Best Place to Support Local Artists
Start with the very name of the place. A wag could argue that “practical art” is either an oxymoron or a redundancy. In 2025, the latter feels more apt. Art is neither a luxury or a nice-to-have: It’s a necessity, and everything it’s good for is better for when your artists are local. In this shop just north of Camelback Road, you’ll find wares from some 200 local artists and artisans: shirts, jewelry, wooden toys, handpainted planting pots, framed photos, mugs, pottery, dishware, cards, soaps. You’ll find framed prints by the likes of Jake Early, Leah Kiser, Eric Lindquist and Antoinette Cauley; ceramics by Bettina Chow and Lisa Olson, Mike Farabee, and Becky Altman; and eminently pettable felt journals by Molly Koehn. Artists foremost are creators who observe, and the many folks whose work populates Practical Art’s store and website are people who do their observing in the places where you live. If you see your own life reflected back to you in their works, this is by design. Carry one of these artifacts with you in the world and you’ll be practically home.