The decision to become an artist is not always easy. It took Wilson Hurley

decades and two careers before he followed his muse. But his experiences added

to his vision, making him one of the most respected landscape artists in the

world and perhaps best known for his primordial portraits of the American

West.

One of Hurley’s most monumental accomplishments is the creation of five unique

American vistas, Windows to the West–a series of forty by sixteen foot

triptychs–which hang in the National Cowboy Hall of Fame. These classic

American works are worthy of the Hudson Valley School of Artists’ maxim:

"If you wish to see God’s work, look about you."

Hurley was born in Tulsa, the son of a lawyer who was to become Secretary of

War in President Herbert Hoover’s administration. Following a military career

and a World War II assignment he practiced law in New Mexico, where spectacular

views of the West fueled his hobby of painting. Then came the fateful

appointment with a dying client, a terminally ill doctor who consulted Hurley

about a will.

With the knowledge of mortality forefront in his mind, Hurley decided to devote

the rest of his life to art. This devotion led him to become one of the

leading landscapists of our time, compared to such revered painters as Albert

Bierstadt, Thomas Cole and Thomas Moran. Hurley is a founding member of the

National Academy of Western Art and the recipient of their highest honor, the

Prix de West.