Sheldon Parsons

It is largely by serendipity that Sheldon Parsons became a painter of the New Mexico landscape. A student of noted artist William Merritt Chase at the National Academy of Design, Parsons was enjoying a career as a successful New York City portraitist in the early 1900s. President William McKinley and Susan B. Anthony were two of the famous Americans whose likenesses he painted. However, his career and life trajectory abruptly changed upon the death of his wife in 1913. Parsons sold everything and headed west with his twelve-year-old daughter to complete a mural commission in San Francisco. Parsons suffered a relapse of tuberculosis in Denver, and, on the advice of doctors, the duo changed course to head south to the curative climate of New Mexico. 

Parsons settled in Santa Fe and, absorbed by the color and light of his new surroundings, began to paint landscapes saturated with the blue, red, and golden hues of the Southwest. He immediately made an impression in the budding artists’ colony, and his paintings quickly became “one of the chief attractions at the state museum in Santa Fe [the Museum of New Mexico].”1 At the same time, Parsons continued to show in New York City as a member of the prestigious Salmagundi Club, and his work was also exhibited across the country from Chicago to Oklahoma to Washington, DC. In 1914 and 1916, Parsons completed commissions from the Santa Fe Railroad for two paintings of the Grand Canyon. Within a year of its 1917 opening, the Museum of New Mexico Art Gallery (now the New Mexico Museum of Art) arranged a “permanent Parsons gallery . . . which [was] hung with 22 of his most representative canvases.”2 

Parsons was a key figure in consolidating the efforts and cementing reputations of the Taos and Santa Fe art colonies. From the time he moved to Santa Fe, Parsons supported the Museum of New Mexico. In 1915, he organized an exhibition of Taos artists that was described thusly: “never before in its history has the southwest seen so great or so typically an American art exhibit.”3 By 1920, Parsons was appointed “curator of art exhibits” for the museum’s Art Gallery, a post he held for two years. 

As curator, he engaged in the burgeoning debate over the new modernist movement. Parsons himself tended toward a more realist approach in his work. Though he was denied membership in 1923 to the academically inclined Taos Society of Artists, he remained informally affiliated with the group, spending a lot of time painting in Taos—and his daughter married Taos Society artist Victor Higgins in 1919. Yet Parsons remained open-minded. Contemporary critics noted changes in his approach—a move toward bold colors and “freedom . . . in handling”4—as he exhibited frequently in Santa Fe in the teens. After assuming the position of art museum curator, Parsons defended modernism, writing that “this movement in modern art is too great, too universal a movement, for there not to be some grain of truth at its heart and doubt begets humility and humility begets wisdom.”5 He then rearranged the Southwestern art exhibit at the museum, provoking praise from some and criticism from others. Parsons dismissed his critics as “illiterates applauding with their mouths”6 in a letter to the editor of the Santa Fe New Mexican. Yet the political overtones of the debate—several modernist artists were staunch leftists, and the artistic community generally tended toward a “bohemian” outlook at odds with Santa Fe’s conservative political leadership—ultimately cost Parsons his job. He was fired to appease tensions between the museum and civic leaders.  

Another notable achievement of Parsons’s as curator was to arrange a “loan art exhibit” of one hundred works from private collections in Santa Fe, the first of its kind. Parsons also helped to organize the Santa Fe Arts Club in 1921, which some scholars mark as the official beginning of the Santa Fe art colony.7 

Over the next decade, Parsons continued to evolve, increasingly edging on modernism. Yet by the mid-1930s, as “radical” movements such as Transcendentalism gained a foothold and younger artists took charge of the Santa Fe art colony, Parsons’s work began to look “conservative, with Parsons himself being relegated to the ‘old guard.’”8  In 1938, one critic referred to him as the “dean of New Mexico landscape painters.”9 Though Parsons died in 1943, his work continued to be a staple of the Santa Fe art scene and museum exhibits.

The artist pictured in his studio. Photograph made between 1925 and 1945 by T. Harmon Parkhurst.
T. Harmon Parkhurst. Sheldon Parsons, 1935?. Courtesy of the Palace of the Governors Photo Archives (NMHM/DCA), 073941.

Gene Kloss (Alice Geneva Glasier Kloss)

Born Alice Geneva Glasier, Gene Kloss was already a highly respected California printmaker when she made her first trip to Taos, NM, for her honeymoon with her husband, musician and poet Phillips Kloss, in 1925. She brought her etching press on that trip and made prints from their campsite in Taos Canyon. “We bought a sack of concrete and set it up on a stump in the woods and I printed my plates there,” she explained. Kloss would later claim that she was “a New Mexican from then on.”1 She would spend the next twenty years traveling between California and New Mexico before settling permanently in Taos. 

