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Your Weekly Western Art News & Information Source
February 2, 2010
In the News
C. Michael Dudash, Krystii Melaine   & Gayle Nason Artist Focus
  Legacy Gallery - Scottsdale, AZ
Michael Dudash

C. Micahel Dudash          "A Well Protected Herd"     oil    36" x 48"


   On Thursday, Feburary 11th, Legacy Gallery will host a Three-Artist Focus for C. Michael Dudash, Krystii Melaine and Gayle Nason. All three artists depict the west, but in their own unique style and subject matter. Michael Dudash is known for his action filled scenes often times depicting scenes from western history. Krystii Melaine, a native of Australia, creates breathtaking scenes of the American west as well as wildlife in their natural habitat. Realistic western stillife paintings with Native American beaded moccasins, ancient pottery and other artifacts are the subjects of Gayle Nason's intricate paintings.


For more information about Legacy Gallery's Artist Focus, visit their web site at: www.legacygallery.com



Krystii Melaine
Gayle Nason
Krystii Melaine
"Woolie Chaps & Tapaderos"
oil    18" x 24"
Gayle Nason
"Black On Black"
oil    12" x 19"
Gayle Nason
Krystii Melaine
Gayle Nason
"The Woven Blanket"
oil    18" x 24"
Krystii Melaine
"Three Roans"
oil    15" x 30"


 Amon Carter Museum Acquires   George de Forest Brush painting
  Amon Carter Museum - Fort Worth, TX
George de Forest Brush

George de Forest Brush        "The Potter"


   The Amon Carter Museum has acquired a rediscovered painting by American artist George de Forest Brush. "The Potter", painted in 1889, had been in private hands since 1946, when it was sold from the collection of the Galveston financier William L. Moody III. 

   "The acquisition of one of Brush’s ‘lost’ Indian pictures is a major addition to our collection of material relating to the American West," says Dr. Ron Tyler, director of the Amon Carter Museum. "Now, our visitors will have the opportunity to view Brush’s exacting but highly nuanced depiction of an Indian within the context of other representations of indigenous people, such as those presented by painters George Catlin and Frederic Remington and photographer Edward S. Curtis, whose entire multivolume portfolio, The North American Indian, was also recently acquired by the museum."

   The Carter’s newly acquired painting is among the final works in Brush’s Indian series and exemplifies the artist’s rigorous academic training. Exceedingly spare, the painting depicts a single, isolated figure within an indeterminate darkened interior. Unlike earlier works in the series, which center on themes of conflict, native customs or engagement with the natural world, "The Potter" portrays the seated figure of a native artisan intently focused on the task of glazing a hand-crafted vessel. The meticulous precision with which Brush drew and painted the human body is matched by his pictorial mastery of color and texture in the few carefully placed decorative elements within the composition.

   "Brush’s academic training was grounded in the French tradition, which focused on the idealized human body and prized paintings with allusions to classical art," says Dr. Rick Stewart, the Carter’s senior curator of western painting and sculpture. “By using the Indian theme, Brush could apply his technical expertise and extensive knowledge of ancient art and Old Master painting to a thoroughly American subject with its own tradition of pictorial representation.”    

   Brush began the series of paintings of Indian subjects in 1882, while living first in Wyoming at Fort Washakie and later in Montana at the Crow Agency, sketching members of the Arapahoe, Shoshone and Crow peoples. He continued to work on the series throughout the 1880s, traveling widely to study native cultures in eastern Canada and Mexico and along coastal northeastern Florida. Along the way he assembled a collection of indigenous artifacts for use as studio props. The Indian paintings, though initially based on the artist’s firsthand experiences among native people, have little basis in the reality of contemporary American Indian life. 

   "One of the more intriguing aspects of the Indian paintings is that, despite the high degree of realism Brush brought to these pictures, he was not concerned with a cogent narrative or with historical or ethnographic accuracy," says Stewart. "Regardless, and interestingly also because of this, the paintings brought the artist both critical and commercial success."

   The Indian pictures evolved from compositions with multi-figured narratives set within the landscape to compositions that feature a solitary individual engaged in the manual creation of art, as seen in The Potter.  The paintings present a carefully calibrated, fictitious, pre-industrial world where idealized Indians lived in a timeless environment undisturbed by the advent of modernism. For Brush, the Indian became a metaphor, a way to express personal concerns, including his skepticism over industrialization and the mechanization of labor. Ultimately, Brush conceived the Indian series as a progressive meditation on the theme of human creativity. 

