Logo Logo Logo Logo Logo
  • STORIES
    • Latest Stories
    • Features
    • Auction Block
    • Best of the West
    • Collector’s Eye
    • Collector’s Notebook
    • Designing the West
    • Things We Love
    • Editor’s Note
    • Illuminations
    • In the Studio
    • Perspective
    • Rendering
    • Wanderings
    • Western Landmark
  • MAGAZINE
    • ISSUES
    • ADVERTISE
    • SUBSCRIBE
    • ABOUT
  • EXPLORE
  • BLOG
  • STORIES
    • Latest Stories
    • Features
    • Auction Block
    • Best of the West
    • Collector’s Eye
    • Collector’s Notebook
    • Designing the West
    • Things We Love
    • Editor’s Note
    • Illuminations
    • In the Studio
    • Perspective
    • Rendering
    • Wanderings
    • Western Landmark
  • MAGAZINE
    • ISSUES
    • ADVERTISE
    • SUBSCRIBE
    • ABOUT
  • EXPLORE
  • BLOG

08 Mar Perspective: The Uruguayan Cowboy: Jo Mora [1876–1947]

Posted at 23:49h in April | May 2019, Perspective 0 Comments
Share

He was the scion of distinguished European artists, yet a roughneck who proved himself a cowboy on Texas cattle drives at the turn of the last century. While a young man, he enrolled at the Art Students League in New York City, apprenticing to the...

Read More

09 Jan Perspective: Quah Ah (Tonita Peña) [1893 – 1949]

Posted at 23:39h in February | March 2019, Perspective 0 Comments
Share

In 1921, the federal government banned the Pueblo tribes sacred “pagan” dances. About the same time, a San Ildefonso woman started painting pictures — though only men of her tribe were supposed to paint. That artist, Quah Ah, captured the defiant, inner strength of her...

Read More

08 Nov Perspective: Earl Biss [1947–1998]

Posted at 22:50h in December 2018 | January 2019, Perspective 0 Comments
Share

Artist Earl Biss was a man driven by visions and demons. He was brilliant, charming, handsome, volatile, sometimes violent and, as his friend, Hunter S. Thompson, affectionately said, “crazy as five loons.” He was also a primary catalyst in an art movement that saw works...

Read More

14 Sep Perspective: John Nieto [1936–2018]

Posted at 01:30h in October | November 2018, Perspective 0 Comments
Share

Only the most gifted artists are able to fold art history and personal history into a cohesive and imaginative new direction. Painter John Nieto, who passed away in July 2018, was such a master. Nieto is recognized as the first American artist to bring French...

Read More

16 Jul Perspective: T.C. Cannon [1946–1978]

Posted at 21:30h in August | September 2018, Perspective 0 Comments
Share

With 50 years of modern American art in the rearview mirror since the 1960s, it may be difficult to grasp how radically the work of one young Native American painter at the time diverged from what had come before, and the impact his vision would...

Read More

09 May Perspective: Albert Bierstadt [1830–1902]

Posted at 03:55h in June | July 2018, Perspective 0 Comments
Share

Albert Bierstadt’s last great painting was a grand-manner allegorical canvas recounting the impending demise of the two prime symbols of the American West, the buffalo and the Plains American Indian tribes. It is titled The Last of the Buffalo (1889). So important was the subject...

Read More

15 Mar Perspective: The Gentle Rebel: Olive Rush [1873–1966]

Posted at 05:18h in April | May 2018, Perspective 0 Comments
Share

It seems that Olive Rush [1873–1966], a pioneering artist long hidden in the shadows of American art history, may have contributed to her own obscurity by accidentally branding herself as a mild Quaker spinster, rather than the worldly, independent, adventurous spirit she was. After having...

Read More

17 Jan Perspective: Eduardo Carrillo [1937–1997]

Posted at 07:20h in February | March 2018, Perspective 0 Comments
Share

At just about the time that Eduardo Carrillo [1937–1997] was up for tenure in his teaching position at the University of California, Santa Cruz (UCSC) in the 1970s, he became aware that an African-American member of his department was being left out of some activities....

Read More

17 Dec Perspective: Charles Schreyvogel [1861–1912]

Posted at 22:41h in December 2017 | January 2018, Perspective 0 Comments
Share

He had a city boy’s fascination with the West. And though he’d often visited and was influenced by explorer-artists such as George Catlin and Thomas Moran, he painted not on the dry prairie or desert plain but on the flat roof of a Hoboken, New...

Read More

14 Sep Perspective: Awa Tsireh [1898–1955]

Posted at 03:40h in Articles, October | November 2017, Perspective 0 Comments
Share

Known for his skilled Modern Pueblo paintings, this San Ildefonso artist was an equally talented metalsmith...

Read More
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • 8
  • 9
  • 10
  • 11
About Us
Western Art & Architecture is the magazine for art collectors and architecture aficionados across the United States.
1050 E. Main St., Ste. 3
Bozeman, MT
800-417-3314
info@westernartandarchitecture.com
Links
Subscribe to Western Art & Architecture
Advertise
Contribute
Contact Us
About
Terms of Use & Privacy Policy
Subscribe for news
Stay up-to-date with Western Art & Architecture! All of WA&A's features, columns and photography focus on America’s love affair with the Western visual arts — from the classic Western masters to contemporary trendsetters — in lively, creative communities from Texas to the West Coast.


    Copyright ©2017 Western Art & Architecture
    We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.