Calgary Herald

DRAWN TO THE CALL OF THE WILD

Artist explores surprising connection­s with nature, specifical­ly the nearly lost American bison

- DONNA BRYSON

DENVER Arturo Garcia rose, bundled up in a puffy green vest and denim blue hoodie, and staked his easel amid the pale golden grasses of Wyoming ’s Wind River Reservatio­n, home to the Eastern Shoshone and Northern Arapaho. It was so windy he had to keep one hand on a canvas the size of a school notebook. It was so cold an onlooker got out of her car to offer him her gloves — he could only wear one, as he needed a bare hand to manipulate the palette knife he uses instead of a brush to apply energetic lines and bold colours. Grass blew into his paint.

The Mexican-born artist based in the Denver area persevered for an hour-and-a-half to record the moment last autumn when 10 American bison, tails whipping like flags, lumbered out of a trailer. The mini stampede and a similar release a year earlier were part of an effort by tribal leaders, the Wyoming Wildlife Federation and the National Wildlife Federation to restore the majestic mammal to an ecosystem of which it is a key part and to the stewardshi­p of a people who see their own marginaliz­ation paralleled in the near annihilati­on by white settlers of an animal sometimes called buffalo.

“I could not let that opportunit­y go,” Garcia said months later in the kind of space in which he’s more used to working: a cosy, well-lit studio at the Denver Art Museum, part of a short residency.

“I did the real deal — plein air, 30 degrees (F, or -1 C), which felt like 30 below (or -34 C),” he said of his work in Wyoming. “It’s very challengin­g painting like that. Especially in the morning when shadows change so fast. The more challengin­g it got for me, the bigger the smile I got on my face.”

The opportunit­y came to Garcia after conservati­onists and Wind River residents took note of his connection to bison. In 2014, he had set himself the task of painting the animals for which Colorado is known. He depicted elk, moose and sheep.

“The bison was the last painting I did in the series. It produced something in me I can’t explain,” said Garcia, whose work has been exhibited in U.S. and Mexican galleries. “I go on painting binges — portraits, trees, bison. Bison has lasted longer than any other.”

He has seen bison in small herds in preserves near Denver and photograph­ed them in Yellowston­e National Park. A quest to learn more about his muse led to conversati­ons with Native Americans. As Garcia gained Eastern Shoshone and other friends, he thought back to his own past.

“All my uncles were skinny, tall, with big foreheads,” he said. “People would refer to them as Indians. And they didn’t like it.”

Garcia began to question that sense of shame. He came to a realizatio­n: “To be Indian is a beautiful thing. To be human is a beautiful thing. I am of the land. I am of the universe. The bison has brought me to an encounter that I did not have any idea I was going to have with myself.”

As a wildlife artist with Mexican roots, it was natural for Garcia to take part in the Americas Latino Eco Festival, an annual event in Colorado co-sponsored by the National Wildlife Federation that has since 2012 brought together artists, scientists and policy-makers to discuss environmen­tal concerns. The children of NWF Rocky Mountains regional executive director Brian Kurzel took part in a workshop Garcia led during the 2015 festival. Kurzel said he got more time to speak with Garcia at the festival the following year, when he learned of the artist’s interest in bison and shared details of NWF’s Wind River project.

The 890,308-hectare reservatio­n had been part of the bison’s habitat before the U.S. government encouraged the exterminat­ion of millions of buffalo across the Great Plains and the West in the 1800s. For more than a century, no bison had roamed Wind River.

Garcia’s work could inspire others to learn more about bison and “help create the next generation of advocates,” Kurzel said.

By the time NWF brought Garcia to Wind River for both the 2016 and 2017 releases, he had already done scores of bison paintings. In addition to creating more of his own work while in Wyoming, the artist led workshops for Native American schoolchil­dren.

Jason Baldes, in charge of the bison project for the Eastern Shoshone, said Garcia’s paintings capture the animal’s power, its connection to Indigenous people, and the possibilit­y of healing for both the beast and the people who have been pushed onto reservatio­ns.

“And he’s such a caring individual,” Baldes said. Garcia “wanted to provide young people the opportunit­y to express their own art.”

Indigenous elders also responded to Garcia. NWF’s Kurzel described a Shoshone woman closely observing the painter at work after she gave a traditiona­l blessing at a bison release.

“These two great artists came together,” Kurzel said. “They were part of illustrati­ng the connection­s between nature and people.”

Baldes, the son of a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service biologist who had worked to rebuild the reservatio­n’s game population­s, said that returning bison to Wind River is for him and other Shoshone “a way to reconnect with an animal that was removed from us as a way to kill us off.”

 ?? PHOTOS: DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
PHOTOS: DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
 ??  ?? Artist Arturo Garcia uses a palette knife rather than a brush to apply the bold colours he favours in his wildlife artworks. “I go on painting binges — portraits, trees, bison. Bison has lasted longer than any other,” he says.
Artist Arturo Garcia uses a palette knife rather than a brush to apply the bold colours he favours in his wildlife artworks. “I go on painting binges — portraits, trees, bison. Bison has lasted longer than any other,” he says.
 ??  ?? When not working in a studio, Arturo Garcia takes his paint outside to capture scenes from life, like the release of bison onto a Wyoming reservatio­n.
When not working in a studio, Arturo Garcia takes his paint outside to capture scenes from life, like the release of bison onto a Wyoming reservatio­n.

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