Tuesday, November 5, 2019

2019 Award Winners

About the Awards

Scholarships
-       One of the priorities of the Lea County Cowboy Hall of Fame has always been to identify and help deserving students at New Mexico Junior College complete their education.  Over the years, many students have benefited from the financial support they received from the Hall of Fame’s scholarship program.

Outstanding Rancher and Working Cowboy Award
-       The Board of Directors also recognize those who are “actively preserving the fast-fading cowboy way of life.”  The Outstanding Rancher Award is presented to an individual or couple whose occupation is ranching, and is recognized as a business person(s) with ethics, integrity, and honor.  The Working Cowboy Award is bestowed upon an individual who is a wage-earning cowboy who exemplifies ability, dependability, and character.

Silver Concho Award
-       For men, women, or animals not eligible for induction into the Hall of Fame, but who deserve to be remembered for their service throughout Lea County, the Board of Directors of the Lea County Cowboy Hall of Fame instituted a special recognition award known as the Silver Concho Award.

Lea County Cowboy Hall of Fame Induction
-       Induction into the Lea County Cowboy Hall of Fame is commemorated with the presentation of the Cowboy Hall of Fame Inductee Award.  This award is given annually to no more than four men and/or women who have roots in Lea County and who have distinguished themselves in the rodeo world or have contributed to the area’s ranching industry.  In addition to the individuals selected by the membership, the Board of Directors may choose no more than one person per year who meets special criteria.

NMJC Scholarship Recipients
-       The Lea County Cowboy Hall of Fame board is pleased to sponsor academic scholarships for the 2019/2020 school year for the following students:
o   Colter Figg – Kenny Smith Memorial Scholarship
o   Madison Rice – Wayne Smith Memorial Scholarship
o   Grady Ross Kirkes – J.E. Teague Memorial Scholarship
o   Lea County Cowboy Hall of Fame Scholarships
§  Colton Able
§  Cheyenne Gonzales
§  Justin Long
§  Zerrick Ponder
§  Hunter Salter
§  Mackenzie Watkins
§  Colette Wilson

Mike Wilson – 2019 Working Cowboy
Born in 1969 to Larry and Margie Wilson, Mike grew up in Roswell, New Mexico. He started his first paying job at ten years old working alongside his dad at the local sale barn. At 16 he went to work for LC “Buck” Pounds riding and training horses. Mike attended Goddard High School and after finishing school was employed by The Broken Heart Ranch in Wilcox, Arizona as a horse trainer. He has been blessed to work for some good outfits with great horses including Indian Bluff Ranch and Scharbauer Cattle Company. In 1990 he married his wife Stacie and in May of 1991 they planted roots at the headquarters of the Turkey Track Ranch owned by Bogle Ltd. Mike has worked for Bogle Ltd for 28 years. He was first hired as a colt starter and ranch hand and spent many years showing and promoting Bogle’s remuda. After 13 years at the Turkey Track Ranch, Mike, Stacie, and their two children Garret and Colette moved to Lea County where he has been the foreman at Bogle’s historic 4-Lakes Ranch for the past 15 years. The 4-Lakes ranch is home to Bogle’s mare herd and also runs approximately 450 mother cows and depending on the rain 1000-1500 yearlings.

 Garth Coombes – 2019 Outstanding Rancher
Garth Coombes was born in Lovington, New Mexico on May 6, 1966 to Malcolm and Harriet Coombes.  They lived northwest of town near the Anderson Ranch.  Garth and his folks moved to Elida, New Mexico when Garth was a year old.  Malcolm was transferred to Elida and worked in the oilfield on the Bob Crosby Ranch south of Kenna.  Garth's parents had several ranches leased from south of Kenna to Milensand.  Garth grew up working with his Daddy and helping friends and neighbors.  Garth had the pleasure of being exposed to many great and talented ranchers, cattlemen, and cowboys.  These people were his role models, mentors, and heroes.  Garth and his dad started a trucking company in 1980.  Garth worked, drove trucks and went to school in Elida until he finally graduated in 1984.  In 1988 he moved to Hobbs where he would have more opportunities.  In 2008 he bought his first ranch at Crossroads NM, which included the Tips Barnes place, the Duncan Gaynor place, and the Lovejoy place. In 2015 he also purchased the Underwood place.  Garth is living his dream of ranching, hauling cattle, helping his neighbors and enjoying his family.

2019 Silver Concho Award
Dr. Darrell Beauchamp is the Executive Director of the Museum of Western Art in Kerrville, TX. Prior to assuming the position in Texas in April, Beauchamp was, for seven years, the Executive Director of the Western Heritage Museum and Lea County Cowboy Hall of Fame in Hobbs.

