2019-03-01 Western Art Collector

(Martin Jones) #1
Wagon Train Scouts, oil, 21 x 34”

The titles were almost interchangeable: All
Western, Western Story, Thrilling Western,
Western Romances, Popular Western and Wild

West Stories. Even the wood-pulp paper on
which they were printed seemed to suggest a
disposability to the magazines. After all, they
were only meant to last until the next issue.
And yet the Western pulps did last, and
today are regarded as an important cultural
bridge from real cowboys of the 1800s to
Western cinema and TV. Nowhere is this
more evident than at the A.R. Mitchell

Museum of Western Art in Trinidad,
Colorado, which celebrates the legacy
of Arthur Roy Mitchell (1889-1977), the
so-called “King of Western Pulp Covers.” The
artist, who once noted he could find eight or
more of his pulp covers at the newsstand at
any given time, is the star of the museum that
bears his name in Trinidad, where Mitchell
was born and lived much of his life.

The A.R. Mitchell Museum of Western Art in Trinidad, Colorado,
celebrates the legacy of artist and illustrator Arthur Roy Mitchell.

By Michael Clawson


PULP


COWBO


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T


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E

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