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The recipient of the Western Heritage Award from the Cowboy Hall of Fame for scriptwriting and a literary fellowship from the National Endowment of the Arts as well as many other literary awards, her most recent book is Fieldnotes from Yosemite, the second volume in her series of Sketchbook Expeditions. After 20 years as an author, Teresa Jordan turned to visual art as part of a “mid-life expansion.” She has had one- and two-woman shows in Salt Lake City at both the Phillips Gallery and the Finch Lane Gallery, at the University of Denver, and at the Lewis-Clark Center for the Arts and History in Lewistown, Idaho, and has exhibited in group shows in several Western states. Teresa received her BA in History from Yale University in 1977, graduating summa cum laude and winning election to Phi Beta Kappa. Her thesis, Wyoming Ranchers During the Great Depression, won the McClintock Prize for History of the American West. In 2002, she earned her BFA in Fine Art, with an emphasis in drawing and painting, from the University of Utah. A frequent public speaker, Teresa has presented keynote addresses to such various organizations and conferences as the Oregon School of Arts and Crafts, the Fife Folklore Conference, the Center of the American West, and the Rocky Mountain Book Publisher's Association. She has served as writer in residence at the University of Nebraska and the University of Utah, and has taught writing at colleges, universities, and workshops throughout the West. Teresa's literary work is managed by Joanna Hurley Marketing and Literary Services 300 E. Marcy St., Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501; 505.982.4006. Her artwork is represented by Phillips Gallery, 444 E. 200 St., Salt Lake City, UT 84103; 801.364.8284. Teresa and her husband, folklorist and public radio producer Hal Cannon, live in Salt Lake City, Utah. For more information: Writer Resume | Artist Resume | Artist Statement |