Darrell grew up in central Texas, with five brothers.  Upon graduation from high school, he attended Temple Junior College and East Texas State University where he met his future wife, Jan.   He holds a Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees from East Texas State University and an earned doctorate from Texas A&M University - Commerce.  During his career he has served as a photo-journalist, a graphic designer, a University professor (University of Central Arkansas), a Librarian (Navarro College) and a Museum Director. 

Dr. Beauchamp served as the Executive Director of the Western Heritage Museum and Lea County Cowboy Hall of Fame on the campus of New Mexico Junior College from 2012-2019.  During this time, he fostered a tight relationship between the Museum and the Hall of Fame, allowing both entities to work toward a common goal.  He switched the roles of the South and North Gallery providing extra space needed to bring in quality exhibits, including:  “Titanic: The Artifact Exhibition,”  “Bigger than T-Rex,” “Bugs Outside the Box,” and “Selected works of Andy Warhol.”  He increased visitor attendance through creating a Staked Plains Roundup event for the public, bringing in Bonnie Moran’s North Pole Village at Christmas, and much more.  His tenure saw many improvements to the building and grounds, and unprecedented growth to the Museum and Hall of Fame.

In his spare time, Darrell is an avid fly fisherman, camper, and photography enthusiast.  He is an Eagle Scout and was a Boy Scout leader and Scoutmaster for fifteen years.  He and his wife, Jan, are the parents of three grown children, Cody, Casey, and Emily all of whom live in Central Texas.

 2019 Cowboy Hall of Fame Inductee
Albert “Suckerod” Ozborn
Albert Ozborn was born on March 4, 1935.  He left home at 15 to work on the historic Matador Ranch near Lubbock, TX.  He also worked on the historic Pitchfork Ranch, also near Lubbock, as straw boss at age 17.  He moved to Lea County in 1964, where he began working for the Charlie Martin Ranch, founded by W. S. “Colonel” Williams.  At 29 years old, Albert worked as a foreman for the Martin Ranch and retained that position for 53 years.  In 2000, Albert purchased and operated the Breaks Ranch on the edge of the Caprock. While ranching, Albert earned the nickname “Suckerod” due to his thin physique.

Albert considered working cattle to be both his job and his hobby.  He is recorded as saying, “Some people like to go fishing; I like to work cattle.  There ain’t nothing more pleasant than to go down and saddle a horse and work cattle.”  Albert also built bits, spurs, belts, chaps, bull whips, bull ropes, trailers, and made boots for his family.

Albert was a successful team roper and known for being left handed and using a short rope.  He was on the cover of the Quarter Horse Journal in 1958 and in the Saturday Evening Post in 1959 where he was featured roping cattle on the Pitchfork Ranch.

Albert believed there was no better life, than living and working on a ranch.  He was awarded as Working Cowboy at the Western Heritage Museum and Lea County Cowboy Hall of Fame in 2004.  Albert passed away on January 3, 2017.  His wife, Marion, and son, Jim, are also deceased, but he is survived by son, Phillip and wife Troy Lee; grandchildren, Zach, Makayla, Chad, and Crystal; and great-grandson, Zane.




2019 Cowboy Hall of Fame Inductee
J.E. Teague
Born to Hattie and “Cowboy” Teague, J.E. Teague’s family has an established history in Lea County.  His grandparents homesteaded 160 acres at the corner of Stiles and Knowles Rd, northwest of Knowles, NM, and he lived on the southwest corner of the original land until his death.

“Cowboy” was a roper and had roped in Will Rogers Coliseum in Fort Worth, TX, but J.E. didn’t start roping until he was out of high school.  J.E. went to South Plains Junior College on a rodeo scholarship and rodeoed as much as possible to keep up with the very competitive rodeo scene in southeastern New Mexico.  J.E. was the leader in points for Rodeo Cowboy Association Rookie of the Year when he was drafted into the US Army.  He couldn’t rodeo while stationed in Georgia, but when he transferred to Washington state, he eventually was able to find time to rodeo on the weekends if he could find somewhere to board his horse, “Ole Woody”.  Finding an empty barn with stalls and a big yard, he took a chance and asked the family about boarding his horse.  The Crate family welcomed J.E. with open arms. becoming his home away from home.  By the time J.E. got back into roping he’d lost his standing for Rookie of the Year.

J.E. left roping for a few years and started cutting.  He did well as a weekender in the non-pro class in New Mexico and Texas, and went to the NCHA finals in Fort Worth, TX several times.  Roping associations began to form, creating numbered classification systems, and J.E. was again able to successfully compete on the weekends.  J.E. continued to compete right up until the weekend before he passed away at age 81.  He was #13 in the Ultimate Calf Roping Series.  He once said “I rope against other old guys AND against their grandsons and granddaughters.”

