Artists -- New Mexico
Found in 13 Collections and/or Records:
Chuzo Tamotsu Papers
Chuzo Tamotsu Pictorial Collection
The collection contains photographs of Chuzo Tamotsu's paintings. Many of his works employ an ecclectic, hybrid style which relates to both East Asian and Western styles of painting.
Consuelo and Nora Chavez Collection,
Collection consists of material on Angélico Chávez. Material includes clippings on his writings; the seminary newsletter Brown and White, which he edited for several years; designs for book title pages; conference and meeting material. Also included in the collection are legal documents relating to the Chávez family and the Chávez Family Association and two scrapbooks with clippings covering the early career of Angélico Chávez.
Ferenc M. Szasz Papers
Gendron Jensen Papers
The collection primarily contains correspondence, illustrated letters, projects, and publications about Jensen's work.
Gerald Cassidy Collection,
Collection consists of 10 postcards of paintings by Cassidy published by Fred Harvey for the 1922 Santa Fe Fiesta, and photocopies of four letters concerning the return of Cassidy's "Coronado Murals" to New Mexico in 1948.
Ina Sizer Cassidy Collection,
The collection includes Cassidy's correspondence, manuscripts, and newspaper clippings dealing with Pueblo Indians. Also included are copies of correspondence by Richard Kern, who was an artist on the Fremont Expedition of 1848-49.
Lloyd Lozes Goff Papers
Museum of Fine Arts Correspondence,
Robert R. White Papers
The collection contains journals, articles and research files of author and scholar Robert Rankin White. The bulk of the collection consists of White's personal journals and materials pertaining to New Mexico artists.
Robert R. White Pictorial Collection
The collection consists primarily of photographs and slides related to Robert White’s research on early Taos artists and artists of Territorial New Mexico.
Ted Egri Papers,
Webb Young Collection,
The collection contains documents pertaining to the structural development of Santa Fe and to the activities of the Santa Fe City Council during the 1960s.