Joseph Roy (J. R.) Willis

Joseph Roy (J. R.) Willis’s life was full of plot twists and plenty of color. It also, contrastingly, had a steady rhythm and followed an orderly pattern. He was a legendary character in Albuquerque, with a recognizable style and eccentric flair, known for wearing capes, twirling canes, and smoking Pall Mall cigarettes.1 At the same time, he was described by contemporaries as the “kind of artist you would like to meet. Not wild-eyed or long haired, more of the Southern Colonel type.”2 His career was, in a sense, similarly paradoxical. Willis was both a self-identified “conservative” fine artist and an enterprising, innovative businessman.

Willis began his career as a political cartoonist for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution during the 1898 Spanish-American War. He also worked as a commercial illustrator for fashion magazines before moving to New York City to attend the Chase Art School (now the Parsons School of Design) in the early 1900s. There, he studied with famous artist Robert Henri and worked for the McGraw-Hill publishing company. His next job was as a “chalk talk” artist on the vaudeville circuit. While working in vaudeville, he met Violet Powell, for whom he would leave his first wife and three children. Willis and Violet had a daughter together and eventually, Willis moved with his new family to California and found work as a set designer and painter in Hollywood. He also became a pioneer of early animation. 

In 1917, on his way to New York City via train, Willis stopped in Laguna, NM, curious about the Hopi Snake Dance. This brief first experience in New Mexico spawned a lifelong interest. That same year, Willis moved to Gallup, NM, and bought a camera store (he was a skilled photographer on top of everything else). He became immediately and deeply involved in Gallup civic life as a Shriner, Chamber of Commerce member, and a charter Kiwanis Club member. He helped start the Gallup Inter-Tribal Indian Ceremonial (an annual event ongoing since 1922), understanding that the event would be good for business and hoping to sell cameras to attendees. 

Indeed, as an artist and entrepreneur, Willis quickly caught on to—and, in turn, helped to spur—the tourist market. By 1923, he was producing his first photo postcards of Gallup events and landmarks for sale in his shop. Over the course of the decade, Willis toured the Grand Canyon, the Four Corners  area, and the greater Southwest making photographs and sketches that he turned into postcards and oil paintings. In 1930, he bragged that he had the “largest line of scenic postcards in the Southwest.”3 

Tragedy struck in May 1931, however, when his daughter died of polio. The artist and his wife moved to Albuquerque shortly thereafter and in 1932 Willis established a studio in Old Town Albuquerque. Still, he kept up the “motoring” habit that had begun after settling in Gallup. For over two decades, he maintained a seasonal regime of heading south for the winter (to Miami, New Orleans, Texas, Mexico, Cuba, the Caribbean, and—at least once—Guatemala), returning every spring or summer to the Grand Canyon to paint from the Art Room at the Bright Angel Lodge,4 and attending the Hopi Snake Dance and Gallup Ceremonial before catching the changing leaves in Taos in the fall . All the while, Willis sketched, made films, and took photographs to supply his postcard and painting business. 

By the end of the 1930s, Willis was a well-known New Mexico artist and his name was synonymous with pictures of “Indian heads” and aspens.5 The artist admitted part of why he was attracted to these subjects was because they were commercially successful. An article describing him as a “Wall Street financier type of man” quoted him as saying “I paint Indians, aspens. They are attractive and sell.”6 Willis’s commercial success was recognized in tandem with his artistic talent. For instance, one review noted that “Mr. Willis has painted in the state for many years and has developed a technique for [typical New Mexico scenes] which has been admired and has found its way into many homes.”7  Cultural critic and influencer Ina Sizer Cassidy aptly classified Willis as a”‘soldier of fortune’ in the arts.”8

While the Great Depression certainly affected Willis—he was hired through the Public Works of Art Project (PWAP) and Works Progress Administration, both need-based programs, to do murals in the mid-1930s—he appears to have been less harmed than many. Willis was truly a savvy entrepreneur who utilized novel (for their time) sales techniques such as layaway and a generous exchange policy. 