J.E. was a proud member of the Board of Directors for the Lea County Cowboy Hall of Fame and the New Mexico Junior College Athletic Booster Club.  He was often found at the NMJC rodeo practice arena where he would work with college students on honing their skills as ropers.

J.E. is survived by wife, Virginia; sister, Janice; and step daughters, Mandy Duncan Sayre with husband Chad and daughter Sadie, and Katie Duncan Summers with husband C.J. and daughter Kenzie.

Friday, October 11, 2019

Creepy Candy Crawl


Join us for the first ever Creepy Candy Crawl at the Museum!!  Monday, October 28, put on your costume and come on down to the Museum for some FREE candy and Halloween games!  All ages are welcome, but adults, please no full masks.

Do you have a really cool group costume?  Take a pic in front of the green screen!

It's sure to be a fun night.  Don't miss it!

Friday, September 20, 2019

Distinguished Author - Jack Loeffler

http://artsawards.newmexicoculture.org/images/2008.loeffler.jpg





Jack Loeffler Jr.
A man with a lifetime of adventures, Jack Loeffler has been a professional jazz trumpeter and classical recorder artist, an environmental activist, “aural historian,” accomplished author, folklorist,  practical anthropologist, sound engineer, and radio producer.
Jack Loeffler lives and loves what he does.  As an “a-u-r-a-l historian” he devotes his life to working with indigenous cultures and recording their relationship to the land. He  believes that the knowledge and wisdom of people who live on the land close to the earth--such as the Hopis, Navajos, Pueblo Indians as well as tribes from Mexico--can help our species survive. Jack records the nature sounds, the music, the stories of these groups to develop an environmental consciousness for the world.  As his Navajo friend Shonto Begay wrote, “by documenting the voices and stories of the land Jack, moves us and helps us to rediscover our own voices”
From his rich recordings, Jack creates sound collages for CDs and radio programs we hear on National Public Radio, such as the Turquoise Trail, the Lore of the Land, and a special production on Aldo Leopold.   Jack has also recorded the largest collection of New Mexican Hispanic folklore and folk music. La Musica de los Viejitos is one  collection of this music. His recordings are housed in the Smithsonian and will be available at the New Mexico History Museum as well.  Jack has also published five critically acclaimed books.
In 2008 Jack received the Governor’s Award for Excellence for his writing and his ethnomusicology work. This year he received the Edgar Lee Hewett Award for Outstanding Public Service from the New Mexico Historical Society.
Jack ‘s daughter Celestia writes about her Dad and “best pal.”  “He makes friends everywhere he goes, because he cares.  He empathizes and connects with every living being he encounters.  From the child sitting across from him at a restaurant to the Navajo elder, and the great horned owl to the spiny cholla cactus, he cares about it all.”  A good friend wrote about Jack: he lives every day “in the moment, while creating a legacy for posterity that will have resonance in Santa Fe and far

Jack Loeffler is a true Renaissance man 

During the 1950s and early 1960s, Loeffler was a jazz trumpeter who performed throughout the United States. He has written numerous books, including "Adventures with Ed: A Portrait of Abbey," which was published in 2002 and recounts his experiences with writer and pioneering environmentalist Ed Abbey.

Loeffler moved to New Mexico in 1962 and has spent the last 40 years devoted to preserving and sharing the arts and stories of the people of his adopted state. He has interviewed and recorded writers, visual artists, traditional indigenous people, musicians and ordinary people who live in every region of the state. As a master artist in ethnomusicology, Loeffler has set extremely high standards for sound quality and editing. Through his artistic recordings, he has exposed the world to traditional Hispano and Native American music and culture.

Loeffler's personal archive of interviews, music and environmental sounds has been fully digitized onto archival gold CDs and hard drives to be saved for future generations. The collection is already being used in current exhibitions and programs at the Palace of the Governors which will share this outstanding ethnographic collection in the new State History Museum, which is set for a public opening on Memorial Day weekend 2009. Loeffler's radio shows, which include the ongoing "Lore of the Land" and "Moving Waters - the Colorado River and the West," are legendary, not only for the information they impart but for the inspiration they engender.

"Loeffler is a National Treasure who is revered in his field from the Folklore Center at the Library of Congress to small villages in rural New Mexico," said nominator Sue Sturtevant. "While very few people deserve the Governor's Award for Excellence in the Arts, Jack Loeffler is one who does!"

