The Role of the American Cowboy Is Examined in a N…


Above: Otis Kwame Quaicoe, Rodeo Boys, 2022, oil and fabric applique on canvas

Artists have long been key to creating and propagating the foundational myth of the American cowboy. First came painters and sculptors, led by Frederic Remington (1861–1909); later, movie director John Ford, actor John Wayne, and other Hollywood players cemented our notion of the strong, silent type astride a noble steed. In the current cultural moment, no homegrown avatar seems riper for a retrofitting and a critical rethinking than the iconic cowhand. 

Right on schedule comes Cowboy, a large thematic group show that will take over the entirety of the Museum of Contemporary Art Denver from September 29 to February 18, with more than 70 works on display in the heart of the American West. “There’s no more enduring and compelling figure in the popular imagination, both here and abroad,” says Nora Burnett Abrams, the museum’s director, who co-organized the exhibition with senior curator Miranda Lash. 

Karl Haendel, Rodeo 11, 2023, pencil and graphite on paper

Karl Haendel, Rodeo 11, 2023, pencil and graphite on paper

Courtesy of the Artist and Vielmetter Los Angeles/Mitchell-Innes & Nash, New York/Wen-Trup Gallery, Berlin

The show features some artists you might expect, including Richard Prince, who made his name appropriating images from cigarette ads, as he does in Untitled (cowboy) from 1989. The witty conceptualist John Baldessari depicts a cowboy-less hat in a spare composition, and the exhibition’s most famous name, Andy Warhol, is represented by his 1965 Western-film parody, Horse. But the focus is primarily on works by women and people of color. 

“This exhibition is not your grandfather’s Remington,” Abrams quips. “We’re taking the figure off the pedestal, so to speak. On the one hand, it’s a critique of the traditional icon, and on the other hand, it’s an opening up of the lens,…




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