It’s summertime in New Mexico, which means that every afternoon a lone cloud on the horizon frequently starts gathering steam in the southwestern sky and threatens to (we hope, hope, hope) dump rain before nightfall.  For those of you living elsewhere, let me tell you about New Mexico summer clouds. They’re not for the faint of heart, they’re not small and delicate and wispy, but they are amazingly beautiful, especially when the evening light catches them around the edges.

Yesterday I drove home from Lubbock and arrived at the caprock south of San Jon at about 7:20, the perfect time for cloud viewing.   I stopped to take pictures, and could hear both my kids in my head, saying, “Wow, Mom, those are some Wilson Hurley clouds!”  And they were.

Back in the day when Zachary was in kindergarten and I was a starving single mom/legal secretary at the Sutin Law Firm in Albuquerque, my boss went to a black tie event where they handed out art posters to donors.  He received a signed poster of Wilson Hurley’s “Thunderhead at Last Light” and in either a fit of generosity, or because he wouldn’t be caught dead with a print in his home, he handed it off to me the next Monday morning.  I loved it – it was exactly what the New Mexico sky looks like at sundown with a thunderstorm brewing.  It looked like home to me.

Wilson Hurley with one of his amazing sky paintings. Courtesy wilson-hurley.com

I very proudly took my print to Michaels where they mounted and framed it and we hung it on our dining room wall (even though the dining room was part of the kitchen in our tiny apartment).  We kept our Hurley with us for years, and my kids would look at an amazing summer cloud and say, “Wow, Mom, there’s a Wilson Hurley cloud.” 

He could paint a New Mexico cloud unlike anyone else I ever knew.  One of the great heartbreaks of my life was when we were moving to North Carolina and I placed the print in the garage of our house on Dakota Street in Albuquerque, where someone accidentally broke the glass and bent the print in the moving process.

We don’t have the print anymore, and my kids are grown and out of the house, but every time I see a gorgeous New Mexico cloud, I think of them, and of Wilson Hurley, who knew exactly what the sky looks like here.  Thanks for that, Mr. Hurley!

If you happen to run into a copy of Thunderhead at Last Light somewhere, let me know. I’d like to get copy for myself and my kids. It was a gift to own.

By the way, Mr. Hurley died in 2008, but there’s a newly released book about him and his work. It’s The Life and Art of Wilson Hurley and you can get a copy at Amazon at this link. (Disclosure: This is an affiliate link and I receive a small commission should you choose to buy from this link.) The tagline is “Celebrating the Riches of Reality,” which tops my list of my favorite phrases I’ve heard in a long time. We should all be celebrating the riches of reality, I think.

I’m ordering my copy today. And then I’ll write an article on the book.

2 Replies to “Wilson Hurley Clouds”

  1. We have a framed Wilson Hurley Thunderhead at Last Light my dad purchased at a rotary fundraiser! My mom’s name and email is below if you want to ask her about selling it.

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