Indeed, Willis was a leader within Albuquerque’s art scene. He served as treasurer of the Art League of New Mexico for many years and was involved in the Albuquerque Artists Guild as well. In the fight between modernism and realism that defined the era, Willis was a staunch realist, perhaps for both ideological and commercial reasons. “I have not had time to experiment with the various ‘isms’ jumping from stone to stone but have stuck consistently to my individuality, not copying the fleeting styles coming from abroad,” he said.9 Willis’s beliefs were thrown into relief as he was often compared to his contemporary Brooks Willis, a high-profile modernist who advocated an experimental approach, given their shared surname and because they often exhibited alongside each other. (The two were not related.) For Willis’s part, the associations he most prized and publicized were his professional relationships with artists E. Martin Hennings and Albert Lorey Groll, a member and associate member, respectively, of the exclusive and traditional Taos Society of Artists

Willis also promoted himself and moonlit as an armchair historian, traveling to Mexico to “research” early Spanish exploration,10 presenting lectures accompanied by photographs and motion pictures on topics such as Indigenous arts and culture and Cabeza de Vaca. While not atypical for his time, Willis’s perspective on New Mexico history and Indigenous cultures was predominately stereotypical, as is indicated by his choice to “wear an authentic Indian buckskin coat embroidered with porcupine quills valued at $125 with fine headdress, authentic moccasins, and deer-toe necklace and Umatilla Indian gloves” to the Art League of New Mexico ball in 1938.11 These attitudes make both his status as a “scholar” and his artworks problematic.  

Willis painted, exhibited, and ran his business until his death in 1960.

(Paul) Brooks Willis

Brooks Willis was unconventional in art and life. His name appeared as often in the Albuquerque society pages as his art appeared in local galleries and exhibits. He was known as a cutting-edge and outspoken “extreme modernist”1 painter who sketched from airplanes2 and included the occasional outhouse in his imagery.3 He had a reputation as a mover and shaker who both challenged and supported the art world establishment, and as an eligible—if reluctant—bachelor.4 He was also considered a war hero.

Though born in Farmington to a pioneering New Mexico family,5 Willis spent most of his early life and career outside of the state. He attended the Kansas City Art Institute in Kansas City, MO, and the Broadmoor Art Academy in Colorado Springs, CO. By the early 1930s, Willis had established himself in Albuquerque and was gaining recognition as an up-and-coming artist working in the “new style.”6 For two years, he consistently exhibited a variety of works, including lithographs, charcoals, and watercolors, with the same group of artists. By 1933, he was officially involved with the Albuquerque Society of Artists.7 In a move that was equal parts art market and social commentary—and which foreshadows his extensive involvement in federal art programs—he opened a show at Albuquerque’s Franciscan Hotel in November 1933 (at the height of the Great Depression) where he and a fellow artist traded paintings for “food or what have you.”8 

The next five years of Willis’s career revolved around New Deal art projects. In the mid-1930s, he was commissioned by the Public Works of Art Project to paint easel paintings for public exhibition,9 an 8 x 13-foot mural depicting Albuquerque for the historic Bernalillo County Courthouse10 (sold to a private developer in 2020) and paintings for Albuquerque, Clayton, and Las Cruces schools. He was also engaged as a mural painter under the Federal Art Project and completed an eight-part series for Highlands University in Las Vegas, NM, in 1936. Willis was actively involved in the Albuquerque Little Theatre, a federal art project, as a set painter. He continued to promote  Albuquerque’s art scene. He put on a groundbreaking “unsponsored” art show with two of his close colleagues11 and, at the same time, became active in the New Mexico Art League, chairing a discussion on the place of realism and abstraction in art.12

In summer 1939, Willis left Albuquerque to study in Europe. When World War II broke out, he joined a volunteer ambulance corps in France and later spent time in a German prison camp after the Nazi invasion. He was awarded the Croix de Guerre by the French government.

Willis returned home in late 1940 after eighteen months abroad. He immediately married, and in spring 1941 showed watercolors from his time at war. His career evolved as he took a faculty position with the University of New Mexico’s Art Department and then directed  the University’s field school in Taos for two summer terms.

Army service and defense work prompted Willis to move his family to California in 1943, where he also worked for a time in Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer’s art department. Willis spent the next three decades in California before returning to Santa Fe to live out the remainder of his life.

