ALL IT TAKES IS ONE MEMORY



EDUCATION RESOURCES




AQHF READING ROOM
SHOP QUARTER HORSE OUTFITTERS

AMERICAN QUARTER HORSE FOUNDATION
SHOP QUARTER HORSE OUTFITTERS

 

 

   

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


HALL OF FAME SPOTLIGHT

Each month, we spotlight a member of the American Quarter Horse Hall of Fame.

This month, learn more about
Hank Wiescamp.

Hall of Fame & Museum News

American Quarter Horse Hall of Fame Member
Orren Mixer passes away

Orren Mixer (left) and past AQHA President Frank Merrill (right) celebrate the Hall of Fame dedication in June of 2007.

The American Quarter Horse Journal, April 30, 2008 -- Renowned equine artist Orren Marion Mixer died on Tuesday. He was 87.

Mixer was born in Oklahoma City in 1920 to Florence Motter and Orren Marion Mixer Sr. After attending public schools, he graduated from Central High School and through the efforts of his high school art teacher, Grace Chadwick, he obtained a scholarship to attend the Kansas City Art Institute from 1938-40.

Mixer worked in graphic arts in New York, Oklahoma City, and Fort Worth, Texas, before moving to San Diego to work in an aircraft manufacturing plant. He returned to Fort Worth in 1943 and joined the US Navy. Stationed in Chicago, he was a visual aids graphic artist.

In his personal time, Mixer painted Western scenes, and his first sales came through a Chicago sporting goods store. Discharged from the service in 1946, he brought his wife, Evelyn Leonard, whom he’d married in 1941, back to Oklahoma, where he built a house and studio near Arcadia/Edmond.

Mixer became a well-known local Western artist during the 1950s and 1960s. Livestock, particularly horses, became his specialty, and his work graced the covers of Western Horseman, Quarter Horse Journal, Cattleman, and Oklahoma Today. In 1968, the American Quarter Horse Association commissioned Mixer to paint "the ideal American Quarter Horse," and six other breed associations followed suit. He depicted the ideal Pinto, Paint, Palomino, Appaloosa, Buckskin, and Pony of the Americas.

Briefly retired during the 1980s, Mixer resumed his artistic productions in the mid-1990s, still working from a studio near Arcadia.

Mixer was inducted in the AQHA Hall of Fame in 1993.

Services will be held at Edmond First Baptist Church in Edmond, OK at 2:00 p.m. on Monday, May 5, 2008.

Condolences can be sent to Matthews Funeral Home in Edmond, OK.

Click here to see Orren Mixer's bio from the American Quarter Horse Hall of Fame & Museum


Click here to check out our newest educational resource:
lesson plans in Spanish!

 

 

                                                             AMERICAN QUARTER HORSE HALL OF FAME & MUSEUM

For more information, e-mail museum@aqha.org or call (806) 378-5181

American Quarter Horse Hall of Fame & Museum

 2601 East I-40, Amarillo, Texas 79104

Click the medallion to View the Hall of Fame Gallery Guide