Four Brothers by Royden Card

Four Brothers by Royden Card

Four Brothers

Royden Card

Please call us at 707-546-7352 or email artannex@aol.com to purchase this item.
Title

Four Brothers

 
Artist

Royden Card

  1952 - PRESENT (biography)
Year
1979  
Technique
woodcut 
Image Size
8 1/8 x 10" image size 
Signature
pencil, lower right 
Edition Size
2 of 24  
Annotations
titled, dated and numbered 
Reference
 
Paper
Rives HW buff 
State
 
Publisher
 
Inventory ID
RC164 
Price
$450.00 
Description

Zion National Park is Utah’s first National Park. It is located within three separate counties in southwestern Utah. Within its 232 square miles, are high plateaus, a maze of sandstone canyons, and the Virgin River and its tributaries. The park is distinguished by Zion Canyon’s steep red cliffs. On 31 July 1909 Taft set aside approximately 16,000 acres for Mukuntuweap National Monument to preserve its “many natural features of unusual archaeologic, geologic, and geographic interest.” In his proclamation, the President noted the “labyrinth of remarkable canyons with highly ornate and beautifully colored walls, in which are plainly recorded the geological events of past ages.” In 1918 Munkutuweap National Monument became Zion National Monument, and in 1919 the named changed again to Zion National Park. On 22 January 1937 President Roosevelt established a second Zion National Monument, preserving over 36,000 acres. The second Zion National Monument, which is now referred to as Kolob Canyons was incorporated with Zion National Park in 1956. On 30 March 2009, President Barack Obama signed the Omnibus Public Land Management Act into law designating 124,406 acres of Zion National Park as Wilderness. Visitors to the wilderness can enjoy backpacking, canyoneering, hiking, rock climbing, horseback riding, and river rafting. Over four and half million people visited Zion in 2023.

The Four Brothers are four un-named peaks adjacent to and north of West Temple. The West Temple is a prominent 7,810-foot mountain summit composed of Navajo Sandstone and is the highest feature in Zion Canyon. The name Zion, meaning ”place of refuge,” was given to the canyon by Mormon pioneers in 1919.

 
Please call us at 707-546-7352 or email artannex@aol.com to purchase this item.