Frank Howell · 1937–1997
The Artist
[PLACEHOLDER — needs real content] The biography below is interim framing copy. Replace with an authorized artist biography before launch.
Frank Howell (1937–1997) was an American painter, lithographer, and teacher whose mature work became inseparable from the light and presence of the American Southwest. Across three decades he built a singular visual language — weathered faces, wind-carried hair, blanketed figures set against turquoise skies — rendered with a draftsman's precision and a printmaker's patience.
Howell worked fluently across media: original stone lithography, serigraphy, monotype, oil, and acrylic. He was closely involved in the craft of his editions, frequently hand-coloring impressions and reserving artist's proofs, trial proofs, and museum editions that document each image's development. It is precisely these working proofs — ordinarily dispersed at an artist's death — that this collection holds in unusual depth.
His work is held in private and public collections throughout the United States, and his gallery presence in Santa Fe made him one of the recognizable voices of Southwestern art in the 1980s and 1990s.
