Brazos River Canyonlands
Untitled Landscape with view of the Brazos River Canyonlands. Circa 1900. Color print by L. O. Griffitn.
with pastels and easels, a guitar, a Bible and a gun in a wagon decorated with deer horns and snake skins
Frank Reaugh

After the frontier soldiers in the 1870s chased the Comanches from their strongholds in the Texas Canyonlands, cowboys and cattlemen moved their Longhorn herds west, replacing the Indians and the Buffalo herds, much as depicted by Larry McMurtry's Lonesome Dove.

Trailing these cattlemen and their Longhorns, artists made their way to the frontier of West Texas. Frank Reaugh, who studied at the St. Louis Art Institute and the Academic Julian in Paris, came first up the Brazos in 1883. Through French and Dutch-influenced Impressionism, Reaugh's pastels captured the luminance of the light and the subtle grandeur of this epic landscape.

Whitetop Field, West Texas. Circa 1900. Pastel by L. O. Griffith.

Using annual trips up the Brazos as a workshop, Reaugh took with him other painters including L. O. Griffith in the early 1900s. Reaugh and Griffith traveled up the Brazos for several weeks, likely in 1901, “with pastels and easels, a guitar, a Bible and a gun in a wagon decorated with deer horns and snake skins.”

L. O. Griffith enjoyed a long, successful career as an Impressionist painter in New Orleans and Indiana. His works in oils and prints featured on this site, recently “rediscovered,” further define the majesty of this landscape and its wide open spaces.

FRANK REAUGH
Major collections of the paintings of Frank Reaugh reside at the University of Texas, Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center and the Panhandle-Plains Historical Museum in Canyon, Texas.
On the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center Web site, you will find more information about the life and art of Frank Reaugh. Click on to the following link to view a photograph of the “Dean of Texas Artists” and samples of his art from this period:
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Grasses along a canyon ridge trail with Mesquite trees in the background
Grasses intertwined with mesquites
Late autumn foliage along the banks of a canyon-fed creek that flows into the Double Mountain Fork of the Brazos River in Longhorn Valley