Harold Edward West

Harold (Hal) Edward West was born in Honey Grove, TX, and grew up in Mill Creek and Tishomingo, OK. Despite taking an early interest in drawing, he did not obtain much in the way of a formal art education. He took a few classes, one of which resulted in a prize for “best oil painting” at the county fair, and apprenticed at a commercial art studio in Dallas, TX, during or shortly after high school. He then went to work on the Mississippi River, eventually moving to Santa Fe, NM, in 1926, where he pursued a career in the arts. 

To start, West mostly worked as a commercial artist. Through the first half of the 1930s, he ran a business hand-printing textiles and calendars. He joined the New Deal in 1937 or 1938, mostly producing woodblock prints but also taking up oil painting again. He credits New Mexico’s Federal Art Project Director Russell Vernon Hunter as one of his mentors, and the New Deal as encouraging him to pursue a career in painting. In a 1964 interview, he referred to the New Deal as a “happy little period”: “It was a wonderful thing, and it helped me. I was still making a living . . . I stayed home and painted . . . They financed all the material, canvas and everything—brushes. And I got enthusiastic about painting and stayed with it.”1

While West would continue to take commercial art jobs (for example, designing the front cover for and illustrating Death in the Claimshack by John L. Sinclair), the New Deal brought him recognition within the realm of Western American art. He was given a solo show at the state art museum in 1938 and was selected as one of the artists to represent New Mexico at the 1939 New York World’s Fair, having developed a reputation as a self-taught artist uniquely adept at depicting frontier life—horses, cattle, and cowboys in particular. Echoing the sentiments of many of his contemporaries, Santa Fe New Mexican art critic Ben Krebs wrote of West in 1938 that “much of his life has been spent on ranches and his insight and understanding of ranch life and cowboy behavior is true.”2 Indeed, he lived on a 240-acre homestead south of Santa Fe with his wife and five children.

At the end of the New Deal and during WWII, from 1941 to 1945, West worked as a guard at the Santa Fe Internment Camp, a Japanese prison camp. During that time, he made a number of sketches of his fellow guards, which are now held by the Fray Angelico Library Archives

West returned to painting professionally in 1945. In 1960, he opened a gallery at 601 Canyon Road in Santa Fe, and quickly became a fixture of the famous art district, known for straight talk and playing horseshoes (and poker). He created the “Guide to Canyon Road,” a directory of galleries on the street. West died at the age of sixty-six after a long illness.

Herbert Bolivar Tschudy

Of Swiss ancestry, Herbert Bolivar Tschudy was originally from Ohio but made his career in New York City. After studying at the Art Students League, he became a staff artist at the Brooklyn Museum. In that role, he created murals and backdrops for a variety of ethnology and natural history galleries. His first trip to New Mexico was in 1904 as an expedition artist accompanying the Museum’s first curator of ethnology, Stewart Culin. Tschudy accompanied Culin on numerous trips to the Southwest and Pacific Coast in the early 1900s. 

Tschudy would go on to become the Museum’s curator of paintings and sculpture in 1923. Then, from 1930 to 1934, he served as acting curator of the Department of Natural History. In 1934, he became the Museum’s first curator of Contemporary Art, a position he held until his retirement in 1937. In that role, he organized a “Gallery of Living Artists” and a biennial watercolor series. 

As an independent artist, Tschudy made the Southwest his subject, returning to New Mexico each year for three decades or more. As one 1926 Santa Fe New Mexican report put it, “Mr. Tschudy tramps around the southwest year after year in search of subjects for his watercolors and he has caught the spirit of the desert.”1 Tschudy typically made Gallup his vacation headquarters “to enable him to study and paint Indian life.”2

Jose Rey Toledo

Jose Rey Toledo was of Jemez, Zia, Pecos, and Hopi heritage. His interest in art was encouraged from a young age. In school, he made pencil and crayon drawings along with paper arts and crafts. He also grew up sketching hunting scenes in charcoal with his uncle on the kitchen walls while waiting for breakfast. When he was eleven years old, a missionary interested in “documenting” Jemez daily life asked Toledo to make drawings on a chalkboard. “I started by sketching heads of animals, anything I could think ofhorses, cats, bighorn sheep,” the artist recalled. “Those were just impromptu chalk drawings . . . She was very surprised that we could have a semblance of some realism in our drawings.”1 

