What's Up!

February 27-March 5, 2022

What's Up - Your guide to what's happening in Fayetteville, AR this week!

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FEBRUARY 27-MARCH 5, 2022 WHAT'S UP! 9 Albright's personal favorite is a photograph of a shed that's a convenience store. It has a big red Coca-Cola sign on it, and a woman standing out front is also wearing red. "It just comes up off the photograph, this shabby shed that's colorful and interesting and not what you'd expect," Albright says. Among the other structural shots is a cabin with a natural stone chimney. It's interesting for its show of Ozark architecture, but Albright says the angle is beautiful and gives the viewer a good sense of what life must have been like for people living in the late 1800s. This particular exhibit is a unique one for the history museum since the objects on display are from a person they can still call. It's one of the few times they have a direct line of connection like that, Albright says. Friends of the museum who are close to Smith connected Albright and her staff, which is how they came to borrow his boots, notes and surveying equipment. Two of the photos are of Ken Smith himself, one from his earlier years and one more recent portrait taken by Don House. The museum also produced a 12-minute video interview with him where they were able to ask him various things directly, including what drives him to nature and what he loves about the Buffalo River. Among the artifacts on display is a level that Smith called "the determinator," his manual typewriter, two backpacks from his explorations, notes and calendars, a couple of his original articles and books, some surveying utensils, as well as the precision pencils and maps. A map of the Buffalo River watershed is on one wall of the exhibit with Smith's photos laid on top to orient where they were taken. It should give viewers a better sense of how many counties the area covers. That mix of artistic and precise scientific expression makes the exhibit effective and engaging, Albright says, like for instance when some of the photographs and artifacts are presented next to large scale rendition of a poem Smith wrote about loving the land. Albright hopes it will add a sense of variety to all the ways that the Ozarks can be experienced, allowing people to learn about the life you can find in the middle of nowhere, and that it's not just a beautiful place we're surrounded by, but a place full of people, nature, archeology and waterways. Ken Smith's Leica camera, which he used to shoot many of the photos in "Ken Smith's Buffalo River Country," rests atop his book in the Shiloh Museum exhibit currently on show. (Courtesy Photo/Shiloh Museum) In observance of the 50th anniversary of the Buffalo National River's designation, the Ozark Society has released a special edition of "The Buffalo River Country" by Ken Smith. The book, which features Smith's photos, maps and narratives, was first published by the society in 1967. (Courtesy Photo/Shiloh Museum) "Ken Smith's Buffalo River Country: A Special Exhibit" opened at Shiloh Museum this month and will continue through December. It includes 24 photographs, 22 of them taken by Smith, and a variety of artifacts including the tools, maps, camera and even the boots he used while collecting information. (Courtesy Image) FYI The Shiloh Museum of Ozark History hopes to have a special event for "Ken Smith's Buffalo River Country" in the spring with an interview or short film and an opportunity to talk with people in the Ozark Society, which did a lot of work to preserve the Buffalo River. For more information, keep an eye on shilohmuseum.org.

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