We arrived in Salt Lake City as the sun was setting. The first thing we saw was the Utah State Capitol, which is known as the "Little White House." It is a Renaissance-style building, exquisite and beautiful from the inside to the outside, and still magnificent under the setting sun. One year of the Winter Olympics made me remember Salt Lake City, and then I really learned about its history here. In 1847, a group of Mormon believers led by the prophet Brigham Young pioneered Salt Lake City. Since then, the church's general association has been here, more than half of the locals are Mormons. In the evening, I visited the famous Mormon Temple Square. The Mormon Temple is the symbol of Salt Lake City and a holy place for Mormons worldwide. There is also a new Internet celebrity check-in landmark in Salt Lake City. This work is located in front of the Salt Palace Convention Center at Lamptons Lake Calvin Lake (Calvin L. Rampton Salt Palace Convention Center). The work includes more than 150 signage with views and a red bench, which looks like a messy roadside sign, but if you look closer, you will find that the "road sign" is full of contradictory or antisemitic phrases, such as "from A to Z" (A TO Z) "less is more" (LESS IS MORE). Put a picture of the handsome leader who loves stinky beauty