Image of the Day, December 29, 2012
Posted in Art and Architecture: Painting, Photography and Sculpture
|
Three of the Nation's Top Western Artists Under 40, Glenn Dean, Josh Elliott and Logan Maxwell Hagege, will be featured at the Medicine Man Gallery in Tucson, Arizona.
Continue Reading ...
|
Image of the Day, December 25, 2012
Posted in Art and Architecture: Painting, Photography and Sculpture
LeConte Stewart Masterworks - Finally Available
Posted in Writers Camp: Books
|
Utah artist LeConte Stewart (1891–1990) created images of Utah and the West at once epic and intimate. His farms, deserts, and urban landscapes capture a region and an era. Influenced by John Carlson, Maynard Dixon, and Edward Hopper, Stewart is a valued and important voice in this period of American art. This long-awaited volume includes more than 300 paintings, many never before seen or brought together in one work.
Continue Reading ...
|
Image of the Day, September 22, 2012
Posted in Art and Architecture: Painting, Photography and Sculpture
|
“Balkanski has created a narrative that engages the viewer in an anecdotal moment. The barn tells the story of an accumulated past, and as with anything or anyone who is a little worse for the wear, the barn is still up, still functioning, but is fairly worn. With his painterly strokes, the artist went to extraordinary lengths to create this piece for this particular show.”
Continue Reading ...
|
Image of the Day, August 14, 2012
Posted in Art and Architecture: Painting, Photography and Sculpture
|
For the next few days we’ll be featuring paintings that will be exhibited at Maynard Dixon Country 2012, home of the extraordinary Maynard Dixon cabin and ground, beautifully preserved by Susan and Paul Bingham and the Bingham Gallery in Mt. Carmel. This event gets bigger and better each year, featuring many of the most talented artists in the country.
Continue Reading ...
|
Image of the Day, August 12, 2012
Posted in Art and Architecture: Painting, Photography and Sculpture
|
Even if you think you don’t know the artist Maxfield Frederick Parrish, (1870-1966) you’ll probably recognize prints that hung in your great aunt’s home or that of some elderly friend or relative. The most famous of the prints was titled “Daybreak,” (1922). The actual painting, from which the prints were copied, sold not long ago for $5,234,500. Before Parrish painted his iconic neo-classical paintings full of atmosphere, languid youth and the famous ‘Parrish blue’ he was illustrating western scenes for the covers of McClure’s, Colliers and other popular turn-of-the-century magazines.
Continue Reading ...
|
Image of the Day, August 11, 2012
Posted in Art and Architecture: Painting, Photography and Sculpture
|
Bill Gollings grew up in Pierce City, Idaho, worked on a ranch in Rosebud County, Montana and eventually settled in Sheridan, Wyoming where he painted for the remainder of his life. His contemporaries were Russell, Remington, Koerner and other artists of the authentic American West. Their work is highly desired because of the genre element, telling stories that can no longer be told.
Continue Reading ...
|
Image of the Day, August 8, 2012
Posted in Art and Architecture: Painting, Photography and Sculpture
Image of the Day, July 24, 2012
Posted in Art and Architecture: Painting, Photography and Sculpture
|
“The Conversation” by Barbara Pence received the “People’s Choice” award and the jurors’ award of merit at the recent 2012 Spring Salon and the Springville Museum of Art in Utah.
Continue Reading ...
|
Image of the Day, July 21, 2012
Posted in Art and Architecture: Painting, Photography and Sculpture
|
Offered at the Jackson Hole Art Auction, September 15, 2012, Jackson Hole, Wyoming
Continue Reading ...
|
Image of the Day - Vintage Photo, June 16, 2012
Posted in Art and Architecture: Painting, Photography and Sculpture
Image of the Day, June 14, 2012
Posted in Art and Architecture: Painting, Photography and Sculpture
|
For every illustration that ever graced the cover of magazines like Harper’s, Field and Stream, Collier’s and The Saturday Evening Post, there is an original work of art in a collection or museum attesting to the veracity and story telling capacity of the artist.
Continue Reading ...
|
Image of the Day - Vintage Photo, June 2, 2012
Posted in Art and Architecture: Painting, Photography and Sculpture
|
Passionate Kisses, 1930s. Vernacular photograph of the West from the My-West.com photography collection.
Continue Reading ...
|
Image of the Day, May 29, 2012
Posted in Art and Architecture: Painting, Photography and Sculpture
|
Get real. The best fashion statement — authenticity. Handmade in New York, these bags epitomize a true western aesthetic.
Continue Reading ...
|
Image of the Day - Vintage Photo, May 23, 2012
Posted in Art and Architecture: Painting, Photography and Sculpture
|
The Photographer, 1938. Vernacular photograph of the West from the My-West.com photography collection.
