A Place of Refuge: Maynard Dixon"s Arizona

Price 47.47 - 79.51 USD

EAN/UPC/ISBN Code 9780911611366



Pages 160

Year of production 2010

Western painter Maynard Dixon once pronounced Arizona the magic name of a land bright and mysterious, of sun and sand, of tragedy and stark endeavor. So long had I dreamed of it, he professed, that when I came there it was not strange to me. Its sun was my sun; its ground was my ground. The California-born Dixon (1875 1946) first traveled to Arizona in 1900 to absorb what he believed was a vanishing West. Dixon found Arizona a visually inspiring and spiritual place that shaped the course of his paintings and ultimately defined him. A Place of Refuge: Maynard Dixon"s Arizona is the first exhibition to focus solely on the renowned painter"s depictions of Arizona subjects. As early as 1903 Dixon referred to Arizona as home. Although he spent most of his life in San Francisco, Dixon lamented to friends that he longed for Arizona and the solitude of the desert, and he frequently traversed the land"s varied expanses. In 1939 he made Tucson his winter home and spent his remaining years painting his beloved desert landscape. In the confluence of Arizona"s natural and cultural landscapes, Dixon would become one of the West"s most distinctive painters, creating a body of work that established his place among the vanguard of artists who portrayed western subjects. Thomas Brent Smith explores Dixon"s remarkable departure from traditional depictions of human conflict in the Old West rendered by such predecessors as Frederic Remington, Charles M. Russell, and Charles Schreyvogel. Smith"s essay describes this shift in artistic ideology and analyzes the tranquil images that emerged on Dixon"s canvases. Donald J. Hagerty"s biographical essay highlights Dixon"s travels and his affinity for the people and landscape of Arizona.