Cady Wells: Ruminations

Mar 25, 2017 through Sep 17, 2017

The New Mexico Museum of Art, in partnership with The Philbrook Museum of Art, Tulsa, OK, presents the dynamic and psychologically penetrating watercolor paintings of Cady Wells (1904-1954). This group of more than 25 works features Wells’ uniquely modernist interpretations of Southwestern landforms and cultural-religious traditions. Born to a traditional, well-to-do New England family, Wells settled in northern New Mexico beginning in 1932. There, his art took on the complex layering of a spirit inspired by music, calligraphy and stained glass, but traumatized by active WWII combat, sexual intolerance, and Atomic bomb experiments at Los Alamos, just 12 miles from where he lived and painted. Such mid-century influences marked his increasingly surrealist style with equal parts rapture and disquietude.

More ...


Confused Memory

Landscape Study – Hill and Cedars, c. 1946

Untitled (New Mexico Landscape), 1934

Santo No. 1, c. 1948

Head of Santo, c. 1939

Tree/Lane: Reverse, Abstract Study, 1933

Back to event/exhibition details »