Historic Visions
-
-
Westward expansion played a pivotal role in shaping American identity, drawing artists to the vast, untamed landscapes and rich cultures of the region. This exhibition brings together a selection of works that capture both the romanticized imagery and the transformative changes of the American West. Through landscapes, portraits, still lifes, and scenes of everyday life, the featured pieces reflect the enduring Native American and Hispanic traditions, the dialogue between cultures, and the promise of settlement and modernization. Together, these works offer a poignant view of a time when the West was a land still being made-and remade.
-
-
Albert Bierstadt, Autumn (Antelope on The Plains of Yosemite, From the East Looking West), c. 1863 -
Frederic Remington, “-A Study-“ (Cavalry Horse), d. 1888 -
Frank Tenney Johnson, Night in Hopi Land, d. 1939 -
W(illiam) R. Leigh, New Mexico Landscape with Two Riders, d. 1911
-
Edgar Payne, Nomad - Navajo Indians -
Joseph Henry Sharp, Ceremony, Taos Pueblo, New Mexico, c. 1930 -
Clyde Aspevig, Glacier National Park, d. 2007 -
Edgar Payne, “Three Sisters” Monument Valley
-
Walter Ufer, June Morning -
Nicolai Fechin, The Drum Player -
Robert Henri, Dolores (Gypsy), Madrid, Spain, d. 1924 -
Carl Woolsey, Winter Stream, Rio Hondo-Taos, New Mexico
-
John Marin, Nassau Street, N.Y.C., d. 1926 -
Stuart DavisRoses, d. 192714 ¼ x 13 ½ inches -
Victor Higgins, Landscape, Taos -
E. William Gollings, Roundup Time, d. 1911
-
Frederic Remington, The Rattlesnake, c. 1908 -
Oscar Berninghaus, Stagecoach, c. 1930 -
Leon Gaspard, Loaded Camels Waiting, No. Africa -
Thomas Hart Benton, Untitled (Missouri Landscape), d. 1956
-
