New Mexico Museum of Art
formerly named
Fine Arts Museum, Museum of New Mexico
(above left: Plaza, Looking North, Santa Fe, February, 1997; above right: Detail of Front Facade, Fine Arts Museum, Santa Fe, 1997, photos by John Hazeltine. Please click on the images for enlargements.
Santa Fe, NM
505-476-5072
The West Through My Eyes: Highlights From the Private Collection of Bill Schenck (7/13/05)
Victor Higgins, 1884-1949, essay by Robert A. Ewing (9/5/03)
From Realism to Abstraction: Art in New Mexico, 1917-2002 (10/31/02)
Eliseo Rodriguez: El Sexto Pintor, article by Carmella Padilla (8/15/01)
Oliphant in Santa Fe: Political Drawings, Caricature, and Sculpture (9/5/00)
In His Native Land: The Early Modern Photography of John Candelario (8/7/00)
The Railroad to Trinity: Selections from the Permanent Collection (7/8/00)
20/20: Twentieth Century Acquisitions by Twenty Leading Patrons (2/24/00)
From Baca to Burlin: An Insider's View (10/10/99)
New Art for a New Millennium: New Mexico 2000 (9/16/99)
Milton Avery: Paintings from the Collection of the Neuberger Museum of Art (2/28/99)
The New Mexico Museum of Art, formerly named Fine Arts Museum, Museum of New Mexico, was founded in 1917 as the Art Gallery of the Museum of New Mexico. Housed in a spectacular Pueblo Revival building designed by I. H. and William M. Rapp, it was based on their New Mexico building at the Panama-California Exposition (1915). The museum's architecture inaugurated what has come to be known as "Santa Fe style." For more than 85 years the Museum has collected and exhibited work by leading artists from New Mexico and elsewhere. This tradition continues today with a wide array of exhibitions of work from the world's leading artists.
The Museum is part of the Museum of New Mexico, a division of the New Mexico Office of Cultural Affairs and is located just off the northwest corner of the Plaza in Santa Fe, NM. Hours and admission fees are available on the Museum's website.
Google Book Searches conducted in 2008 and 2013 by Traditional Fine Arts Organization (TFAO) located the following brochures, catalogues and gallery guides published on paper in connection with the Museum and with a topic of American representational art. The list may not include all relevant publications. Titles are listed by date of publication, with most recent listed first. Information on publications may be in error or incomplete. Titles may be followed by links to related essays published by Resource Library. See Definitions for more information on finding brochures, catalogues and gallery guides using TFAO's website.
Artists of New Mexico Traditions: The National Heritage Fellows by Michael Petit, Museum of New Mexico Press, 2012 - 176 pages. Google Books says: "Since 1982, fifteen New Mexico artists have been named National Heritage Fellows, the most from any state, recognized for their contributions to the nation's traditional arts heritage. Pettit draws from the lives of these New Mexico artists -- among them potters and weavers, storytellers and musicians -- through interviews with living artists, family members, curators, and others discussing their lives and art. Portraits emerge, as well, of the villages, extended families, and traditions that are a constant in the lives of these artists."
Santa Fe Indian Market: A History of Native Arts and the Marketplace by Bruce Bernstein, Museum of New Mexico Press, 2012, 151 pages. Google Books says: "This is the only book on the history of Santa Fe Indian Market. Each August, one hundred thousand people attend Indian Market in Santa Fe, New Mexico, the nation's largest and most anticipated Native arts event. One thousand artists, representing 160 tribes, nations, and villages from the United States and Canada, proudly display and sell their works of art, ranging from pottery and basketry to contemporary paintings and sculptures. Beautifully illustrated with photographs of the artists and their work, historical photos from the Market's 90 year history."
Gustave Baumann: Nearer to Art, By Martin F. Krause, David Acton, Madeline Carol Yurtseven: 1993 - 158 pages. Original from the University of Michigan. Digitized Nov 14, 2007. ISBN 0890132518, 9780890132517
Joseph A. Fleck, an Early Taos Painter: Museum of Fine Arts, Museum of New Mexico. 1985 - 63 pages. ISBN 089013152X, 9780890131527
Marin in New Mexico, 1929 & 1930. Catalog of an exhibition organized by the University Art Museum, the University of New Mexico, and shown at the University Art Museum, Nov. 18-Dec. 29, 1968; Marion Koogler McNay Art Institute, San Antonio, Tex., Feb. 7-Mar. 7, 1969; Amon Carter Museum, Fort Worth, Tex., Mar. 21-May 12, 1969. 1968 - 32 pages. Original from the University of California. Digitized Apr 23, 2008
Henry C. Balink: a Retrospective Exhibition, September 25 through November, 6, 1966. 1966 - 16 pages
E.MARTIN HENNINGS: THE INFLUENCE OF NEW MEXICO. 1986 - 4 pages
Thomas Hart Benton. Museum of New Mexico. 1962
The New MexicoPaintings of Frank H. Myers. 1962
Marsden Hartley. 1958
Olive Rush. 1957 - 4 pages
Homer Boss, 1882-1956. 1956 - 12 pages
Robert Henri: an Exhibition of Paintings : Museum of New Mexico Art Gallery. 1956
Gustave Baumann: a Retrospective Exhibition of Color Woodcuts , June 8 through July 27, 1952. 1952
Ernest L. Blumenschein: a Retrospect Exhibition of the Life Work; May 30 to June 30, 1948; Art Gallery, Museum of New Mexico, Santa Fe. 1948 - 5 pages
Exhibition of Paintings by Ernest L. Blumenschein. 1945
Book information courtesy of Google Books. This may not be a complete list of books published by the museum.
Links to sources of information outside of our web site are provided only as referrals for your further consideration. Please use due diligence in judging the quality of information contained in these and all other Web sites and in employing referenced consultants or vendors. Information from linked sources may be inaccurate or out of date. Traditional Fine Arts Organization, Inc neither recommends or endorses these referenced organizations. Although Traditional Fine Art Organization, Inc. includes links to other web sites, it takes no responsibility for the content or information contained on those other sites, nor exerts any editorial or other control over those other sites. For more information on evaluating web pages see Traditional Fine Arts Organization, Inc.'s General Resources section in Online Resources for Collectors and Students of Art History.
Why was this sub-index page prepared?
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