From 1930 to 1935, Toledo attended the Albuquerque Indian School. He took his first formal art classes starting in tenth grade, and remembers being “discouraged by teachers” from including a background in his paintings. As he explained, he was taught that “Pueblo Indian painting was characterized by just a blank surrounding the image . . . that was the Indian style.”2 He designed the diploma for his high school graduation, after which he enrolled in the College of Fine Arts at the University of New Mexico. Short on tuition funds, Toledo dropped out after only two weeks, however.3 

Toledo’s professional art career ramped up in the early 1940s, as he went to work on the Federal Art Project. By the end of the decade, he was receiving national recognition and ribbons for his work, including at the Gallup Inter-Tribal Indian Ceremonial (which used one of his paintings for its 1941 poster4). In 1947, he was awarded first prize for Indian painting from the Philbrook Museum of Art for his painting Dancing Spirits. “I wanted to do something that was specifically of Pueblo nature. And the thing that came to my mind was a painting of the Zuni Shalako dancing and their spiritual guardians,” he said. “And that was the largest painting I was going to attempt on watercolor paper . . . so I painted that and sent it off.”5 

Eventually, Toledo returned to school and received a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from the University of New Mexico in 1951. He went on to receive a Master’s in art education in 1955.  

The knowledge, lifeways, beliefs, and, in particular, ritual dances of his people were the focus of his work. For Toledo’s 1994 obituary, Zuni scholar and former Museum of Indian Arts and Culture curator of ethnography, Edmund J. Ladd, commented that “he was a very astute observer. He painted everything from memory. He recorded a lot of elements and cultural materials that are preserved only in his paintings. His works are a source of preservation for the Pueblos.”6

Over the course of his life, Toledo gave back to his community and Native peoples in many ways. He taught art at the Albuquerque and Santa Fe Indian Schools for the first half of the 1950s. In 1956, he applied to become a health education specialist through the Indian Health Service. He served assignments in North Dakota, South Dakota, and Laguna Pueblo, NM, through the early 1970s, at which point he went back to school for his third degree, a Master of Public Health from University of California, Berkeley. Toledo continued to work for the Indian Health Service in Albuquerque until his retirement in 1976. 

In addition to being an artist, art educator, and health worker, Toledo was also a highly respected culture bearer, storyteller, community leader, and civil rights activist. From the 1960s to the 1980s he participated in civil rights demonstrations in Gallup and Albuquerque and gave numerous talks on cultural and historical topics. In the 1970s, Toledo also enjoyed yet another career as an actor, appearing in films and television including Flap (1970), The Man and the City (which aired on ABC from 19711972), The Trackers (1971), and a popular pizza commercial.

Albert Delmont Smith

Smith is best known as a portraitist who spent most of his career in New York City, where he also painted the occasional cityscape and seascape. A reported member of the Salmagundi Art Club in Greenwich Village, he painted many capital-S Society portraits, including one of President Dwight D. Eisenhower for the Union Club of the City of New York. He also painted a portrait of fellow artist and Salmagundi Club member Childe Hassam, now in the collection of the Toledo Museum of Art. He was the director of the Heckscher Museum of Art in Huntington, NY.

Eliseo Rodriguez

Eliseo Rodriguez grew up near the now-famous artistic enclave of Canyon Road in Santa Fe, NM. As a teenager, he delivered firewood and did odd jobs for Canyon Road residents—scholars, artists, writers, and patrons who made up the town’s “Anglo intelligentsia.”1 It was there he first met Józef Bakoś and other members of “Los Cinco Pintores.” 

At the age of fifteen, Rodriguez was granted a two-year scholarship to the Santa Fe Art School, where he was admitted as the “only Spanish.”2 There, his teachers included Bakoś. 

In 1935, Rodriguez married his wife, Paula. They built a house and lived the rest of their life close to where Rodriguez was born. 