Wednesday, September 18, 2019

Museum Day 2019


The Western Heritage Museum and Lea County Cowboy Hall of Fame on the campus of New Mexico Junior College is participating in Smithsonianmagazine’s Museum Day, this Saturday.  Smithsonian magazine has designated Saturday, September 21, 2019 as the 15thannual Museum Day, an initiative in which participating museums across the United States open their doors for free to those who download a branded ticket.  The annual event allows museums, zoos and cultural centers from all 50 states to emulate the spirit of the Smithsonian Institution’s Washington, D.C.-based facilities, which offer free admission every day.  Museum Day represents a national commitment to access, equity and inclusion.

“We have participated in Museum Day for 8 years now,” says Erin Anderson, Interim Executive Director of the Western Heritage Museum and Lea County Cowboy Hall of Fame.  “It is important to offer opportunities like this for patrons to experience cultural and historical activities without worrying about cost.”

This year, Museum Day will celebrate the Smithsonian Year of Music, an institution-wide initiative celebrating the Smithsonian’s vast musical collections and resources.  Music is not only a reflection of human creativity and innovation, but also a key method of communication and cross-cultural exchange and understanding.  

“Our most recent event, Staked Plains Roundup on campus, tied into the Smithsonian’s Year of Music,” explains Anderson.  “The Native American dancers performed traditional dances, Maciolek School of Dance dancers taught patrons to line dance, and Gary Nix and West Texas performed a wonderful concert on the patio.  If, by chance, you missed this event, don’t worry, you can see musical instruments from our permanent collection on display, and you can see how music has touched many lives in our traveling exhibits, National Geographic’s Greatest Photographs of the American Westand E Pluribus Unum.”

Museums in all 50 states have signed up to participate in Smithsonianmagazine’s 2019 Museum Day, the largest event of its kind.  More than 1,500 museums are expected to participate this year.  Those wishing to attend any of the participating museums can visit Smithsonian.com/museumday to learn more and download a Museum Day ticket.  Each ticket grants the holder and one guest free access to any participating museum on September 21, 2019.  One ticket is permitted per email address.  A list of participating museums can be found on the website as well.

Friday, July 12, 2019

Moon Landing



It is hard to believe that it has been fifty years since Neil Armstrong became the first man to walk on the Moon on July 20, 1969. Many of us have vivid memories of where we were and how we felt watching the event. We heard Neil Armstrong utter the now famous words, “That’s one small step for man-one giant leap for mankind” and we knew that our world had changed forever. 
Eight years earlier, President John F. Kennedy threw down the gauntlet in an address to Congress when he said, “I believe that this Nation should commit itself to achieving the goal, before this decade is out, of landing a man on the moon and returning him safely to earth.” The United States needed to take this bold step because the Russians were accelerating their space program and America had to keep pace.  The “Cold War” had begun to simmer, which is why President Kennedy set space exploration as one of his top priorities. 
Although he would never live to see a man walk on the moon, President Kennedy’s goal was achieved as he predicted, “before this decade is out” on July 20, 1969. The ambitious program required the backing of the nation. Congress was asked to appropriate an unprecedented amount of money. Kennedy explained: “it will not be one man going to the moon--if we make this judgment affirmatively, it will be an entire nation. For all of us must work to put him there.” 

The Congress backed the plan and the adventure began. Ironically, the mission was achieved during the presidency of Kennedy’s rival, Richard M. Nixon. There is a plaque on the moon to commemorate the landing. It says: "Here men from the planet Earth first set foot upon the Moon July 1969, A.D. We came in peace for all mankind."

The Western Heritage Museum is commemorating this historic anniversary in a couple of ways. We are showing four films about the United States Space Programs every Sunday at 2 pm: The Right Stuff,July 14; Apollo 13, July 21; First Man, July 28; and October Sky,August 4. Our Second Annual Chalk Art Contest will be held on Saturday, July 20thand the theme is “To the Moon and Beyond.” Please join us!

For more information visit the National Archives website,https://www.archives.gov, where you will find pictures and articles. 

Distinguished Author Series



The Western Heritage Museum and Lea County Cowboy Hall of Fame is proud to announce their inaugural Distinguished Author Seriesfeaturing award winning author Anne Hillerman, on July 25, at 6:30 pm. Director of Education, Mary Lyle said “We are delighted to present Anne Hillerman as our first Distinguished Author.”   

Anne Hillerman, the daughter of the late Southwest mystery writer Tony Hillerman, grew up in Santa Fe and Albuquerque, the eldest of the family’s six children. She received a journalism degree from the University of New Mexico and worked as a newspaper reporter, editor and columnist before becoming a full-time author.

