

Maynard Dixon
Cultural Positioning
- • Impressionism
Selected Institutional Exhibitions
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Maynard Dixon painted the American Southwest with an authority shaped by decades of direct observation, rendering its vast landscapes, Native peoples, and desert light in a style that grew increasingly bold and simplified over his career. Active from the late nineteenth century through the mid-twentieth, he documented a rapidly changing West with a seriousness that separated his work from romantic illustration. His compositions are marked by monumental cloud formations, flattened forms, and an austere palette that captures the particular stillness of arid, open terrain. He was known among contemporaries as the last cowboy in San Francisco, a distinction that reflected both his subject matter and his deliberate remove from urban artistic fashions.



















