Western Art Collector | By Chelsea Koressel | June 2022 Edition
Donna Howell-Sickles grew up on a farm and ranch in Sivells Bend, Texas, not far from where she lives today. Partaking in the many demands that came with that lifestyle instilled in her a sense of hard work, independence and, most importantly, community—all elements that have helped forge her career as an artist. “We didn’t think of ourselves as cowgirls or cowboys,” she notes, “it was just what we did.”
Howell-Sickles’ family moved to New Mexico, where she graduated from high school, and then studied to be an elementary school teacher at Texas Tech. It was there that she discovered her true passion, or rather, her destiny.
“After signing up for a drawing class my junior year,” she says, “I realized for the first time in my life that people thought like I thought. It wasn’t a slow dawning; it was more of a light-bulb moment, realizing that I could make art and could see myself doing it forever. It was an instant and irrevocable decision.” Now emboldened, Howell-Sickles switched degrees and graduated with a B.A. in painting and drawing, and never looked back.
Today, Howell-Sickles combines her experiences with ranch life and her love of art, and also her joyful and humorous depictions of cowgirls. Over the years, she’s dabbled in sculpture, along with etchings and lithographs, but she always returns to her favored medium: drawing with charcoal and finishing pieces in oil or acrylic.
One of the more important elements to Howell-Sickles’ work is storytelling with a focus on realistic depictions of women in Western culture.
Howell-Sickles has set out to tell a better story of the women of the West and to give them an audience. “I want people to realize that this cowgirl figure I draw has been a part of the West from the beginning…and she’s an essential part of how the West has been developed,” she says.
Pieces like Warm Reflection, part of a series of four paintings, featuring a cowgirl holding a torch, placed against a dark, star-lit sky, dives into an even deeper story.
“The torch is the idea of enlightenment and warmth, the nurturing inside community,” she explains. “I can think of many times people have symbolically handed me a torch when I’m struggling with something…This is what you do among friends, community and mentors. I think it’s an essential part of who we are as humans to share the light we’re given with someone else—the passing on of what you know and love.”
Viewers should also take note of the night sky, as the artist features an accurate position of stars. “I think it’s a good pairing with the symbol of the torch—the North Star is a guiding and consistent light,” she adds.
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Collectors can view her work at upcoming events and shows such as Ann Korologos Gallery’s group show, Lightness of Spirit, from June 2 through 28 in Basalt, Colorado; the Bonheur & Beyond: Celebrating Women in Wildlife Art at the National Museum of Wildlife Art, in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, from June 4 through August 16; the Buffalo Bill Art Show & Sale in September in Cody, Wyoming; and Quest for the West at the Eiteljorg Museum, from September 9 to 10 in Indianapolis. —