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  2. Art of the American Southwest - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Art_of_the_American_Southwest

    The Heard Museum Guild has held their Indian Art Fair since 1958 in Phoenix, Arizona. The Arizona State Museum on the University of Arizona in Tucson hosts the annual Southwest Indian Art Fair, [46] and the Museum of Northern Arizona in Flagstaff and host major art's festivals for Southwest indigenous and Hispanic peoples. [47]

  3. Gerry Peirce - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gerry_Peirce

    A generation of Tucson artists passed through the doors of the school. Peirce continued to prolifically produce both his extraordinary etchings and watercolors. Peirce authored the bookPainting in the Southwest Landscape in Watercolor” and was awarded an honorary doctor of philosophy in arts from St. Andrews University College of London.

  4. Hawaii series by Georgia O'Keeffe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hawaii_series_by_Georgia_O...

    O'Keeffe used this floating motif several years earlier in From the Faraway, Nearby (1937), which shows a deer skull and antlers hovering over a desert, a work that O'Keeffe believed captured the heart of the Southwest. [65] Art critic Henry McBride and curator Jennifer Saville both argue that O'Keeffe treated the fishooks series in the same ...

  5. Fernand Lungren - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fernand_Lungren

    Fernand Lungren (1857–1932) was an American painter and illustrator. He is mostly known for his paintings of American South Western landscapes and scenes (in California, New Mexico, Arizona) as well as for his earlier New York and European city street scenes.

  6. Maynard Dixon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maynard_Dixon

    Maynard Dixon (January 24, 1875 – November 11, 1946) was an American artist. He was known for his paintings, and his body of work focused on the American West.Dixon is considered one of the finest artists having dedicated most of their art to the U.S. Southwestern cultures and landscapes at the end of the 19th-century and the first half of the 20th-century.

  7. Category:Southwestern artists - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Southwestern_artists

    Artists who were born in, or who have extensively lived in, extensively worked in, or been involved with the Southwest United States, including Arizona, California, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico and Utah.

  8. Erin Hanson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erin_Hanson

    Hanson's work has been displayed in fine art galleries and museums such as the St. George Art Museum, La Salle University Art Museum, Mattatuck Art Museum and Bone Creek Museum of Agrarian Art. Her painting "Desert in Color" won Best of Show at the 2019 Cowgirl Up! art show in Wickenburg, Arizona, which features top women artists from across ...

  9. Sandpainting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sandpainting

    Navajo sandpainting, photogravure by Edward S. Curtis, 1907, Library of Congress. In the sandpainting of southwestern Native Americans (the most famous of which are the Navajo [known as the Diné]), the Medicine Man (or Hatałii) paints loosely upon the ground of a hogan, where the ceremony takes place, or on a buckskin or cloth tarpaulin, by letting the coloured sands flow through his fingers ...