She is honored and delighted to continue the mystery series Tony Hillerman created featuring Navajo detective Joe Leaphorn and Jim Chee. Anne’s debut novel, Spider Woman’s Daughter, follows the further adventures of the aforementioned characters, and it places one of Tony’s supporting characters, officer Bernadette Manuelito, in the spotlight to make the series her own. Released by HarperCollins, the book received the Spur Award from Western Writers of America for the Best First Novel of 2013. 

Hillerman’s fifth novel, The Tale Teller,wasreleased in April of this year. Once again, the Legendary Lieutenant Joe Leaphorn is back as a crime solver. Joining him are Bernadette Manuelito and Sergeant Jim Chee who both use their knowledge of the criminal mind and their well-honed skills of observation and persuasion. 

“Anne will be discussing her own work and talking about the legacy of her father,” said Lyle. “We have a number of her titles available at the Museum, including her newest novel.” “If we have a good response to this event, the Museum will endeavor to invite other notable authors.” 

The event is freeof charge. Attendees are welcome to visit Rodin: Truth, Form, Lifeafter the lecture. For more information call 575-492-2678. 

Tuesday, June 25, 2019

D'Jean Jawrunner

Image result for d'jean jawrunnerThe Western Heritage Museum and Lea County Cowboy Hall of Fame is proud to host internationally recognized artist, D’Jean Jawrunner on Thursday, June 27 from 6:30 pm – 8:00 pm. Jawrunner will give a gallery talk and instruction in Rodin’s drawing technique, “Blind Contour Drawing.” In addition, members of Llano Estacado Art Association will be holding their monthly “drink and draw” evening. “It should be a very interesting evening for all of us,” said Mary Lyle, Director of Education. 

“We are so lucky to have such an experienced artist like D’Jean for this event,” Lyle noted. “She is so enthusiastic and has a wealth of knowledge about Rodin and the techniques he used in creating his sculptures.”  

Since 1997, D’Jean Jawrunner has been the Foundry Director and Art Professor at Mesalands Community College in New Mexico. Jawrunner, who just retired as the chair of the art department at Mesalands Community College, taught art history, design, sculpture, printmaking, painting, and drawing. She has been in group, solo and museum shows nationally and internationally exhibiting alongside artists such as Edgar Degas, Kiki Smith, and Andy Warhol. She has also been featured in several publications including Sculpture Magazine and New Mexico Magazine. * Her work is in the permanent collections of the International Folk Art Museum, the Whitfield Wildlife Conservation Area in Santa Fe, the National Sculpture Trail in Yellow Springs, Ohio and the Greenville Museum in Greenville, North Carolina as well as­­­­­­­­ many private collections. 

The public is welcome to join this special Evening with Rodinevent. This presentation is for adults and not appropriate for children under the age of 12.  

*D’Jean Jawrunner was featured in the March 2018 issue of New Mexico Magazine. You can read “Molten Beauty” by Kate Nelson by cutting and pasting this website: “https://www.newmexico.org/nmmagazine/articles/post/big-pour/

Wednesday, May 29, 2019

Evenings with Rodin



Unless otherwise noted, activities on Thursday evenings are FREE and have no participant limitations.

May 30 - Film: Camille Claudel (1988)
Introduced by Mary Lyle, Director of Education.
Isabelle Adjani (Best Actress nominee) and Gerard Depardieu star as Camille and Auguste Rodin. The film traces the development of the couple’s intense romance, the rise of Claudel’s career from her start as Rodin’s model, then assistant, and finally as an artist in her own right. Claudel must overcome prejudices against female artists, and the tempestuous relationship with her mentor, Rodin. The film is in French with English subtitles and is rated R for nudity and sexually explicit content.

June 6 - Family Art Fun
Families can participate in an art activity, inspired by the work of Rodin. This week join us for a foil sculpture activity. Create sculptures out of tin foil and try to mimic Rodin’s use of movement and emotion.

June 13 - Film: Rodin (2017)
Introduced by Mary Lyle, Director of Education.
This film is the most recent attempt to capture the life and loves of one of the world’s most famous sculptor, Auguste Rodin. The film takes place around 1880 when Rodin received his first state commission for “The Gates of Hell,” which included two of his most famous sculptures, “The Kiss” and “The Thinker.”  The film is in French with English subtitles. This film is not rated but has nudity and sexually explicit content that is not appropriate for anyone under the age of 18.

June 20 - TBA

June 27 - Llano Estacado's Drink and Draw
Artists are welcome to join their friends in the Rodin exhibit for an evening of sketching. Rodin’s technique of “Blind Contour Drawing” will be demonstrated. Bring your sketch pads and we will supply the “drinks.”

July 11 - Sculpture Workshop
Art instructor Nancy Powell will teach a beginning sculpture workshop. $10/person (covers all of the materials); limited to the first 15 people; must be 10+ years old.

