Description
Wyoming Cowboy is a vibrant mixed-media tribute to identity, place, and the enduring spirit of the American West. Created around the turn of the millennium, this piece captures the iconic image of a bucking bronco rider—a symbol deeply rooted in Wyoming heritage—while reimagining it through a richly textured, contemporary lens.
At its core, the silhouette of the cowboy and horse is constructed entirely from hand-crafted polymer clay elements. Each fragment was individually formed, patterned, sliced, and baked by the artist, then carefully assembled into a mosaic of color, movement, and memory. These miniature sculptural pieces—some geometric, some organic—create a dynamic surface that feels both playful and intricate, like a living tapestry of moments and imagination. The layering of these elements evokes energy, chaos, and rhythm, mirroring the untamed force of a bucking horse.
Surrounding the central figure is a deeply personal frame composed of photographic fragments from a journey through Yellowstone National Park—America’s first national park and a sacred landscape of the West. These images, captured during travels in the late 1990s, ground the piece in real experience and memory, blending the mythic cowboy symbol with lived moments of exploration, love, and connection.
The contrast between the warm, open background and the dense, colorful figure emphasizes both isolation and presence—the lone rider standing boldly against the vastness of the Western landscape. At the same time, the explosion of color within the form suggests that even the most iconic symbols are made up of countless small stories, decisions, and creative acts.
Wyoming Cowboy is not just a representation of a cultural emblem—it is a personal artifact, a fusion of craftsmanship, travel, memory, and identity. It celebrates the artist’s Wyoming roots while showcasing a lifelong dedication to experimentation with materials, particularly polymer clay, which continues to play a central role in their creative practice.






