Barbara Van Cleve’s heritage is rich with family history and firsthand experience. Her family’s ranch, the Lazy K Bar, was founded in 1880 on the east slopes of the Crazy Mountains near Melville, Montana. Her father, Spike Van Cleve, was a unique combination of writer, poet, Harvard scholar, and expert horseman -and “a pure quill Montanan,” as her father once put it.  As a photographer, she has held a camera since she was 11 years old when her parents gave her a “Brownie” camera and a home developing kit. Her youthful interest in photography soon grew into a lifelong commitment. Ranch work also began early for Barbara. Barely six, she could be found helping in the corrals or sitting astride a horse helping gather cattle. Ever since then she has been documenting the “true grit” and romantic beauty of her experiences on the ranch and on other ranches in the West.  Along the way, she earned an MA in English Literature at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois; she has been a Dean of Women at DePaul University in Chicago, Illinois; and she taught English Literature, and later photography, for over 25 winters at DePaul University, Loyola University and Mundelein College, all in the Chicago area. At the same time photography continued to be a passionate avocation. In her free time, she worked for Rand McNally as a textbook photographer and also established her own stock photography agency. The long summers were usually spent on the family ranch in Montana.

She moved to Santa Fe in late 1980 to concentrate on photography full time and had her first major exhibition in the fall of 1985. Since that time she has had over 55 one-person shows and has been in nearly 77 group shows. Her work is in public and private collections in the United States as well as internationally.

Barbara was honored to receive the Santa Fe Rotary Club’s Artist of the Year award in 2000. In 2001, the Coors Western Art Exhibition awarded her the Mary Belle Grant Award. In 2005 she was the first woman and the first photographer to be honored as the Featured Artist of the Coors Western Art Exhibit and Sale.                                                                                                                                         

Her photography has been published in Roughstock Sonnets (with poetry by Paul Zarzyski), Way Out West, and Cowboys: A Horseback Heritage. KOAT-TV, in Albuquerque, New Mexico produced and aired a thirty-minute video documentary, Barbara Van Cleve: Capturing Grace, in 1993. In the Fall of 1995 her book, Hard Twist: Western Ranch Women was published by Museum of New Mexico Press, and she was inducted into the Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame in Fort Worth, Texas. All This Way for the Short Ride (with poet Paul Zarzyski) was published by the Museum of New Mexico Press in 1997. Her newest project is a book Holding the Reins: A Ride Through Cowgirl Life written by Marc Talbert and illustrated with her photographs about ranch girls was published by Harper Collins in February 2003.

In 2004 Barbara moved back home to Big Timber, Montana where she now has her studio and is close by the family ranch.

         
         

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*Bronze Sculptures Workshop with Dale Wood
*Photography Workshop with Barbara Van Cleve
*Expressionistic Drawing with Karen Carson