The Eddie Basha Collection is honored to participate in a new, major retrospective exhibition at Western Spirit: Scottsdale’s Museum of the West, showcasing the life’s work of one of Western art’s greatest talents and biggest personalities, Joe Beeler, one of Eddie’s closest friends.
On exhibit January 16, 2018 through October 28, “The Art of Joe Beeler: A Western Original” includes more than 80 paintings and bronze sculptures by the artist, plus video presentations, and a recreation of Beeler’s Sedona, Arizona studio. The nearly completed painting “Into the North Wind,” which was on Beeler’s easel at the time of his death, is included in the exhibition. In addition, a joyful portrait entitled “Rememberin’ Joe” by renowned Western artist Martin Grelle is featured.
The exhibition features artworks from the Jody and Monica Beeler Collection (son and daughter-in-law of the artist), and numerous masterpieces from The Eddie Basha Collection, the Tim Peterson Family Collection, and the Charles F., Jennifer E., and John U. Sands Collection.
A fourth-generation Westerner, Beeler (1931-2006) was equally admired for his artistic talent, authenticity, warm heart and sense of humor. Working in bronze, oil, pastel, watercolor, pencil and charcoal, he portrayed Plains and Southwest Native Americans, cowboys, mountain men, animals, and everyday moments of Western life.
During his long and prosperous artistic career, Beeler helped define Western art not only for his generation but future generations. He was one of four co-founders of the Cowboy Artists of America (CAA), which is recognized as one of the most influential artists’ groups in the nation’s history. The other founders (George Phippen, Charlie Dye and John Hampton) were also prominent Western artists and Arizona residents. Formed in June 1965 at Sedona, Arizona’s Oak Creek Tavern, the mission of the by-invitation-only organization is to authentically preserve and perpetuate the culture of Western life in fine art.
“A love of horses and western history inspired Beeler to create the incidents and phases of the Old West that were portrayed by earlier artists such as Charles Russell and Frederic Remington,” commented Chief Curator Tricia Loscher, Ph.D. “Beeler’s paintings and bronzes offer a timeless motif for generations of Western painters. His images of cattlemen and rustlers are like a cast from a uniquely American romantic theater, which still thrives today in film and fiction.”
“Joe Beeler’s artworks speak volumes about a certain place and time in the American West,” commented museum Director Mike Fox. “They preserve the enduring legend of the American cowboy, its Native people and the American West. The exhibit, as well, celebrates the longtime friendship between Joe and the late Eddie Basha, an Arizona grocer and community leader, who as the leading patron of Western art beginning nearly 50 years ago, ensured the success of many Western and Native American artists.”
The exhibition, which is located in the Nina Mason Pulliam Charitable Trust Fine Arts Gallery, is included with museum admission. Scottsdale’s Museum of the West is located at 3830 N. Marshall Way in downtown Scottsdale.
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