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    Picturing the Parks

    Texas photographer takes us on an amazing trek through every national park

    Tarra Gaines
    Aug 10, 2016 | 2:25 pm

    When photographer Mark Burns was growing up in Houston, he didn’t have many everyday opportunities to gaze upon great mountains and sweeping vistas, but that changed when his family went on vacations. In those family car trips to West Texas and Big Bend and then on to New Mexico or up into Colorado, Burns first began to understand the magnificence of this country’s vast landscapes.

    Now, years later, that appreciation has found its ultimate expression in his photographic exhibition The National Parks Photography Project, on view at the George W. Bush Presidential Library and Museum beginning August 10.

    I recently had a chance to speak with Burns about the exhibit and what set him off on this monumental quest to capture one defining image from each of the 59 U.S. national parks. The project began over five years ago, after he created and produced the exhibit The Culture of Wine for the George Bush Presidential Library and Museum in College Station: Jean Becker, Bush’s chief of staff, asked if he had ideas for another exhibition.

    Even back in 2010, Burns was already thinking about a photographic way to commemorate the National Parks Service centennial anniversary in 2016. After an advisory committee was brought together and a “collaboration” with the Parks Service was made, Burns set off on his journey that would take him to every national park.

    The wild trek
    ​
    Though he began relatively close to home in the southwest, Burns eventually drove to all of the national parks in the lower 48 states in his Toyota FJ Cruiser, racking up about a 160,000 miles during his five-year odyssey. When driving wasn't an option, he left the Cruiser at home and flew to Hawaii, Alaska, and American Samoa to complete the list.

    “The third and fourth years, I was really all over the place, traveling extensively,” Burns explains, describing the route that took him 9,000 to 10,000 miles in one trip. “Some of the trips that I did took me from Houston through New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada, California, Oregon, Washington, over to Montana, and then back down through Wyoming, Colorado, New Mexico to Houston.”

    Many of the the parks he visited multiple times, “chasing weather and also trying to be there during different seasons,” he explains.

    From the onset, Burns planned on taking black-and-white photos of the parks, not only because of his artistic appreciation of the medium but also because he felt it was the best type of photography to link the parks in the 21st century back to the previous hundred years.

    “Right from the beginning, I made that connection in my mind that it would be a neat bridge to have people looking at photographs that would have a contemporary date, but they would be in black and white, and that would look similar to those [photos] of the 1910s, '20s, and '30s,” Burns says.

    The land and sea alone
    Looking at this vast expanses frozen in time on paper, visitors to the exhibit might notice that there are no people amid the mountains, rivers, glaciers, beaches, and cliffs, as Burns made a decision early on not to include the “human element.” He did include a few man-made structures, like Proenneke’s Cabin in Lake Clark National Park Alaska, and the lighthouse at Biscayne National Park, but only when they were an important element of the landscape or represented the character of the park.

    Burns also felt it necessary to draw a distinction between landscape and wildlife photography. The few animals captured in the photos, like the brown bears in the Katmai National Park, are such a part of the topography of those particular parks that he felt they had to be included.

    He also creates a balance in the exhibition between iconic images probably familiar to most Americans and those places of wilderness yet to be overwhelmed by the vacationing crowds. For example, while he captured beautiful pictures of the Yellowstone River, he realized after repeatedly hearing “Where’s Old Faithful?” that his photo of the famous geyser would have to go in the exhibition.

    Yet, when I ask Burns if there was an underappreciated park he grew to admire, he is practically poetic in his descriptions of Lassen Volcanic National Park in northern California, a park he had originally just wanted to check off his list but that he revisited several times just to see the change of seasons.

    Texas beginnings
    While the The National Parks Photography Project might have officially begun five years ago, it's apparent while talking to Burns that this was a journey that truly began with those family trips of his childhood.

