
Emily Johnson is a recent graduate from the University of Utah’s History MA program and the new collections registrar at Utah Arts & Museums. During her time at the U, she focused heavily on public history and art, and co-curated an exhibit for the Utah Museum of Fine Arts showcasing printmakers of the Great Depression. A Salt Lake City native, Emily lives downtown and spends her free time hanging out with Stella, her pit bull.
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I just moved into a new apartment, and only started placing art and artifacts in the last few days. I don’t actually have a mantel, but in my living room hangs two square prints by Ed Mell of blooming desert flowers, one white and the other orange and red. A print of Jules Breton’s “The Song of the Lark” is hanging by my front door.
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For the last two years, everything I’ve read has been for school. The most memorable book I read recently that directly relates to my thesis is called “Flight Maps: Adventures with Nature in Modern America” by Jennifer Price. She’s a hilarious and brilliant environmental historian, and the book is great fun. Having just finished my Master’s thesis, picking up a book that’s not directly related to my academic research still feels a little indulgent and rebellious. I have Gabriel Garcia Marquez’s “One Hundred Years of Solitude” and Margaret Atwood’s “Surfacing” on my night stand.
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I’d love to have Kate Beaton turn me into one of her comics. Seriously, “Hark! A Vagrant” is hilarious and I’d love to be a kind of sassy and impatient historical heroine ala Beaton’s rendition of Queen Elizabeth or Wonder Woman.

UTAH’S ART MAGAZINE SINCE 2001, 15 Bytes is published by Artists of Utah, a 501 (c) 3 non-profit organization headquartered in Salt Lake City, Utah.
Categories: On the Spot | Visual Arts








