{"version":1,"type":"rich","provider_name":"Libsyn","provider_url":"https:\/\/www.libsyn.com","height":90,"width":600,"title":"The Art Colony of One (and the Power Trio of Prescott):\u2028Kate Corey, Grace Sparks, and the Women Who Built a Town","description":"In this episode of Arizona Roundup, host Stuart Rosebrook welcomes Prescott resident and living-history presenter Brenda Cusick for a fast-moving, story-rich conversation about two remarkable women who helped shape Arizona\u2014and a third whose influence ties them together like a well-built bridge: artist Kate T. Corey, civic powerhouse Grace Sparks, and historian-founder Charlotte Hall.  What starts as a preview of an upcoming Sharlot Hall Museum program becomes something bigger: a lively, sometimes funny, and often inspiring tour through early Arizona\u2014told through the lives of three women who didn\u2019t just participate in history\u2026 they made it. &amp;nbsp; The Program\u2019s Big Idea Brenda Cusick has become an expert interpreter of Kate Corey and Grace Sparks, and Stuart frames the conversation around a compelling truth: Prescott wasn\u2019t simply a quiet mountain town in the early 1900s\u2014it was an influential cultural and civic hub. And these women helped keep it that way.  Kate Corey: painter, photographer, diarist, ethnographic observer, educator\u2014an artist who became her own \u201cart colony.\u201d Grace Sparks: the practical force who kept Prescott visible, viable, and vibrant through tourism, public works, preservation, and promotion. Charlotte Hall: a woman of letters and history whose leadership helped preserve Arizona\u2019s story\u2014and whose legacy lives on through the museum itself. &amp;nbsp; Meet Kate Corey: Manhattan Socialite to Hopi Mesa Adventurer Kate Corey\u2019s story begins in the Gilded Age of Manhattan. After the deaths of her parents, she buys a round-trip train ticket west in 1905\u2014pursuing an artistic vision that takes her to the Hopi Mesas. When the artist who inspired her journey never arrives, she declares, \u201cI am the art colony. It\u2019s me.\u201d  She steps off the train in Canyon Diablo, rides under vast desert skies, lives among the Hopi people, and ultimately writes an English-to-Hopi dictionary when none exists. Her diaries, artwork, photography, poetry, and advocacy reveal a woman of extraordinary independence and vision. &amp;nbsp; Why Prescott? Thumb Butte and a Pueblo Home After years on the mesas, Kate chooses Prescott. Drawn by the forest and especially Thumb Butte, she builds a small pueblo-style home with the help of Hopi friends. She writes an epic poem, The Legend of Thumb Butte, and creates a body of work that spans Hopi portraiture, landscapes, flora, and desert imagery.  Her life stretches from the Civil War era to the atomic age\u2014an extraordinary arc of American transformation witnessed through the eyes of a determined Western artist. Enter Grace Sparks: Civic Vision in Action If Kate Corey brought artistic depth, Grace Sparks brought civic drive. Through her work with early tourism, promotion, and preservation efforts, Sparks helped ensure Prescott remained culturally relevant and economically viable.  She played a role in sustaining major community institutions and is credited with helping rescue the World\u2019s Oldest Continuous Rodeo when it was near bankruptcy\u2014demonstrating that civic leadership requires imagination as well as grit. A Balanced Trinity of Influence Together, Charlotte Hall, Kate Corey, and Grace Sparks form a remarkable trio.  Charlotte preserved history. Kate recorded culture through art and writing. Grace built the civic structure that allowed both memory and growth to thrive.  Their combined influence shaped not only Prescott\u2019s story\u2014but Arizona\u2019s identity. Special Invitation: Twilight Tales at Sharlot Hall Museum On March 10 at 5:00 PM, Brenda Cusick presents a one-woman interpretation of Kate Corey at the Sharlot Hall Museum as part of the Twilight Tales series. The evening will include special artwork displays, light refreshments, and an opportunity to experience Kate\u2019s story as a living voice from Arizona\u2019s past. Things to Remember, Share, and Act Upon \u2022 History is often shaped by those who refuse to shrink. \u2022 \u201cI am the art colony. It\u2019s me.\u201d \u2022 Communities thrive when art, preservation, and civic leadership work together.  Attend the Twilight Tales program. Visit Prescott\u2019s museums. Share these stories. Elevate these women to the level of recognition they deserve. Closing This Arizona Roundup episode reminds us that communities don\u2019t drift into significance\u2014they are built by people with grit, imagination, and conviction.  If you love Western history, civic storytelling, and the untold heroes of Arizona, this episode\u2014and the Sharlot Hall Museum\u2014offer a powerful place to begin. &amp;nbsp; ","author_name":"Arizona Roundup with Stuart Rosebrook at Sharlot Hall Museum in Prescott AZ","author_url":"https:\/\/sharlothallmuseum.org\/","html":"<iframe title=\"Libsyn Player\" style=\"border: none\" src=\"\/\/html5-player.libsyn.com\/embed\/episode\/id\/40282975\/height\/90\/theme\/custom\/thumbnail\/yes\/direction\/forward\/render-playlist\/no\/custom-color\/88AA3C\/\" height=\"90\" width=\"600\" scrolling=\"no\"  allowfullscreen webkitallowfullscreen mozallowfullscreen oallowfullscreen msallowfullscreen><\/iframe>","thumbnail_url":"https:\/\/assets.libsyn.com\/secure\/content\/199123435"}