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Ticket hours: 9a-5p Tues-Fri
on the phone or at the studio

Thursday May 6th 7:30pm, 2010

KRCC presents A Live Radio Show taping of NPR's Wait, wait... don't tell me!
Location: Pikes Peak Center, 190 South Cascade Avenue, Colorado Springs, CO 80903( map )
Tickets ~KRCC IS SOLD OUT OF MEMBER DISCOUNT TICKETS~ General Public reserved seating is available ONLY through Ticketswest www.Ticketswest.com . (General public tickets will NOT be available at the studio)

Sunday March 7th 7pm, 2010

KRCC presents Tommy Castro
Location: Crystol Roadhouse( map )
Tickets KRCC member tickets $12 at the KRCC studios. General public tickets available for $18 at www.AMusicCompanyInc.com $23 day of show

Saturday March 20th 8pm, 2010

KRCC presents The Haunted Windchimes
Location: Stargazers Theater( map )
Tickets ~ KRCC member tickets available for $6 at the KRCC Studios. $10 General public tickets ONLY available at www.StarGazersTheater.com

Friday March 26th 8pm, 2010

KRCC presents Tab Benoit
Location: Stargazers Theater( map )
Tickets KRCC member tickets $16 at the KRCC studios. General public tickets available for $22 www.AMusicCompanyInc.com $30 day of show.

Tuesday April 20th 8pm, 2010

KRCC and Maven Productions present Ani DiFranco
Location: Armstrong Hall, Colorado College Campus( map )
Tickets A limited number of KRCC member tickets on sale for $28 at the KRCC Studios. General Public tickets on sale for $32 ONLY AT www.MavenProductions.com or by calling Maven Productions Box Office at 303-786-7030 (General public tickets will NOT be available at the KRCC Studios.)

Memorial Weekend, May 28th-30th, 2010

KRCC presents The MeadowGrass Music Festival
Location: La Foret Conference Center, Colorado Springs, Colorado ( map )
Tickets $15 single day tickets, $40 full festival passes for KRCC members at the KRCC Studios. $20 Single day tickets, $50 full festival passes for General Public. General Public tickets at all Independent Records and Video locations, and on-line at www.ticketweb.com

May 28, 2009

Balanced Rock Forever Balanced Rock

Possibly the most photographed spot in the entire Garden of the Gods, Balanced Rock’s place as a backdrop in tourist photographs for more than a hundred years gives it a status worthy of “the most photographed barn in America” from Don DeLillo’s satirical novel White Noise: “No one sees the barn. Once you’ve seen the signs about the barn, it becomes impossible to see the barn.”

Who among us hasn’t had our photograph taken with Balanced Rock, pretending to prop it or topple it? Who among us hasn’t spent more time looking at the camera that’s photographing us against it than the rock itself? Perhaps the photographs, past and present, are the best evidence that there is no “one” balanced rock. In fact, we believe that the two slide shows below will attest to the terrifying possibility that some Behemoth or Wooly Golem replaces Balanced Rock each night with a Balanced Rock that looks just similar enough to pass for all other Balanced Rocks.

Regardless, these images are but few of what must be millions of images and digital copies that testify to the fascination that Balanced Rock continues to hold for us no matter how many times we pose in front of it.

Let’s start with the past and Matt Mayberry of the Colorado Springs Pioneers Museum:

Says Mayberry, Director of the Pioneers Museum:

The Colorado Springs Pioneers Museum has an outstanding collection of historic photographs—some 80,000 images in our collection. One of the great series of images in that collection come from Balanced Rock at Garden of the Gods. An exhibit that I’ve always thought about doing, and now will have a chance to do virtually, is to show how beloved Garden of the Gods, and Balanced Rock in particular, have been by tourists coming through and by photographers. Because of the way the road is up there now, it almost requires you take it from one specific location because of the parking lot and the roadway. But this reminds you that there were many different ways to get to Balanced Rock and the park wasn’t as carefully defined in terms of trails as it is today.

The next slideshow is culled from various places on the web as a sampling of the present. Though Sombreros and Burros have given way to track suits and Big Gulps, there is something equally essential about Balanced Rock’s status as evidence. “I’ve been here!” the photos still say. And somehow it’s reassuring.

The Colorado Springs Pioneers Museum is gladly accepting donations of Balanced Rock photographs from any era up to and including the present! Please contact them through their website HERE

(We always appreciate your comments below. If you have tips for other Big Somethings, please email us at thebigsomething@krcc.org. Thanks!)

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Filed under: Local History, Photography — Noel Black @ 12:00 am
About Noel Black and The Big Something
Comments (2)

2 Comments »

  1. [...] of our favorite things about The Big Something has been the opportunity to open windows onto our local history through audio slideshows with expert narration by staff members of the museum. In light of the [...]

    Pingback by KRCC: The Big Something — September 15, 2009 @ 2:04 am

  2. I am a local Artist painted in oil the Balanced
    Bock, Kissing Camels you can see at my webside.
    Ingrid Spreuer

    Comment by Ingrid Spreuer — December 21, 2009 @ 10:56 pm

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