    “My dad would take my brother and me. For a period of about six or seven years, we would go to into southwestern Colorado and New Mexico. That’s were I cut my teeth in landscape photography,” Burns says, telling the tales of his first attempts at photographing the Southwest. Instead of the usual whines of a kid asking if they were there yet, he would ask his dad to stop along the road so he could get a picture of some image that had caught his young photographer’s eye.

    “We went to Big Bend some, and I certainly enjoyed going out to West Texas and Big Bend because it was such a different environment from Houston. My eye started to see landscapes probably in that Big Bend area.”

    Now, Texans can take their own journey into the wilds of our national parks with just a few steps into the George W. Bush Presidential Library and Museum.

    ---

    The National Parks Photography Project is on display until August 30 at the George W. Bush Presidential Library and Museum.

    Mark Burns at the Grand Canyon.

    Mark Burns at Grand Canyon
    Photo by Craig Robbins
    Mark Burns at the Grand Canyon.
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    news/arts

    Museum News

    2 Dallas museums partner on landmark Roy Lichtenstein acquisition

    Teresa Gubbins
    Nov 12, 2025 | 12:51 pm
    Roy Lichtenstein
    Courtesy
    Roy Lichtenstein

    The Dallas Museum of Art (DMA) and the Nasher Sculpture Center will present works from the joint acquisition of more than 50 artworks generously gifted by the Roy Lichtenstein Foundation in 2024, showing prints, drawings, and sculptures by the groundbreaking American artist at the two neighboring institutions in the Dallas Arts District.

    According to a release, the installations will be on view from January 31 to August 16, 2026 at the Nasher and from January 1 to July 5, 2026 at the DMA.

    The joint gift made by the Roy Lichtenstein Foundation to the DMA and the Nasher in Celebration of the Centennial of Roy Lichtenstein is comprised of a selection of prints, drawings, maquettes, and sculptures by Roy Lichtenstein (1923–1997), a leading figure in twentieth-century American art and a pioneer of the Pop Art movement.

    The works were specifically selected by the curatorial staff of both institutions and relate to objects already in their respective collections including sculptures, works on paper, and maquettes, along with tools and study objects.

    Organized by the Nasher Sculpture Center’s Senior Curator Dr. Catherine Craft, The Nancy and Tim Hanley Assistant Curator of Contemporary Art at the DMA Ade Omotosho, and The Allen and Kelli Questrom Assistant Curator of Prints and Drawings at the DMA Dr. Emily Friedman, the presentation is divided according to each institution’s strengths and will be shown in combination with objects by Lichtenstein already in their respective permanent collections.

    At the Nasher, works relating to three sculptures from the Raymond and Patsy Nasher Collection—Head with Blue Shadow, Peace through Chemistry, and Double Glass—will be accompanied by a selection from the Foundation's gift of more than two dozen drawings and maquettes associated with Lichtenstein’s Brushstroke sculptures.

    At the Dallas Museum of Art, the presentation features a set of Brushstroke sculptures carved from wood alongside various prints and studies that reveal the artist’s eclectic imagery.

    Events
    In addition to the exhibition, the DMA and the Nasher will co-host a Study Day focused on the artist on March 28, 2026, sponsored by the Roy Lichtenstein Foundation. This scholarly event will bring together a variety of curators, academics, and conservators to discuss Lichtenstein’s studio practice and the fabrication and conservation of his sculptures.

    Concluding the Study Day will be a public conversation held at the DMA between Nasher Director Carlos Basualdo and artist Alex Da Corte, regarding Da Corte’s work on the forthcoming Lichtenstein retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art.

    “In bestowing this generous gift, the Roy Lichtenstein Foundation established Dallas as a center for the study and display of Lichtenstein’s work,” Basualdo says in a statement. “This collaborative presentation of the gift and the corresponding programming is an important step in the direction of pursuing that goal, deepening the understanding of an artist who remains immensely influential to contemporary art and its relationship with mass media and today’s culture.”

    Roy Lichtenstein is made possible by support from the Roy Lichtenstein Foundation and the Dallas Tourism Public Improvement District (DTPID).

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