The New Deal allowed Kloss to continue to succeed as an artist. “[The New Deal] was a very pronounced help to me in my career because the government subsidy alone gave it dignity and importance,” she said in a 1964 interview, continuing, “and their . . . attitudes towards the artist in their free expression and pulling the most out of one to do your best technically, and the amount, and the result of speeding you on your way in your creative work.”2

First, for the Public Works of Art Project, Kloss created a print series of nine New Mexico scenes that were reproduced and distributed to public schools across the state. She was then employed by the Federal Art Project to create etchings, oils, and watercolors. “They went to galleries, museums. Lots of them went to Washington for the offices,” Kloss recalled. Kloss won the Eyre gold medal at the 1936 exhibition of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, and in the two decades following the New Deal, her work was collected by many of the country’s major museums. Her paintings explored the landscapes, cultures, and people of New Mexico, and she appreciated the New Deal’s emphasis on regionalism. “I think it [the New Deal] stimulated an interest in art. Because people in outlying places who had never seen anything had murals in their post office and received some of the easel pictures or prints to hang in their schools and their public buildings. I think it is one thing that started the public interest in art.”3

Albert Lorey Groll

An East Coast-based and European-trained artist, Albert Lorey Groll became a much admired, successful painter of the Southwestern landscape. Groll was part of the first wave of European and European-American artists to venture west and participate in what scholar Joseph Traugott has termed the “culture rush,”1 capturing images of new—to them—places, peoples and cultures.

His career as a Western American artist began in 1904, when he accompanied Brooklyn ethnologist Stewart Culin on an expedition to the territories of Arizona and New Mexico. On that trip he was introduced to Lorenzo Hubbell, owner of the Ganado Trading Post (now known as the Hubbell Trading Post). One of the desert scenes he painted on that trip, titled Arizona, won Groll a gold medal at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in January 1906 and “created a furor when it was exhibited in New York” six months later.2 The artist wrote to Hubbell that his Western paintings “have made a decided hit, both artistically and financially; in fact, my visit to the Southwest has been my lucky stars.” Groll promptly returned to New Mexico that same year to visit Laguna Pueblo, this time taking along his friend and colleague from the Royal Academy in Munich, William Robinson Leigh. Groll is credited with introducing Leigh, who would become another famous Western American artist, to the Southwest. Moreover, as he continued to make frequent trips to and prolifically paint the West, Groll is widely, though not universally, credited for founding the Santa Fe art colony, with the Santa Fe New Mexican reporting in 1923 that “It is said that it was not until Mr. Groll visited Santa Fe that artists came out to New Mexico’s capital to make their residence.”3 

Over the course of four decades, Groll made a name for himself painting vast skies and towering cloud formations on visits to the Grand Canyon, Yellowstone National Park, Hopi Pueblo, Taos, Gallup, and beyond. One reviewer commented in 1922 that “A. L. Groll takes the desert for his subject and paints it under the cloud dotted blue sky which the very mention of his name recalls.”4 And that reputation only grew. By the 1940s, he was being heralded as “the greatest of American sky painters.”5 In addition to achieving broad popularity, his status and legacy as a founding Western American artist was cemented when he was made an affiliate member of the exclusive Taos Society of Artists. Groll’s career developed in lock-step with the Western American art movement, and also represents the origins and formation of that movement. 

In 1941, Groll donated at least three artworks to Gallup’s Federal Art Center for the purposes, as reported in the local newspaper at the time, of forming “a nucleus for a projected permanent museum and art centre [sic] here.” The article goes on to explain that Groll has been “inspired by the gorgeous colors of the skies and also in rock formations near Gallup.”6

Joseph Amadeus Fleck

Joseph Fleck was born and raised in Austria and trained as an artist at the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna. After serving on the Italian front in World War I, he emigrated to the United States in 1922, first landing in Kansas City. There, he saw an exhibit of the Taos Society of Artists, which prompted his move to Taos in 1924 or 1925.

Fleck lived and worked in Taos the majority of his life. While he followed and shared the artistic perspective and principles of the exclusive, conservative Taos Society of Artists (active from 1915 to 1927), painting Southwestern subjects—mostly portraits of Native peoples and Taos residents—in a realistic manner, Fleck was denied entry to the Society per its bylaws, which had been amended in 1919 during the Red Scare to restrict membership to American citizens (Fleck became a citizen in 1927). He was, however, a member of the Taos Artists Association.

During the New Deal, Fleck fulfilled commissions through the Public Works of Art Project and painted murals at post offices in Raton, NM, and Hugo, OK. After WWII, he turned his attention from portraiture to landscapes. His style evolved in step with his subjects, gradually loosening from an academic to a quasi-impressionistic approach. From 1942 to 1946, he served as the Dean of Fine Arts and artist-in-residence at the University of Missouri in Kansas City.

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Gallup’s New Deal art collection consists of over 120 objects created, purchased, or donated from 1933 to 1942 through New Deal federal art programs administered by President Franklin D. Roosevelt to support artists during the Great Depression.

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