NM Artists Paintings
March 25, 2011
Inspired by the natural splendor of the Southwest, these European-American artists who settled in Taos, Santa Fe, and Albuquerque, captured their visions of the landscape in beautiful realistic styles; such artists as:
Carl Von Hassler, who was best known for his traditional realistic landscapes of New Mexico and his Indian portraits, spent almost half of his 47 years here developing a new painting technique that caused a stir in art circles. This Special Exhibit illustrates some of the best examples of his work.
Will H. Shuster, A realist and early modernist painter, graphic artist, illustrator, and sculptor, who became known primarily for his work in New Mexico where, in 1920, he settled in Santa Fe, having been encouraged to come there by John Sloan. He had studied electrical engineering at the Drexel Institute in Philadelphia and later was a student of Sloan\'s in Santa Fe in both etching and painting.
In World War I Shuster suffered a gas attack and upon his return to the states was advised by his doctor to go west for his health, where he once again resided in Santa Fe. While there Shuster became one of the founding members of Los Cinco Pintores, artists who responded to the New Mexico environment, including the Penitentes, in a respectful way and modernist, abstract style. Later he became more a realist in style.
Howard Schleeter, in 1929, moved to New Mexico and decided to make his living entirely as an artist; the following year he married and the couple made New Mexico their permanent home. The Great Depression left Schleeter occasionally digging ditches to make ends meet. In 1936, his financial status greatly improved when he received the first of several commissions from the Works Progress Administration (WPA).
In 1945, the Encyclopedia Britannica referred to Schleeter as an artist