Barbara Vaupel
Henryetta, Oklahoma
Born in San Diego, California,
Barbara Vaupel taught herself to draw. She took a night-school
class in California with Floyd Chandler, who emphasized
color and atmospheric progression. For a while she did
advertisements and later proofread ads. But Vaupel wanted
to paint horses - particularly quarter horses. "I
never lived the life of raising and showing horses," she
says. "But the next best thing to living the life
is painting it!" Leaving friends and family behind,
in 1967 she headed for Oklahoma. Her earliest horse portraits
and rodeo scenes were done on commission. Among them was
a portrait of retail wizard Sam Walton with his hunting
dogs and pheasant. Recently, the landscapes dominate the
horses on her canvases. "I guess that is because of
my love of this Oklahoma countryside."
Along with gallery representation,
Vaupel has shown in the Women Artist and the West exhibit,
Tucson, AZ, and with the Texas Cowboy Artists. She is also
included in An Encyclopedia of Women Artists of the
American West, as well as named 1999 Outstanding Art
Book, 38th Annual Western Heritage Awards.
Images are copyright
of The Oklahoma State Senate Historical Preservation Fund,
Inc. and the artist. Please contact Pam Hodges at 524-0126
or hodges@oksenate.gov for
further copyright information. |