Continue Reading ...
|
Image of the Day, May 18, 2012
Posted in Art and Architecture: Painting, Photography and Sculpture
|
Demand for paintings by Henry Farny’s (1847-1916) best work is consistently driving prices at auction beyond the high estimate...way beyond. On May 1st Farny’s Southern Plans Indian Warrior (1894) sold for $362,500, a surprising $162,500 above estimate.
Continue Reading ...
|
Image of the Day - Vintage Photo, May 15, 2012
Posted in Art and Architecture: Painting, Photography and Sculpture
|
Howard, c. 1940s. Vernacular photograph of the West from the My-West.com photography collection.
Continue Reading ...
|
Shane Yellowbird - Rising Star (Update)
Posted in Music: Music Reviews
|
In November, 2011 the 12th Annual Native American Music Awards (Nammys) were announced at a gala show and concert in New York. ... One artist who really stood out was Shane Yellowbird. Yellowbird grew up in Hobbema, Alberta and is Cree. He exploded onto the country music scene in 2006 with the release of his debut album Life is Calling My Name...
Continue Reading ...
|
Image of the Day, May 10, 2012
Posted in Art and Architecture: Painting, Photography and Sculpture
|
Photographed by David F. Barry (1854-1934), “Sitting Bull,” mounted albumen print. Lakota chief and holy man, Sitting Bull (1831-1890) was famous for his 1876 victory over George A. Custer at the Battle of the Little Bighorn in southern Montana.
The cabinet card of Sitting Bull, photographed in the 1880s is for sale at Bonhams, Auction in San Francisco, June 5th 2012 at 10:00 a.m. (although the web site reads June 4th at 12:00).
Continue Reading ...
|
Dillon, Montana (Repost - January 1, 2011)
Posted in Go West: City Guides
|
Five thousand people, one for every foot above sea level. ... 14 bars. ... Seat of a county larger than three US states. Home to an all-round champion rodeo rider and endless supplies of talc. Home also to a cold blooded killer who used a pack of camel cigarettes as a blueprint to build a magnificent stone gate as a gift to his gal, Gracie.
Continue Reading ...
|
Lodges of the American West (Repost - January 27, 2011)
Posted in Art and Architecture: Architecture
|
Gilbert Stanley Underwood crafted a uniquely western brand of architecture whose grandeur derives from its perfect harmony with the most stunning natural landscapes the west has to offer. Underwood designed many of the west's most memorable lodges, including Timberline Lodge, featured as the first installment in our series on Lodges of the American West.
Continue Reading ...
|
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow - The Cross of Snow (Repost - April 5, 2011)
Posted in Writers Camp: Poetry
|
Happy Easter!
In 1873, a group of explorers led by Clarence King found and photographed a legendary mountain in Colorado called the Mount of the Holy Cross. ... In 1879, the American poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow was looking through an illustrated book of western scenery. There he saw the Mount of the Holy Cross, and he subsequently wrote this poem ...
There is a mountain in the distant West That, sun-defying, in its deep ravines Displays a cross of snow upon its side. Such is the cross I wear upon my breast
Continue Reading ...
|
Impressions of the West: Wallace Stegner (Repost - March 1, 2011)
Posted in Writers Camp: Books
|
"Back to Wendell Berry, and his belief that if you don’t know where you are you don’t know who you are... He is not talking about the kind of location that can be determined by looking at a map or a street sign. He is talking about the kind of knowing that involves the senses, the memory, the history of a family or a tribe. ..."
The Sense of Place, by Wallace Stegner
Continue Reading ...
|
Impressions of the West: Thomas Hart Benton (Repost - Feb. 15, 2011)
Posted in Writers Camp: Books
|
"There are great flat stretches of land in Louisiana, there are prairies in Illinois, Iowa, Missouri, but the experienced traveler in the United States does not confuse these with the West. Even though these more eastern prairies may present the same great vistas which are connected in our thoughts with the West, they lack the character of infinitude which one gets past the ninety-eight-degree line." - Thomas Hart Benton
Continue Reading ...
|
Fashion Week in Paris
Posted in Best Of: Products
|
Reporting on Fashion Week in Paris, German Vogue focuses on Isabel Marant’s 2012 Winter Collection, described as easy-going Western-Style. …
Continue Reading ...
|
Gary Clark - The Savior of the Blues
Posted in Music: Music Reviews
|
Hailing from Austin, Texas, Gary Clark has taken the rock and blues world by storm. He was heralded by Rolling Stone as “the best young gun” and by the Seattle Weekly as “a musical force to be reckoned with, a serious songwriter and a [expletive deleted] of a guitar player,” and he deserves every accolade you could ever dream up.
