llanologo

          Hilton McLaurin's paintings available from the Artist and at these fine Southwest Galleries
Call us In Lubbock, Texas 806-744-9747 or E-Mail
FREE SHIPPING!
         
Tornado Gallery
19th Street and Buddy Holly Ave.
Lubbock, Texas
          Taos Artist Co-op
226 Paseo Del Pueblo Norte
Taos, New Mexico

217
Sunspot Angles

12 x 12
       U-Turn Lilac
U Turn Lilac

12 x 12

      
Aspen Rumble

24 x 18

       223 Little Bluestem
Little Bluestem Fall Fest
12 x 12

       Ghost Ranch Hoodoos
Ghost Ranch Hoodoos

12 x 12


232
High Road Galleries

12 x 12

       Poppies In Bloom
Poppies In Bloom

12 x 12

       234
Aspen in Meadow
12 x 12

       235
Rancho de Taos Church #1

12 x 12

       232
Arroyo Flood Coming
24 x 36

              Taos Teepes
Taos Teepes
12 x 24

      

          Current landscape painting workshop - June -  Garden & Arts Center,
Lubbock, Texas
"one brush acrylics".
         

229 Big Land
Big Land

19 x 39

       Chimayo Gate
Chimayo Gate

12 x 12

       230 Aspen Valley Homestead
Aspen Valley Homestead

12 x 24


          Interesting discussion topic. What Counts as Indian Art?
“There is much more to Indian Art, than pretty, stylized pictures…
Are we to be held back forever with one phase of Indian painting…?” Oscar Howe
         

Aspen Road
Aspen Road
11x 14

       Hale Center
Hale Center Sunrise

12 x 12

       214 hollyhock
Hollyhocks in Taos
12 x 12

       Ute Valley Homestead
Ute Valley Homestead

12 x 12

       Ransom Canyon Flowers
Ransom Canyon Flowers

12 x 12



                           "If you persist in looking at your profession as if it were a hobby or avocation you will never do anything in art. You have to live in art. "William Hook                            


222 Canyon Conundrum
Canyon Conundrum

12 x 12

Box Canyon Aspen
Box Camyon Aspen

12 x 12
"Santa Fe Trail Series"
       SOUTHWEST CHARMS AND PENDANTS
pewter group
      
Taos Mountain Sunset

24 x 20

       Dry Creek
Dry Creek

12 x 12



                           “Buy with your heart, not with your wallet” Philip Smet                            


                           "The best investment is art, unlike stocks or bonds, art is "a cultural commodity... it never loses value." Vladimir Kaplunov                            


Hondo Valley Breeze
Hondo Valley Breeze

12 x 12
       High Country gate
High Country Gate

16 x 20
       Taos teepes
Taos Mountain and Teepes
10 x 10
SOLD
       Arroyo Flood Coming
Arroyo Flood Coming

12 x 12

       Wetside-Dryside
Wet Side Dry Side

12 x 12


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dba Hilton McLaurin Studio in Lubbock, Texas since 1995

Colorado Bob's Hopi Blue Corn Experiment

#2

The Garden at the Tornado Gallery continues to provide a great place for plein air painting.
This 5x7 is from last night, very quick, stems blowing in the wind.
Great live music before the storm.

Harwood Museum
Taos, New Mexico
Kindred Spirits and the Adobe Connection: E.I. Couse and J.H. Sharp
June 19 - October 18, 2009
Founding Members of the Taos Society of Artists Shown Together

TAOS, NM.- In 1902, painters I.E. Couse and J.H. Sharp met for the first time in Taos, New Mexico. Both from the Midwest—Couse originally from Michigan, and Sharp from Ohio—each had lived and studied in Europe, and brought with them to New Mexico the Beaux-Arts tradition of painting they had independently experienced in Paris.

By 1909, the two men had become next-door neighbors in this budding art colony of northern New Mexico—their studios on Kit Carson Road separated by a slim adobe wall—and remained important friends and colleagues for the rest of their artistic lives.(Couse died in ’36, Sharp in ’53).

From June 20 through October 18, 2009, the Harwood Museum of Art in Taos, NM, in cooperation with The Couse Foundation, will present Kindred Spirits and the Adobe Connection: E.I. Couse and J.H. Sharp and The Photography of I.E. Couse. These exhibitions launch The Couse Foundation’s centennial celebrations of the year the two men became neighbors.

The exhibition features paintings by both artists, along with the original artifacts portrayed in the paintings. Sketchbooks and photographs related to the paintings and to the artists will also be on display. The viewer will have the unique opportunity to see what was involved in their creative processes, and compare the painters’ styles.

“These two men were the most dedicated academics of the Taos artists, and their paintings reflect those late-19th century European studies,” says Jina Brenneman, Harwood curator. “Both were prolific, successful painters who started painting Native American subjects in the Northwest around the turn of the century, and then settled in Taos a little later. They were among the founders of the Taos art colony, and charter members in 1915 of the Taos Society of Artists.”

Both Couse and Sharp admired the arts and crafts of Native Americans and each formed extensive Indian collections. The Couse collection still exists and portions of it can be seen at the Couse studio. However, due to issues of conservation, many items such as beadwork and other perishables are currently in storage.

“This exhibition provides an opportunity for the public to see items from the Couse Family Collections and Archive not normally on view,” Brenneman continues. “Sharp’s collection no longer exists in one place since during his lifetime much of it was sold to the Southwest Museum in Los Angeles, and the Gilcrease Museum in Tulsa. The remainder was dispersed after his death and ended up in private collections.”

Noted authority and writer on Sharp, Marie Watkins, Assistant Professor of Art History at Furman University in Greenville, South Carolina, who will present a lecture on October 16, sums it up this way. “For the past hundred years, museums and collectors have esteemed the works of Irving Couse and Joseph Henry Sharp. Underlying the style of their painting is the influence of Paris from their student days. The Beaux-Arts tradition never left these Taos artists. Paris determined how Couse and Sharp painted. In turn, these artists, along with their Taos colleagues, transformed American art. What they learned in Paris didn’t stay in Paris, but unfolded into a rich and diverse Taos panorama.” Artdaily.org