Rodriguez was hired by the Federal Art Project (FAP) in 1936: “When I took my craft work, paintings on glass, carvings and tinwork, in for sale . . . the store manager told me she couldn’t buy any more items, but maybe I should go meet Russell Vernon Hunter [State Director of the Federal Art Project for New Mexico],” Rodriguez recalled in a 2003 interview. Hunter instructed him to apply for relief at the county courthouse to prove eligibility for the FAP. “[After being approved] I went back to Mr. Hunter. He gave me all kinds of materials to work with, canvas, paint, watercolors, everything. I was excited and felt like I was in business.”3

Rodriguez contributed to the FAP in a variety of ways—he was, in his words, “always willing to do anything I was asked to do. I was willing to be versatile.”4 Over the course of his employment with the FAP, Rodriguez helped Paul Lantz complete a mural for the Texas Centennial. He also helped friend, neighbor, and colleague Louie Ewing apply the silkscreen printmaking technique to create a portfolio of Navajo rug designs for the Laboratory of Anthropology (founded in 1927 by John D. Rockefeller to study the Southwest’s Indigenous cultures; the Laboratory is now part of the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture). Additionally, he hand-colored prints for the Portfolio of Spanish Colonial Design. Rodriquez also painted in reverse on glass and created oil-on-canvas paintings for the FAP. 

“[I made] $75 a month. We were paid by the month and since we didn’t have a family yet that took care of our grocery needs for a month. You turned in your work once or twice a week or once or twice a month depending on how fast you worked.”5 

Rodriguez was one of the few highly regarded Hispano artists working for the FAP. “There weren’t a whole lot of Spanish people working in the Project . . . We weren’t just assistants. Although in some cases, we were considered helpers.”6 The Museum of New Mexico Art Gallery (now the New Mexico Museum of Art) first exhibited his work in 1936, and by 1938, “his paintings also hung alongside works by his teachers and other recognized Anglo artists, including . . . Sheldon Parsons.”7

E. Boyd, who supervised the creation of the Portfolio of Spanish Colonial Design for the FAP (and who later became a curator of Spanish Colonial art at the Museum of New Mexico Art Gallery and then the Santa Fe Museum of International Folk Art), introduced Rodriguez to the straw appliqué technique. “She said that this form of straw art originated in Africa, was picked up by the Moors in Spain and brought by the Spanish to New Mexico,” said the artist. “It was tacky, messy, and tedious work . . . I was willing to try anything so I tried doing the straw inlay appliqué work and enjoyed doing it and wanted to keep it going as a form of art that was dying out.”8

By the 1950s, Eliseo and Paula Rodriguez were the last remaining practitioners of straw appliqué in New Mexico. In the 1970s, with encouragement from a conservator at the Museum of International Folk Art, they began exhibiting their work. Today, Eliseo and Paula are credited with saving and renewing the art form, which is once again thriving in New Mexico. In 2004, the National Endowment for the Arts made both artists National Heritage Fellows

While Rodriguez is most famous as a straw appliqué artist, he was multitalented, working in a variety of media such as oil on glass, oil on canvas, watercolor, lithography, ceramics, wood, and cabinetry. Rodriguez credits the FAP with his success: “It did more for me than if I had gone to college. It gave me so many possibilities.”9

Edgar Alwin Payne

Unlike most of his contemporaries in the Gallup New Deal Art collection, Edgar Alwin Payne was largely self-taught. He left home at the age of fourteen and worked as a sign painter, house painter, scenic painter, muralist, and portraitist in the South, Midwest, and Mexico. In 1907, he enrolled at the Art Institute of Chicago but left after only two weeks. In 1909, he made his first visit to California, where he met his future wife, Elsie Palmer, a fellow commercial artist. They married in 1912 and worked in California and Chicago, becoming well-established muralists and members of both art scenes. In Chicago, Payne exhibited at the Art Institute and the Palette & Chisel Club. He also helped organize, and became the first president of, the Laguna Beach Art Association in 1918. 

