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Essential West Magazine

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

Montana's Remote Glaciers Through the...
Montana's Remote Glaciers Through the Drawings of Jonathan Marquis

Jonathan Marquis fell in love with Montana before even moving there in 2003 to finish college. It didn’t take long – backpacking and mountain climbing around the state – to know it was true love. “When I climbed one of my first peaks and had this incredible 100-mile view, something really clicked and I knew that this is...

Wendy Red Star's 'The Soil...
Wendy Red Star's 'The Soil You See' Takes Rightful Place at Tippet Rise

Wendy Red Star’s The Soil You See (2023) belongs here. On the traditional homeland of the Apsáalooke (Crow). Red Star (b. 1981) grew up on the tribe’s reservation roughly 50 miles east of here. This was all Apsáalooke (Crow) before the white man came. Hundreds of square miles in every direction. Now it’s called Montana. This particular 12,500 acres of Montana near tiny Fishtail, a 45-minute drive northwest from Red Lodge on State Route 78, hosts Tippet Rise, an outdoor sculpture park and summer classical music concert venue. The mighty Beartooth Mountains with the highest peaks in region backdrop The...

Art and Heartbreak in Taos,...
Art and Heartbreak in Taos, NM

There are heartbreaks. Teenage heartbreaks. First love heartbreaks. The kind of heartbreaks everyone should experience as essential to the human condition. The kind you get over. And then there are heartbreaks. Destroyers. Those that obliterate the soul. The kind you don’t always get over. I know both. On a recent visit to Taos, NM, I learned about a pair of the latter. Nicolai Fechin Nicolai Fechin (1881–1955) immigrated to the United States from Russia with his wife, Alexandra, and their daughter, Eya, in 1923. Like most eastern Europeans, their first stop was New York City. Fechin had a successful career...

Into Old Growth Forest with...
Into Old Growth Forest with Photographer Mitch Epstein

Everything’s connected for photographer Mitch Epstein (b. 1952). In his work, anyway. One thing always leads to the next, typically without premeditation. That explains how his last series of photographs centering resistance movements across America – “Property Rights” – led him into his most recent series of pictures, “Old Growth,” highlighting America’s old growth forests. “’Property Rights’ encouraged me to think further about what North America was like pre-colonization,” Epstein said. “That, in part, was instigated by spending time at national monument sites under threat during the Trump administration – we had Ryan Zinke as Interior Secretary. After going to...

Beauty and Significance of Native...
Beauty and Significance of Native Fashion Spotlighted in New Exhibition

The Spencer Museum of Art at the University of Kansas in Lawrence shares the beauty and significance of Native fashion in a new exhibition by that same name. “Native Fashion” explores the diversity and ingenuity of wearable artworks produced by Native people from the 19th century into today. On view are traditional garments, contemporary couture and streetwear, and an expansive array of accessories, including jewelry, bags, and other adornments. “’Native Fashion’ offers our audiences a compelling opportunity to explore fashion as both core to Native identity and as a living art that continues to have meaning and impact to tribal...

Pendleton Round-Up brings thousands of...
Pendleton Round-Up brings thousands of visitors - and art - to eastern Oregon

Never be afraid to send an email. Roberta Lavadour, Executive Director at the Pendleton Center for the Arts in Pendleton, OR, wasn’t.  She was on the Jordan D. Schnitzer Family Foundation’s email list to receive updates regarding news and events along with, presumably, hundreds of others.  “After viewing one in 2016, I typed up a request for information on how we could start a conversation about borrowing prints,” Lavadour remembers. “I hit ‘reply’ thinking it would land in the inbox of a communications staffer. Less than two minutes later our phone rang and it was Jordan thanking me for reaching...

Tse Tsan: Santa Clara Surrealism...
Tse Tsan: Santa Clara Surrealism for a New Century

Standing out at Santa Fe Indian Market takes some real doing. Here, 1,000 of the best artists in the world converge with their best work. Not 1,000 of the best Native artists, 1,000 of the best artists who happen to be Native. On view and for sale are a dizzying assortment of paintings, photography, jewelry, pottery, and objects of creativity and handicraft defying belief. An art lover could go to Indian Market with an 18-wheeler to fill and $1 million to spend and still be forced to make choices. Necrosis turned my head during the event’s Best of Show preview...

Art or Accident: The Grand...
Art or Accident: The Grand Canyon Dragon Map?

It’s not an artwork. Not intentionally. But its line, color, and composition combine for a striking visual. The hand of man produced it, although forces vastly greater and older are responsible for its existence. The Grand Canyon Dragon Map. Can you see it? 'The Geologic Map of the Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona,' 1976. Courtesy of the Museum of Northern Arizona. From either end, the geologic features of the Grand Canyon as seen from above appear eerily reminiscent of a Chinese dragon’s head, tail, and spikey, serpentine body. Totally unintentionally. An exhibition at the Museum of Northern Arizona in Flagstaff...

T.C. Cannon's 'Self Portrait in...
T.C. Cannon's 'Self Portrait in Studio,' The Greatest Self-Portrait in American Art

The boots. The hat. The jeans. The bandana. That shirt! Brushes casually laid across his lap like an Old West gunfighter’s six-shooter. Discarded cigarette butts on the floor. You’ll have to get up close to see those. Aviator sunglasses. Everything about T.C. Cannon’s Self Portrait in the Studio (1975) is cool. More than cool, this is the finest self-portrait in American art history. T.C. Cannon, 'Self Portrait in the Studio,' 1975. Tia Collection. You can see it through December 1, 2024, at the Baltimore Museum of Art during its institution-wide “Preoccupied: Indigenizing the Museum” project, a 10 month Native art...

Tokio Ueyama and Colorado's Granada...
Tokio Ueyama and Colorado's Granada Relocation Center on View at Denver Art Museum

Anti-Japanese racism in America following the 1941 bombing of Pearl Harbor by imperial Japan resulted in one of the nation’s most disgraceful chapters. Under the excuse of “national security,” roughly 120,000 Japanese Americans, 79,000 of them U.S. citizens, were identified by the government, given six days to put their affairs in order – sell houses, close businesses, contact family – collect what few possessions they could carry with them, then rounded up and sent to remote military zones, mostly across the West. Anyone at least 1/16th Japanese was taken. Officially termed “relocation centers,” the prisoners were held in concentration camps....