Bugbee Murals
Harold Dow Bugbee painted the murals on the north, south, and east walls of Pioneer Hall. He served as the Museum Curator of Art from 1951 until his death in 1963. Bugbee usually painted western scenes and illustrated many books with his pen and ink drawings. Bugbee made all but one of the sketches reproduced as large banners on the north wall. His wife, artists Olive Vandruff, drew the oil derrick. Under President Roosevelt’s New Deal, Ben Carlton Mead painted two murals on the west wall of Pioneer Hall: Untitled (Antelope Creek People) and Coronado’s Coming. A third mural for the west wall, Comancheros, was installed in 1957. A student of Western history, Mead also painted smaller works and illustrated numerous publications about the West.
Harold Dow Bugbee, Hide Hunters, 1956
Harold Dow Bugbee, The Cattleman, 1934
Harold Dow Bugbee, Ranch Headquarters, 1940
Ben Carlton Mead, Untitled [Antelope Creek People], 1940
Ben Carlton Mead, Coronado’s Coming, 1934
Ben Carlton Mead, Comancheros, 1957
Harold Dow Bugbee, Kiowa Hunting Buffalo, 1957
Harold Dow Bugbee, Working Cattle on the Open Range, 1958