July 18 - TBA

July 25 - Llano Estacado’s Drink and Draw 
Artists are welcome to join their friends in the Rodin exhibit for an evening of sketching. Bring your sketch pads and we will supply the “drinks.”

August 1 – TBA

For more information, please call the Museum at 575-492-2678 or visit our website at www.nmjc.edu/museum.

Friday, May 17, 2019

Rodin: Father of Modern Sculpture

FATHER OF MODERN SCULPTURE

Rodin covered in plaster wearing his iconic beret

Auguste Rodin is widely regarded as the “father of modern sculpture,” and by some, as the greatest sculptor since Michelangelo. Throughout the nineteenth century, artists found new ways of expressing themselves on canvas and print. The many innovative art movements included the Impressionists, Post Impressionists, Symbolists, and Expressionists. Sculpture during that same time remained tethered to the French academy. Rodin, was a contemporary of Monet, Renoir, Cezanne, and Gaugin. Just as they had done in painting, Rodin would transform the medium of sculpture and bring it into the modern era in art.

Born in Paris in 1840, to a modest middle-class family, Rodin showed an innate talent for art from an early age. In his teens, he attended the government school for art and craft design. There, he learned the traditional practice of observational drawing from plaster casts of ancient Greek and Roman sculpture. He also learned how to model in clay, a technique that he would continue to use throughout his career. He applied to the École des Beaux-Arts, an influential French art school, but was rejected three times. 
For almost a decade, Rodin worked as an anonymous member of a workshop and produced decorative sculpture for another well-known artist named Albert Carrier-Belleuse. Rodin continued to want to exhibit his work under his own name, and in the 1860s he submitted his sculpture to annual juried Paris Salon exhibitions. However, he again suffered a series of rejections.  

Rodin’s father had written his son an encouraging letter. His words of wisdom sustained the artist through the rough patches in his career. His father advised him: “You must not construct your future on sand so that the smallest storm will bring it down. Build on a solid, durable foundation [so that] the day will come when one can say of you as of truly great men – the artist Auguste Rodin is dead but he lives for posterity, for the future.”

Rodin finally received the recognition he sought in his 40’s when he was commissioned to create a sculpture for the entrance of a new museum. Rodin’s concept was inspired by Dante’s literary masterpiece, The Divine Comedy. His Gates of Hell were conceived to rival the great doors of the Baptistry in Florence known as The Gates of Paradise. The museum was not built, however, and the commission was canceled. Rodin decided to use some of the figurative reliefs from the door and he turned them into independent sculptures, also reusing some of the parts to create new sculptures. 

Later, Rodin was commissioned to create other monuments, portraits of famous people at the time, as well as noncommissioned works. During the 1890s, Rodin created many artworks, and by the year 1900 he was the most famous sculptor in Europe. The Paris World Exposition dedicated an entire pavilion to a retrospective exhibition of his work. In 1908, Rodin moved his studio and gallery to the Hôtel Biron, a large mansion in Paris, where he worked until his death in 1917. 

Before he died, Rodin donated the contents of his studio and his home to the people of France in exchange for an agreement that a Rodin museum would be established. Today, the Musée Rodin is made up of two sites: the Hôtel Biron and the structures and land in Meudon, the suburb of Paris where Rodin’s home was located.

If you would like to learn more about Rodin please visit the museum’s website www.nmjc.edu/museum and click on the Educator Guide for Rodin: Truth, Life, Form – Selections from the Iris and B. Gerald Cantor Collections

Tuesday, May 14, 2019

Rodin: Truth Form Life Selections from the Iris and B. Gerald Cantor Collections



The Western Heritage Museum and Lea County Cowboy Hall of Fame is proud to present a first for Southeastern New Mexico and the surrounding regions.  From May 23 through August 11, visitors can see RODIN: TRUTH FORM LIFE/ Selections from the Iris and B. Gerald Cantor Collections.  This special exhibit is a retrospective of the popular French artists’ work using 22 pieces from the Iris and B. Gerald Cantor Collections and organized and made possible by the Iris and B. Gerald Cantor Foundation.

“Rodin is the father of modern sculpture,” says Erin Anderson, Interim Executive Director of the Museum.  “This exhibit allows our visitors to follow his train of thought from early in his career up until the end.”

Eschewing tradition methods, Rodin let his models inspire the creative process rather than telling them a specific pose to strike. Rodin’s genius lay in his ability to model sculpture that captured the moving and evolving figure and that combined bodies in ways that expressed emotions and provoked responses.  “You may be familiar with The Thinkerby Rodin,” mentions Mary Lyle, Director of Education at the Museum.  “While The Thinker is not a part of this particular exhibition, you are able to see how Rodin created a sculpture that so uniquely captures the consternation of man’s existence.”

