JoAnne Artman Gallery is pleased to present Technicolor west, a dynamic group exhibition featuring works by Billy Schenck, Chris Watts, and Greg Miller. Reimagining the mythology of the West through a vivid, contemporary lens, the exhibition brings together three distinct voices united by a shared fascination with cinematic narrative, bold color, and the enduring iconography of cowboy culture.
Drawing on the visual language of classic Western films, advertising, and pop culture, Technicolor west transforms familiar archetypes, gunslingers, heroines, and outlaws, into striking, graphic compositions. Saturated hues and heightened contrasts replace dusty realism, offering a vision of the West that feels both nostalgic and newly imagined. Here, the frontier is not merely remembered, but represented with a deliberate sense of allure.
Billy Schenck, widely recognized as a pioneer of Western Pop, distills the genre to its essential forms. His compositions, marked by sharp edges and luminous color fields, evoke the drama of mid-century cinema while introducing a distinctly modern clarity. Schenck’s work captures moments of tension and spectacle, where gesture and gaze carry the weight of narrative.
Chris Watts repositions the female figure at the center of the Western mythos. Watts’ heroines are poised, self-possessed, and vividly rendered, challenging traditional depictions of women in western narratives. Through commanding palettes and precise environments, Watts constructs a West that feels both empowered and brilliant, where identity and presence take precedence over convention.
Greg Miller brings a layered, tactile dimension to the exhibition through mixed-media works that incorporate collage alongside painterly gesture. His compositions merge pop sensibility with psychological depth, placing figures within fragmented and emotionally charged spaces. Miller’s work suggests a version of the West shaped as much by contemporary culture and collective imagination as by lived history.
Together, these artists present a vision of the West that is less about place and more about perception where myth, media, and memory converge. Technicolor west invites viewers to experience the frontier not as a fixed past, but as an evolving image: confident, stylized, and undeniably alive.
These artists’ work will inspire, provoke, engage and mesmerize. With visual perceptions always changing, peek behind the stories told and you're sure to find the right artistic expression.












