Home Is Where the Art Is
Art and Antiques
Combine With Colors
and Corners in Northern New Mexico
by Kate
Winslow
Cowboys and Indians, May 2001
about Thom Wheeler (click here)
Thom Wheeler Press Release (pdf)
Thom
Wheeler's Taos studio/home is a riot of colors and textures, anchored,
but not subdued, by warm adobe walls and that lovely light particular to
northern New Mexico. Wheeler, an eccentric (in the best sense of
the word) artist and collector, has designed and built a house as
colorful as his own personality, and tour thought this two-story wonder
includes a fascination story about almost every piece of art and
furniture: a wire couch that came from a French insane asylum, the
doorbell that was once a training bell for boxing matches at Madison
Square Garden, the newel post from Galveston that leads to his rooftop
parapet. No wonder Thom Wheeler's house is called the "newest
historical house in Taos."
Wheeler came to
Taos from Houston in 1985 and soon after began building his dream house.
The bottom floor, which you enter through doors thrown wide open, even
in the winter, is Wheeler's gallery where he displays and sells his
paintings, sculptures, and "wall jewelry." Lofty ceilings feature
enormous timbers, which were hauled by mule from nearby Wheeler Peak
after a fire. A quartet of mounted deer heads stand sentinel over
the room which is warmed by the steady flow emanating from the west
wall's giant fireplace.
Wide
stairs lead to Wheeler's second-story living quarters: an open-plan
living, dining, and kitchen area pulsing with tile work reminiscent of a
restrained Gaudi. Especially striking is the light filtering
through two stained glass winders in the kitchen. "Those windows
came from a Presbyterian church in Mexica, Texas," Wheeler says,
smiling. "I bought them in college, and they've leaned every window sill
I ever had, in every apartment I ever rented--until now."
Like many of the
pieces he's collected over the years, these windows look perfectly right
in this house. The same goes for the stately Doric columns that
lead from the master bedroom into the bathroom. Wheeler salvaged
them from a funeral home in Houston. Topped by art deco molding,
the columns are bizarrely wonderful and make a dramatic entry into the
hushed tiled vestibule of a bathroom.
In warm weather,
the grounds surrounding Wheeler's home become another suite of rooms.
Jade green grass sweeps up to the acequia that runs behind his house.
In turn, the acequia helps water his garden, where he grows snow peas,
peppers, tomatoes, a variety of herbs, and his many rose bushes, which
have made his home a favorite stop on to annual Taos Garden Tour.
But
the real star of the show is the fountain that Wheeler built two years
ago. No simple hole in the ground, this fountain required the removal of
11 dump trucks' worth of dirt and claims inspiration from the San
Antonio River Walk. This multi-leveled work of art, pieced
together with native stone, is a sure gathering spot on hot summer days;
a nearby fire pit ensure that guest say on into the cool of evening.
Though stunning in
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