Essential West Magazine

Learn about the latest Medicine Man Gallery happenings; all about our artist, see our educational videos about native American art and fine art, watch podcasts with your favorite artists and check out art and history-related links we think you'll enjoy.

Exploring Art, Literature, History, Museums, Lifestyle, and Cultures of the West

It amazes me that four letters - W-E-S-T - have the ability to evoke an instantaneous emotional image. Simply the act of reading these four letters has caused you to form a narrative of your west.

Can the West be distilled to its essence - a simple direction or region? I believe not; it is a deeper dive of consciousness. How America sees itself and the world defines us. Diverse cultures, strong individualism, open spaces, and raw natural beauty marinated in a roughshod history have formed this region’s unique milieu.

Our online magazine’s primary focus is to feature relevant topics in art, literature, history, museums, lifestyle, and culture; lofty goals for any publication. No single magazine can be the beckon of all things western; it is a diverse, evolving paradigm that cannot be pigeonholed. As the publisher, I hope to be the buffalo that grazes the wide expanse of western sensibility and relay to you a glimpse of how I perceive our Essential West.

- Mark Sublette

Featured Article

Lessons in Collecting from Dr....
Lessons in Collecting from Dr. Albert Barnes

Albert Barnes (1872–1951) was one of this country’s greatest art collectors. Dr. Albert Barnes. He made his fortune co-inventing antiseptic. Anyone with tons of money can collect art. Separating the mere shoppers from the memorable collectors are vision, commitment, legwork, confidence – among other characteristics. Fortunately, none of those skills require a private jet. They are skills we...

The Foremothers of Western Art
The Foremothers of Western Art

“Essential West” has been highlighting origins the past two months. The origins of Modern Native American art. The origins of the Amon Carter Museum of American Art. The origins of painter Clyfford Still. The origins of Indigenous storytelling in North America. Another origin story this week: women artists in Colorado and Utah. History Jackson Hole presents “Women Artists of the American West: Colorado and Utah, 1885–1940” (January 20 through June 30, 2026), the second in a two-part exhibition highlighting trailblazing women in the western United States. This first presentation centered Montana and Wyoming. The series highlights white women. Mostly painters...

The Enduring Global Appeal of...
The Enduring Global Appeal of The West

This past November I visited an art festival in the Azores. I asked a fellow reporter, an Italian working in Germany, where in the States she’d most like to visit. She had never been. “Texas,” she answered. She wanted to see a cowboy. The international pull of the cinematic, scene, authentic, imagined “West” never ceases to amaze me. I was reminded of its power again upon receiving news that Gagosian – the largest and most powerful art gallery in the world – is staging an exhibition for Richard Avedon’s (1923-2004) In the American West (1979–84) photo series at its London outpost...

The Origins of Modern and...
The Origins of Modern and Contemporary Native American Art

Whenever I’m asked, “what’s your favorite kind of art,” I always respond, “contemporary Native American art.” Primarily painting. It has been since I picked up an interest in art literally out of nowhere shortly after turning 40. Call it a professional mid-life crisis. I had a 20-year career in the sports media, focused on college football, and completely lost interest in it. Sports was my passion and profession since high school; now, I don’t even follow the scores. I haven’t watched a game in years. Any kind of game. How art came to fill this void is an unlikely story....

Start an Art-Filled 2026 with...
Start an Art-Filled 2026 with the California Desert Plein Air Festival

No better way to begin an art-filled 2026 than with the California Desert Plein Air Festival January 8 through February 1 in Palm Desert. The event celebrates the California desert’s tradition of landscape painting en plein air – outdoors. “Our landscape, flora, and fauna – we have the best,” Diane Moore, co-founder of the nonprofit Desert Plein Air Association, the Festival’s organizer, said of the area’s appeal to plein air painters. “And it happens that our prime time of year is January and February, and that’s not good for the rest of the country.” The event opens with four days of...

Georgia O'Keeffe's Connection to the...
Georgia O'Keeffe's Connection to the Amon Carter Museum

Georgia O’Keeffe’s history with New Mexico is well known. In 1929, O’Keeffe first visited the state with her artist friend Rebecca Strand. They stayed for three months in Taos with famed arts patron Mabel Dodge Luhan. At this time, O’Keeffe (1887-1986) was living in New York City and spending summers upstate at Lake George. O’Keeffe fell in love with northern New Mexico, a deeper love than she had for her husband, photographer and gallerist Alfred Stieglitz. She returned almost every year in the late spring and summer until Stieglitz died in 1946, then moved there permanently. Lesser known is O’Keeffe’s...

Clyfford Still: Western Artist
Clyfford Still: Western Artist

Western artwork by artists not considered “Western” fascinates me. Particularly the early and mid-century American masters. Marsden Hartley, Stuart Davis, John Marin, Thomas Hart Benton, Jackson Pollock, Richard Diebenkorn. A-listers associated with Modernism, with American art, but never the art of Western America. Georgia O’Keeffe, too. Despite her deep engagement and decades spent living and painting the West, she’s never thought of as a “Western” artist. This exclusion comes at the hands of American art historians, curators, and writers, and at the hands of Western art historians, curators, and writers. I will never understand why so many devotees of Western...

Along the Pecos River in...
Along the Pecos River in West Texas, an Artistic Tradition Unbroken for 4,000 Years

Carolyn Boyd wasn’t a trained archaeologist when she first visited the rock art sites in West Texas along the Pecos River. She was an artist. Being one and not the other allowed her to see something one, but not the other could. “I saw compositions,” Boyd, Shumla Endowed Research Professor in the Department of Anthropology at Texas State University, said. “Highly sophisticated, well-planned compositions with rules in terms of the way that they applied the paint making it even more complicated.” Hitherto, researchers believed the massive rock art murals – some stretching as long as 100-feet, with individual figures nearly...

Portland Art Museum Opens Expansion...
Portland Art Museum Opens Expansion with Focus on Northwest Art

The Portland Art Museum opened its $110-plus million Mark Rothko Pavilion to the public on November 20, 2025. The glass building provides a new main entrance for PAM, new terraces and display spaces, a new gift shop and café, and connects its two historic buildings. Portland Art Museum's Grand Gallery inside Mark Rothko Pavilion. Mark Rothko (1903-1970), icon of mid-century New York Abstract Expressionism, seems like a random figure to name anything in Portland after until informed that he grew up there. His family emigrated from Latvia when he was 10. Rothko took classes at the Museum’s art school. He...

Honoring the Navajo Code Talkers...
Honoring the Navajo Code Talkers Through Portraiture

Elwyn Shorthair (b. 1988; Shiprock, New Mexico) has been painting portraits of Navajo Code Talkers since 2020. He picked up the project from James King who passed in 2019. King helped mentor Shorthair. The portraits are commissioned by Navajo YES, a nonprofit organization based on the Navajo Nation created to provide positive activities for youth and families, mostly outdoors, like hiking and mountain biking. In 2015, the group began a series of running events, the Navajo Parks Race Series; one such event was called Code Talker 10K. At that time, many of the famed Navajo Code Talkers were still alive....