   "It’s always thrilling when notable works of art resurface in pristine condition and are able to be shared with the public," says Tyler, who also notes that The Potter was exhibited in 1889 at the National Academy of Design, along with Frederic Remington’s Dash for the Timber, one of Amon G. Carter’s most important acquisitions.


For more information or to visit the museum, click on their web link: www.cartermuseum.org




"Dog & Pony Show & Sale"
   Brandon Michael Fine Art - Santa Fe, NM
Brandon Michael Fine Art ad




To see the entire show, please visit the Brandon Micahel Fine Art's web site at: www.brandonmichaelfineart.com



 "Wildlife In American Art:    Masterworks from the National    Museum of Wildlife Art"
   National Museum of Wildlife Art - Jackson, WY

Wildlife In American Art book  More than a collection catalogue, the recently released book Wildlife in American Art: Masterworks from the National Museum of Wildlife Art presents a generous sampling of the museum’s holdings while exploring wildlife in art in the context of both American art history and the country’s evolving relationship with its natural resources.  Written by National Museum of Wildlife Art Curator of Art Adam Duncan Harris, Ph.D., and published by the University of Oklahoma Press, the book combines scholarly essays and more than 125 full-color illustrations to showcase the breadth of the museum’s more than 5,000-piece collection.

   From elegant birdstones carved by ancient Americans to epic Western scenes by Albert Bierstadt, from depictions of unspoiled wild landscape by Carl Rungius to modern takes on the subject by Andy Warhol, Wildlife in American Art allowed author and curator Harris to approach the museum’s extensive collection through a historical view of artists grappling with a changing perspective on American wilderness.  “It’s a good way to ground the collection not only in art history, but also to connect it to the importance of wildlife and wilderness in the greater scope of American history,” Harris explains.

   Over more than two decades, the National Museum of Wildlife Art in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, has assembled the most comprehensive collection of paintings and sculptures portraying North American wildlife in the world.  To set parameters, Harris considered only deceased artists for the book; and rather than presenting a comprehensive accounting, he identified select highlights including lesser-known pieces that demonstrate the collection’s breadth, like folk artist Bill Traylor’s Brown Rabbit or Rockwell Kent’s Mt. Equinox, Vermont.

   Published in 2009 by University of Oklahoma Press, Wildlife in American Art: Masterworks from the National Museum of Wildlife Art is available in the museum shop or online at www.wildlifeart.org/shop.  The price is $55 for the hardcover, $35 for softcover.  A leather-bound Special Edition is available for $275.

   A member of Museums West and accredited by the American Association of Museums, the National Museum of Wildlife Art of the United States provides an exciting calendar of exhibitions from its permanent collection and changing exhibitions from around the globe and has been featured in media including the L.A. Times and The New York Times.  A complete schedule of exhibitions and events is available online at www.wildlifeart.org.

 







Events
February:

4th
Through The Painter's Eye
Scottsdale Fine Art
Scottsdale, Arizona
www.scottsdalefineart.com

5th
INSTINCT: The Art of Chimpanzees
Artisans At Rocky Hill
Fredericksburg, Texas
www.artisansatrockyhill.com

6th
Glen Edwards One-Man Show
Mountain Trails Gallery
Park City, Utah
www.mountaintrailsgalleries.com

7th
Pioneering Women Artists
of Arizona

Art conversations with Fran Elliot
Phippen Museum
Prescott, Arizona
www.phippenmuseum.org

11th
C. Michael Dudash,
Krystii Melaine & Gayle Nason
Artist Focus
Legacy Gallery
Scottsdale, Arizona
www.legacygallery.com

11th
Bruce Cheever, Michael Malm & Matt Smith Showcases
Trailside Galleries
Scottsdale, Arizona
www.trailsidegalleries.com

12th - 13th
28th Anniversary Celebration
Greenhouse Gallery Of Fine Art
San Antonio, Texas
www.greenhousegallery.com

13th
Scott Richardson One-Man Show
Mountain Trails Gallery
Park City, Utah
www.mountaintrailsgalleries.com

14th
Winterscapes Of The West
Ann Korologes Gallery
Basalt, Colorado
www.korologosgallery.com

16th
California & American Art Auction
John Moran Auctioneers
Pasadena Convention Center
Pasadena, California
www.johnmoran.com

18th
Chuck Middlekauff
One-Man Show
Route 66 Meets Highway 41
Legacy Gallery
Scottsdale, Arizona
www.legacygallery.com