Never-before has anything like this been presented in Southeastern New Mexico.  “We are honored to have the opportunity to work with the Iris and B. Gerald Cantor Foundation in order to bring this exhibition to Hobbs,” explains Anderson.

Do not miss this exhibition at the Western Heritage Museum and Lea County Cowboy Hall of Fame from May 23 through August 11, 2019.  Come on out for a free opening reception on Thursday, May 23 at 5:30pm.  Refreshments will be served.  Parental discretion is advised as some of Rodin’s subject matters are adult in nature.


THE IRIS AND B. GERALD CANTOR FOUNDATION
The Iris and B. Gerald Cantor Foundation promotes and recognizes excellence in the arts and enhances cultural life internationally through its support for art exhibitions and scholarship and for the endowment of galleries and sculpture gardens at major museums.  Most unusual for a philanthropic foundation, the Cantor Foundation also owns this significant collection of Rodin sculpture.  During the last four decades it has loaned individual works and entire exhibitions to museums in more than 160 cities in Australia, Canada, Japan, Singapore, and the United States.  Nearly eleven million people have seen these shows.

The Foundation also actively supports healthcare, with a current emphasis on comprehensive women’s clinical care facilities. Indeed, through its support of the Iris Cantor-UCLA Women’s Health Center in Los Angeles and the Iris Cantor Women’s Health Center at New York-Presbyterian Hospital in New York, the Foundation pioneered a new model for clinical care for women that provides “one-stop shopping,” as Iris Cantor describes it. 

The Cantor Foundation is chaired by its president, Iris Cantor.  Its offices are in Los Angeles.  The Foundation’s Curator of Collections and Exhibitions, Judith Sobol, organized this show. More information about what the Iris and B. Gerald Cantor Foundation does and the achievements of its founders is available at www.cantorfoundation.org.

Monday, April 22, 2019

Family Gardening Workshop


The Western Heritage Museum and Lea County Cowboy Hall of Fame is pleased to announce our Second Annual Family Gardening Workshop featuring Tracy Curry, Southern Director for New Mexico Agriculture in the Classroom. Tracy Curry’s presentation and take-home project will be on how to make a small indoor “vermicomposting” bin.  “Vermicomposting is a fun way to teach children about the importance of worms to our environment,” Curry said.  Curry will also explain how to grow vegetables in a small space.  The workshop, scheduled for May 4, 2019 from 9 am – 11:30 am will also include methods for creating a raised bed garden, using the Museum’s Teaching Garden as an example. 

“Kids love to learn about ‘Yucky Worms’ and why farmers and gardeners think of worms as their friends and that they really aren’t that yucky at all,” Curry said. The workshop will also feature actual vegetable plantings, and other ideas for a family garden. “I am pleased to have Tracy Curry with us to teach families about the importance and fun of raising their own vegetables,” said Mary Lyle, Education Director for the museum.  “We think it will be both fun and educational.” 

Cost for the workshop will be $10 per family.  “We’re only charging a nominal fee for the workshop to help cover the cost of our materials” said Lyle.  Each family will receive a vermicomposting bin and a tomato plant to take home to start their own garden. “We will be in the Museum Garden area, so remember to wear a hat and plenty of sun screen,” Lyle noted. 

Space is limited to the first 15 families, consisting of up to 6 family members, fee to be paid in advance.  For more information, contact the museum at (575) 492-2678 or contact Mary Lyle at mlyle@nmjc.eduor 575-492-2679.

Fear of Flying Monkeys


Wizard of Oz Memories: Fear of Flying Monkeys 
By Mary Lyle, Director of Education 

The Museum’s Classic Film Series is revisiting the many great films released in 1939, “greatest year” in the Golden Age of Cinema, and we will be featuring the The Wizard of Oz on Saturday, April 27that 2 pm as part of our Family Fun Day. Our current traveling exhibit, Goosebumps: The Science of Fear, invites visitors to “face their fears.” Well, one of my childhood fears developed as a reaction to the “Flying Monkeys” and the “Wicked Witch,” which I saw for the first time in 1956, the first television broadcast of TheWizard of Oz.

It might be impossible for modern-day moviegoers, so used to Computer Generated Imagery (CGI) and other spectacular special effects, to be impressed by 1939’s beloved adaptation of The Wizard of Oz. But for those of us who were first introduced to the film on the small screen, there is nothing that modern technology has done that will ever surpass the impact of that first viewing of The Wizard of Oz. Although the film was first release d in 1939, the Baby Boomer generation remembers seeing it as a television program, broadcast as a “special presentation” during a holiday season.

