Saturday, July 4, 2026

Artist of the Day, July 4, 2026 : Laura Gilpin, an American photographer (#2570)

Happy 250th anniversary, America! 

One of the foremost women photographers of the twentieth century, Laura Gilpin (1891 –1979) spent more than half a century photographing Southwest cultures and landscapes. She is renowned for her photographs of Navajo and Pueblo people. Gilpin ventured into remote landscapes during a time when most photographers doing such work were male.

Gilpin was born in 1891 to Frank and Emma Gilpin in Austin Bluffs, Colorado, just north of Colorado Springs. Later, her family moved to Colorado Springs. She became interested in photography at a young age, receiving a Brownie camera on her twelfth birthday. She spent time on the East Coast, attending Baldwin School in Pennsylvania, Rosemary Hall in Connecticut, and the New England Conservatory of Music in Boston. She also studied photography at the Clarence White School in New York for a few years at the encouragement of her mentor, noted photographer, Gertrude Kasëbier. Gilpin began working as a professional photographer in 1918.

Her work among Navajos began in 1930 accidentally: On a camping trip, her car ran out of gas in an isolated part of the Navajo reservation, about twenty miles north of Chinle, Arizona. She and her close companion, Elizabeth Forster, a nurse in Colorado Springs, made the best of the situation, acquainting themselves with the local culture. This incident proved fortuitous for both women. For Gilpin it spurred an interest in Navajo culture, and for Forster, it resulted in a job as a field nurse on the Navajo reservation. A year later, Forster accepted a job in Red Rock, Arizona, where she stayed for almost two years.

Gilpin visited Forster during those years and they began a collaborative effort to document Navajo culture in photographs and words. Unfortunately, the project was grounded until many years later when Martha Sandweiss, a curator at the Amon Carter Museum where Gilpin’s photographs and papers are now housed, compiled Forster’s letters and Gilpin’s photographs into an edited collection titled Denizens of the Desert, published in 1988.

With Gilpin and Forster’s publication on hold at the time, Gilpin began work on her own project. The culmination of this work was the 1968 publication of The Enduring Navaho. In this monograph, Gilpin presents a portrait of Navajo culture, documenting daily activities, from tending sheep to community gatherings. Her collection was a departure from prominent photographers like Edward S. Curtis, who believed indigenous cultures to be on the brink of extinction. In contrast, Gilpin emphasized the enduring nature of Navajo culture, which existed despite countless threats. Gilpin had three other major publications: The Pueblos: A Camera Chronicle (1941), Temples in Yucatan: A Camera Chronicle of Chichen Itza (1948), and The Rio Grande: A River of Destiny (1949). She excelled in platinum printing.

While Gilpin’s photographs of Navajos, Pueblos, and Southwest landscapes have been criticized by some as veering toward the romantic, her work has received acclaim and appeared in numerous exhibits nationally and abroad. In 1974, she was one of four individuals to receive the first annual award for Excellence in the Arts by the governor of New Mexico. In 1977, her home state of Colorado awarded her the Governor’s Award in the Arts and Humanities. Gilpin had a life-long love of nature and still went camping into her eighties. She lived in Santa Fe, New Mexico, where she continued to work as a photographer until her death in 1979.

© 2026. All content on this blog is protected by international copyright laws All images are copyrighted © by Laura Gilpin, or assignee. Apart from fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act, the use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission is obtained. All images used for illustrative purposes only


Ms. Laura Gilpin
Visiting nurse, 1924
Adobe Wall, Shadow, Street N.M. 1949
Square Tower House, Mesa Verde National Park, 1925
The Hughes House, Denver Colorado, 1928
The Small Shrine, 1928
Long's Peak Colorado, 1930
Pueblo Bonito, Chaco Canyon, New Mexico, 1931
Raindrops on Lupin Leaves, 1931
A Maya Boy, Chichen Itza, Yucatan, 1932
Figure at the top of steps at Temple of the Warriers in Chichen Itza, 1932
Laura Gilpin, IBM Gallery of Science and art  exhibition poster
Looking Down on the Temple of Warriors, from the top of El Castillo, 1932
Mrs. Francis Nakai, 1932
Navajo Woman with Child & Lambs, 1932
Red Rock Trading Post, 1932
Temple of the Warriors, Chichén Itzá, Yucatan 1932
Mrs. Francis & Corn, 1933
Setah Begay, Navaho Medicine Man, 1933
Shepherds of the Desert, 1934
Aspen, 1945
San Ildefonso Dance, 1945
The Rear Elevation of the Temple of the Jaguars 
and the Lower Temple of the Jaguars,
1946
Santa Elena Canyon, 1946
Storm over La Bajada Hill, 1946
Sotero Ortiz, Former Governor of San Ildefonso Pueblo, 1947
Maria Martinez Making Pottery, 1949
Old Lady Long Salt, 1950
Irene Yazzie Weaving, 1951
Georgia O'Keeffe, 1953
Summer Hogan - Old Lady Long Salt, 1953
Young Navajo mother and her child, 1953
Old Lady Long Salt's Great Grand Daughter 
at Her Loom with Her Little Daughter,
1954

Friday, July 3, 2026

Artist of the Day, July 3, 2026 : Xavier de Vilmorin, a French painter [New artist to watch in 2026] (#2563)

Young Parisian artist, Xavier de Vilmorin invites you to traverse a colorful, dreamy, and delicately nostalgic universe, shaped by works in acrylic, oil, and dry pastel. His work is a sensitive territory where emotion flows freely, a space where color becomes language and where forms tell what words silence.

From childhood, Xavier develops an instinctive relationship with drawing, as a way to grasp what moves him. But it is during his second year at animation school — in a small workshop in the 17th arrondissement — that he paints his first canvas. A founding moment, a kind of inner shift: he discovers the freedom of gesture, the density of materials, and above all, the power of colors to convey the intimate.

Recognized for his personal style, Xavier de Vilmorin composes his works like visual scores where simple geometric shapes and bold hues confront, intertwine, and reconcile. His influences are multiple — from cubism to expressionism — but he reinterprets them with a voice that belongs only to him, a vibrant pictorial writing where softness and tension coexist.

His canvases plunge the viewer into a world that is both atypical and familiar: a place where one finds an echo of oneself. Through his compositions, he freezes atmospheres, captures a moment, an emotion, a light. The material becomes memory, and color, a breath.

© 2026. All content on this blog is protected by international copyright laws All images are copyrighted © by Xavier de Vilmorin or assignee. Apart from fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act, the use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission is obtained. All images used for illustrative purposes only


Xavier de Vilmorin
... at work!
Face à lui, 2024
Minuit sur le divan, 2025
A côté de moi, 2025
En corps, 2025
Grec I, 2025
Grec IV,  2025
Grec IX, 2025
Grec V, 2025
Grec VI, 2025
Grec VIII, 2025
Grec X, 2025
J'attendrai, 2025
L'esprit solaire, 2025
L'instant seul, 2025
L'oiseau qui rêvait de vivre, 2025
La rancœur, 2025
Le cri libre, 2025
Le portrait au jardin, 2025
Le regard de muse, 2025
Naître à soi, 2025
Sans Titre, 2025
Un matin à Klima, 2025
Un souffle d'espoir, 2025
Une vie en cage, 2025
Le bord du lac, 2026
Nouvelle vie, 2026
Sans Titre, 2026
Vivienne III, 2026
Vivienne IV, dessin, 2026