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Born in Minneapolis, Meri DeCaria attended the Pratt School of Design in New York. She earned an A.A. degree at the Art Institute of Philadelphia and a BFA at the American College in London. In 1990 she moved to Salt Lake City where she is Director and Curator at Phillips Gallery. Her work includes several commissioned public murals in the downtown Salt Lake City area and is exhibited widely in galleries and shows. An active member of the of the Salt Lake Gallery Association, Ms. DeCaria currently serves on The Utah Museum of Fine Arts' Special Exhibitions Committee as well as the Utah Arts Council Advisory Panel.
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Raised in Utah, John Collins learned much about painting from his sister Chris and his father Gary. He studied fine arts and design at the University of Utah where he developed his interests in printing, design, and illustration. His work is frequently exhibited in galleries and shows throughout Utah. His commissioned murals and paintings can be seen in locales from Florida to Hawaii. Currently, John teaches watercolor classes on river trips along the Colorado and resides in Salt Lake City where he is a freelance artist.
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![]() Meri DeCaria, "Concentration," 2002, acrylic, 24" x 32" |
![]() Meri DeCaria, "Fragile Existence," 2002, acrylic, 9½" x 9½" |
Meri DeCaria: There are recurring symbols imbedded in the flowing organic shapes and vibrant colors of my work: houses (often misshapen and bending), spirals, bowls, flowing showers, vines—all want some interpretation. Perhaps the showers are some substance that nurtures—the full bowl, the vessel of life that waits to satisfy a thirst. Vines might be growth, which really is a gift—houses, the safe shelters that bend and buckle under weight.

John Collins, "A Shot of Light," 2003, watercolor, 8" x 10"
![]() John Collins, "Trout in the River," 2003, oil, 16" x 20" |
![]() John Collins, "Trout at Big Springs," 2003, oil, 16" x 20" |
John Collins: I have painted fish for many years—they fascinate me. My brother-in-law invited me to go fishing with him in Idaho, and that's where I started painting trout. I had traded some paintings for some fishing gear, and while I waited for delivery, I began to look closely beneath the surface of the water. I love the way the water plays with the light—the refracted image almost becomes abstract. I feel the same way about the light that filters through a grove of aspen.
John Collins: The Grand Canyon of the Colorado and the desert of Canyonlands are two of the great landscapes of the world. They display an amazing array of colors and contrasts, and I have done a lot of painting there. Together they have inspired me to look at things in a whole new way—a more abstract way. Recently, I find my work reflecting a more fluid interpretation and re-visioning of shape and color. My painting has become increasingly more abstract as it continues to connect to the landscape.
Meri DeCaria: Many of my paintings invite a kind of introspection, an investigation of the everyday experiences that make our lives. We live in a chaotic world, and my paintings want to put some order to it—or at least help us understand it. The flowing lines, the colorful spaces, the use of the entire canvas as a "field of play," all of these combine to speak of our vulnerability and need to find some order—they also speak of our ability to find sanctuary and discover that order.
![]() Meri DeCaria, "Rapt," 2003, acrylic, 23" x 28" |
![]() John Collins, "Light on the Desert," 2003, oil, 16" x 20" |