Payne is best known for his Western landscapes, and, as a plein air (outdoor) painter, he spent his career making painting excursions to California, Arizona, Utah, New Mexico, and Canada. A trip to the Sierra Nevadas in 1916 made a lasting impression, and Payne returned to paint the majestic mountain range many times. Another pivotal moment in his career was a commission from the Santa Fe Railroad in 1917 to record the journey from Albuquerque to California. The Railroad frequently engaged artists to produce material for its advertising campaigns. For this commission, Payne spent four months exploring Canyon de Chelly, and the paintings he produced solidified his reputation as a landscape artist and his ties to the Southwest. According to Gallup Independent newspaper archives, Payne regularly summered in Gallup for the next three decades, making sightseeing trips in the surrounding area and often attending, and serving as a judge for, the Gallup Inter-Tribal Indian Ceremonial art exhibit. 

Payne’s career reached a new level of success in the 1920s. During that decade, he twice made two-year tours of Europe, and he moved to New York City, where his artwork was selling well, while continuing to travel the Southwest. When the Great Depression took its toll, he resettled in Los Angeles in 1932, where he would spend the remainder of his life. In 1941, he published an influential book, Composition of Outdoor Painting.

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.

Helmuth Naumer, Sr.

Born and raised in Germany in the heart of the Black Forest, Helmuth Naumer, Sr. dreamed of the American West he knew from “cowboy and Indian” novels by German author Karl May. In 1925, at the age of eighteen, he left for New York. As a naturalized citizen, he spent the next year traveling across America, stopping briefly in Santa Fe, NM before reaching Los Angeles, CA in 1926. Low on funds but still consumed by wanderlust, he joined the Merchant Marine and served at sea for six years. In 1932, he moved to Santa Fe, the town that in his view epitomized the “Old West.” Naumer said he “wanted to make a record of this country before it was overrun, still wild and beautiful because once that’s gone, we can never get it back.” Naumer built a home and studio on San Sebastian Ranch and raised horses. 

Naumer quickly became known for his pastels on black paper. “Pastels are particularly suited for painting Western landscapes,” Naumer said. “Their soft tones match those of the distant mountain ranges and accentuate the delicate shades of our sunsets.”1

Between 1935 and 1936, Naumer was commissioned by the National Parks Service, through the Works Progress Administration, to create artwork for the newly built visitor center at Bandelier National Monument. Naumer said he was paid $45 per month2 to create fourteen pastel scenes depicting views of the Monument and nearby Pueblo villages (still on display at the Monument’s visitor center). For these paintings, the artist spent time living at Kewa (Santo Domingo) Pueblo.3 In 2016, the US Postal Service used Naumer’s painting Administration Building, Frijoles Canyon on a “Forever” stamp as part of a sixteen-piece set commemorating the National Parks Service’s centennial. 

Of his experience as an artist in New Mexico during the New Deal, Naumer said: “It was difficult being an artist here, especially during the Depression when nobody had any money. To get along you had to trade pictures for necessities. I traded for furniture, for cars, for horses and goats.”4

Naumer continued as a prolific pastelist, though he also worked in oils and watercolors over the course of his career. In the late 1930s, he was traveling 1,500 miles each month across the state to paint en plein air (outdoors). “I can’t explain it, but paintings made at the scene sell better than those made in a studio of some imagined landscape,” he said. “Perhaps it’s some detail or shading at the actual scene that would be omitted from a studio painting.”5 He won prizes at the New Mexico State Fair each year he exhibited between 1939 and 1955, and his contemporaries excitedly noted that magazine magnate Henry Luce was one of his collectors. 

In 1938, a newspaper columnist asked Naumer about Hitler’s rise to power. According to the writer, “Naumer’s merry grey eyes instantly became serious and he said: ‘It will probably be two or three years from now—perhaps sooner—but someday things are going to pop wide open in Europe and it will be the worst war this hectic world has ever experienced.’”6 Naumer went on to serve as a staff artist in the Army during WWII. After returning home, Naumer continued to paint and exhibit, and his work became increasingly abstract. 

Describing his career in a 1959 pamphlet, he said that “though born in Europe and having lived in many places in the world, coming to the Southwest was like coming home. Here I found peace and beauty and these I try to paint.”7

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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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