Steve damstra ii biography of albert
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Concert regrets, outdo disappointing fillet breakups, summers best shows: Readers react
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My Start Jacket: Finest summer fair or greatest concert regret? Find run on below. (Photo/John Sinkevics)
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Steve Damstra
I played my first real gig at the seventh grade dance with a band I formed with my best friend, John Andrews. We used to call girls up on the telephone and sing to them, because we were too nervous to sing to them in person.
I played in several rock bands through my High School years, playing mostly school dances and a couple of “Battle of the Bands” in which we never won…LOL! I was attending Kendall College of Art and Design when I found what would become my true musical love, the acoustic guitar. Teaming up with John again, we formed an acoustic duo named “Cades Cove” which later morphed into a fairly successful regional band named Horsefeather. We played all over Michigan and Wisconsin and toured out west as well, playing clubs and festivals. Horsefeather was one of the first and only bands at the time with an album of all original songs that was played extensively on WLAV FM in Grand Rapids, MI.
After Horsefeather broke up I joined a country show band called Foxfire which only lasted about nine months and then went on to join another fairly successful local band called Dirk Rivers, which toured the mid-west and came in second in the state at the state Wrangler Country Star Search finals.
After about four years with Dirk Rivers, I took part in reforming th
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They came, they created, they inspired.
National parks have been the source of inspiration for well-known artists, such as Thomas Moran, Albert Bierdstadt, and Frank Dudley, who have visually depicted the cultural and natural treasures of our great American heritage. These beautiful works are cherished by park visitors and for future generations. Indiana Dunes National Park invites you to become a part of this legacy in our two week Artist-in-Residence Program.
The Artist-in-Residence program at Indiana Dunes offers professional artists the opportunity to live in the park for two weeks to create art that helps generate appreciation and support for the national park. In exchange, the artist provides a public engagement and donates a piece of art created during their stay.
Artist Caroline Goldsmith sums her time spent here.
“Residency work is very different to commission work or good paintings done in studio or Plein Air etc. With residencies comes a freedom to challenge and explore more because of less distractions and coveted time. The walls we experience in everyday life are gone. A reflection of where you are at in every way is reflected right back at you. So you have an artist in shifted focus."
Artist-in-Residence Submissions Now Open
Artist-in-Residence sub