Continue Reading ...
|
The Valentine State
Posted in Go West: Hit the Road
|
100 years ago yesterday, Arizona became the 48th state, the last piece of the puzzle in the contiguous US.
“May your trails be crooked, winding, lonesome dangerous, leading to the most amazing view ... May your mountains rise into and above the clouds.”
- Edward Abbey
Continue Reading ...
|
The Rhine's Own Cowboys - The Boss Hoss
Posted in Music: Music Reviews
|
Rhine as in Rhine River. These cowboys from Berlin are hugely popular in Germany, and are selling out concerts through much of Central Europe and Britain with their blend of country, rockabilly boogie and plain old good time rock and roll. OK, some sex appeal doesn’t hurt either. In their new CD, The Boys have teamed up with Nena, of 99 Red Balloons fame. I had the hots for Nena in the early 80s and it appears she has only gotten better with age.
Continue Reading ...
|
Elegant Eyesore - The Kolb Legacy
Posted in Picture This: Photography Challenge
|
The brothers settled on the rim of the Grand Canyon at the head of Bright Angel Trail…in a time and landscape where just getting water pure enough to develop prints meant trekking down into the depths of the canyon and back up…often three times per day.
Initially they earned a living taking photographs of tourists.
Continue Reading ...
|
Snow Alert
Posted in Best Of: Apps Wrangler
|
And if the Snow Alert App sends you up Little Cottonwood Canyon above Salt Lake City, you might just get a glimpse of this gal … Caroline Gleich … professional skier, model, and lots of other stuff …
Continue Reading ...
|
State of the Union Station
Posted in Art and Architecture: Architecture
|
“We have tried to express the distinctive character of the railroad: strength, power, masculinity.” -- Gilbert Stanley Underwood – Architect, Union Station – Omaha, NE
Continue Reading ...
|
Cowboys & Kiwis - AKA Beauty & The Bodice
Posted in: Picture This: Movie Reviews
|
The film is called ‘Good For Nothing’ and will go down as the first western movie ever filmed in New Zealand, which I guess is good for something. It’s been doing the rounds of the film festivals to generally positive reviews and will see limited US release this spring.
Continue Reading ...
|
Norah's Country-Side
Posted in Music: Music Reviews
|
Long years in the Big Apple have neither extinguished that Texas twang, nor the torch Norah Jones carries for country. “I love playing country music,” she says. “More than any other genre, it makes me feel at home.” That from a jazz artist who has sold over 40 million albums since her stunning debut in 2002.
Continue Reading ...
|
Hey Doll, Where’d You Get That Kachina Dress?
Posted in Best Of: Products
|
My-West’s fashion savvy friend, Diane, turned us on to the latest fashion to hit Paris this year. Japanese designer Issey Miyake who was inspired as a youth by Japanese artist Isamu Inokuma’s paintings and sketches of Kachina Dolls, has created a new line of summer clothing based on those early sketches.
Continue Reading ...
|
BOOKS: The Schopenhauer Reading Society
Posted in Writers Camp: Books
|
My great great aunt, if I can believe what my mother told me when I was a child, started the Schopenhauer Reading Society in Idaho Falls, Idaho in the 1880s or 1890s. My mother was proud of this aunt – proud that she’d been an intellectual in the early days of the state, and that she’d read books that didn’t make it on her religious community’s list of approved works. Even the title – the Schopenhauer Reading Society, named after the philosopher, professional curmudgeon and pessimist Arthur Schopenhauer – seemed to be a statement of my aunt’s independent spirit. ...
Continue Reading ...
|
Gary Cooper – Enduring Style
Posted in Writers Camp: Books
|
“He conveyed a straightforwardness and an honest, American handsomeness that seemed to both ignore and rise above the contrived glamour and studied posturing that had characterized so many other film heroes...No matter what costume he put on, he looked like he owned it. The camera loved him, and so did the box office.” – Gary Cooper: Enduring Style
Continue Reading ...
|
The Morning of the Morning
Posted in Writers Camp: Poetry
|
By Mary Crow, Poet Laureate of Colorado:
Why let it matter so much?: the morning’s morningness,
early dark modulating into light
and the tall thin spruces jabbing their black outlines at dawn,
light touching the slope’s outcroppings of rock and yellow grass,
as I sit curled under blankets in the world
after the world Descartes shattered,
a monstrous fracture
like the creek’s water surging through broken ice.
Continue Reading ...
|
Impressions of the West: Willa Cather
Posted in Writers Camp: Books
|
"'Because,' he roused himself from his abstraction and looked about at the company, 'because a thing that is dreamed of in the way I mean, is already an accomplished fact. All our great West has been developed from such dreams; the homesteader`s and the prospector`s and the contractor`s. We dreamed the railroads across the mountains, just as I dreamed my place on the Sweet Water. All these things will be everyday facts to the coming generation, but to us--' Captain Forrester ended with a sort of grunt. Something forbidding had come into his voice, the lonely, defiant note that is so often heard in the voices of old Indians."
