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Western Visions: Making and Collecting Fine Art

Western art collection - Brett Allen Johnson (b. 1984), "Trailing Shadows," 2022, oil on panel, 36 x 60 in.
Brett Allen Johnson (b. 1984), "Trailing Shadows," 2022, oil on panel, 36 x 60 in.

A Western Art Collection Profile >

The artist Billy Schenck lives near Santa Fe with his wife (and business partner), Rebecca Carter, in a handsome adobe house built by the renowned landscape architect John Brinckerhoff Jackson (1909–1996) and then completely renovated by the couple. Here at the Double Standard Ranch they have created their own Shangri-La for making and displaying art, and also for playing the equestrian sport of ranch sorting, at which Billy excels.

Artist and collector Billy Schenck
Artist and collector Billy Schenck

Born in Ohio, Billy “began drawing before I can remember.” In 1965, during his freshman year at the Columbus College of Art & Design, he spent $125 (a substantial sum then) on a painting created by a sophomore friend named Peter Kambitsis. Soon he transferred to the Kansas City Art Institute and began collecting art by his peers there, too. Billy still owns all of those works, including six paintings by classmate Stanley Whitney that are the only figurative works Whitney made before famously turning to abstraction.

A key component of Billy and Rebecca’s collection is contemporary Western art. They follow only 20 or so artists, but in depth, much the same way that Dr. Albert C. Barnes did a century ago when he focused on such contemporaries as Renoir, Cezanne, and Matisse in order to create what became Philadelphia’s Barnes Foundation. The artists represented are James Butler, Russell Case, Kang Cho, Anne Coe, Frank Croft, Glenn Dean, Josh Elliott, John Fincher, Logan Hagege, Brett Allen Johnson, Jerry Jordan, T. Allen Lawson, Ed Mell, John Moyers, Erin O’Connor, Roseta Santiago, Tim Solliday, Tracy Stuckey, Kim Wiggins, Kathy Wipfler, and Dennis Ziemienski. (Robert Daughters is also here, though he passed away in 2013.)

Glenn Dean (b. 1976), "Silence and Reverie," 2022, oil on linen, 48 x 60 in.
Glenn Dean (b. 1976), “Silence and Reverie,” 2022, oil on linen, 48 x 60 in.

Billy notes that all of these artists are “technical virtuosos who tend to have an immediately recognizable signature style”; he and Rebecca plan to publish a book on this group, something they have already done for their stellar holding of historical Western art, which encompasses such stars as Maynard Dixon, J.H. Sharp, and Frank Tenney Johnson. When it was exhibited at what is now the New Mexico Museum of Art, that trove drew record-breaking crowds and is still the only private collection presented at the museum since it was founded in 1915. (The show went on to visit six other venues nationwide.)

Also in the collection are key examples of handcrafted ranch furniture made by Thomas Molesworth between 1932 and 1950; this was his best period, after he had studied under Frank Lloyd Wright and brought his Arts & Crafts techniques to Cody, Wyoming. In addition, the Schencks are admired for their prehistoric Southwest ceramics.

Billy says the contemporary Western art has been purchased in a variety of settings — from the West’s many exhibition-sales benefiting museums, from galleries and auctions, and from other collectors and artists. He explains, “I know the living artists we collect because I have exhibited alongside all of them. People always assume that because I’m an artist, we acquire just by trading with other artists. But that is not true. We are extremely specific about the pieces we want, and those we get are usually exceptional and would never be available through a trade. We buy from the dealers and galleries that represent our colleagues and from the museum shows where their work is available.”

Some artists can be disorganized, but not Billy. Every artwork — regardless of value or rarity — is fully documented, including provenance, condition, the price paid, and the current market value. Billy and Rebecca keep this data digitally and also printed out in binders, and they have built a 1,000-square-foot climate-controlled storage unit that houses approximately 350 paintings, drawings, prints, and photographs.

