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Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center

Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center
Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center.JPG
The main entrance
Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center is located in Colorado
Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center
Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center is located in the US
Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center
Location 30 W. Dale St., Colorado Springs, Colorado
Coordinates 38°50′45″N 104°49′32″W / 38.84583°N 104.82556°W / 38.84583; -104.82556Coordinates: 38°50′45″N 104°49′32″W / 38.84583°N 104.82556°W / 38.84583; -104.82556
Area 1.6 acres (0.65 ha)
Built 1936
Architect Meem,John Gaw; Rogers,Platt
Architectural style Art Deco
NRHP Reference #

86001455

Added to NRHP July 03, 1986

86001455

The Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center (FAC) is an arts center located just north of downtown Colorado Springs, Colorado. Located on the same city block are the American Numismatic Association and part of the campus of Colorado College.

The center uses a thick red outline of a square as its logo.

With $600,000, Alice Bemis Taylor funded the 1936 construction of the Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center and provided a $400,000 donation for an endowment. It was built on property owned by the Broadmoor Art Academy. Constructed during the Great Depression, Taylor saw the project as a means of employment for unemployed laborers. Taylor donated her extensive Indian and Hispanic art and her collection of 6,000 volumes of Americana. She envisioned a place that would be accessible to all people, with no admission charge. The Broadmoor Art School previously stood on the grounds of the current art center, on land donated by Julie Penrose. Elizabeth Sage Hare also collaborated with Taylor and Penrose on the building which became a center for a museum, art school and performing arts venue for the growing city.

The fine arts center was designed by New Mexico architect John Gaw Meem who works often combined Pueblo Revival Style and Spanish Colonial into "Santa Fe Style" architecture. In 1940, Meem's most modern design earned a Silver Medal at the Fifth Quadrennial Pan American Congress of Architecture. The building is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

At the original Grand Opening in April 1936, Martha Graham performed Lamentation-Dance of Sorrow; "art icon Alexander Calder executed the stage design for an operetta; and Frank Lloyd Wright lectured on the new building." Art luminaries Boardman Robinson and Robert Motherwell were early teachers at the art school.


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