason I seek them out to photograph today. There are fewer of them around every year, as a lot of them slowly fall into disrepair and collapse unless they have been cared for or restored over the years. I love incorporating them into my landscape photography as much as I can, especially as a way of preserving their history. I have started to reach out with my photography and have started trying to capture more shots in other areas, as well as different states, both in nature and landscape scenes. Lately I have focused more on reaching out to new parts of Missouri, and trying to show the viewer that there is so much more around us than we are used to seeing locally. The pictures that I have selected for this exhibition show a range of my photos that depict the history and outdoor settings that our area, as well as other parts of the country, are known for—whether historic or in the natural beauty that we might otherwise only see if you were to travel there and see for yourself.”

A Meet-the-Artists event will be held on Tuesday, April 23, 2024, 3:00-4:30 PM, hosted by the library, 750 W. Broadway, in West Plains. The public is invited to attend, meet the artist, view, and discuss the pieces on display. Partial funding for this exhibit is provided by the Missouri Arts Council, a state agency.

For more information about the exhibit, contact Greg Carter greg.carter@westplains.gov at the library or WPCA Coordinator Audrey Scott at Audrey.scott@zizzers.org

Photo courtesy of Marc Brannan

City of West Plains Aquatic Center @ Peoples Park
Jun 13 @ 12:00 pm – 5:00 pm

Hours of operation are noon to 5 p.m. daily with an evening swim Thursdays from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. The cost of admission is $5 for children ages three to 11, and $6 for ages 12 and up. Children under three are free. The Parks and Recreation Department requires that children under 12 be accompanied by an adult. Punch cards will be sold at the Jimmie Carrol Sports Complex for $30. Each punch card is good for 10 pool visits. For additional information, including pool rentals, call the Parks and Recreation office at 417-256-7304.

Ozark Heritage Exhibit featuring the L.L. Broadfoot Collection @ Harlin Museum
Jun 13 @ 12:00 pm – 4:00 pm

The Lennis L. Broadfoot collection, housed at the Harlin Museum, is the most complete collection of art by the Shannon County, Missouri, artist. Broadfoot is best known as the artist who immortalized the often enigmatic people, places, and traditions of the turn-of-the-century Ozarks region, in multiple mediums, while also offering a firsthand narrative in the writings that frequently accompanied his works. He is the author of the highly regarded book, “Pioneers of the Ozarks,” in which the art and the histories were compiled to preserve his work.

The Harlin Museum is an all-volunteer organization, and sometimes there are staffing issues. If you are travelling a distance to see the Broadfoots, please check Harlin Museum of West Plains on Facebook for potential closures. Additional contact methods can be found at HarlinMuseum.com. Private tours can be arranged.

Admission is free, but donations are welcome.

Movies @ Glass Sword Theater
Jun 13 @ 4:00 pm

For movies currently playing and all show times, see https://www.glassswordcinema.com/

City of West Plains Aquatic Center @ Peoples Park
Jun 13 @ 5:00 pm – 8:00 pm

Hours of operation are noon to 5 p.m. daily with an evening swim Thursdays from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. The cost of admission is $5 for children ages three to 11, and $6 for ages 12 and up. Children under three are free. The Parks and Recreation Department requires that children under 12 be accompanied by an adult. Punch cards will be sold at the Jimmie Carrol Sports Complex for $30. Each punch card is good for 10 pool visits. For additional information, including pool rentals, call the Parks and Recreation office at 417-256-7304.

21st Annual Dog Jog @ Heart of the Ozarks Fairgrounds
Jun 13 @ 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm

Link for information here.

Trivia Night @ Wages Brewing Company
Jun 13 @ 6:30 pm

From organizers: Pub trivia format, 4 rounds of 5 trivia questions. Free entry with prizes.

Jun
14
Fri
Art at OzSBI ~ Artist Angela Bullard (sponsored by Council on the Arts) @ Ozarks Small Business Incubator
Jun 14 @ 8:30 am – 4:30 pm
Art at the Library ~ Marc Brannon Artist @ West Plains Public Library
Jun 14 @ 9:00 am – 6:00 pm

The West Plains Council on the Arts (WPCA) and West Plains Public Library (WPPL) will partner to bring quarterly art displays to the library. Photography from local artist Marc Brannan will be featured through the end of June 2024. Visitors may view the display at the library during their open hours, 9:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Monday-Friday, 9:00 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday.