In their home and office, nothing gets direct sunlight, and most photographs are kept in flatbed drawers to protect them from light and heat. Not surprisingly, the collection also includes the only complete set of Billy’s own serigraphs, lithographs, and etchings, along with color trial proofs and the original drawings used to cut the silkscreens. The serigraph collection has been exhibited at five museums and can be requested for loan in the future.

When asked about treasures that got away, Billy laughs and recalls: “There are a number of cases where I missed a painting and got it only after it went through two or three more sets of hands. One of them took 17 years before I acquired it. For the prehistoric Southwest ceramics, my all-time record was waiting 46 years to get one piece. In many cases, I did not have the financial wherewithal to acquire them right away. Moreover, I outlived all of the owners and bought the pieces from their estate sales. There are several instances where I had owned pieces and sold them in moments of financial weakness, then was able to buy them back as long as 40 years later.” He concludes, “Obviously the key is patience and living long enough.”

Billy is too modest to note one other key asset: his superb eye that discerns which artwork to pursue. Without that, patience and longevity will get a collector only so far.

View more artist and fine art collection profiles here at FineArtConnoisseur.com.

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PleinAir Salon Monthly Winner Announced: “The Passage”

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PleinAir Salon winner - Andrew Judd (Canada), “The Passage,” Oil, 12x12 in.
Andrew Judd (Canada), “The Passage,” Oil, 12x12 in.

Please help us congratulate Andrew Judd for winning Overall First Place in the November 2024 PleinAir Salon, judged by artist Dean Mitchell.

“Art has been my lifelong passion since I first discovered it in high school,” Andrew says. “I pursued this passion by majoring in Illustration at The Ontario College of Art. After graduation, I spent five years working in a commercial studio as an illustrator before transitioning to freelance work.

“However, over time, my heart became increasingly drawn towards painting, and I decided to focus on it full time. My wife and I had a wonderful opportunity to live in Vienna, Austria, for several years. During this time, I spent many days painting in the city’s beautiful cafes. Being in Europe was a transformative experience for me as an artist, leaving a profound and indelible mark on my painting style.”


About the PleinAir Salon:

In the spirit of the French Salon created by the Academie des Beaux-Arts in Paris, this annual online art competition, with 11 monthly cycles, leading to the annual Salon Grand Prize winners, is designed to stimulate artistic growth through competition. The PleinAir® Salon rewards artists with $50,000 in cash prizes and exposure of their work, with the winning painting featured on the cover of PleinAir® Magazine.

Winners in each monthly competition may receive recognition and exposure through PleinAir Magazine’s print magazine, e-newsletters, websites, and social media. Winners of each competition will also be entered into the annual competition. The Annual Awards will be presented live at the next Plein Air Convention & Expo.

The next round of the PleinAir Salon has begun so hurry, as this competition ends on the last day of the month. Enter your best art in the PleinAir Salon here.

Featured Artwork: Eric Tardif

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The Lovers, Eric Tardif, bronze

Eric Tardif: Eric Tardif was born in northern Quebec, in the French-speaking part of Canada. He studied applied ecology before turning to sculpture. It was during his sculpture courses that he came up with the idea of linking the dimensions of movement and space in the single material of wood.

His wood sculptures capture the elegant and graceful movements of birds through abstract expressions, but unlike most abstract art, Tardif’s designs draw from a
lifetime of close observation.

To see more of Eric’s work, visit:
Website 

sculpture of abstract bird with white background
Flight of Fancy, Eric Tardif, walnut, 22 x 32 x 17 in
wood carving of abstract bird with white background
Intertwine- white ash, Eric Tardif, 22x 19 x 9 in

Virtual Gallery Walk for January 3rd, 2025

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Friday Virtual Gallery Walk

As part of our effort to continue to help artists and art galleries thrive, we’re proud to bring you this week’s “Virtual Gallery Walk.” Browse the artwork below and click the image itself to learn more about it, including how to contact the gallery.