19th
Mountain Trails Gallery
Master's Show
Mountain Trails Gallery
Park City, Utah
www.mountaintrailsgalleries.com

5th
Dan Naminga One Man Show
Ann Korologes Gallery
Basalt, Colorado
www.korologosgallery.com

20th
Marathon Discovery Auction
Burchard Galleries
St. Petersburg, Florida
www.burchardgalleries.com

21st
Estate Antiques & Fine Art Auction
Burchard Galleries
St. Petersburg, Florida
www.burchardgalleries.com

Ends February 21st
Greatest Earth On Show
Phippen Museum
Prescott, Arizona
www.phippenartmuseum.org

25th
The Beauty Of Form
Scottsdale Fine Art
Scottsdale, Arizona
www.scottsdalefineart.com


Western Art Times logo


25th
Transitions Show
Dan, Danny & John McCaw Three-Man Show
Trailside Galleries
Scottsdale, Arizona
www.trailsidegalleries.com

27th
Ed Mell One-Man Show
Medicine Man Gallery
Tucson, Arizona
www.medicinemangallery.com

27th
Simon Winegar One-Man Show
Mountain Trails Gallery
Park City, Utah
www.mountaintrailsgalleries.com

Ends February 27th
In Bronze and on Canvas
Art of Mehl Lawson &
Jeffrey R. Watts
Bonita Museum & Cultural Center
Bonita, California
www.bonitamuseum.org

American Plains Artists ad
March:

2nd
Texas Stampede
Insight Gallery
Fredericksburg, Texas
www.insightgallery.com

4th
Daniel Gerhartz, Jeff Legg & Jacquelyn Bischak Artist Focus
Legacy Gallery
Scottsdale, Arizona
www.legacygallery.com

5th
Feast For The Eyes
Michael Lynn Adams One-Man Show
M Gallery Of Fine Art
Sarasota, Florida
www.mgalleryoffineart.com

5th
Port Aransas Centennial Celebration Art Show & Sale
Port A Gallery
Port Aransas, Texas
www.portagallery.net

6th
Greg Overton One-Man Show
Mountain Trails Gallery
Park City, Utah
www.mountaintrailsgalleries.com

11th
Women Artist Of The West
Ann Korologos Gallery
Basalt, Colorado
www.korologosgallery.com

17th - 20th
C.M. Russell Auction
Best Western Heritage Inn
Great Falls, Montana
www.cmrauction.com

20th
Quiet Reflections of Joy: Paintings
& Drawings by Nancy Guzik

Presented by West Wind Fine Art
Tucson Academy of Art
Tucson, Arizona
www.westwindfineart.com

20th
Marathon Discovery Auction
Burchard Galleries
St. Petersburg, Florida
www.burchardgalleries.com

21st
Estate Antiques & Fine Art Auction
Burchard Galleries
St. Petersburg, Florida
www.burchardgalleries.com

25th
John Coleman One-Man Show
Legacy Gallery
Scottsdale, Arizona
www.legacygallery.com

27th
Annual Spring Auction
Altermann Gallery
Scottsdale, Arizona
www.altermann.com

Ends April 1st
Western Design Conference Exhibition & Sale
Accepting artist applications
Jackson, Wyoming
www.westerndesignconference.com

Thru April 3rd
Where The Legend Lives: Masterpieces of the Permanent Collection
The Museum Of Western Art
Kerrville, Texas
www.museumofwesternart.com

Ends May 16th
Human / Nature: Artists As Explorers in the Early
American West

Rockwell Museum
Corning, New York
www.rockwellmuseum.org

Ends May 16th
The Photographs of Edward Sherriff Curtis
Rockwell Museum
Corning, New York
www.rockwellmuseum.org

Ends May 2nd
Kenneth M. Freeman Legacy Exhibition - Artists At Work
Booth Museum
Cartersville, Georgia
www.boothmuseum.org

Birthdays
February:

3rd - Robert McGinnis
5th - Tom Lovell
         (1909 - 1997)
6th - Eldridge Hardie
9th - Bill Anton
9th - Dennis Doheny
10th - Xiang Zhang
12th - Ramon Kelley
12th - Clark Kelley Price
16th - Robert "Shoofly"                     Shufelt
17th - Buck McCain
20th - Charles Fritz
20th - Guy Coheleach
21st - Sherrie McGraw
22nd - Dick Heichberger
24th - Richard Greeves
25th - Walt Gonske
25th - John Budicin
26th - Dave Wade
27th - Tucker Smith
27th - Bob Boomer

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