Los Cinco Pintores ("The Five Painters") was a group of early 20th-century artists in Santa Fe, New Mexico that included Will Shuster, Fremont Ellis, Walter Mruk, Jozef Bakos, and Willard Nash.

By 1921, Shuster, Ellis, Mruk, Bakos, and Nash had all moved to Santa Fe, and the five formed their artist collective in 1921. At the time, the five painters were all in their 20s and new to Santa Fe.[1] Their stated goal was to "take art to the people" by exhibiting in places such as schools, hospitals, factories, and even the New Mexico Penitentiary.[2]

In December of that year, the New Mexico Museum of Art presented the first of several exhibitions as a group.[3] In addition to their Midwestern Touring Exhibit in 1922, they also arranged a show in Los Angeles in 1923 call "Exhibition of Painting by Artists of New Mexico".[4]

These modernist painters were inspired by New Mexican people and landscapes for their subject matter. They formally disbanded in 1926.[5]

See also

edit

Notes

edit
  1. ^ Robertson, Edna (1975). Los Cinco Pintores. Santa Fe: Museum of New Mexico Press. ISBN 0-89013-080-9.
  2. ^ "Hold Art in a Penitentiary". American Art News. 20 (13): 4. January 7, 1922. JSTOR 25589890.
  3. ^ Schimmel, Julie (1986). Art in New Mexico, 1900-1945 Paths to Taos and Santa Fr. Washington D.C.: National Museum of American Art, Smithsonian Institution. p. 186. ISBN 0-89659-598-6.
  4. ^ Lewandowski, Stacia (2011). Light, Landscape and the Creative Quest : Early Artists of Santa Fe. New Mexico: Salska Arts. p. 143. ISBN 9780615469171.
  5. ^ Traugott, Joseph (2012). New Mexico Art Through Time : Prehistory to the Present. Santa Fe: Museum of New Mexico Press. p. 122. ISBN 9780890135457.