Shrine Hallway, Cyrus Afsary, oil, 12 x 9 in; ArtzLine

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David Jackson, Mountain Valley View, oil, 30 x 40 in; Celebration of Fine Art

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Passing Fancy, Rogue Simpson, oil, 6.5 x 9.5 in; Artzline

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Her Water Garden, Kathleen Kalinowski, oil on linen, 24 x 30 in; Kalinowski Fine Art

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Peaceful Flow, Albert Handell, oil, 30 x 36 in; Albert Handell

Want to see your gallery featured in an upcoming Virtual Gallery Walk? Contact us at [email protected] to advertise today. Don’t delay, as spaces are first come, first served, and availability is limited.

On With the Good Stuff

Jennifer Kershaw (b. 1981), Drumshanbo and Grapefruit, 2024, oil on panel, 10 x 10 in., available through the artist
Jennifer Kershaw (b. 1981), "Drumshanbo and Grapefruit," 2024, oil on panel, 10 x 10 in., available through the artist; included in this issue of Fine Art Connoisseur

From the Fine Art Connoisseur January/February 2025 Editor’s Note:

Transcending the Circus

Well, you know I have to address it. For over a month now, people have mentioned it the minute they learn I edit a magazine about art collecting.

In November, the world fluttered yet again about the artist provocateur Maurizio Cattelan (b. 1960) and his latest sensation. The Italian’s conceptual piece, “Comedian” — a yellow banana duct-taped to a white wall exactly 63 inches above the floor — soared past its $1.5 million estimate to sell for $6.2 million (including fees) at Sotheby’s New York. The winner, Chinese cryptocurrency entrepreneur Justin Sun (b. 1990), beat out six other collectors after a five-minute bidding war. He won the banana (which he proceeded to eat on camera a week later), plus a certificate of authenticity and an instruction manual for how to replace the banana every time it rots. You really could not make this stuff up.

Comedian - banana art sold at Sothebys
Photo © Maurizio Cattelan

“Comedian” has been attracting attention ever since it debuted at the Art Basel Miami Beach fair in December 2019. Any hopes that the subsequent pandemic might quash such nonsense in the art world were dashed, of course, and now its circus of vulgar novelty and conspicuous consumption goes on. (To be sure, there has always been a strand of absurdism in the arts: think of Marcel Duchamp presenting a commercial urinal as a Fountain in 1917, but that was over a century ago and jokes don’t remain amusing quite that long.)

David Galperin, head of contemporary art at Sotheby’s, opined that “Comedian” “transcends geographies, language, understanding, cultural differences” and cited “its universality, the way it kind of pierces through the cultural zeitgeist to the very center.” In 2021, Cattelan himself said he does not see Comedian as a “joke,” but rather a “sincere commentary and a reflection on what we value.”

“Sincere” is not a word I would have conjured in this context, but I agree with both men that the visual and intellectual emptiness of “Comedian” perfectly reflect the emptiness of our “cultural zeitgeist.” If this is the only contemporary art that most Americans have heard about, no wonder they think art collecting is a racket, the loathsome love child of Wall Street, Silicon Valley, and Madison Avenue.

Fine Art Connoisseur JanFeb2025
Fine Art Connoisseur, January/February 2025

For decades, cynics have noted — quite correctly — that Leonardo da Vinci’s “Mona Lisa” (1503–06) is just a piece of wood covered in oil paint. It has no intrinsic or material value, only the incalculable value of its fame and history. Yes, but it also possesses beauty and meaning; it connects us with its maker and its sitter in powerful, sometimes perplexing, sometimes thrilling, ways. I don’t see anyone connecting powerfully with the banana, or with Maurizio Cattelan. He is justly admired as a brilliant skewerer of our era, and as a brilliant businessman. Yet Leonardo will be remembered for all time; his Italian compatriot will be forgotten within half a century — probably sooner — because satire and publicity stunts get stale so quickly.

This season’s frenzy of irony, cynicism, and commodification has not left me outraged or sad. Rather, it makes me cherish even more keenly the skill, thoughtfulness, and authenticity of the artists highlighted in Fine Art Connoisseur. There is no point in moaning about the global circus of cutting-edge contemporary art. Let’s ignore it and get on with making, viewing, studying, and buying the good stuff.

