Exterior view of the Pueblo Revival style house of artist Carlos Vierra, with the appearance of thick adobe walls, stepped massing of the first and second levels, flat roofs and projecting wooden roof beams (vigas), painted in an earth tone.
Interior view of a room in the Pueblo Revival Style home of Carlos Vierra, a ceiling of massive wooden beams supported by wooden corbels, a fireplace in the foreground and a stairway in the background, and furnished with area rugs a couch and decorative objects.
Interior view of a room in the Pueblo Revival Style home of Carlos Vierra, with part of a fireplace on the left and a ceiling of massive wooden beams supported by wooden corbels and furnished with chairs and area rugs.
Interior view of a room in the Pueblo Revival Style home of Carlos Vierra, with a ceiling of massive wooden beams and furnished with a table, sideboard, chair and area rugs, and with a fireplace in the corner.
View towards a corner fireplace in a room in the in the studio home of Santa Fe artist Sheldon Parsons, located at 3 & 5 Cerro Gordo Road. The corner is furnished with a sheepskin rug, an Indian throw rug and three wooden chairs. Decorative elements include terracotta pots, a wooden cross and paintings on the walls, and a potted plane on the window seat.
Photograph of Alice Corbin Henderson seated in a hoopback Windsor chair on the back porch of her Pueblo Revival house in Santa Fe. Behind her are a bench covered with and Indian blanket, a few terracotta pots and a view through 3 windows. The house is located at 555 Camino del Monte Sol.
Carlos Vierra (1876 – 1937) studied at the Mark Hopkins Institute (now part of the San Francisco Art Institute) under Gottardo Piazzoni in the 1890s, and also studied illustration in New York. He was the first resident artist in New Mexico and one of the first 3 members of the Santa Fe Art Colony. He was a strong advocate for preserving landmark buildings in New Mexico and promoted a modern architectural style now called the Pueblo Revival Style architecture that reflects this historic architectural heritage.
Bust-length portrait photograph of William Penhallow Henderson in a cowboy hat, white shirt, neckerchief and glasses, at his Santa Fe home (555 Camino del Monte Sol).