Telluride’s Gold Mountain Gallery Gallops Into Museum Place
Gold Mountain Gallery brings Telluride style to Cowtown. (Photo by Courtney Dabney)
Gold Mountain Gallery brings Telluride style to Cowtown. (Photo by Courtney Dabney)
Source:
Telluride’s Gold Mountain Gallery Gallops Into Museum Place
Gold Mountain Gallery - Petrified wood, hides and furs oh my. (Photo by Courtney Dabney)
Gold Mountain Gallery - Petrified wood, hides and furs oh my. (Photo by Courtney Dabney)
Source:
Telluride’s Gold Mountain Gallery Gallops Into Museum Place
Famed photographer David Yarrow is the main artist at Gold Mountain Gallery. (Photo by Courtney Dabney)
Famed photographer David Yarrow is the main artist at Gold Mountain Gallery. (Photo by Courtney Dabney)
Source:
Telluride’s Gold Mountain Gallery Gallops Into Museum Place
A peek inside Fort Worth's newest gallery. (Photo by Courtney Dabney)
A peek inside Fort Worth's newest gallery. (Photo by Courtney Dabney)
Source:
Telluride’s Gold Mountain Gallery Gallops Into Museum Place
Gold Mountain Gallery features artistic home furnishings as well as important artwork. (Photo by Courtney Dabney)
Gold Mountain Gallery features artistic home furnishings as well as important artwork. (Photo by Courtney Dabney)
Source:
Telluride’s Gold Mountain Gallery Gallops Into Museum Place
Some things have to be seen in person like this amazing chandelier. (Photo by Courtney Dabney)
Some things have to be seen in person like this amazing chandelier. (Photo by Courtney Dabney)
Source:
Gold Mountain Gallery can now be found just across from Blue Sushi in Museum Place. Owners Mark and Jessica Goldberg opened Gold Mountain Gallery in 2011 along Colorado Avenue in the jet-setting paradise of Telluride, Colorado. The gallery opened another outpost in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, last September. Now, the Fort Worth Gold Mountain Gallery marks the company’s first foray into the Texas market.
Located at 3100 West Seventh, Fort Worth welcomed the posh new gallery to town as it celebrated its grand opening in early May, although quietly. Word is just starting to get out about the wonders in store. From dramatic artworks to furniture, décor, lighting, and rugs ― the space brings something new to town.
The primary artist at Gold Mountain Gallery is photographer David Yarrow. His large-format prints are hot commodities. Yarrow, who began shooting wildlife, is known for his cinematic vision, now blending humans alongside animals and showcasing breathtaking natural landscapes, far-flung locales, and rugged Wild West icons.
David Yarrow’s Photography At Gold Mountain Gallery
Famed photographer David Yarrow is the main artist at Gold Mountain Gallery. (Photo by Courtney Dabney)
Yarrow’s photographs are mesmerizing. Famous models from Cara Delevingne and Brooks Nader, to Cindy Crawford, amp up the images. They pose alongside wild animals from cheetahs to longhorns, and from mountain lions to gray wolves. The “storytelling” collections capture the imagination and require further study.
Some of Yarrow’s work focuses on the nostalgia of the steam engine opening up the West, as well as classic cars and airplanes. Other artworks riff on familiar backdrops from the Teton mountain range to forgotten ghost towns. They also take us to summers in St. Tropez and ski fantasies in St. Moritz, plus David Yarrow’s native Scotland.
Texas has been on the artist’s mind more and more lately, with new photographs taken in the Fort Worth Stockyards, featuring our iconic signage and The Herd of longhorn steers, as well as inside the historic White Elephant Saloon, now owned by Tim Love.
Yarrow already has plans to use Fort Worth as his muse once again, later this year.
Collectors go wild for his artworks, which are printed in a series of 12. Their rarity makes the pulse race, and a coveted investment worth having.
Interior Design Haven Filled With Artistic Finishing Touches
Gold Mountain Gallery features artistic home furnishings as well as important artwork. (Photo by Courtney Dabney)
Other artists at Gold Mountain make a house more than a home ― a true work of art. You’ll find it a source for custom furnishings from tables and chairs to lighting ― like the two-tier crystal antler chandelier that hangs in a central location, or the ornate stained glass buffalo head sconce fitted with real horns that greets you at the entry.
Other wooden lights, I cannot even describe to you (because cantilevered-wooden floor lamps and wooden grid chandeliers with monumental polished rock pulley systems) don’t convey until you’ve seen them for yourself. So, you’ll have to drop by and do just that.
The Goldbergs have developed deeply rooted relationships with artists who inspire interior spaces. Another example is artist Johnathan Sweet, who left his indelible mark on the Fort Worth gallery. He fitted a stunning wooden wall feature, as well as a bar, with custom furniture.
Telluride Style Blurs The Lines In Fort Worth
Gold Mountain Gallery – Petrified wood, hides and furs oh my. (Photo by Courtney Dabney)
When you visit Gold Mountain Gallery, you’ll feel wrapped in a warm hug from both the mountain village of Telluride and rustic Jackson Hole. The artwork and home furnishings obviously belong there. But, I think you’ll find that they are perfectly suited for Fort Worth interior tastes as well.
You don’t have to have a mountain home or a rustic lake house to appreciate the styling. Many of Fort Worth’s most enticing new communities are embracing the lodge style as well as the modern ranch. Gold Mountain Gallery is where you bring your interior designer to outfit it.
The gallery has long been a go-to for designers in Telluride in search of a showcase piece or looking to pull together the entire scheme with inspiring artistic designs. It will be no different in Fort Worth.
The interior design team based in Telluride is ready to work with Fort Worth clients and their designers, either acquiring or commissioning pieces.
The relaxed Museum Place showroom is family-owned and operated. The Goldbergs designed it to feel like a friend’s home. They want to invite you to come in, enjoy a drink at the bar, and relax for a while as you explore the art and home goods.