What are your thoughts? Share your letter to the Editor below in the comments.

Download the current issue of Fine Art Connoisseur here.


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Peek Inside Fine Art Connoisseur, January/February 2025

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Fine Art Connoisseur JanFeb2025

Published six times per year, Fine Art Connoisseur is now a widely consulted platform for the world’s most knowledgeable experts, who write articles that inform readers and give them the tools necessary to make better purchasing decisions.

Fine Art Connoisseur JanFeb2025

Fine Art Connoisseur, January/February 2025

Get this issue of Fine Art Connoisseur here.

ON THE COVER
Jesse Powell (b. 1977), “China Cove, Point Lobos” (detail), 2023, oil on linen, 20 x 16 in. (overall), available through the artist

COLUMNS

  • Frontispiece: Jacob Jordaens
  • Publisher’s Letter:
  • Editor’s Note: Transcending the Circus
  • Favorite: Sarah Bracey White on Winslow Homer
  • Off the Walls
  • Classic Moment: Nicole Alger
  • 2025 Collector’s Guide to Rocky Mountain Towns

FEATURES

  • ARTISTS MAKING THEIR MARK: THREE TO WATCH
    We highlight the talents of Christopher Groves, Cody Kamrowski, and Allison Evonne Streett
  • JESSE POWELL: PAINTING PERSONAL STORIES
    By Rose Fredrick
  • A PLACE AT THE TABLE
    By Max Gillies
  • NATIVE SON: JOHN WILSON’S CONSCIENCE-DRIVEN CAREER
    By Thomas Connors
  • JULIUS LEBLANC STEWART: THE ENIGMATIC EXPATRIATE
    By Valerie Ann Leeds
  • REVEALED: A RIBERA MASTERWORK REDISCOVERED
    By Timothy J. Standring
  • A BANK HELPS CONSERVE OUR CULTURAL HERITAGE
    By Daniel Grant
  • GREAT ART WORLDWIDE
    We survey 10 top-notch projects occurring this season.
  • SELF-THROUGHTRAIT
    By William A. Suys, Jr.
  • IN NEW YORK, ENTICING ENCOUNTERS WITH POLISH ART
    By Peter Trippi
  • ART WARMS THE WEST
    There are at least 3 great reasons to celebrate the American West this season.

Subscribe art magazines - Fine Art Connoisseur

Fine Art Connoisseur‘s jargon-free text and large color illustrations are attracting an ever-growing readership passionate about high-quality artworks and the fascinating stories around them. It serves art collectors and enthusiasts with innovative articles about representational paintings, sculptures, drawings, and prints — both historical and contemporary, American and European. Fine Art Connoisseur covers the museums, galleries, fairs, auction houses, and private collections where great art is found.

Featured Gallery: Chelsie Nicole Contemporary

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Chelsie Nicole Contemporary

Chelsie Nicole Contemporary is an art gallery and atelier in the Historic River District in Ozark, Missouri. Showcasing award-winning representational art from across the globe, the gallery is devoted to promoting and advancing contemporary figurative works.

We value the living artists working to create these new masterpieces and strive to advance the future of figurative work by connecting contemporary artists with collectors and offering skill-based studio education rooted in excellence and tradition. The atelier provides ongoing classes and hosts a wide array of workshops taught by modern masters.

Visit our website to view our upcoming exhibition schedule and available collections of timeless art, or to enroll in our upcoming classes or workshops.

graphite pencil and ink drawing of woman looking away from viewer
Second Chances, Chelsie Nicole Murfee, Graphite, Ink and Pastel on Paper, 20 x 24 in

Second Chances is dedicated to those daring enough to set down the past, make a new covenant, and look towards the future.

 

oil painting of woman sitting on couch, half light and shadow, looking out the window
Anxious Contemplation, Barbara Hack, Oil Painting on Wood Panel, 48 x 26 in

Anxious Contemplation explores how we navigate life’s decisions and changes. Anxiousness can often accompany our thoughts when we face decisions… whether moving towards the light of new possibilities or confronting the shadows of the past.

