Exhibit captures ‘Denizens’ of 19th century wildlife


The Park City Museum will host Denizens: Wildlife on the Western Frontier from November 4, 2023 to January 7, 2024. This exhibit features the spectrum of wildlife which graced the 19th century frontier American West. Original engravings from Harper’s Weekly, Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, The Illustrated London News, and other historical sources illuminate the native species and their interaction with humans. Included in this menagerie are: bears, bison, elk, pronghorn antelope, bighorn sheep, mountain goats, moose, wolves, beaver, cougars, wolverines, eagles, osprey, rattlesnakes, and wild mustangs. These derivative images portray them in their natural habitat, or as the object of mankind’s penchant to hunt them for food, clothing, or sport. Prints such those in this exhibit were the medium by which most Americans viewed visual art, since artists were glad to reproduce their original imagery and enhance their name via the popular press.
David Jackson/Park Record

Park City Museum is introducing 19th century wildlife with “Denizens: Wildlife on the Western Frontier,” a new exhibit that runs through Jan. 7.

The display, in the Tozier Gallery, showcases a series of prints depicting fauna that were abundant on the Great Plains and in the Rocky Mountains in the 1800s, said Courtney Titus, curator of collections and exhibits.

“Most of the prints are from that era, and there are some that are from a bit earlier,” she said. “All the prints were featured in publications — magazines, newspapers and journals — of that time period.”



Some of those periodicals include Harper’s Weekly, Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper and The Illustrated London News, and notable artists represented in the exhibit include Frederic Remington, George Catlin and Alfred Jacob Miller, Titus said.

Most often those encounters were of people hunting the animals, but some also show animals attacking people.”
Courtney Titus, Park City Museum curator of collections and exhibits

“Denizens: Wildlife on the Western Frontier” is a new exhibit showing through Jan. 7, 2024, at the Park City Museum. The exhibit features woodcuts, steel engravings and lithographs of wildlife of the 19th century American West.
David Jackson/Park Record
Frederic Remington is one of the artists whose work is spotlighted in the “Denizens: Wildlife on the Western Frontier” exhibit at the Park City Library.
David Jackson/Park Record

“This exhibit is from the Lee Silliman Print Collection, and he gathered the images from the pages of these publications,” she said. “Lee also compiled quotes and writings from travelers, naturalists and journalists at that time who described these scenes and animals.”



The initial goal of these images in the publications was to show people back East what the wildlife and terrain was like in the West. 

“It was the way people were getting their information about the Western frontier,” Titus said. “These images were for people who weren’t here to see these animals in person, and the photos were a way for them to get a sense of what the landscape looked like.” 

The prints feature all kinds of animals.

“We have moose, wolverines, eagles, antelope, mountain goats, coyotes, mountain lions, big-horned sheep, bison, rattlesnakes and grizzly bears, to name a few,” Titus said.

The “Denizens: Wildlife on the Western Frontier” exhibit now showing at the Park City Museum, includes historic images that have been colored by hand and by the chemical-based chromolithograph process.
David Jackson/Park Record

Some of these animals are accurately depicted, while others, not so much, she said. 

“The images depict animals in their natural habitats, either alone or with other animals,” Titus said. “Some of these prints also show the encounters that people had with these animals. Most often those encounters were of people hunting the animals, but some also show animals attacking people.”

The prints in the exhibit were created with steel engravings, wood engravings and lithographs, the three main techniques used for print publishing of the time, according to Titus.

Some are hand colored, and others were colored through the chromolithograph process, which uses chemicals to color the prints, she said.

Some of the images showcased in “Denizens: Wildlife on the Western Frontier” at the Park City Museum have been culled from historic publications such as Harper’s Weekly, Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper and The Illustrated London News.
David Jackson/Park Record

“Denizens: Wildlife on the Western Frontier” is the second exhibit by Silliman the Park City Museum has shown.

The first was “Viewed from Afar: European Prints of the American Frontier West, 1759-1908,” which ran during the summer of 2022, Titus said.

“Lee has a full selection of different exhibits that are available, and while we showed ‘View from Afar’ first, I had known that this one existed,” she said. “We knew we wanted to bring this in at some point, and there are others that he has that we’re looking at, as well.”

These exhibits feature content of a time period that fits well with the goal of the museum, Titus said.

The museum’s mission is to “preserve, protect and promote Park City’s history and heritage,” which also means to highlight the surrounding environment, she said.


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *