The George G. Matthews Collection of Western Art

Page 164

LANFORD MONROE 1950 - 2000 Elizabeth Lanford Monroe grew up surrounded by art and artists. Her parents, illustrator C. E. Monroe and portraitist Betty Monroe, and her Bridgewater, Connecticut neighbors, illustrator John Clymer and wildlife artist Bob Kuhn, were among her earliest mentors. “I don’t even remember learning to draw,” she once said. When her father needed a child-like illustration to include in one of his commercial illustrations, Landford got her first art “commission” at the age of six.

of ethereal landscapes in morning fog or a winter haze, animals being part of the scenery rather than the subject. However, she also painted a number of fox hunting scenes that are prized by collectors. And, her paintings were regularly exhibited at the Holland & Holland gun room in New York City. In the 1980s, Monroe moved back to Alabama where she met and married musician and writer R. E. C. (Chip) Thompson. Anxious to move back west, in the early 1990s they moved to Taos, New Mexico, where Monroe enjoyed working from her large studio for the rest of her life.

The Monroe family relocated to Huntsville, Alabama to be near Lanford’s grandparents, where Monroe said, “I grew up studying my father’s favorite tonalists: American landscapist George Inness and Swedish wildlife painter Bruno Liljefors. When he wasn’t illustrating, my father was also drawn to a tonalist palette, and I ended up following in his footsteps, preferring the subtleties of early morning and late evening.”

Monroe’s work was greatly admired by famed wildlife artists Robert Bateman and Bob Kuhn. During her lifetime she received many awards, including: Society of Animal Artists Awards of Excellence, American Academy of Equine Art awards, a 1994 Grand Teton Natural History Association Award, and three awards from the Salmagundi Club. In 1999 Art of The West Magazine named Monroe one of 12 “masters for the new millennium” saying, “In our estimation, there is no one painting today who uses light and dark contrast with the skill of Lanford Monroe. Monroe’s magical moods will continue to win the hearts of collectors for generations to come.”

Monroe was awarded a Hallmark Scholarship in Fine Art and attended the Ringling School of Art in Sarasota, Florida. Following art school Monroe traveled extensively and lived in a variety of places, while she pursued various art projects. For a time in the 1970s she lived in South Dakota and was married to a member of the Lakota tribe or Teton Sioux, with whom she had a daughter.

Tragically, Lanford Monroe died of a heart attack at the age of 50, just as she was about to mount up to go horseback riding with friends. Her life and more than 130 of her paintings have been chronicled in the book Homefields: The Art of Lanford Monroe by her husband R. E. C. Thomas, published by Sporting Classics, 2007.

During her time in the west, Monroe developed a real love of the west and of horses, which were often the subjects of her paintings and almost exclusively the subject of her sculptures. Early on she tended to paint in watercolors, later moving on to oil on Masonite, and by the mid 1990s to oil on canvas. Her paintings were often

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Hubert Wackermann

2min
pages 254-259

Richard D. Thomas

2min
pages 248-253

John Paul Strain

2min
pages 242-243

Karl Thomas

2min
pages 246-247

Lyle Tayson

2min
pages 244-245

Ron Stewart

1min
pages 238-241

Oleg Stavrowsky

2min
pages 234-237

Don Spaulding

1min
pages 226-227

Gene Speck

2min
pages 228-233

Irvin Shope

2min
pages 224-225

William Steve Seltzer

1min
pages 222-223

David Sanders

2min
pages 214-217

Alfredo Rodriguez

3min
pages 204-211

William Rushing

1min
pages 212-213

Conrad Schwiering

1min
pages 218-219

Gary Lynn Roberts

3min
pages 198-203

Olaf Carl Seltzer

2min
pages 220-221

Mack Ritchie

1min
pages 196-197

Douglas Ricks

2min
pages 194-195

Robert Pummill

3min
pages 182-187

Leonard H. Reedy

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pages 188-189

Chuck Ren

2min
pages 190-193

John Phelps

2min
pages 178-179

Tom Phillips

2min
pages 180-181

Don Oelze

3min
pages 176-177

Jim C. Norton

3min
pages 168-175

John Moyers

2min
pages 166-167

Gerald McCann

2min
pages 142-143

Mitchell Mansanarez

1min
pages 138-141

David Mann

3min
pages 134-137

Frank McCarthy

2min
pages 144-147

Wendell Macy

1min
pages 132-133

Gerry Metz

1min
pages 148-153

Lanford Monroe

2min
pages 164-165

Kim Mackey

3min
pages 130-131

Dustin Lyon

1min
pages 128-129

Ted Long

2min
pages 124-127

Hayden Lambson

1min
pages 122-123

Morton Künstler

2min
pages 120-121

Harvey Johnson

2min
pages 116-117

Thomas Kinkade

3min
pages 118-119

John Jarvis

1min
pages 114-115

Heinie Hartwig

3min
pages 112-113

Robert Farrington Elwell

2min
pages 94-95

Raul Gutierrez

1min
pages 102-103

Carl Hantman

2min
pages 108-111

David Halbach

1min
pages 104-107

Martin Grelle

1min
pages 100-101

Joe Ferrara

1min
pages 98-99

John Fawcett

2min
pages 96-97

Charlie Dye

2min
pages 92-93

Robert Duncan

2min
pages 84-91

Austin Deuel

2min
pages 78-81

Gene Dodge

2min
pages 82-83

John DeMott

2min
pages 74-77

Stan Davis

1min
pages 70-73

Don Crowley

2min
pages 68-69

Sheila Cottrell

1min
pages 66-67

Jim Carson

3min
pages 44-55

Michael Coleman

1min
pages 56-61

Guy Corriero

2min
pages 64-65

Nicholas Coleman

2min
pages 62-63

Paul Calle

3min
pages 40-43

Don Brackett

2min
pages 34-35

Dan Bodelson

2min
pages 30-33

Reynold Brown

2min
pages 36-39

Paul Abram, Jr

1min
pages 16-19

Roy Andersen

2min
pages 26-29

William Ahrendt

2min
pages 22-25

INTRODUCTION

3min
page 15

Cassilly Adams

2min
pages 20-21
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