To commemorate the University of Wyoming Art Museum’s 50th anniversary since its humble
beginnings as a corkboard in the Fine Arts Department, the museum presents an exhibition
exploring its place in the American West, a region imbued with the emotional subtexts
of freedom, independence, and wilderness. The museum re-presents “traditional” narratives
to highlight Indigenous voices, place landscapes in historical perspective, and examine
the history of collecting the art of the American West. Using the permanent collection,
guest curator Robert Martinez collaborated with Art Museum curators to develop an
exhibition that he says, “challenges the visitor to change their mindset and note
whose perspective is missing. Whose story is not being told and why.” This expansive
exhibition spans three galleries of works in the Art Museum’s permanent collection,
and additionally features an installation in the museum’s Rotunda and a film screening
in the Wyoming Gallery Theater. Terry Maker’s Cowgirl Hat Ball, composed of 500 straw hats, stands both as a celebration of Western culture and a
challenge to gendered assumptions. The sculpture, 10 feet in diameter, is a mystery
at first glance, but quickly reveals itself to be comprised of a familiar accessory
and icon of the region: Western hats. Dana Claxton’s short film, Say It’s Ok (2006), screening in the Wyoming Gallery Theater serves as either an entry point
or a finale for The New West exhibition. It features an Indigenous boy pondering through identity and survivance.
The exhibition is made possible through support from the Terra Foundation for American
Art. Additional support is provided by WE Soda, Pence and MacMillan LLC, Roy and Caryl
Cline, and the Susan Moldenhauer FUNd for Contemporary Art.
Dana Claxton (Hunkpapa Lakota, b. 1959), Hip Hop NDN, 2022, inkjet print, 54 x 72 inches, Robert M. & Judith Redd Knight Endowment for
Collection Conservation & Acquisition, 2022.8.1
Terry Maker (American, b. 1953), Cowgirl Hat Ball, 2019, wood with straw cowgirl hats, 10 feet diameter, courtesy of the artist