Could a collection this massive be built today? Probably not but when Eddie Basha began to collect, Western art was not so fashionable nor so expensive. But Eddie knew what he liked was able to build this extensive collection over the years. He also became friends with the artists, discussing their art with them, giving them a showroom, helping them in hard times and just generally being a good friend. Actually part of the collection is a lot of sketches and hand drawn Christmas and birthday cards that the artists gave him.
And, this museum with its extensive collection is mostly obscure, viewed by those who have heard via word of mouth that it is here. We met a woman today who has lived in the Phoenix area since the 1970’s and has never been here. She just heard about it a few weeks ago. I read that they get approx. 700 visitors a week but during the 5 hours we were there, we saw only about 12 others. And, you know how much it costs to get in? How much viewing this marvelous collection of the best Western Art is? Nothing, zero, nada. It costs nothing to get in. (They ask for a donation which goes to art education for the local schools who bring students every year to view the collection.)
The collection is huge, it is free, and the setting is so intimate, with no large galleries, guards watching your every move and cameras pointed right at you. Interestingly enough, it would be possible for you to touch anything in the gallery. You could toss the pottery like a football. There are few cases and most of the art is out in the open. WOW. As an aside, I looked down one of the corporate office corridors through a locked door and the walls are lined with more art. Imagine coming to work every day and being able to see this marvelous art all around you. (In the corridors of my office were what I might charitably call ‘motel art.’)
We’ve been here before but knew that we wanted to see it again and see things that we might have missed the first time around. That’s a dumb statement, heck, there’s so much here that I don’t know how anyone could see it all in one visit, or even in two. None the less, we’re here to see it all again.
Breakfast out at the Farmhouse Restaurant in Gilbert where we shared a large cinnamon roll with cream cheese frosting and a veggie omelette with home fries. You can see Gary’s hand clenched - he must be hungry.
Lets get to the art work. This huge vibrant painting greets you as you enter.
Around the corner was this one by John Clymer, titled the Fur Press. It’s a group of trappers who have spent the winter in the wilderness trapping and cleaning furs for shipment to St. Louis in the spring. Self-reliant and rugged to the core, they carried their rifles, knives and steel traps into the wilderness relying only upon themselves to build a shelter, find food and live through a rough winter. They trapped by day and huddled in rough shelters over night. On the right are the pelts that they had cleaned and stretched over willow frames to dry. Now, it’s spring and they are taking them off the frames and pressing them to make a compact bundle which they will wrap with deer or elk hides and tie with rawhide thongs. This rawhide shrinks as it dries and makes the bundle even more compact but these bundles could weigh up to 100 lbs.
Knowing that wagons and women could make the journey to Oregon along the Oregon Trail, others followed and soon the trickle became a flood as wagon trains made the arduous journey cross country to the West Coast. (A sad postscript: the Whitman's enthusiasm soon began to deteriorate. They lost their 2-yr old daughter in a drowning accident. Then, after a measles epidemic killed most of the children in the nearby tribe, the Cayuse, the relations with the Native American spiraled downward. in 1847 a band of Cayuse murdered Narcissa, Marcus, and a dozen other whites and then burned their mission to the ground.)
You know you’re in Arizona when you can pronounce Saguaro, Tempe, San Xavier, Canyon de Chelly, Mogollon Rim, and Cholla.
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