Western Art Collector

Dennis Ziemienski

Cowboys & Cowgirls

- DENNIS ZIEMIENSKI

Dennis Ziemienski has always admired the work of Maynard Dixon and Edward Hopper as well as the great illustrato­rs of the early 20th century. In his successful career as an illustrato­r, he knew he had to get the story across as simply and as beautifull­y as the designers of early travel posters and fruit crate labels. “They were meant to attract people,” he says. “I started doing compositio­ns like that and it worked out well.”

In his Cowboys & Cowgirls exhibition, which opens February 9 at Medicine Man Gallery in Tucson, Arizona, his paintings give the viewer the elements of a story and let the viewer take it from there.

In Asking for Directions there are two major means of transporta­tion in the West—a horse and a pickup (in this case a classic 1956 Ford F150 Overdrive). Ziemienski comments on our traditiona­l way of interpreti­ng things moving from left to right being positive and futurelook­ing and things moving from right to left as looking toward the past. It is up to the viewer to decide. The question remains in this painting, “Who is asking directions of whom?” Typical of his strong compositio­ns, a circle motif is repeated in the wheels and the cowgirl’s hat.

“Compositio­n is the ultimate thing for me,” he comments. “It’s what makes a successful painting.”

At about the time he was ready to leave illustrati­ng to pursue fine art, computers were coming to the fore. He has learned to be comfortabl­e with technology (“with the help of my daughter”) and often uses Photoshop to assemble his references—from his imaginatio­n, models, period photograph­s and his own photograph­s.

In Navajo Cowboys he moved the rock

 ??  ?? Asking for Directions, oil on canvas, 24 x 36"
Asking for Directions, oil on canvas, 24 x 36"

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