Featured Artwork: Emma Kalff presented by 33 Contemporary Gallery

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oil painting of woman looking away from viewer with landscape scenery behind her
"Perennial Adolescent", Emma Kalff, 2024, Oil on panel 45 × 48 in | 114.3 × 121.9 cm

oil painting of woman looking away from viewer with landscape scenery behind her

Emma Kalff
Perennial Adolescent, 2024
Oil on panel
45 × 48 in | 114.3 × 121.9 cm

Kalff’s figures are often set against expansive, twilight-toned landscapes. Her paintings explore the liminal beauty of dusk, where light softens and reality takes on a surreal edge. She uses soft, moody tones to create a sense of stillness, inviting viewers to pause and reflect on the impermanence of time and memory.

In 2022, Kalff was featured in Southwest Art magazine’s “21 Under 31: Young Artists to Collect Now”. Her work has also been shown in American Art Collector magazine, Aesthetica magazine, and Studio Visit magazine. In 2023 she was listed as an “Artist to Watch” by Plein Air Magazine. Kalff’s paintings are in private and public collections, and have been shown at the Wausau Museum of Contemporary Art.

Kalff studied at the New Orleans Academy of Fine Arts. She is currently based in Colorado, U.S.A.

Featured Artwork: Carole Belliveau

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detail oil painting of a young child learning to dance
Detail of “The Youngest Dancer,” Carole Belliveau, 18×18 in., Oil, 2023

Carole Belliveau: I paint plein air, studio landscapes and figures. Currently I am working on a collection featuring the children of Santa Fe, NM celebrating their Spanish Heritage during Fiesta. This collection along with landscapes of New Mexico will be offered in a solo show at Underwood Gallery, 225 Canyon Road, Santa Fe from September 6-27, 2025. Contact Raquel Underwood at 505-795-2295 for landscapes and figures.

To see more of Carole’s work, visit:
Website
Underwood Gallery, Santa NM 

 

oil on wood painting of 3 women dancing in white
“Teatro de Danzas Folclóricas”, Carole Belliveau, oil on wood panel, 18 x 18 in; available through the artist

 

oil painting of young dancers; girl in white in front of others in red
Painting of “The Youngest Dancer” on easel in Carole’s studio

A Room of Her Own: The Estrado and the Hispanic World

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sala de estrado paintings
JOSÉ CAMPECHE Y JORDÁN (1751–1809), "Doña María Catalina de Urrutia," 1788, oil on wood panel, 15 1/3 x 11 in., Hispanic Society of America, LA2394

ON VIEW: This is the first exhibition to explore the forgotten history of the sala de estrado …
“A Room of Her Own: The Estrado and the Hispanic World”
Hispanic Society Museum & Library
New York City
hispanicsociety.org
Through March 9, 2025

The Hispanic Society Museum & Library (HSM&L) is presenting “A Room of Her Own: The Estrado and the Hispanic World.” This is the first exhibition to explore the forgotten history of the sala de estrado, an area in elite homes where the woman of the house could escape the expectations of her class in order to receive visitors, display her valuable objects, sew, play and listen to music, consume luxuries such as hot chocolate, and even (in a few cases) practice witchcraft.

These spaces emerged during the Islamic occupation of Spain and became widespread throughout the Hispanic world, including the Americas, but slowly disappeared as the Spanish Empire collapsed in the 19th century.

References to them appears in travelers’ accounts, inventories, legal records, and works of fiction, yet scholars have generally overlooked the profound impact such spaces had on women’s self-expression, physical autonomy, sociability, and intercultural exchange, not to mention their collecting practices. Particularly ignored have been the non-European women who used such spaces.

Curated by Alexandra Frantischek Rodriguez-Jack, the checklist includes many works from the HSM&L collection never exhibited before. Among them are paintings, books, engravings, lacquer boxes, mother-of-pearl tables, and carpets. The exhibition will be complemented by a series of live concerts featuring classical music composed by women of Iberian descent.

WEEKLY NEWS FROM THE ART WORLD

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