Continue Reading ...
|
Unbridled Enthusiasm
Posted in Go West: News of the West
|
December 13th is the ‘National Day of the Horse’ in the US. Yes, we realize you weren’t aware of that fact. That’s why My-West is here! The congressional resolution reads in part:
“Whereas the horse is a living link to the history of the United States; Whereas, without horses, the economy, history, and character of the United States would be profoundly different.”
Continue Reading ...
|
As a Matter of Fact I WAS Brought Up In A Barn!
Posted in Art and Architecture: Architecture
|
We come honestly by our barnyard bona fides. Our Grandpa was a rancher and gifted builder, responsible for one of the most beautiful barns in Beaverhead County. In those days hay was for horses and horseplay was for haylofts and I doubt that in his wildest dreams Grandpa could have imagined humans might someday want to inhabit his equine temple.
Continue Reading ...
|
Painting Mount Olympus - No Easy Task for Mere Mortals
Posted in Art and Architecture: Painting, Photography and Sculpture
|
Mount Olympus is not the tallest mountain in the Wasatch Range, but anyone who has seen this natural wonder will agree with the early pioneers who bestowed upon it the Greek name for ‘the home of the gods.’ Mount Olympus acts as an anchor in the Salt Lake Valley, an unchanging reference point locating residents both in their environment and their history.
Continue Reading ...
|
Rifleman Redux
Posted in: Picture This: Movie Reviews
|
Oh my God! This is too good to be true! Merry Christmas, Happy New Year, The Rifleman is returning to a home entertainment system (AKA boob tube) near you! CBS is working on a reboot of the original hit that made Chuck Conners a household name in the early 60s ...
Continue Reading ...
|
The Artist's Studio: Part 1
Posted in Art and Architecture: Painting, Photography and Sculpture
|
Even with the familiar smells of turpentine, linseed oil and paint dominating your sense of smell, the artist’s studio can be a mysterious place to visit—an alchemical chamber where elements are mixed, stirred and modeled to become valuable impressions of beauty. Although most studios have high ceilings, towering north facing windows and waxed wooden floors, they can tell a lot about how an artist chooses to work, the props they use and the ambiance they need to be inspired.
Continue Reading ...
|
Paintings Without Color: The Grisaille
Posted in Art and Architecture: Painting, Photography and Sculpture
|
Grisaille paintings are often offered for sale by western art auctions and galleries today. Oftentimes you’ll hear viewers wondering why the artist “didn’t finish the painting.” The simple answer is the works are finished. Newspapers and magazines in the latter part of the 19th century and early 20th needed black and white images for their publications—especially as they tried to fill the high demand of their readership for images of the West.
Continue Reading ...
|
Before Lassie, There was Rin Tin Tin
Posted in Writers Camp: Books
|
”He believed the dog was immortal,” is the opening line of the book Rin Tin Tin, The Life and the Legend written by Susan Orlean. The story begins when Corporal Lee Duncan found the pup in a bombed out kennel in France during World War One. The dog went on to make over 23 films, and he was the subject of books, radio programs and television. In the end it was not the tricks or the feats of power that made the dog a star, it was and remains the unwavering bond between humans and man's best friend that made him a household name and an icon of Hollywood history.
Continue Reading ...
|
The Navajo Code Talkers
Posted in Special Features
|
The Navajo code talkers accrued praise throughout the war for their skill, speed and accuracy. At Iwo Jima, six code talkers working around the clock sent and received over 800 messages in the first two days of battle. The 5th Marine Division signal officer said of their dedication: ‘Were it not for the Navajos, the Marines would never have taken Iwo Jima.’
Continue Reading ...
|
A Closer Look: Paintings by Connie Borup
Posted in Art and Architecture: Painting, Photography and Sculpture
|
Connie Borup’s depictions of fall foliage are not inherently nostalgic, in fact far from it. She avoids the spectacular colors of fall using instead a tonal palette of dry grays, and browns and yellows. But the images act as a mainline for deep memories of fall, perhaps because as P.D. James wrote, “It was one of those…autumnal days which occur more frequently in memory than in life.”
Continue Reading ...
|
The Race Against Summer - Haying Season
Posted in Picture This: Photography Challenge
|
Stacking was by far the worst chore, a summer sentence of sweat and swirling hay dust and the sense of constantly climbing up out of quicksand. The one reward at season’s end was a slightly heavier paycheck and a body that was way beyond buff.
Continue Reading ...
|