WPPL Director Greg Carter shares, “Here at the library, our vision is that we are a space where all come to learn, create, discover, and connect. There is no better way to accomplish that vision than displaying local pieces of art for the community to peruse and appreciate. We are always proud to partner with the Council on the Arts to bring the beauty of art to our patrons.”

Marc Brannan grew up on his family farm near Willow Springs, MO., and currently lives and works in West Plains. He started playing with cameras and taking pictures at a very young age. He loved playing in the old barn and enjoyed being outdoors as much as possible surrounded by nature. His parents nurtured his desire to travel and see new places. His dad encouraged him to learn and enjoy history, especially the history of his family and where they came from.

Brannan says, “I have always enjoyed the stories of my mom attending one-room schools when she was a kid, and I think that is a big reason I seek them out to photograph today. There are fewer of them around every year, as a lot of them slowly fall into disrepair and collapse unless they have been cared for or restored over the years. I love incorporating them into my landscape photography as much as I can, especially as a way of preserving their history. I have started to reach out with my photography and have started trying to capture more shots in other areas, as well as different states, both in nature and landscape scenes. Lately I have focused more on reaching out to new parts of Missouri, and trying to show the viewer that there is so much more around us than we are used to seeing locally. The pictures that I have selected for this exhibition show a range of my photos that depict the history and outdoor settings that our area, as well as other parts of the country, are known for—whether historic or in the natural beauty that we might otherwise only see if you were to travel there and see for yourself.”

A Meet-the-Artists event will be held on Tuesday, April 23, 2024, 3:00-4:30 PM, hosted by the library, 750 W. Broadway, in West Plains. The public is invited to attend, meet the artist, view, and discuss the pieces on display. Partial funding for this exhibit is provided by the Missouri Arts Council, a state agency.

For more information about the exhibit, contact Greg Carter greg.carter@westplains.gov at the library or WPCA Coordinator Audrey Scott at Audrey.scott@zizzers.org

Photo courtesy of Marc Brannan

Summer Reading Program hosted by @ West Plains Public Library
Jun 14 @ 10:00 am

Not all events will be held at the library. Call West Plains Public Library, 417-256-4775, for more information and full schedule.

“Cones & Cops” Community Meet & Greet hosted by West Plains Police Department @ Spring Dipper
Jun 14 @ 12:00 pm – 2:00 pm

Come by and join us for a chance to ask questions, voice concerns, and get to know the people that serve our community.

City of West Plains Aquatic Center @ Peoples Park
Jun 14 @ 12:00 pm – 5:00 pm

Hours of operation are noon to 5 p.m. daily with an evening swim Thursdays from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. The cost of admission is $5 for children ages three to 11, and $6 for ages 12 and up. Children under three are free. The Parks and Recreation Department requires that children under 12 be accompanied by an adult. Punch cards will be sold at the Jimmie Carrol Sports Complex for $30. Each punch card is good for 10 pool visits. For additional information, including pool rentals, call the Parks and Recreation office at 417-256-7304.

Ozark Heritage Exhibit featuring the L.L. Broadfoot Collection @ Harlin Museum
Jun 14 @ 12:00 pm – 4:00 pm

The Lennis L. Broadfoot collection, housed at the Harlin Museum, is the most complete collection of art by the Shannon County, Missouri, artist. Broadfoot is best known as the artist who immortalized the often enigmatic people, places, and traditions of the turn-of-the-century Ozarks region, in multiple mediums, while also offering a firsthand narrative in the writings that frequently accompanied his works. He is the author of the highly regarded book, “Pioneers of the Ozarks,” in which the art and the histories were compiled to preserve his work.

The Harlin Museum is an all-volunteer organization, and sometimes there are staffing issues. If you are travelling a distance to see the Broadfoots, please check Harlin Museum of West Plains on Facebook for potential closures. Additional contact methods can be found at HarlinMuseum.com. Private tours can be arranged.

Admission is free, but donations are welcome.

Movies @ Glass Sword Theater
Jun 14 @ 4:00 pm

For movies currently playing and all show times, see https://www.glassswordcinema.com/

Children’s Ballet of the Ozarks Presents: The Perfect Nanny @ West Plains Civic Center Theater
Jun 14 @ 7:00 pm

From organizers: The story of a Nanny named Mary who arrives just in time to help a dysfunctional family heal from the past and find joy in their relationships together. This story is told through Ballet, Contemporary, Jazz and Tap and is put on by the students of Children’s Ballet of the Ozarks. Tickets here.

Karaoke by MOES @ Wages Brewing Company
Jun 14 @ 8:00 pm