Our family watched the film on a very small black and white television set. When the Flying Monkeys carried off Toto and Dorothy, I remember running into the next room crying. My mother assured me that the monkeys were no longer on the screen, and clinging to her I made my way back to watch the rest of the program. However, an even more frightening scene followed; the Wicked Witch took a torch and set fire to Scarecrow! That was bad enough, but in order to put out the blaze, Dorothy grabbed a bucket of water, to douse the flames and in doing so, melted the Wicked Witch. Although I was glad that the Scarecrow was saved, I was totally freaked-out by the sight of the Wicked Witch melting into a puddle on the floor. Could people really melt? My mother, once again, had to convince me that only Wicked Witches could melt.


My four-year-old mind couldn’t handle what I had seen. That television program, combined with the teasing of my older brother, who loved to frighten me by telling me that the Witch and her Monkeys were going to “get me,” produced nightmares that recurred for several years. 

When our family finally purchased a color television, I was treated to another miraculous experience:  technicolor! It was 1968 and I was in high school. What a revelation! The scenes in Kansas were filmed in black and white, and were moody and sad which reflected Dorothy’s experience of her home, but when Dorothy opened the door and beheld Munchkin Land in all of its technicolor glory, I thought, “Wow! How beautiful, how amazing!” 

I got over my fear of Flying Monkeys and Wicked Witch by the time my own children were old enough to watch the film. By that time, it had been released for home viewing on VHSremember that? I shared my own memories of the first time I watched the film with my little son. He said reassuringly, “Mom, don’t be afraid. Those monkeys aren’t real and they can’t fly.” He was a much more sophisticated four-year-old than his mother had been. 

Please join us on April 27th for a special 80th anniversary showing of The Wizard of Oz. The film still holds up today because of its “groundbreaking visuals,” masterful storytelling, and delightful musical score. 

Family Fun Day April 27

10 am – 3 pm
Admission is FREE all day
11 am & 1 pm: Guest Speaker, Tim Cole from the Austin Reptile Service
2 pm: Film – The Wizard of Oz – 80thAnniversary of the film’s release 

The Western Heritage Museum and Lea County Cowboy Hall of Fame presents a free Family Fun Day, Saturday, April 27, from 10:00am until 3:00pm. The event is in conjunction with “Goose Bumps: The Science of Fear.” 

“We are excited to be hosting Tim Cole, owner of the Austin Reptile Service,” said Mary Lyle, Director of Education. “Tim’s presentation promises to be quite unique and informative.” Mr. Cole’s presentations are at 11 am and 1 pm in the theater.

Tim Cole began keeping reptiles and amphibians at an early age. By the age of 10, Tim proclaimed to his parents that “he was going to study Herpetology.” Tim started conducting Educational Reptile Programs while he was living in Chicago in the 1970’s.  Hemoved to Texas in 1985 to enjoy the herpetofauna and the warm weather which was quite a change from the upper Midwest. After moving to Austin, Texas, he began conducting Safety Classes for Animal Control Officers and a many environmental groups.

Tim Cole has served as president and currently the vice-president of the Austin Herpetological Society, which he helped found in 2003.  The motto of his Austin Reptile Service is "Conservation by Education, " and Tim is widely recognized as one of the authorities on herpetology in the southwest. If you are interested in learning more about snakes, this presentation is for you!

Admission for the whole day is FREE! Demonstrations and guided tours will start at 10 am and end at 3 pm. The Wizard of Oz—80thAnniversary of the film’s release—will begin at 2 pm. 

For more information, call 575-492-2678. 

Monday, March 11, 2019

Darrell's New Adventure


Dr. Darrell Beauchamp is leaving his position as Executive Director of the Western Heritage Museum and Lea County Cowboy Hall of Fame, to become the Executive Director of The Museum of Western Art in Kerrville, TX.  He will begin the new position April 1.


“Leaving the Western Heritage Museum and New Mexico Junior College was a very hard decision for my wife and me,” said Beauchamp. “When the folks in Kerrville asked me to consider the position, we felt it was an opportunity to be closer to our children in Austin.”

“The number of friendships I have made and built, these people are like family and will be with me for the rest of my life. I’ll be back to Lea County to visit. Some of my friends may be inducted into the Lea County Cowboy Hall of Fame some day. Some may have other special events in their lives that will be celebrated. I plan to be here for those. No, Lea County has not seen the last of me.”
Beauchamp earned his doctorate from Texas A&M University – Commerce. He began his 30-year career in museums as the founding executive director of the Pearce Museum in Corsicana, Texas, and went on to serve as the CEO for several world-class museums including the C.M. Russell Museum in Great Falls, Mont., and the Briscoe Museum in San Antonio.